Tuesday, March 28, 2017

South Korea road trip

We continued on our South Korean adventure. So far we went to Seoul and Jeju; now that we got used to driving on the right hand side, we were ready for the road trip.

We left Jeju by ferry to Mokpo. It is a 4.5 hours ride and cost ₩68,000 for both of us. We went to the international pier which is about 1 km up the road from the local ferry terminal. Lucky we had enough time to catch another taxi to the right terminal.

To say that it was a ferry is actually selling the experience short. It was more like a cruise ship. It was fully equipped with a supermarket, massive restaurant & bar, game rooms, massage room, karaoke rooms, business class rooms and economy rooms. I booked us an economy room. It was pretty much an empty room, and there were five other people in the room with us - all laying around on the floor.


Very interesting and different experience

Mokpo


We arrived at Mokpo around 6.00 pm and caught a taxi to Lotte car rental located in front of Mokpo train station. Taxis are quite reasonable and cheap in South Korea; the journey from the ferry terminal to the train station only cost us around AU$3.00. We hired the car for 5 days, dropping it off in Busan - where we will leave South Korea and head to Osaka, Japan.

We booked Yujeong Hanok Guesthouse, a traditional Korean accommodation; i.e. we slept/ate on the ondol floor - with Western style bathroom. This was the beginning of our struggle to communicate, as barely any English was spoken outside the big cities - my sign language proficiency was 120% challenged on this leg of the trip.  

In saying that the locals tried hard to communicate with us. When all else failed, they would indicate us to follow them and walked us to our destination. The landlady in Mokpo walked us to the restaurant when I asked for dinner recommendation. She also kept telling us to check out Yudal mountain, which we did in the morning. There was no one else in the guesthouse, so we had the place all to ourselves. 

Dinner spread with Korean rice
View from the top of Yudalsan

Boseong Green Tea Plantation (보성녹차밭 대한다원)

Entrance fee ₩4,000 per adult

After Yudalsan we drove for 1.5 hours to the green tea plantation. It was really quiet for such a beautiful place! 

The flowers were just starting to bloom

Rolling hills of green tea

Even though it was cold, we had an ice cream anyway

Naganeupseong Folk Village (낙안읍성)

Entrance fee ₩4,000 per adult

We continued on our drive to Naganeupseong Folk Village. According to the internet, we could stay inside the fortress village, but we had no idea how. So, we decided to just rock up, go to the i-centre and see how we go. After various body movements, maximum use of google translate and numerous phone calls - an elderly man popped in to the i-centre. He then gestured us to follow him to (I assumed) his house, opened the bedroom door, continued to speak Korean to us and left. Accommodation sorted! 

The guesthouse that we stayed
It was a hanok style guesthouse, so again we slept on the floor. Funnily enough, I slept really well!

In one of the alleyway
Drone footage of the folk village

Suncheonman Bay Wetland Reserve (순천만습지)

Entrance fee ₩8,000 per adult

Suncheonman Bay has the biggest colony of reeds in Korea that attracts large number of rare birds. The many trails around the wetland are gorgeous; though we didn`t see many birds. I believed they were still hibernating.


So brown and so fine

Daraengi Village (가천 다랭이마을)


We stayed a night here. The drive from Suncheonman Bay to Daraengi was very picturesque with mountains all around us at all time and flowers lining the streets. The village is famous for terraced rice paddies - we booked a studio nearby called Montmartre (with spring bed this time, Fabs had enough sleeping on the floor) that overlooking the sea and mountains.

Terrace fields by the sea

Stunning!

Spot us

German Village (독일마을)


Yup – there’s a German village in a countryside of Korea. It felt like a theme park with overpriced bratwurst with tasty beers.

There were German flags EVERYWHERE

Tasted OK... beer was yum though

Yeojwacheon Stream (여좌천-벚꽃명소)

We came here a week too early - there's a yearly sakura festival for 2 weeks from 1st of April. The cherry blossoms has just started budding; they already looked beautiful, but in full blooms I think it would be magnificent. Especially since the entire city of Jinhae is filled with cherry blossoms; not only the stream area. 

Sakura everywhere! 
We continued to Gimhae and stayed in the Terrace Hotel - I have a feeling that it is a 'love hotel', but since everything in Koreans I can't be sure. It has themed rooms, there was (pretty much) no lobby or receptionist, you can get a room with some sort of vending machine and the biggest giveaway is, it provides condoms. It even has the 'premium' rooms with its own garage, vending machine in front of the room and private staircase to ensure complete anonymity!

The room itself was spacious, clean (I hope so) with a massive bath, and nicely decorated - so I had no complains.

Busan


After breakfast we continued on to Busan and checked into Queens Hotel - the room somehow looked similar with Terrace Hotel though slightly dated. I don't know whether it is a love hotel as well, since I couldn't find any condoms. 

The hotel located in the shopping strip - so we just went for a walk in the rain, shopped for some more clothes and skincare. 

ANOTHER shopping street in South Korea

Spa Land Centum City (스파랜드 센텀시티)

Weekdays ₩15,000/ Weekends & National Holidays 18,000. After 8.00 pm ₩13,000

Spa Land is located in 'Shinsegae Centum City', the largest department store in the 🌏 Here's the proof.


The scale of the mall is ridiculous. And the Spa Land itself is humongous. As mentioned, we went to a Korean spa in Seoul; but it was a local one near our accommodation. After a quick browse on the internet, I thought this spa looked good after all that driving and walking. It wasn't good. It was brilliant. 

The first floor housed 22 spas (!!!), 13 distinctively themed Jjimjil-bangs and saunas, and an open-air foot spa; while the 2nd floor has 'entertainment zone', with a range of beautification programs, a theater, and a conference room. There are restaurants on both level, resting areas, massage chairs and many more. 


The pictures don't do it justice since I can't show the spas - some outdoor spas with their own waterfall!!
We could've spent a whole day there. But we got there after dinner and the place closed at 12.00 am. We contemplated to miss our flight the next day so we can go back to this heavenly place. 

This place was THE perfect place to close off our South Korean chapter!

Road trip finds


I highly recommended a road trip in South Korean countryside. It is way less touristy, the landscape is breathtaking, and much 'entertainment' along the road. Like this fake traffic controller.

Fake - the arm just went up and down
Some only had one arm. We also passed a speed bump that sprayed water onto our car! Driving in South Korea required international driving license from your home country which is really simple to get.

Once more, this country doesn't disappoint! To anyone that hasn't been to Korea, I highly recommend it. It's very modern whilst still keeping its very own traditions and quirks, clean, mecca for anything related with beauty and shopping, gorgeous sceneries with many trekking trails, yummy food, and it's still somehow affordable.

It had been an amazing 2 weeks and a wonderful start for our trip.  There were times I almost pushed Fabs off the cliff for being a nuisance we're all capable of, however love prevailed. Kamsahamnida South Korea for the memories - Konnichiwa Nihon! We are off for our week long pilgrimage trek at Honshū: the Kumano Kodo. Hopefully I survive to write about it!




2 comments:

  1. Amazing! Loved reading this Inge. It's now on my to-go list.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you! Glad it inspires you to go to Korea :)

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