Thursday, May 3, 2018

Danang: Dragon Bridge and China Beach

     Phillip and I spent two nights in Danang, flying in from Ho Chi Minh City on Vietnam Airlines. Airport and flight procedures are just like those in the United States, although the Airbus 321 we flew on did have more legroom than the USA planes. Our hotel, the Tuyet Son Hotel, was not actually on the beach, but the buildings between the hotel and the beachfront were only one-story, so our 9th floor room was truly "ocean-view" as advertised. Like our hotel in HCMC, the hotel staff were friendly and wanted to make our stay as comfortable as possible.
China Beach
     Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday, Phillip and I walked about ten miles, discovering that although the air temperature is a bit lower than in HCMC, the increase in humidity of Danang makes it feel even hotter to us than HCMC!
     April 30 and May 1 were national holidays in Vietnam (Liberation Day - their version of our 4th of July, and May 1 - their version of our Labor Day). That made a long holiday weekend for the Vietnamese office workers. Alot of them had apparently come to the beach in Danang. We still heard revelers Tuesday night on the beach, but we came across workers dismantling the stages and bounces houses during our walks both days.
    One of the attractions of Danang is the Dragon Bridge. The Han River separates the city of Danang from the beach area where our hotel was. Four bridges connect the two areas, and they built one bridge as a dragon.
Dragon Bridge
     On weekend nights, the dragon spits fire and water from its head, but unfortunately, our nights in Danang were weeknights. It was still an impressive bridge!
     While walking along the Han River, we saw some fishing boats. Our tour guide for the Meking Delta trip had noted that the eyes painted on boats were different north of the Mekong Delta. So, I snapped a photo of the mid-Vietnam fishing boat eyes.
Danang fishing boat eyes - no evil spirits here!
We walked along China Beach and I walked in the water a bit. As part of the holiday celebrations, we saw what I think were award-winning displays of painted basket boats and surfboards.
My favorite of the painted basket boats
painted basket boat
The view out from the beach appears hazy in my pictures, but it was humidity, not pollution.
view to the north from China Beach
I'm saving food pictures for a separate post on the Vietnamese food, but I have to
mention the Thung Phi restaurant's barbecue. I read the excellent reviews for the restaurant and then had to use Google maps to find it. It was down an alley, very much hidden from the main street. We were the third customers who arrived shortly after 6 pm, but by the time we left, the place was packed with diners. For 69,000 VND (about $3) each, we ordered plates of seasoned meat which we then, with the help of the waitress, cooked at our table. A platter of sauteed morning glory stems with garlic ($1.50) and two Tiger beers each completed our meal. We ordered the beef rolled around mushroom and the pork belly. Pork belly is just uncured bacon, but after grilling, it tastes even better than bacon. Our Cu Chi Tunnel guide told us that Tiger beer was the best beer. He was a young guy and we think he had tried many beers, so we took his recommendation.  The food was absolutely wonderful! The seasonings made it a totally fifferent dish than USA barbecue or Korean barbecue. We will definitely have Vietnamese barbecue again on our trip.
     This morning, we travelled by private car from Danang to Hoi An, about an hour's drive. Tomorrow, we will have another university student to lead us on a tour of Hoi An's Old Town, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Cu Chi Tunnels

    One of the premier attractions for toursts, international and domestic, in the Ho Chi Minh City area is the Cu Chi tunnels. The Cu Chi tunnels are a 250 km (150 miles) system of tunnels that are about 40 km north of Ho Chi Minh City. Their construction began during the Vietnamese war with the French after WWII. They were greatly expanded during the Vietnam War. Guerilla fighters used them to hide from the French and US troops and to plan and wage small attacks. Later in the Vietnam War, the tunnels were also used as shelter to protect people from the bombing raids.
     The tunnels evolved into a three level system: 3 meters deep to move around and make attacks, 9 meters deep to live and sleep, and some tunnels even deeper to provide protection from the B-52 bombs. The entrances to the tunnels were very small and hidden by a leafy cover.
Pat in one of the tunnel entrances
     The tunnels were only about 20-30 cm tall (8-12 inches) but the rooms were of course bigger. Most of the tunnels have collapsed, but the government did restore and enlarge several to preserve the history of the tunnels.
     The tunnels had to have fresh air sources, so the people used some of the dirt they removed when they dug the tunnel and made fake termite mounds to hide the ventilation holes.
fake termite mound, ventilation holes on bottom left
The jungle above the tunnels was completely destroyed by bombs and napalm during the course of the war. In the 45 years since the end of the war, it has grown back.
view of jungle from our trail
Displays were placed along the trail as we walked thru the jungle. One display illustrated the booby traps that the Vietcong would set up in the jungle.
The traps were covered with sticks and leaves
Not every bomb that was dropped in the war actually exploded, so the guerillas would open the unexploded ordnance and use the explosive material for their own weapons. This mock-up should how they would open the bombs. It was not a very desirable job, since the friction of opening the bomb may set it off.
And of course, tanks and large weapons. Every museum or historical site has tanks and other military hardware on display, both abandoned US tanks and Russian and Chinese tanks.
The tunnel complex also had a shooting range where tourists could shoot an AK-47,  M-16 or M-60. We didn't participate in that activity. $2.50 USD per round fired and the guns were open sight. About half of our group of twelve did shoot the guns.
shooting range for AK-47, M-16, M-60
     Our tour guide also showed us the shoes made from old tires. At some point, the US troops burned the jungle and would then follow the guerilla's footprints in the ashes to the tunnel openings. Notice the heel and toe portions of the shoe in the picture. They are actually reversed relative to the sole. The Vietcong began making  them like this to cause confusion regarding which direction the guerilla had been walking.
shoes made from tires
Throughout this area, we saw numerous bomb craters.
B-52 bomb crater
     Our final activity at the complex was actually going into the tunnels and "walking" thru them. The aboveground entrance led into a small room and more steps led farther down into the tunnel.
As I noted, the tunnels were enlarged for tours, but not enough to stand. We had a guy on our tour with broad shoulders, and he could not fit in the tunnels. Phillip and I did fit!
Once in the tunnels, we had the option to travel 20 meters, 40 meters, or 60 meters. Both of us, and most of our group, bailed out after the first 20 meters.
I never thought I was claustrophobic, but I was very happy to see those stairs after 20 meters!
     I noticed that this post has two pictures of Phillip's back and two of the top of my head, so I'll end with a picture of our smiling faces.... smiling because we aren't still in those tunnels!
Phillip and Pat next to ..... a tank



Sunday, April 29, 2018

Mekong Delta: The boats have eyes

     The Mekong Delta River cruise today illustrated lessons regarding ecology, economics, farming, religion, and history. Phillip and I joined ten other travellers for a boat tour from Ho Chi Minh City into the Mekong Delta. After we left the central city with its hi-rise buildings and fancy hotels, we boated thru an area our guide, Hang, called the Saigon slum area. We saw these barely river-worthy boats that Hang said came from deeper in the Delta, people who would bring produce down to the city to sell it, moor on the river and sell from the bank. If the police came, they pulled their goods back on their boat.
just outside the central city, along the Mekong
     The second area was comprised of ramshackle houses built on stilts. When we began our river cruise, it was low tide and we could see the wooden piers in the water.
houses along the Mekong River
    According to Hang, the government wants to get rid of these slums because they discharge sewage directly into the Mekong River. They are building high rise apartments for the people who live in the stilt homes, but the apartments are an hour away and moving would take the people from their livelihood on the water, without new jobs to go to. So, the people here do not want to move, even though their housing situation, and quality of the Mekong water, will be improved.
     A commercial area was our next sight up the river. Barges bring sand and rock down the river and off-load it, then trucks come and take it for construction sites in town. We also passed a huge wholesale vegetable market. We smelled the fish sauce factory before we came to it. A lot of commerce uses the Mekong River for the transportation of goods. 
     After a bit, however, we did leave boat congestion and polluted water. The river water was never clear because of all the silt it carries down, but it looked better the farther we got from Ho Chi Minh City.
Mekong River, away from the city
     We stopped at a Buddhist Temple, then at a farm where we saw tapioca in various stages of growth, sugarcane fields, mango and jackfruit trees. Tapioca is grown for its roots, which are processed and dried, then sold as either tapioca flour or turned into boba, those almost gelatinous balls that can be found in some Asian drinks. In the USA, we are mostly just familar with tapioca pudding, but tapioca can be transformed into much more.
Young tapioca plants
We walked for about thrity minutes through the countryside on this trail.
    I'm calling it a trail, but it was actually also a road. We had to step to the side several times to let motorcycles pass. Note that it is raised above the field level as the fields flood with heavy rains frequently.
     Back on our boat for more water travel before our next stop for refreshment - very fresh coconut juice. Hang said that the best coconuts to drink for their juice are those picked about four months after they form. This coconut juice was quite tasty and the coconut was obviously younger than other I have had.
     We also stopped at a town market along the river. Although Phillip and I generally visit the local markets wherever we travel, several folks on our boat had not walked thru one. Hang explained the different vegetables sold in the maket and their role in Vietnamese cooking. I was drooling over all the fruit that the market sold. It is mango season now.
local market: mangos for sale
    The vendors had brought their wares to the market by boating down the various canals that feed into the river. After lunch, we headed back down the river to Ho Chi Minh City.
Mekong River during our return trip, high tide
About those eyes on the boats....
Hang shared with us that the Vietnamese have been painting eyes on the prow of their boats for a long time, to protect the boats from monsters and evil spirits.
According to several sources, the first king of Vietnam, in the 1st century, B.C.E., ordered that the boats be painted to protect people from sea monsters. Scholars think the sea monsters were probably crocodiles.
We saw the eyes on almost all the boats that weren't barges. Barges have flat fronts so the eyes wouldn't work to scare off the sea monsters. 

Friday, April 27, 2018

Second tour, water puppets, and weasel coffee

     For our second day, we had a full day, custom tour with a delightful young university student, Thu. She was a first year university student, also from the Hoi An area, and also good at English. She is studying German and literature at the university. Thu met us promptly at 9 am. She had planned to take us to the Reunification Palace, but since we visited it yesterday with Hua and Linh, she immediately suggested the History Museum instead.
     Thu knew her Vietnamese ancient history and told stories as we walked thru displays of artifacts from the ancient dynasties that ruled Vietnam. For example, Vietnam was the only country that was able to repel Mongol invaders during their three attacks on Hanoi. They did it by emptying the city just before the Mongols arrived, then surrounding and defeating the Mongols when they moved into Hanoi. This tactic worked for all three Mongol attacks. The museum was interesting, but the fun part of the morning was talking to the groups of kids (probably about 5 years old) who were also touring the museum. To the kids, Phillip and I were more interesting than Khmer jewelry or Cham artwork. A lot of the kids, to our surprise, approached us and said "Hello, what's your name?" in English! The funny part is that we'd bend down and respond, "Hello, I'm Pat (or Phillip), what's your name?" I think their English lessons had only gotten to the question, not the answer, because each one who spoke to us then looked at their teacher who was chuckling and smiling. She translated briefly and several were then able to respond with what was probably their name. They did know "high five" and Phillip high fived several when we realized they couldn't actually have a conversation. Thu said that English is taught in Vietnamese schools these days.
Cute kids who knew a few words of English
     We joined the kids for a performance of the Saigon Water Puppet show. Some of the kids were absolutely enthralled by the water puppets. None of the kids acted up a bit. Thu had told us this was the smaller, less elaborate show. It was cute with a plotline of fishing and dragons, and a cat that darted out and tried to eat the ducks. The kids squealed when the dragon puppet squirted water at them.
Saigon Water Puppet Show
     After lunch of sizzling pancake, crab soup, and barbecue pork with broken rice, Thu took us to the War Remnants Museum. This was the most serious museum we visited, and probably will visit. One floor was dedicated to the photojournalists who died during the war and the photographs they took. Other displays were of the devastation of the people and the land caused by Agent Orange and some of the other atrocities of the war, including My Lai. The grounds outside had a replica of the island prison built by the French, including the guillotine that the French, and later the South Vietnamese leaders, used on prisoners. I didn't take pictures inside the museum because it was a somber place, but I did get a picture of one of the many tanks parked around the building.
tanks on the grounds of the War Remnants Museum
     Thu took us to a coffee shop after the War Remnants Museum. The coffee shop was not a serious place. It served "weasel coffee," which I ordered. Thu whispered that it was "poop coffee." She was referring to the coffee beans eaten by civet cats, then harvested after the beans pass thru the civet cat's digestive system. I checked on-line and learned that Vietnam's "weasel coffee" is probably made with a chemical process that replicates the action of the cat's digesive system, so my coffee was most likely not poop coffee. But then again, maybe it was! It actually tasted like strong coffee to me. My palate is not refined enough to really taste anything special in weasel coffee, but now I can say I've had it!
weasel coffee and the ice to pour it over
     Phillip and I really enjoyed our day with Thu. She is such a great representative of the young people of Vietnam. She answered all our questions, was curious about life in Texas and was such a joy to talk with. Thu said that Saigon Hotpot has about 80 students available to conduct tours and they provide about 100 free tours a month. I'm glad I arranged similar tour guides in Hoi An, Hue, and Hanoi.
Phillip and Thu

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Keyword for Ho Chi Minh City: Humidity

    Phillip and I arrived without incident into Vietnam. Our flight from DFW Airport, layover in Hong Kong, and flight to Ho Chi Minh City were quite the test of our endurance. We both dozed a little, not much, on the flights and Phillip slept for about an hour in the lounge in Hong Kong Airport. Twenty-five hours after first boarding, we landed in Ho Chi Minh City.
Heading out from DFW Airport
    Our e-visa worked exactly as it was supposed to. We went into the regular immigration line immediately after deplaning and breezed thru, being processed even quicker than the Asian lady ahead of us in line. A note for future travelers: get your money changed into Vietnamese dong at the airport in Vietnam. Phillip stopped at the exchange desk at DFW Airport, but they only offered 3.5 million dong for US $220. At the HCMC airport, he exchanged $200 for 4.5 million dong, over 25% better value! We are still getting used to the Vietnamese currency, but I do like it. It is made of an almost plastic material. About ten years ago, the Vietnamese government went to this material because the paper bills did not last, disintegrating in the humidity.
600,000 VND = about $28
    Our hotel, Huong Sen Hotel, is well-located and the staff is friendly. The breakfast buffet is exceptional and is served on the rooftop terrace. An egg station so you can request fresh eggs cooked to order; warming trays with different fried rice and entree items, mostly pork; bacon; fresh fruit; pastries; and beverages such as coffee and juices. I tried the aloe vera yogurt - it was surprisingly good and I'll eat it again. A slightly grassy flavor and the chunks of aloe vera worked to provide a bit of chewiness, just like strawberries and peached work in yogurt. I didn't get any gelatinous feel in my mouth like I thought I would.
     After breakfast, Phillip and I walked around for about two hours. We weren't yet brave enough to cross any major streets, so we basically made a large block. The information in the guidebooks about traffic is absolutely correct.
     Promptly at 1:30 today, we met with Hua and Ling, our student guides. We spent a delightful afternoon with them. Their command of English was exceptional, especially Hua. She was the more studious one, taking summer classes and planning to graduate early from college. Both girls were second year college students, majoring in Economics.
The girls took us to the Reunification Palace, the former Presidential Palace which is a very well-preserved museum.
The rooms were time capsules of the 1960s, with furnishings, telephones, and telegraphs from that era. The girls explained the history, that this was where the fall of Saigon officially occurred in 1975 when the North Vietnamese tanks came thru the front gate. The grounds are well-maintained and contain actual tanks and planes from the era.
     After the Reunification Palace, we went to a coffee shop: a mango smoothies for Phillip and iced coffee with coconut milk for Hua and me. Ling had a tasty-looking yogurt beverage. Hua had a class in the evening, so she left and Ling took us to Ben Thahn Market. We didn't buy anything there, but the market is on the highlights list for Ho Chi Minh City. Ling said that the market has developed into a more tourist destination. She had actually never been there before. It reminded me of the Bangkok markets with vendor stalls piled to the ceiling and very narrow walkways.
      By this time, our shirts were drenched with sweat, so we enjoyed going to an air-conditioned restaurant for dinner with Ling. Pho and the noodle/pork dish I like for me. Although it was after dark when we walked back to our hotel after dinner, the humidity was still extremely high. Another tip for travelers: don't expect to wear your clothes for more than one day!
     We thoroughly enjoyed our first day in Vietnam, especially our interaction with Hua and Ling. Their enthusiasm for learning about us and their pride in their country was evident. They both came from small communities, Hua from the north and Ling from near Hoi An, so we talked farming with them. They described their university system (future military people and teachers get a free university education, everyone else has to pay). They referred to Ho Chi Minh City several times as Saigon, so we asked about it. Ling said that HCMC is more proper and her friends that are politically connected do try to correct her, but Saigon is still a common usage name for the city since that's what older people know it as. It was so rewarding to have them as our student guides and as the website said, the girls would not accept a tip and did recommend we donate to the charity described on Saigonhotpot website.
     We are happy that we chose to visit Vietnam and look forward to meeting another student guide tomorrow for more sight-seeing.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Vietnam: Our Next Adventure

    Our travel year is here again! Phillip and I alternate a year of journey and adventure with a year close to home, tending to my garden. 2017 was a garden year, and a bountiful garden it was, over 1500 pounds of tomatoes and new harvest records for ten of the vegetables we grow. The effort is worth it for the nutritious food we have, but I'm glad our travel year is here.

     Vietnam is our first destination. Our knowledge of Vietnam prior to my research for our trip came from the evening news during the 1960s and early 1970s. The Unites States military involvement in Vietnam ended while Phillip and I were in high school, although my older brothers served in the Army and Navy during the conflict.
    After the fall of Saigon in 1975, we rarely heard about Vietnam as the country followed an isolationist path and had very little economic growth. To us, it was just a poor country in Asia that did not want outsiders to visit. In 1986, the Vietnamese government realized its policies were not working and committed to economic liberalization and a more market-based economy. The Vietnamese government still controls political expression, but steps are being taken toward better protection of human rights.
    Vietnam has changed greatly from the country that Phillip and I saw on the news fifty years ago. A country of 96 million people, Vietnam has a 95% literacy rate and 53% of the population uses the Internet. The greatest share of Vietnam's exports come to the United States. The country is slightly larger than New Mexico in land mass and much of the terrain destroyed by napalm and Agent Orange has been reclaimed. According to the World Bank, in 1995 Vietnam had just over one million tourists. During 2016, that number had grown to over ten million visitors. The southern portion of the country is tropical, while the northern portion is temperate. Time for a map:
     The map indicates the route of our adventure. We fly into Ho Chi Minh City (the former Saigon) then make our way north to Hanoi. Acording to Lonely Planet, the Vietnamese road system is not the best, so we chose to fly from Ho Chi Minh City to the middle of the country, into Danang, then take vehicle transportation south to Hoi An, and back north to Hue. We then fly from Hue to Hanoi. That loop near Hanoi illustrates our 3-day, 2-night cruise of Halong Bay.
     We are looking forward to tropical fruit, excellent food, and seeing locations we heard of as children. All five cities we are visiting have a program where university students who want to practice English serve as free tour guides in the central city. I've arranged the student-led tours in all but Danang (because Danang is a 2-night beach stop for us).
    Regarding trip preparations, we did have to get a visa; however, last year Vietnam started an e-visa process. Our visa process was completed entirely on the Internet. The only hiccup was that my browser did not approve of the security protocols on the payment page. I went to my cell phone and was able to make the payment. We received our e-visas within a week of application. Our packing is almost exactly like the packing we did for our Thailand and Philippines trips. I no longer have an argument with Phillip over blue jeans. He has accepted the fact that they stay home! Two carry-on size suitcases, although we will check them; a small lightweight backpack for me; and Phillip's small carry-on duffle for charger cords and snacks.
   Another trip preparation item was lunch a few weeks ago at a Vietnamese restaurant with my retiree buddies. I took a picture of the restaurant version of pho (soup), I expect to have pictures of authentic pho to post and compare in the next month!
American version of beef pho
     Our itinerary will unfold and you can share our journey as I post to this blog. All of the hotels I selected have Internet access in the rooms, breakfast buffets and swimming pools. Phillip and I are ready for this new adventure! As the famous philospher Anonymous once said, "We travel not to escape life but for life not to escape us."

Friday, May 6, 2016

Final South Korea post... until our next visit!

Phillip and I returned to Texas last week and are into our home routine: checking on the cows at the ranch (they were fine, frisky and fat from the green grass), taking Zelda to the "spa" (aka pet grooming), and working on the remodel of the Crowley house (granite countertop installation went well and they look fabulous). I've had time to think about our Korean adventures to now compose this post.
First, a description of our final days in South Korea... We traveled by subway from Suwon to Seoul. Once we knew to identify the exit from which we needed to leave a subway station, life became so easy. More praise for the Korean subway system: clean, efficient, and at times, like on our travel to Seoul with luggage, not crowded. Only three times on our numerous subway rides would I call it crowded and only one of those times would I call it sardine-crowded. No luggage except my backpack that day, but I had to hold it up as we were smushed into the car during rush hour. Fortunately, we only had to go two stations and were positioned just to the left of the door.

When we got to Seoul, the hotel let us check in early, so we dropped our bags off and began shopping. My quest was to purchase the pans to make egg bread. First step: buy an egg bread and ask the vendor if we could take a picture of her pans. That was the easy part!
We had a list of things in addition to the egg bread pans that we wanted to get, so I didn't worry that we couldn't find them on our first shopping day. By Wednesday, however, I started to get frantic about them and we became determined to find them. Finally, after a dedicated three hour search, with help from two young female market employees who were able to get us to the right market, then to the correct section of that market, we found them. I was willing to pay as much as $3 a pan for them, so I was pleasantly surprised when the vendor said 1500 won each (about $1.35). I bought 24 of them so I could take some to the ranch.
I liked shopping in the traditional markets with vendors and crowds best. Phillip liked going to Myeong-dong with its stores and crowds. Lonely Planet described Myeong-dong  shopping as "an overwhelming experience that borders on sensory overload." I agree with that assessment, except that for me, I'd change the "borders on" to "is a." For Phillip, we joined the masses in Myeong-dong for our last two evenings. We did have some excellent bulgogi on our last evening at a restaurant there. That was a nice experience as we arrived just as the first floor of the restaurant had filled, so we were the first customers to be seated upstairs. For awhile, we had a private dining experience above the crowd, with our own waitress.
Myeong-dong was the only shopping area we frequented that had the 32-cm ice cream that Phillip liked! While we were in Busan, Phillip found this ice cream, mango flavored, just a couple blocks from our hotel. He was quite pleased to have it again in Seoul. The ice cream is over 12 inches above the cone. He also liked that the cone itself was full of ice cream and tasted good. Unlike the fish-shaped ice cream cone he'd gotten once that didn't taste as fresh and had been filled with cornflakes instead of ice cream. Just 2000 won, an excellent snack, which he did share with me.

Our shopping done and our sights seen, we packed and boxed up our final purchases and prepared to come back to Texas. Our return flight on the 28th was uneventful, the way airline flights should be. We loved the people of South Korea and the country and plan to return in two years during our next travel year. I do have some tips and final impressions of the country and our experience to share:
  • I highly recommend a cooking class. In addition to the actual culinary experience, meeting Jessie and her mother started the trip on such a warm, generous tone. We learned a lot about modern-day Korea from Jessie, as Phillip only had 1978 Korea as a reference in his head (from his time there in the Air Force). She explained a lot to us and gave context to the changes that Phillip saw as we traveled after the cooking class. I plan to schedule cooking classes in the future when we travel internationally.
  • The most important phrase to know in the language of the country being visited is "thank you." In Korea, more than in any othe country we've visited, people always offered to help us and we could see the happiness on their face when we could thank them in their own language, even when they spoke English with us.
  • South Korea has an amazing infrastructure in its technology and mass transit. Wifi everywhere, including routers on the subway trains. It is not a third world country, it is a modern country with all the amenities of home. With its modernization does come modern prices, but they are still less than in the USA. Except meat prices - because they import most of their beef, meat prices are higher than here. Of course, I am spoiled because we raise our own beef.
  • Don't push the buttons on a bidet toilet unless you are actually sitting on it. Phillip learned that lesson and then had to get more towels to wipe up the water that spouted across the bathroom.
  • Use your smartphone camera liberally. I have many pictures of subway maps on my phone that I took to use as reference. When we did our laundry at one of the hotels, the washing machine instructions were in Korean, so I took a picture of the control panel and went to the clerk with it. Restaurants would have pictures of entrees posted outside, but no pictures on the menus. We started taking snapshots of the outside picture and showing it to the waitress if we weren't ordering something that we knew, like bulgogi, bibimbap or kimbap.
  • Leave room in your planning for spontaneous activities. The baseball game and the horse race were not on my itenerary, but were great additions to our adventure. I've learned to have sufficient unplanned time and to be flexible. If we don't make it to something that I'd picked out to visit, that's OK. Our alternative activity will be just as enjoyable! We never made it to the arboretum in Daegu, but the flowers in the street median, the small botanic garden in Busan, and the cherry blossom festival in Seoul provided many colorful flower viewings.
  • Try new foods. If you've read posts from previous adventures, you know that tip already. Thinking about the foods we ate in Korea, the grilled pork intestines were the most different from our usual fare. We ate many foods that we hadn't had before, but not necessarily exotic or unusual. Egg bread, sugar pancakes, sweet red bean pastries, bibimbap, tteokbokki (the glutinous rice cakes in red sauce) and Korean noodle soup (different from Thai noodle soup) come to mind as favorites. Admittedly, there were a few thing we ate that we didn't care so much for - a vendor meal of room temperature fried flounder with bones comes to mind - but I'd say 98% of what we ate was tasty and enjoyable.
Of the countries we've visited, South Korea now ranks at the top of our list for a return visit. Yes, we will probably return to Thailand (fruit, food, climate) and the Philippines (language not a barrier, climate, my half-brother lives there); however, Phillip and I will definitely return to South Korea (people, food, infrastructure). I'm not a fan of Ernest Hemingway's novels, but I did come across a quote of his that I like. "It is good to have an end to journey toward; but it is the journey that matters, in the end." May your journeys be full of adventures and good food!