Adventures of a teenage author...

This is Marta, author of the Darkwoods series and of Marta's Blog. I created this blog specifically for blogging about my 2015 study abroad adventures in Europe, but it's becoming the blog for all my travels. I hope you enjoy all the pictures and stories!

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Seoul, Day 2 - The Hike Up the Hill

My friend Adrienne watches some TV or YouTube series that involves the members exploring South Korea. One of the things they did was take a cable car up a hill to N Seoul Tower

N Seoul Tower is built on a massive hill looking over the city, so in order to get there, we first needed to walk up the hill toward the cable cars.

On the way, we saw this, which made me giggle and cringe all at once: 


I've had a few experiences with things similar to this. 

Anyway, after that, we made it to the cable car and stood in a surprisingly quick line. A view from the car:



Mountain!

Once we got off the cable car, we still had more walking to do. It was winter, so the trees had no leaves, but they were still picturesque and pleasant:



This next part definitely left an impression on my memory.

It's called the Love Locks, and it's a viewing deck with fences and posts and whatnot. Attacked to these fences and posts are thousands of locks:



Why locks? Well, you see, what happens is this: a Korean couple writes their names on two locks. Then they lock those two locks together and attach them to the fences or posts here. It's a symbol of love lasting forever. 


Anyway, I don't remember what these things are, and I haven't been able to figure out from reading online, but I'm going to take a guess that they are made for smoke signals. The mountain is quite high, after all, so smoke from those funnels would be visible from most of the city. 


Looking inside

Looking up

 After this... it was on to the tower! 

Monday, December 28, 2020

Seoul, Day 1 - The Hanbok, the Palace, and the City

 Freezing cold, but still freaking awesome...

We got off the plane, dozed in the airport, got some coffee (they really know how to make coffee in Seoul!), and then went to our hotel. I should mention that our hotel was in an area that would be sketchy if it were in a European or American area, but this being Asia, I was unconcerned (and justified in my lack of concern--everything was perfectly fine). 

The cool thing is that we were about one block away from a palace! (I think one of Seoul's nicknames is the "City of Palaces"--apparently, there are a lot.)

But before we could go touring the palace... we went to a hanbok cafe. 

Hanbok, for those of you who don't know, is the Korean traditional outfit. Both men and women wear hanbok, but obviously the women's looks quite different from the men's. 

It's worth mentioning that some things that seem absolutely astonishing to us are really quite cheap in Seoul. It is not an expensive city. These hanbok rentals cost something like $10, plus and extra $5 for doing our hair. To consider the cost difference, consider how much it costs to rent a costume for a Renaissance Faire. 

Anyway... pictures!



Oh yes--after the hanbok cafe, we got into the palace for free. It was literally cheaper to rent the hanbok than it was to get a ticket into the palace, I might add. 

Anyway it was so frigid that I apparently didn't get any pictures of the palace... that, or my phone battery was dying, I don't remember. 

After that first trip to the palace, where it was freezing, we went to a Korean bathhouse to warm up.

Then we spent some time wandering around Seoul:

I have no idea what this was about, but it was easy to spot, so...

Clean and well-painted streets!

Pretty buildings!


This became my favorite Korean coffee shop. The name makes me giggle. 

We saw this out the window of our taxi, so we couldn't stop to see what this was. It was just sitting there in the middle of the city, and it makes such a contrast to the bright new buildings. 


This was a Catholic cathedral. We didn't go inside, because Mass was happening when we got there, but we did stop to take pretty pictures. 

We had a competition to see who could guess when this was built. When we finally found a sign saying when it was built, neither of us was close. 

Okay, this next picture made me smile. It looks like it's part of some super important building, right? 


It's part of a subway station that is also attached to an underground mall. 

And finally, the souvenir I should have bought and am kind of kicking myself for not buying: 

It's a Starbucks teddy bear in a hanbok! 

That was our first day in South Korea, but it was not our last... many more pictures to come!