Showing posts with label Seoul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seoul. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Paralympic Volunteer Training Part II

Rode the KTX Train from Seoul Station to Jinbu, a smooth and efficient ride once I figured out the correct platform, car and seat! Thankfully, many Koreans are gracious and guide lost travelers seeking their way.

Next, we boarded a shuttle bus from Jinbu Station to Olympic Accreditation Center in Pyeong Chang. After verifying identity, taking a new photo and obtaining credentials to access venues, it was time to try on 8 pieces of our Paralympic volunteer uniform. North Face designed the colorful and warm waterproof uniform. We received a bonus of a commemorative Swatch watch by Omega.


Another bus and off to WelliHelli Ski Resort for volunteer training. Sure glad I brought some ham and cheese bread for lunch on the road!  We completed a multi-part online language and culture training before traveling to South Korea and the Paralympic Winter Games. A next step was group volunteer training for Korean and English-speaking volunteers at WelliHelli Youth Hostel.

President Lee Hee-beom of the Pyeong Chang Olympic Organizing Committee welcomed us on our first day with sincere appreciation for becoming The Passion Crew and contributing to success of the Games! A variety of speakers shared insights about Olympic history and evolution of Paralympic Sports, service manners and global etiquette, assisting individuals with disabilities and providing accommodations, safety and security of athletes and audience, gender equality and safe sport.





Our "Room 506" Clan learned to adapt and sleep Korean style, five men on pallets in a single spare room with small adjacent sink and toilet. We enjoyed the heated floors, which helped aging backs! At first, it seemed odd not to have furniture in the room, but I recalled times when much younger growing up in a small family home and sharing 2 bedrooms with four brothers. We practiced "Ari-Ari," meaning finding a way or a solution.


We joined other international volunteers from New Zealand, Brazil, Australia, Canada, Greece and Chile to share cafeteria meals of rice, dried fish, kim-chee, seawood soup, pickled radish and small sausages and learned to manage paper drinking cups! Pub visits were "mandatory" during evenings, a chance to get to know one another in a relaxed setting.

We feel excited about beginning individual work assignments tomorrow in seven different functional areas, including Game Information, Operational Support, Media, Technology, Protocol & Language, Sport and Medical Service. 







 














Friday, March 2, 2018

Seoul is for exploring NEW sights, sounds and tastes

Exceptional sights, sounds and tastes make exploring Seoul a feast for eyes, ears and mouth!  This peninsular nation strives to remember its past while embracing a fast-paced and viable future.










Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Insa-dong Market, much for shoppers!

Insa-dong Market in central Seoul presents a juxtaposition of the old and new. One may purchase handmade mulberry paper and goat hair brushes to create scrolls or landscapes. Find next door a gallery with contemporary art reinterpreting historic Korean objects. Fair trade items guarantee living wages. 

Polished brass fixtures enhance dark wood chests, reproductions of vintage Korean furniture. Enjoy a delicious lunch or dinner by selecting a bustling cafe in one of the narrow alleys. We did! 


Dongdaemun History and Culture Park, a unique experience in the heart of Seoul!




Dongdaemun History & Culture Park is a unique delight for visitors to Korea's largest city. On this site are excavations revealing the foundation of Igansumun Water Gate and Chiseong of Seoul Fortress, the earliest defenses of the city and numerous buildings from the Joseon Dynasty, including a military training ground. Inside the Dongaemun History Museum are displays with relics arranged to tell the park's chronology.



Rising above the historic ruins is an ultra-modern event hall and design gallery and landscaped gardens, which replaced Dongdaemun Baseball Stadium. Artists produce original pieces for sale and local crafts delight visitors. While enjoying sweet Americano coffee blend, we watched young women try new fashions, artfully posing for photos. 




MORE from VisitKorea.or.kr

Experiencing traditional healing at Solgaheon


My friendly guide Park Jay and I visited a traditional healing cafe operated by Jinsan Korean Herbal Pharmacy nearby busy Tongin Market. Our aim was to relax with medicinal herbal tea on a cool winter's day. I selected Ganggeun tea for muscular skeletal strength, knees or lower back problems. Hot tea was quietly served wth complementary healthy snacks of pumpkin seeds, dried jujube and light sweet grain cookies.

The pinewood scent and phytoncides of the building are attributed to promote healing, an antidote to the busy modern lifestyle. We quickly shed our coats inside the well-lit cafe made warm by forced heat beneath tile flooring, a modern take to the approach used by Joseon kings hundreds of years ago!

Some come to Solgaheon to rest in special red clay healing rooms or improve blood circulation in herbal foot baths. Others seek herbal treatments for disorders of digestion, circulation, muscular aches and low energy. It was time to leave all too soon!










Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Jogyesa Temple, a center of Korean Buddhism

Jogyesa Temple sits in the heart of modern Seoul, but retains its 14th Century heart. Today, it bears the status of head temple of Korean Buddhism, known by its three golden seated Buddhas in a center hall visited by the faithful. Grey-robed monks strolled temple grounds on their way to perform duties.







This colorful hall is the site of rituals, celebrations and ceremonies throughout the year. During our visit today, workers installed colorful paper lanterns in the ancient trees on the temple grounds. Buddha taught the path to enlightenment, free from daily suffering and miseries of mankind, may be achieved through the Eightfold Path -- believe right, desire right, think right, live right, do the right things, think the right thoughts, behave right and practice deep reflection. 






Nature is important to Buddhism. Five tree species, including teak, bush beech, iron wood, acacia and jackfruit, are integral to temple construction. Six kinds of grasses, fruits and flowers are used as holy water for monks, thoughtfully planted in gardens surrounding central temples, and given as tributes with prayers. Guests may register for a temple stay, lasting one or several days. This participatory experience teaches Buddhist precepts guided by monks, MORE




Changdeokgung Palace, a UNESCO World Heritage Centre

Once the sacred home of kings and queens of the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910), Changdeokgung Palace is a favorite stop for tourists to South Korea. The grounds of this secondary palace were carefully designed for harmony with nature and include walled gardens and ceremonial pavilions, reception areas and private residences.






Visitors enter courtyards through a series of three gates to view the administrative court, royal residential court and official audience court. Lovely wooden buildings with tiled hipped roofs rest atop granite platforms.




Injeongjeon Hall is the throne hall used for formal state events including ministerial audiences and receiving foreign envoys. Sacred animals atop the roof and boldly painted features in colors (blue, red, yellow, white and black) representing five elements proclaim the use of these buildings.



Blue-glazed roof tiles of Seonjeongjeon denote the council hall, a color reserved for the palace. Nakseonjae Hall was the residence of a favorite concubine and features door panels and floor covered with mulberry paper and an in-floor heating system.

Learn more about Changdeokgung Palace Complex

YouTube tour (2:28)

Monday, February 26, 2018

Arrival in Seoul for an Adventure

Safe arrival after a journey of 7,000 miles lasting more than 24 hours, an odyssey to be certain! Korean Airlines maintains high standards of customer service with careful attention to passenger safety.

After a lengthy wait to clear Customs, it was time to get down to serious business. Seoul is for foodies!

It's easy to make a colorful plate (or two) at Aria, an open restaurant with gracious staff tucked in lower level of the Westin Chosun - Seoul. Enjoyed many new tastes and some familiar as Banchan. Tomorrow will have new adventures!