Saturday, February 28, 2015

Seollal in Seoul part 1

First, I want to comment that it has been six months since I came to Korea (in October!) Wow! Can you believe it? I can't. At the beginning it felt like I had eternity in Korea, the whole year stretching out before me and now it kinda feels like wtf I still want to do/see so many things! Where did all that time go I had 6 months ago?! Where is it? So yeah, I am stoked that I only have 6 months till I get to be at home on the wonderful island with my family and friends, but I'm also super sad that in 6 months I'll be leaving this awesome country and all the wonderful people I've met here, that will be really difficult.

Okay, so moving on to Seollal and Seoul! First, I guess you're wondering what Seollal is. It is Korean new year. It happens at the start of the Lunar calendar much like the Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese new years do. It is a time when Korean's go home to spend time with there families and eat yummy Korean foods. They also wear hanbok which is the traditional Korean clothing. They are really pretty looking. So for new years because everyone needs to travel home and it's an important holiday. The day before and the day after Seollal are also national holidays (at least I think that's why? Correct me if I'm wrong about this guys!) This year Seollal was on a Thursday which meant I got the Wednesday and the Friday off as well, which leads perfectly into the weekend giving me five days off! 

So, I did almost go to Japan for this holiday with some different friends, but I decide for the sake of the bank account that Seoul would be the better trip. I was very happy with my choice. I went with my Canadian friend Julianne. We booked a hostel near the Seoul station (so it would be easy to get around) and decided the KTX (railway) would be the fastest and most comfortable way to travel and to us North American's it is fast, I think it took around 3hrs, maybe just under? I wasn't sure. It was super easy to book too. You just go online and book everything for the train you want and then take the information in with your passport to the ticket office on the day of your departure and they give you the tickets. So easy! 

The train also had clean washrooms, comfortable seating, wifi (but only if you downloaded the app which I couldn't get on my phone for some reason) and snacks if you wanted to eat something. The only mistake I made the first day was forgetting to bring water so I was really thirsty by the time I got to Seoul. Seoul was pretty empty when we arrived because everyone was busy heading home for the holidays. The train station was crazy though, in both Changwon and Seoul station. So many people traveling that day. 

Our hostel was really cute and had kind of a school theme. I liked the hostel immediately, it had a really home-y, comfortable feeling and the staff was really helpful and friendly. In order to save money we got one room with a double bed which was perfect for us. The only thing I would've changed for next time was getting the bathroom attached to the room because the bathrooms in the hostel were down the hall and really really small so you had to either hang your clothes on the door and risk getting them wet or leave them outside and risk someone seeing you. And no, you couldn't walk down the hall in a towel because in Korea they just use hand towels, not the giant ones we're used to. 

The first day we were there we quickly dumped our stuff at the hostel and went in search of food. We decided to try a popular Japanese fast food chain called Lotteria it is owned by a huge company that has pretty much everything, it's huge in Asia. The burgers were tasty as fast food usually is and after we took a rest at the hostel and then went to meet Julianne's friend. We ended up eating again then going to Myeongdong which is a really popular shopping area. It is insanely crowded with stores, mostly clothing, beauty and shoes stores, but some other things thrown in for good measure. It is a shoppers dream. Also, when I say beauty stores I mean there was one every other store... it was actually insane. There were beauty stores for one brand (usually more than one in that area) then there were also beauty stores for multiple brands...but they were usually the same brands as the other beauty stores that were for brands... so you basically had the same beauty products everywhere. 

Plus every time you walked by the beauty store there was a girl trying to get you to come in. Lots of them had free samples, but you only got them if you went inside. I managed pretty good self control and only went in one (which happened to be having a 1+1 sale on my favourite hand cream!) After the craziness of Myeongdong we were exhausted so we went back to our hostel via subway and got some snacks then holed up with some television and food to prepare ourselves for Gyeongbokgung the royal palace in Seoul! 

No comments:

Post a Comment