A few weekends ago, I visited Busan. I wanted to get out of Jeonju for a weekend, but it was still cold weather and I didn't want a repeat of Seoul, so I went south! Unfortunately while the KTX serves Jeonju now, there is no easy way on the train to get to Busan, so that meant an express bus. "Express" is a relative term, as it takes 3 and a half hours to Busan, plus another hour on Busan's subway to get from the bus terminal to downtown. By the time I checked into my hostel, it was 2:00 p.m. Since I only had about a day and a half in Busan,I wanted to do two major things: visit Yonggungsa temple and go to Spa Land.
First, though, the view from my hostel was amazing!
Anyway. Yonggungsa Temple from my hostel was about a 40 minute bus ride away. So again, by the time I actually got to do anything in Busan, it was already 3:00! This is a reconstructed (as with almost all things in Korea) Buddhist temple. I'm not very interested in "temple hopping" in Korea, but this is a unique temple in the fact that it's on the coast, and not secluded in the mountains. The view was beautiful.
To view the entire album, Click Here.
Some of the highlights are below!
After the temple, the next item on my list was Spa Land. Spa Land is a massive jjimjilbang (Korean sauna) attached to the World's Largest Department Store, Centum City's Shinsegae. It takes up three floors and is fed by natural hot springs. It was the most relaxing thing I've done in Korea! I went early enough in the day that I got a discount and also enjoyed less people at the facilities, it was starting to get busy by the time I left. After that, I headed back to Jeonju with one of the craziest bus drivers I have ever ridden with in Korea (and that's saying something).
The weeks since have been mostly uneventful. I have told my school this, so now I can comfortably say it in a public forum, but I am not renewing for another year. My last day is July 27th, which means almost less than four months! I still have a few places to go before I leave.
My mom is coming at the end of July, and we have a big trip planned! We are going to visit Korea, Japan, (hopefully) take the trans Siberian railroad across Russia, and then spend some time in Moscow and St. Petersburg before visiting parts of Eastern Europe. I also hope to meet up with my German host sister. I stayed with her family in 2005 when I visited there with my high school German class. Considering all of this, I will probably be back in the United States around mid-September. I will be around the Midwest for a little while, before hopefully moving out to Washington, D.C. and searching for a job there. I think what hindered my job search the most after college was the fact I was applying for entry level jobs from half a continent away. I think if I try again with a DC address and be available for interviewing the next day, I will have more luck. That's my hope at least.
For now I hope to enjoy my last months in Korea, visiting a few more sites, and then enjoying my trip with my mom before coming home to all the faces (and wet noses) I have missed!
Until then,
Karin