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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Jeollabuk-do Trip - Day 2: Daedunsan

March 2, the second day of our trip, we left Jeonju at 9 a.m. and headed to Daedunsan Provincial Park. Our guidebook told us there was a cable car up part of Daedun mountain, which we really wanted to check out. Since I'd gotten quite cold the evening before, we made sure to wear warm clothes and we were sure glad we had by the end of the day. After an hour and a half of beautiful mountainous scenery, the bus arrived at the park and we headed straight up the small hill to the cable car. The view of the surrounding area was so pretty, and we took many pictures from the cable car and from the observation platform once we got out. Then we got serious and started our hike up to the peak. And very soon we were really glad we'd stopped to get the pictures before starting our hike because rain clouds rolled in about 10 minutes into our hike, and the view was all foggy-white after that. Except for the disappointment of not getting to take very many scenery pictures during our hike up and from the peak, we loved the hike, which included a suspension bridge and a long, long set of narrow stairs going pretty much up in nothingness until we reached the top of a rock cliff. After that we followed a trail made of huge rocks piled into a stairway and finally had to use ropes to pull ourselves to the peak so as not to slip back down the snowy and icy trail. The misty rain turned to light snow for the last 15 minutes or so of the hike, but by that point I was so boiling I loved having the snow hit my warm cheeks.

After a short rest and taking some photo beside the monument at the top, we hiked back down to the bottom of the mountain, which took us about 2 hours. This was mainly because the trail was stairs-made-of-boulders rather than an ordinary dirt trail. For most of it I had to step down with one foot and then have my other foot join the first on the same step. And add to that the rain making the rocks slippery. Anyway, it was a fun hike. The only bad part was that once we'd completed the hike and taken all the pictures we wanted to at the little tourist village at the bottom, we found out that we'd have to wait another two and a half hours for the next bus back to Jeonju. We ate the food we brought in the nearly-empty-and-made-totally-of-concrete-with-no-insulation-and-doors-that-didn't-totally-shut bus station, and when Jonathan commented that my chopstick skills seemed to have gotten worse (they're rather iffy at the best of times) I realized that my hands were pretty much completely frozen, even inside my gloves. So we packed up our stuff and set off in search of hot chocolate. The best we found was some pumpkin tea bags that didn't sound very appetizing in a gift shop, so we decided to chance the fancy-looking hotel and were pleasantly surprised to find a very warm and completely empty dining room. The lady at the hotel front desk brought us warm water and when we learned there was no hot chocolate on the premises we decided to go with her suggestion of traditional Korean tea. Wow, was it ever amazing! It tasted like something I recognized, but I never could figure out what. (Actually, the taste kind of reminded me of a good spice smell from my grandparents kitchen.) At the bottom of the teacups were orange chunks of something that looked kind of fruit-like, but we had no idea what. In any case, it was delicious and did a good job to warm us up. Then we stayed there talking until the lady turned the heater off (which must have been a sign for us to leave) and the room cooled way down, almost to the bus-station temperature, it seemed to me. So we took the hint and headed back to the bus station where we invented many new exercises for keeping warm (some of which involved pretending to be various forest creatures in a crude version of charades). I tried to make some origami from some cough candy wrappers Jonathan had, but my hands got too cold again. FINALLY, the bus came and we scampered on it, so happy for the warmth. Needless to say, when we got back to our room I jumped under the covers and stayed there for the rest of the night. Ahhh, so glad for warm, fuzzy blankets!
- Ali

The map of the mountain we hiked - we took the tram up from the lower center of the map but hiked all the way down
Wooden statues that greeted us as we walked up to the cable car
A display showing the different cables used on the tram
Heading up the mountain (you can view the peak and monument just to the left of the middle of the picture)
Ali
Nearing the top of the tramway
The "trail" immediately begins going steeply up
Suspension bridge
Ali on the bridge
Jonathan on the bridge
Looking back after crossing (and climbing a bit more)
We are heading to that stairway on the left
Some handy rock stairs
Finally arriving at the stairway - it's pretty steep!
Another shot showing the cliff we'll be ascending
Ali climbing
Jonathan on his way up
This is what the stairs looked like standing up - that's how close to my (Jonathan's) face they were
This is the top of the stairs - barely enough headroom!
Quite the stairway
Everything here is all fenced in - they don't want people falling off I guess
After hiking a good ways further up, and getting to the main ridge, we found snow!
We must have been hiking on the southern side of the mountain before.
The ropes were actually helpful, since the snow was packed into ice in many places
At the summit!
Ali celebrates :)
Even though it was a complete whiteout up there between the fog and snow, there was still a nice view
Mistical view on the way down
About to pass under the suspension bridge - we could hardly see it through the fog
Back at the base of the tram that we didn't ride down, we watch a car coming in
All the light poles along this section of road had ducks on them
Another view - not the mountain we went up but a nearby one
Panorama from the parking lot - the part we hiked is just left of center, where it looks the most rugged (click to view larger)
Here you can see the tramway, and the cliffs above, but not the summit, it never did come out of the clouds
The road - a very scenic drive
We did it! :)
This traditional Korean tea helped us to warm up afterward (does anyone know what kind it is?)

For pictures and commentary about our other day trips in Jeollabuk-do, click the links below.
Day 1: Muju
Day 3: Byeonsan Bando

4 comments:

  1. your photos and trips are just so fascinating.
    and i will guess it is mango tea.
    or ginger.
    or peach.

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  2. I think.. It is Youjacha. 'Cha' means a tea. Youja seems like a mandarin. And it contains vitamin C more than lemon. It is good for a cold. You have to bring a pair of chains when you climbing the mountain covered with snow. Or, dangerous!! (Please check grammar. KKK) -Tarjan-

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  3. What lovely pictures. Seems you are having quite the variety of experiences. Good going. Looks very interesting and exciting. Sorry, I know nothing about tea.

    ReplyDelete
  4. hope to visit jeonju hanok village.

    http://www.koreabackpackers.net/

    ReplyDelete