Category Archives: Adventure

This is what my life is because I choose to view it that way. But usually reserved for the more exciting moments I ramble about

Hopefully This Will Help Spruce My Den Up

As part of my studies for my MLIS degree I am taking a course on website design. This should force me to take the time to learn HTML5 and CSS, which might help with actually putting the round tuit I have to use in getting my den’s appearance more the way I want it.
:D

I will still have to learn PHP without the external motivator of grades, which may or may not be a good thing. We shall see if I can manage that in addition to my other classes and all the writing I hope to do.

You will probably hear from me a bit more in part because I’ll have to be rambling as part of my assignments for this class. But also because I feel confident that I have developed enough of a routine to start up being a bit more regular about when I ramble.
:creative:

The Return of the Kitsune

Direlda has returned to his den in an attempt to rescue his ramblings from the clutches of Jabber the Procrastinator.

Little does Direlda know that the MUNDANE EMPIRE has secretly begun construction on a new ironclad routine even more powerful than the first dreaded Class Schedule.

When completed, this ultimate program will spell certain doom for the small band of storytellers struggling to restore insanity to the Library…

What that tells you is true, from a certain point of view. :p

For today does mark the return of this kitsune to his den. :D   It has been a long while, but I have grown in my time wandering.  I am armed now with a cork board, index cards, pushpins, and pens and markers of various colours.  So I should be able to work out a system and hold myself to it.

Today also marks the completion of another orientation session for the Master in Library and Information Science program that I have started.  The Chair of the department said, “You’re all going to be librarians, but you’re not all going to work in a library” and that part of my job is to “make humanity more human.”  I think I’m going to like it here.

This program may also give me the tools needed to finally get my den looking the way I want it to.  Or at least give enough of a kick to the tail to send my scampering to the resources to teach myself how.  The Chair made a spontaneous example for how career paths change of a person who wanted to do storytelling ending up in web design.  And that has got me thinking on how to integrate the two.  Because I do want the appearance of my den to convey a story as much as my ramblings do.  Stories are everywhere.

Speaking of stories, I have a short story being published in the Rainfurrest 2014 convention anthology! Whooo! :D   One of my artist friends, NovaWuff, did an illustration to go along with it that should also be in the anthology.

My story is called Neural Enrichment.  Here is a blurb-in-progress:

After saving for months on his hagwon English teacher’s salary, John finally had enough to afford a cybernetic implant.  He had hoped that his new Rycorp implant would allow him to fully enjoy all that the Korean Technocracy had to offer.  Instead it turned him into an anthropomorphic fox and now bombards his mind with adverts.  John is desperate to shut the world out of his head and is willing to seize any opportunity to do so even if it risks what humanity he has left.

I don’t know the cost of the anthology, but I do know that all proceeds will be going towards a charity of sorts (I think it’s the Clouded Leopard Project, but it could be the Cougar Mountain Zoo).  I also don’t know the content of the other stories aside from all being cyberpunk, but I do know that the anthology I’m in has a content rating of G to PG-13.  Come the evening of September 25 I will be able to give you more information.

That is all the exciting news I have for you today!  But I will be around more now. :)

Count the shadows.

I Have Scaled These City Walls…

Lifted some stones, saw the skin and bones
Of a city without a soul
I went out walking

The trenches dug within our hearts
And mothers, children, brothers, sisters
Torn apart.

“You love this town
Even if that doesn’t ring true
You’ve been all over

A city lit by fireflies.”

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Adventures in Jeju: Don’t Feed the Dragon

The last day found us splitting the party.  I know, it makes things more complicated, but they didn’t feel up to adventuring to Yongduam (용두암 “Dragon Head Rock”) and I wanted to see it.  So my wonderful wife and I took our leave of our companions after breakfast.  I don’t think they traveled very far from where we left them (until it was time to go to the airport).  In contrast, we traipsed along and under streets, through parks, and over streams in the course of our adventuring.

It was quite the walk to Yongduam!  We even passed by part of the airport on our trek.  Eventually we walked along the top of Yongyeon (용연 “Dragon ?”), a narrow gorge.  The stream below was a beautiful teal, but bits of trash drifted down it.  I wish I could be surprised.  Yet my time in Korea (and America) has shown me time and time again that people will litter pretty much anywhere, even in places of beauty, and public places suffer for it (I was writing this in a notebook while waiting for a bus and counted several cigarette butts).  Perhaps something similar to the principles of Leave No Trace needs to be taught in schools starting at an early age as well as encouraging more responsibility.  I’ll stop myself here, as this is a rabbit trail I would run a long ways down.

We followed the gorge to the sea.  The coastal road took us past many seafood restaurants.  It would have been fun to eat at one and sample some of the seafood caught locally but we weren’t hungry at the time.  We knew we had arrived at Yongduam when a viewpoint opened up before us on the seaward side of the road.  Some fishermen were fishing below us.  I know there’s a lot of waiting and downtime involved in fishing, but from where we were standing it definitely looked like one of the fishermen was resting and not paying attention to the poles.

While we could see planes landing at the airport a ways to our left and the massive hotels on the coast far to our right, the view of Yongduam wasn’t the best (it didn’t quite resemble a dragon’s head).  So we hiked down a nearby trail to get a different vantage point.  And then we could see the dragon’s head.  It really does look like a dragon rearing up.  There are several versions of the legend surrounding this unfortunate dragon who was turned to stone.  One has the dragon as an emissary of the dragon king sent to gather the elixir of youth from Hallasan and another has the dragon as grabbing on its flight to heaven the sacred jade belonging to the guardian of Hallasan.  Either way, these versions end with the guardian of Hallasan striking the dragon with an arrow and causing it to become transfixed in the spot where it fell.  Yet another version says that this was a cocky young dragon who longed to live in heaven rather than under the sea (since that is where the dragon king is often said to have his palace).  Despite the dragon king’s warnings against leaving the sea, the young dragon set out to fly to heaven.  But when his head emerged from the sea, his black body turned to stone.

Speaking of black dragons, 2012 was not just the year of the dragon in the Chinese/Korean zodiac.  It was also the year of the water (or black) dragon.  I just recently learned this, but in addition to the twelve zodiac animals (which left out the fox), there are also five elements/colours, making a larger sixty year cycle for each animal and element combination.  So I guess we picked a good year to visit Yongduam.

Besides the trash scattered about the spot where we got the best views of Yongduam, the other disappointing thing was that a Ramada hotel built a fair distance away lined up almost perfectly with the stony dragon.  So several of my pictures have an unsightly monstrosity intruding into them.  After a few shots where the hotel frustrated me with its presence, I decided to frame it in the dragon’s open mouth—they should know better than to feed wild dragons!

:lol:

After finding an angle to take pictures of Yongduam without the hotel in the background we set out to explore more of Jeju city.  We crossed over Yongyeon on a suspension bridge, passed by a pavilion located on the spot where people in centuries past would come for music and poetry, and wandered through the central waterfront.  We discovered a mural that included a pair of wings for someone to stand between.  So my wife went ahead and did so!  At some point we stopped for lunch, which included mandu.  Mmm… mandu.  Our wanderings then took us along a seawall, though most of it was cordoned off at the time for what looked like repair/touchup work.

One of the places we stopped at was a replica of a Chinese refugee ship.  In short, refugees from China arrived in Jeju after sailing from China and strove to start a new life (I think they were escaping following the communist takeover).  It was a decent exhibit.  I tried to find the bending machine that a sign told me was there.  But apparently it was hidden from vulpine eyes–no bending techniques for me…  And outside of the replica ship were small models of a variety of ship types, which included a Viking ship and the Santa Maria for some reason.

Leaving the ships behind, we wandered up Sanjicheon, where we watched some birds in the stream.  Then came the rather empty covered shopping street.  There were plenty of stores, but there weren’t many people—I don’t blame them, as it wasn’t exactly the warmest of days.  We decided to venture a look down into the underground arcade.  People bustled about the few hundred shops.  At one end we found a small café and ordered honey bread and strawberry smoothies.  They were scrumptious with the honey bread being so soft and sweet and absolutely delectable.  I would have to put that honey bread on the highlights of our trip (it was that good).

:hungry:

The honey bread didn’t last, though we savored every bite.  Once it was fully devoured we set out for the airport.  The bus stop we waited at was near Gwandeokjeong (관덕정), which is supposedly the island’s oldest wooden structure.  Our guidebook says that it was built in 1448 and reconstructed in 1970, so I’m not really sure how old the structure was.  We also could have wandered in the old administrative complex, but as it looked rather similar to the other Joseon-era buildings we’ve seen, we decided to skip it and catch a bus to the airport.  At the airport we met up with our other party members and had a little to eat while waiting for our flight.  Some flights were delayed or cancelled due to the wintry weather, but ours didn’t seem to be affected too much.

The flight back to mainland Korea was pleasant.  When the plane landed it didn’t taxi to the gate because of the snow.  So we waited on the plane for buses to come to take us to the terminal.  It was rather exciting!  After that came the standard baggage claim and then airport limousine to Jukjeon.  I was a little worried that the bus would have trouble getting us home, but it didn’t, though we did have a cold walk at the end of our bus rides.  At least we had some clothes suited for colder weather that we could put to use!

So that was our Jeju trip!  I hope you enjoyed my recounting of our adventures.  Below are some pictures.

Adventures in Jeju: It’s Rainier Underground

Rain poured down on our umbrellas as we went in search of breakfast.  The rain had been expected, so we had already planned to spend the day at a lava tube and then maybe a museum, as that would keep us dry.  But as Robert Burns said, “The best-laid schemes o’ mice an’ men / gang aft agley.”

Little did we know, as we ate breakfast at Paris Baguette (a Korean bakery chain that doesn’t always have the best-tasting baked goods…), that our plans would prove leaky.  So we ate our bread not worrying about what the day would bring.  (At this point I shall also point out that rainier in the title refers to the adjective and not the mountain in Washington.)

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Adventures in Jeju: Magnets

Our fourth day of adventure found us in transit from one hotel to another. Before we left the hotel in Seogwipo City, we video called my wife’s siblings to participate in the treasure hunt they had set up for their parents.  We had one of their clues, so it was sort of important that we did so, though we also managed to eat breakfast at the same time.

The hotel we were going to was in Jeju City.  But rather than going directly to Jeju City, we took the scenic route.  There is a bus that travels along the eastern coast highway and we hopped on it, as we wanted to stop by Seongsan Ilchulbong (성산일출봉 aka Seongsan Sunrise Peak), which is on the southeastern coast.

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Adventures in Jeju: Climbing out of this World

This was perhaps my favorite day of our whole trip, for we climbed Hallasan (한라산).  Though it wasn’t quite the departure from civilization as other hikes I’ve gone on, it was enough to feed my soul some of what I had been missing surrounded by the towering buildings of urban and suburban Korea.  And the snow-encrusted trees transported me to the worlds within my imagination.

:creative:

But before we made it to the mountain, we journeyed in search of a bus in the shadowlands.  And that journey didn’t start until after my wife and I had called our parents on their Christmas.  I enjoyed being able to say hello and recounting some of what we had done so far.  Yet the time soon came for us to say farewell and set off to find a bus.

We wandered toward a traffic rotary in the northern part of Seogwipo, since that is where a bus was supposed to be, though once we found the rotary we had to figure out where the bus actually stopped, as it wasn’t at any of the bus shelters lining the sides of the rotary.  Fortunately there were some Koreans who sort of comprehended our English.  They pointed us a little south of the rotary to a bus “terminal” (it was more of a parking lot with a ticket booth nestled against a building).  We managed to find a bus that would take us to Jungmun, which was in the right direction.

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Adventures in Jeju: Chocolate and Seashells

We awoke to a wonderful Christmas morning.  There weren’t many presents, as we were traveling, but it was rather pleasant to have a relaxing morning with my fabulous wife!  One of the presents I will mention is the soundtrack to the recent film of The Hobbit.  I was a happy as a hobbit at an all-you-can-eat buffet.

:D

Once we had our Christmas breakfast (bought the day before from bakeries) and listened to rousing music, we set off on an adventure.  The start of which consisted of asking the hotel receptionist to call a taxi for us so that we could go to the chocolate museum several towns away.  Our party of four assembled, our transit secured, and our weapons, I mean cameras, ready, we embarked to places unknown (to us).

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Adventures in Jeju: Arrival

Just sit right back and you’ll smash my tail, as I tell of a Christmas trip.  That started from this freezing place aboard a heated bus.  My mate is a clever vixen and I am rather silly.  Two others joined us that day for a six day tour, a six day tour.  The weather started getting warm, our travel was done.  If not for the space in our bags, we would have sweated.  We would have sweated.  The adventure on the ground of this pleasant Korean isle with Direlda, his mate too, a history teacher and his wife, the video camera, the notebook and many bags here on Jeju Isle.

:p

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Brief Vacation and an Anecdote

So I’m going on vacation for a few days and I haven’t quite finished writing about my adventures in Jeju over Christmas (nor have I started on the 2013 Special Olympics Winter Games adventure or a few other adventures between now and then)… ^_^;

Hopefully I’ll have those up sooner rather than later!  And while I will elaborate on my adventures this past Monday, I will tell you an amusing thing that happened to me.

I was wandering around Yeouido park, taking pictures and video, when a Korean woman wearing a bright orange vest ran up to me and asked if I had a mission card. O.O

What I heard at first was ‘admission card,’ since she looked like she might be someone working at the park, so I was a bit nervous, since I hadn’t seen anything indicating that I needed to pay to be in the park.  But as she repeated her query, I realized that she thought I might have some sort of mission for her.  Probably because a foreign fox stands out in Korea when they let their ears and tail be visible in public. :p

More and more Koreans in orange vests started showing up around me and they all wondered the same thing–did I have a mission for them?  After a while someone in their group spoke enough English to understand that I was just in the park for fun and that I didn’t have any mission for them.  While I’m glad I was truthful, a part of me wishes I had thought up something random to tell them to do…

I kept walking and a few minutes later two Korean men in orange vests came running up and asked if I had a mission for them. I told them no, so then one asked if I was a cosplayer, to which I responded, “sort of.”  Then they were off looking for whoever it was that had a mission for them.

Perhaps a minute later I was met by another group of Koreans in orange vests! And again was asked the same question. O.O   I told them no, but then they asked to take a picture with me.  Not sure if they understood or not, I reiterated that I didn’t have a mission for them, but they still wanted a picture with me.  So I agreed.

Two of them created two loops by linking their arms and had me put my legs through the loops.  They then hoisted me up and posed while a random person walking by was asked to take the picture.  They took a few pictures and then left.  At some point during that time I heard or saw mention that it was for the TV show, Running Man ( 런닝맨 ), so I’m fairly certain they were on the show.  I didn’t see any video cameras trailing any of the groups, but perhaps I’ll recognize the people whenever the episode airs.