The
next day we headed to Chamdeongung Palace which was right by where we
were staying. It was huge! We barely walked through a quarter of the
entire place and the architecture was so intricate you could have taken
photos all day. After leaving we roamed round a few random streets
before realising that despite our early start, Seoul doesn't really open
until 10:30am. This was explained on our last day when we left for the
airport at 5am and the streets where still full of people at the street
restaurants from the night before.
We
headed to Insadong first and did some serious damage in Étude House,
where I found the holy grail of liquid eyeliners. Yay for Korean makeup!
I spotted a jipangyi stall which I was so happy about. It's soft serve
ice cream in a corn-puff cone, the difference being its J-shaped and
about a foot long. Tasty but the most awkward thing to eat when it's
melting from both ends. Later we carried on towards Myeongdong which I
loved. Every shop was blasting different kpop songs and it was the
cheesy bright Korea I'd expected to begin with. Although I restrained my
singing and dancing for Haruka's sake, I did treat myself to a SHINee
album (or two) because you're only in Seoul once, right?! On that note,
almost everyone under the age of 25 looked like they could be an idol,
so Haruka and I were very happy "people watching", even if it was just
cute guys.
We
both wanted to make the most of the street food too, so when we were
there we for some tteokbokki and a very random combination of a hot dog,
wrapped in bread and chips that was deep fried. After that we got the
cable car up to Namsam Tower, and the views of Seoul were stunning in
both daylight and night. It's always shown in Korean dramas as a date
place, but I swear Haruka and I were the only people there not on a
date. The first of a few romantic locations we accidentally visited
together during our travels!
The
next day was all about the kpop! I managed to drag Haruka along to
Gangnam to see the buildings of two of the biggest entertainment
companies there, SM and JYP. Lots of picture taking ensued, we even
chilled in a nearby Dunkin' Donuts for a bit in hope of seeing someone
famous, but no luck. We ventured into SMTown Atrium which was literally
heaven for me, with 5 floors of SHINee, Girls Generation, f(x) and even
a themed cafe.
Afterwards
we met Haruka's friend Jay for dinner before he had to go back to the
U.S. Military base. It was great having him with us because we could
finally go places without English/pictures on their menus, getting to
finally try Korean bbq, soju and bingsu. Since we were in Gangnam, I did
have to embarrass Haruka when we got a picture at the dance stand,
however I didn't dance too much...
Day
3 couldn't have been any more different to the day before. I've been
wanting to visit the DMZ (De-Militarised Zone) between North and South
Korea for so long, and was super disappointed that the tours weren't
running due to MERS. Even though we couldn't go to the Joint Security
Area and technically step foot in North Korea, tours were still running
to parts of the DMZ. We went to Imjingak which was so surreal, as the
barbed wire fences and flags, accompanied with the bad weather made it
seem very eerie. Bombs were also being detonated as part of a military
exercise in the distance too which made it seem all the more real.
Afterwards we went to the unification observatory and got a chance to be
within 2km of North Korean land, even seeing some housing through
binoculars.
Later
that evening we decided to go to the Han River, since I wanted to see
the rainbow fountain show at Banpo Bridge. Turns out we majorly
misjudged the size of Seoul and the chill timetable of the trains, so
totally missed the show. It wasn't all bad though, we fell in love with
Seoul all over again when we walked along the river and just spent time
watching the world go by, filled with lots of people hanging out and
doing the same as us on a Friday night.
On
our final day we met up with Dongho, a guy we met at Keele last year
who's now doing his military service. That was a surreal experience for
all of us since we never thought we'd see eachother again after he left!
We went for hotpot and got to try jeon, before Haruka and I headed to
Hongdae.
Since
this is the university area, there were a lot more international
students around, the only thing I didn't really like about it since they
were very overpowering. However, I did love the fact as soon as we
arrived a group of super cute college boys were dancing kpop group
dances on the street, and also playing a song that reminds Haruka, Jane
and I sooooo much of first year!
After
a failed attempt at finding the Hello Kitty cafe there (I found its old
location, but the directions to the new one were awful), we ended up
walking the streets after a few drinks rather than going to the clubs
like we expected. We stumbled across two buskers who were absolutely
adorable, and after dedicating songs to us in broken Englih, we got a
picture with them. Sadly forgot to get any of their information, but it
was a perfect end to a perfect trip.
Even
though I couldn't read any Korean, I've never felt more welcomed in a
country. The people were unbelievable helpful, along with even being
apologetic that they couldn't speak English, or for assuming I could
speak Korean after using a few phrases. Five days wasn't nearly long
enough, and I know I've only just scratched the surface. Haruka and I
both said the night we arrived how we could move there tomorrow, and I
think Seoul will definitely be our meeting point after uni is over, even
though it's not exactly in the middle! So thank you South Korea, for
being more than I ever expected you to be. Not being just part of my
trip to "get it out of my system", but making me want to explore you
more.
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