Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Mud, Mud, and more Mud!!

Hello All!

Last weekend Darrell, my cousin Chelsea and I went to the very famous Boryeong Mud Festival. We decided to go for the day instead of the weekend because poor Darrell had to start intensives on Monday (he needed as much sleep as possible). We got up at 7am in order to get ready to take the 9:50am train to Daecheon (not to be confused with our Daejeon). This was my and Darrell’s first time on the slow train. It was no KTX…I mean I could actually see things go by in slow motion…haha, but it was a nice ride. As soon as we arrived in Daecheon we had to get our stuff and get off quickly because, like the KTX, the train does not wait for you. Quick as bunnies we were! However, we made it off and once we were in the train station we were being bombarded by our first Korean man saying “Hello…Where are you going?” to which Chelsea answered, “to the bathroom.” Haha…very nice!

After our trip to the bathroom we went hunting for a taxi driver. It was very easy and we pretty much didn’t have to tell him where we were going. We knew what he was thinking “oh, foreigners…to Mudfest.” After a 10 to 15 minute taxi drive we arrived at the beach and once again there was more bombarding by more Korean men asking us if we wanted a place to stay. They were all over disappointed when we kept saying “no”. It was time to fill our bellies with Korean food and then we were off to the beach.



The first we had to do was find a place to put the book bags. We were first going to find a hiding place in the bushes, but then we were thrilled to find lockers. In went all the bags, the clothes, shoes and jewelry…but the cameras were going to stay free. I must say I had no real desire to play in the mud, so I was in charge of the cameras. That way I could capture every express on their faces. We were ready and off to the mud – Well, Darrell and Chelsea went down to the ocean first to play in the waves, but THEN it was off to the mud!

Darrell and Chelsea went through so many different mud activities. First they went into the mud pool, where they would splash, role, and even hug loads of mud. It was a nice start! Then it was off to the mud jail where Darrell and Chelsea were imprisoned in a mighty jail where the ‘guards’ would throw mud at them. Poor Chelsea had her mouth open when this happened and she REALLY got a face-full :P While we were walking around, we saw so many different colors of mud. Chelsea wanted to take part in that color scheme, so she got herself painted blue. So many people were painted with so many colors – blue, green, purple and reddish-orange. So many ages were involved in getting the pretty colors. The youngest we saw was a very tiny baby boy who was being painted green. At first we was doing okay…until he looked at his body and saw green everywhere. He started to panic and cry, but his mother made them keep painting – kind lady! I am at least happy Chelsea did not panic and cry…although they would have made great pictures :P

It was an enjoyable day of mud! But soon the day was almost done for us and we were getting beat and sleepy. Which meant dear Darrell and Chelsea needed to get cleaned up. The only things I needed to clean off were my sneakers. They were filled with mud! I remember thinking to myself “maybe I should take them off” but I’m glad I didn’t. So many people were falling or slipping in the mud because it was EVERYWHERE! Even Darrell came close to falling a few times. A small boy even slid right into my legs…so yeah…it was everywhere. I am very pleased I left my sneakers on or I might have been falling with a very expensive camera and that would have been very VERY bad.

Darrell and Chelsea had one last round of mud paint and then they were off to the sea, the Yellow Sea for that matter. They were very salty when they came out, but at least most of the mud was gone…most of it. There was still some hiding like in the ears…yuck! So, the three of us salty and oily beings were off to homey Daejeon. We had a great time, plus we were also very pleased we only stayed for a day. It was a very windy day, so some of the attractions were not up due to the wind. Even the waves in the Sea were being watched by the lifeguards. Small children were being knocked over by the waves and even Chelsea had a little tumble. However it is a very nice day trip! We left at 9:50am to go there and we took the 6:55pm train back. Both train rides were about 2 hours long plus also needing to count a taxi ride back to our apartments. It was around 9:30pm when we made it home and a nice air conditioned apartment with a sweet hot shower was priceless.

There’s only one thing I can tell anyone who might be in Korea and interested to go: make sure you have a great bunch of people or a great set of friends to go with. There is nothing worse than going and not having fun because you went with the wrong people. The company you are with can make or break the trip. Suffice it to say we were in GREAT company!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

The postal system strikes again!

Well, okay...not exactly the postal system. A more appropriate title would probably be "Lack of adequate communication has caused a rather troublesome issue with the postal system"...but that would be far too long of a title for a post that's not bound to become a paper for some university professor who likes painstakingly accurate titles.

Here's the story: as you all know, we were packed up and moved across town a few months back to a new school and a new home, with a new mailing address. Shannon was ever so kind as to send out the address we were given to many of you, and even sent out some letters with that address on the return. Since that time, we've only received ONE piece of mail that was supposed to have found its way to us.

We asked our boss if she could look into it for us (to no success), and in the process, found out that the address we had for the new school (which is where we have our mail sent, in theory) has been wrong the entire time. Combine that with the fact that our school changed names shortly after we arrived, and Koreans don't seem to do the mail-forwarding thing, and it actually ends up being a small miracle that even that one piece of mail made it through.

We've done little bit more looking, and it seems that any international mail that can't be delivered gets held for about a month (but is impossible to retrieve without a tracking number), and then gets sent back across the pond...by ground. So, to anyone out there who may have replied to a letter, or may have sent us a care package since April, you'll likely see that returned to you over the next 8-10 weeks. We apologize profusely for the confusion (and believe me, we're still quite confused over it), but fortunately, at least the mail is not completely lost (again, in theory).

If you happen to be thinking to yourself, "wow, that's crazy. If only I could sent those two a letter..." fear not! We finally have a proper mailing address!

Please feel free to send any and all cards, letters and delicious Canadian snacks to us at:

Shannon & Darrell Nevers
DYB Edusol 1109
4th Floor Shin Sun Tower
Gwanjeo-dong
Seo-gu, Daejeon
South Korea

This is Darrell, signing off!