Tuesday, November 26, 2019

NOV 4 - BUSAN TOUR DAY 2

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November 4th, Monday
            We had a lovely breakfast at the hotel.  Nice layout nice food not crowded.  All in a we’d rate it a 10.
            Sunny picked us up at 9 AM on the dot.  We drove off, eventually to see a Buddhist temple at the top of the mountains.  We made a stop, however, first at the BIFF center first.  It’s a fascinating building with the largest cantilever roof in the world.  There are posts that come out of the ground if a typhoon comes to town to keep the thing stabilized and stop it from blowing away.  The BIFF building is devoted to film.  There are film libraries, a number of screens, and lecture halls.  Really a fun building inside and out.  Hard to get photos of an enormous place, but I tried.


The square on the ground is a place where they put in poles to support/protect the huge roof of the place if a typhoon comes in/


View of the street behind BIFF from inside

Kind of looks like a regular movie theater.


Upcoming shows



View of BIFF from across the street.  You still can't get the scale of the place.

The photo above is a group of condos near BIFF.  Most of the Korean condo buildings looked like this.  Notice that they are numbered.  Since they are clustered in like groups, it must help you find your way home.

            Our next stop was Beomeosa Temple.  A Buddhist monastery/temple at the top of the local mountains.  Obviously, we drove, but a number of people took a metro, to a tram, or metro and hiked up the mountain.  Not an easy schlep.  Many of the classical Korean Buddhist temple pieces were there.  Three entrance gates, each with a different set of columns holding up the roof.  A large number of chapels around the main court yard – again with the Quan Yin the most popular.  The roofs set against the mountain peaks were beautiful, as were the trees turning colors.





The top of the roof has a design which we saw all over Korea.  It's supposed to represent a bird's wing.

We are standing near one of the temples with Sunny.  She is a wonderful guide!

            We drove down the mountain and our next stop Sunny kept calling the “lego village”.  It’s Korean name is Gamcheon.  It began as a slum area where people displaced by the Korean War built small railroad flats on a hillside.  Around 2007 the city? Locals? Decided to pretty things up and each owner of these small places painted them a different color.  The result is delightful.  We walked around the rim of the place and through some of the house-lets.  It’s become an artists’ center and some of their works were on display.  Very interesting place.



Notice the kimchee jars here too.

Narrow alleyway in the cluster of buildings

Views from the top toward the sea.



The sculpture above (Le Petit Prince) is a very popular spot to get your photo taken.  The girls were doing just that - notice the Hanbok clothes.

            We then stopped for another one of our enormous lunches.  This time it was a wonderful Korean BarBQue.  Delicious salads, pickles, and the meat was excellent.  It got cooked for us which was also very elegant.  Looks like were headed for another Whopper Jr tonight.  OOOF.
            After lunch we drove to Jagalchi Market which is the sea food market in Busan.  We started upstairs among the dried fishes.  I was amazed to find myself enjoying dried abalone!  Dried fish skin!  Who knew?  We then went downstairs to see the tanks of fish.  The sea worms were there (One of the few things I remember from our last trip to Korea), but so were tanks and tanks of every kind of fish you could think of – flat fish, rays, eels, parrot fish, mackerel, cod, and a myriad of fish I didn’t recognize.  There is a long thin fish that Sunny called a sword fish (not the billed fish I thought but thin like a sword).  Fish sellers were in the building and all over the place outside too.  Kind of amazing.  We then wandered down a long alley way called the Gukje Market (International Market).  They sold food, and about everything else you could imagine.  A local doughnut – round but filled with nuts.  Looked pretty good, but I was still stuffed from lunch.  They also sold fish cakes on a stick.  To the unaware (like ourselves) it looks like fried doughnut – but it’s fish cakes of different kinds.
Every kind of fish you can imagine was dried and out for sale.



Really fresh.

The sea side close to the market

Fish cakes are one of the local specialities.  The few we had were quite good.



            Although that was the official end of our tour, Sunny offered to take us to the sky trail off the FiveSix Island.  We had to put booties on our feet and we could walk over glass plates to the end of a pier.  The view was gorgeous and the weather was perfect.  Beautiful end to the day.  We said good bye to Sunny and the driver.  This was the best tour I think we’ve had.


Both our local beaches are visible from here.

            After we sat in the room for a bit to rest – then off for our Burger King feast.  After dinner we decided to get a beer.  Found a likely spot.  There were dinosaur design on the table.  Beers were supposed to be $3 for 300 cc.  Somehow they only cost $2?  Oh well, good deal for beers.  Went to a Post Office Bank ATM and somehow couldn’t figure out how to get money.  We have a receipt – but no cash.  We’ll have to go back when the bank/post office opens tomorrow and hope they speak enough English to understand “cancel, cancel, cancel”.

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