Sunday, 19 July 2009

DMZ visit

All that was needed to convince me I'd travelled back in time and was at a stope entrance at Grootvlei gold mine back in South Africa was the sound of the drills and the rattle of the cocopans as they trundled ore out, but then reality struck home - I was standing at the point where South Koreans had intercepted a North Korean tunnel dug under the Demilitarized Zone, or DMZ.

North Korean soldiers or slave labour had dug, chiselled and blasted this tunnel and three others under the 4 km wide stretch of border with the intention of either infiltrating or attacking the South. That is, the South Koreans have discovered four tunnels - there may be some they have not found.

We headed down the tunnel from this point to the place where the last (or first, depending on your point of view) of three barriers blocked the tunnel. A steel door, barbed wire and a small window through which you could see the next barricade. The thought of the recent saber-rattling that had been done by NK suddenly did not seem so far away or unlikely to erupt into real warfare.

This peaceful fountain, with its oak tree and bushes, stands outside the barracks and post where Korean soldiers keep watch over the valley. On a clear day you can see all the way to the NK watchpost on the other side. The Korean on the stone of this fountain, 망항수, means watchport.

The juxtaposition of this buddhist bell tower and the camouflage brings home just how commonplace it has become - over fifty years of watching each other across the border, at times the leaders talk and then they don't, but we watch and live our lives here.

Here I am under the ROK sign on the wall of the barracks.

The visit was surreal on many levels, not least of which was the thought that tourists come here every day, looking out across the border at what is, after all, merely a prolonged cease-fire. I think this is what I sensed that day - the Korean war is by no means over. I pray that it soon will be, and that the unification so many Koreans dreams of will become a reality.

Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Water, water everywhere...


No, this is not some weird moonwalk or some more Caribbean Bay fun - it's a long exposure taken to try and capture the water flood that followed on two days of solid, and I mean solid, rain!

The bus we were on spent 40 minutes here as people argued about whether we could move from the high ground we were on here, to the lower parts and get through the water.
Here is a video showing the bus driver and several passengers and police arguing. The telegraph pole at the end is significant - normally you can see about 2 meters of black and yellow stripes. Eventually we did edge our way through, passing a less fortunate bus canted at 45 degrees in a ditch!


Sunday, 5 July 2009

Caribbean Bay

So after the last weekend's fun, Sean and I dragged a reluctant Christine (so it was mom and the  two kids!) to Caribbean Bay. Up above you get a panoramic view of one of the pools and the supertube (watertube?) winding its way down the hill. I tell you, the one thing that is tiring is climbing those steps to build up the potential energy so that you can translate it into kinetic energy - talk about physics in action.

Speaks for itself, doesn't it?

This is the bottom of the Boomerango slide, and a fraction of the crowd that was waiting to ride it.

One of the fun experiences - having a bucket containing about a 1000 liters of water dumped on you! Luckily it splashes onto a little balcony of evenly spaced boards first!

The wave pool, from the deep end. No, I'm not in the water, there is a ledge here. You'll notice that all the people here at the deep end are in life jackets - apparently Koreans either cannot swim or are too lazy to tread water. So you hang there in your life jacket, bobbing up and down like a duck as the waves pass beneath you...give me Clifton, or Blouberg Strand, or Jeffrey's Bay any day!

Wednesday, 1 July 2009

Seoul in brief

On Sunday my son and I traveled to Yongsan to shop for some computer goodies in the big electronics market there. Here is a view of the plaza in front of the market and some of the highrise apartments in Seoul.

We decided to go from Yongsan to Jonggak to visit the Jongno Tower - shown here, and to have supper in the restaurant at the top.
This was after indulging in a cutlet meal(shown below) at a little Japanese restaurant at Yongsan station. The meal consisted of pork and chicken cutlet and cold buckwheat noodles in clear broth.


This is the view from the top of the Jongno Tower. On the right of the picture, in the centre, you can see the Cheongggyecheon stream, one of the projects that the current president of Korea, Mr Lee Myun Bak, launched when he was the mayor of Seoul. It really has become a haven of rest and peace for people working in the area, and as we strolled along it we saw many people dabbling their feet in the water and just relaxing with friends and family.