Sunday, April 19, 2015

Cameras, Board Games, Sound Studios, and then some.

I apologize for the severe lack of updates lately. Though this blog hasn't been active, I assure you that I have been far from it. Lots of things have happened since December when I last posted.  January was the new year and my winter break came and went.

February came and at the end of the month, I decided to invest in a DSLR camera, something I've always wanted to get into, but didn't expect to get into it so soon. But it happened since my previous Canon camera went kaput thanks to some battery acid leaking.  It's been a great investment and has been a great avenue for my creativity lately.

I went to a teacher's conference in early March and picked up a few things that I'm using in my class. Below is my favorite shot from there with the bike rack.  Some people in the community invited me to a biweekly chess meet up and I obliged since it is one of my favorite games to play in the last couple of years.





At the end of March was a sea parting festival. In Jindo, there is this body of water that gets so low during low tide that there is a land bridge you can cross to get to other islands by foot. People can do that or harvest seaweed that collects near the shore to dry and eat. I got to eat fresh octopus which was an interesting cultural experience.




At the beginning of April, cherry blossom trees (one of my favorites next to the jacaranda tree) started to bloom. They're a little more white than what I remember seeing in Japan which have this beautiful vibrant pink color. I see some of those pink cherry blossoms around, but the ones I've seen have been mostly whitish-pink. That meant cherry blossom festivals. I caught this fantastic drum group roaming the city.



Spring break arrived (we're a rarity that every other teacher I know whom I do not work with don't have spring break). A colleague and I took that time to venture off to Seoul to explore board game stores and cafes for International TableTop Day that took place April 11th. We gathered information for Waygeek (waygeek.net)



Since winter is over and it's slowly getting warmer, night markets are starting to sprout up. I got to see this really cool artist at work that took glass and acrylic paint and, using his finger, created these awesome landscape portraits.



A few weeks ago I was asked to help a local band Malarkey (x) to play bass guitar and even help them record. I've had some experience singing, writing, and recording songs so it feels pretty nice to exercise that muscle again. In fact, this was such a cool experience that I have an idea to take my kids out here for a school field trip. That would be an awesome experience for them I think.

Finally, last week. the high schoolers went camping at some repurposed school to act as a lodging site. So we all had a camping trip there. I had recently bought a few new camera accessories including a shutter release control. With that newfound power, I went and took advantage of the clear skies and shot the stars for a few hours and came up with this.

So, that's been my life in Korea in a nutshell for the last four months. Now that I have a new camera, I hope to update this as much as possible. Well, maybe in a month or two since I'll be bogged down with preparation of a school spring concert then my summer trip to Europe.

Until then, check you later!

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Seoul Vaccination

Not too long ago, I took my first trip into Seoul. I had no expectations other than it's one of the biggest little cities in the world. I'd say that's about right, it's about the size of Los Angeles proper with the population of New York. The few things I did know from some former colleagues is that they'd rather visit Busan (see Chuseok 2k14) and I think I would have to agree with them after a two night-two day stay.

I arrived on Friday afternoon, having booked a place via airbnb.com (check that site out if you're ever wanting to stay at whatever destination you're planning to stay) and thought what a crazy looking subway map that was; I figured Guangzhou would have prepared me for anything... and it did, kind of. With the help of my smartphone, I was ready to navigate and get to my destination on my own. The owner of the place I was staying then began to badger me and asked where I was and said I should just get a taxi (I'm on a public bus headed there). I do, whatever. Lots of confusion ensues.

You see, the owner took a few days off to visit Japan while his dad was around. There's me talking with the owner in a taxi, the owner talking to the taxi driver AND his dad while he's in Japan, and his dad is trying to talk to me in very broken English. I get there eventually.

Friday night arrives and I decide I want to check out the Gangnam district (known famously for that super popular Korean song). It isn't as crazy and flashy as I thought it would be, maybe I was in the wrong part? There are people drinking out in the streets and none of them look like international visitors, so I keep looking and walking until I run into these two guys traipsing cluelessly through the streets. I befriend them and we decide to begin our journey of finding some decent joints for dinner and drinks. These two guys work for Tencent; if you've never heard of Tencent, they're very popular in China for their messaging services QQ and WeChat (the Chinese equivalent of KakaoTalk). There was a lengthy debate on elevators and floors since one of the men was from Spain and they consider the first floor the ground floor and the second floor is the first floor, etc.

Saturday morning comes and I decide I want to watch my alma mater, Fresno State, play college football. I walk down the extremely steeply graded hill to a cafe, get a coffee, muffin and hook myself up to watch Fresno State vs San Diego State University. My Bulldogs won and that left me in a good mood the rest of the day. I take my things with me and explore around some bustling hubs of the city and a huge pocket of expats swarming in the Itaewon district. I walk out of there and about an hour and a half later, I've walked four miles and find a bike shop that sells Brompton bicycles (my favorite). An old Fresno State dorm mate also lives near Seoul. With both of us having Filipino blood, I thought let's dine Filipino...

We do, and it was delicious. We walk in and it doesn't feel like a restaurant, but the atmosphere resembles that of a typical Filipino household. We're warmly welcomed in and given our food. After we were done eating, we were invited to stay for their rosary prayers and potluck afterward. We decline since it was getting late. But, I did get to meet a whole bunch of Filipinos wanting me to go to their church and hook me up with other single Filipino women after them flipping out that I'm a single 29 year old male.

Sunday morning comes around and I go check out. Nothing really too eventful, but going to the bus station and almost getting lost in the process because I took the right subway line to the wrong direction.

My overall impression of Seoul isn't all it's cracked up to be. Maybe I wasn't looking at the right parts. But, it's just way too crowded and to get from one part of the river across to the other side, it's about an hour just because of traffic congestion. I like it a little more out in Gwangju where things are a bit more close together, destinations and even the people.


NOTE: This post was written about 2 months too late. I've been a very busy man and I apologize.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Alleycon 2k14

Ah, comic book conventions. As long as the comic book was invented, so has the comic book convention... Okay, not really, but conventions do have pretty deeply sown tradition through the annals of time. 

There are comic conventions in Seoul and Busan, known as Comic World, since 1999 which are up to their 128th and 89th events respectively. They are up that high because Seoul holds their events every month whereas Busan is held bimonthly. Although the anime/comic/manga demographic in Seoul is booming, I feel once a month is overkill to be hosting events and cheapens the novelty of conventions as such. 

Anyway, back to Gwangju though. Gwangju held their second annual comic book/video game/sci-fi/nerdfest known as Alleycon just this past weekend and they're doing it once a year, which certainly makes it feel a little more special in that it happens annually. I wasn't here last year and was invited by a colleague whom is an avid fan of Game of Thrones (as am I) so much so that he cosplayed as one of the characters, Grey Worm, if you've been watching any of the latest season.
The first thing you see walking in: BMO!
We arrived Saturday morning to a very modest start (mind you this is a one day event). People getting set up and a local restaurant The First Alleyway setting up a food truck outside for people to have breakfast sandwiches... which also is where the name Alleycon comes from. Their restaurant has a great atmosphere with great food and drinks and most importantly, BOARD GAMES! I digress though, back to Alleycon...
Book swapping and selling

I meet a few new people, walk around the first floor with a tea vendor, comic book artists, book sellers, and others. The fourth floor contained a Dungeons & Dragons room that would be used all day as well as a lecture hall that would be used for Skype with a comic book artist living back home, musical performances, question and answer panels, and the ever-popular cosplay contest. 

Settlers of Catan with some new acquaintances
The top on the fifth floor would be where gamers would find their Eden: a video game room set up with an Xbox for Halo, a Wii for Super Smash Bros., Wii U that would have a variety of games such as Mario Kart 8, PC Gaming... and right next door would be for casual board, card, and role playing gamers to try new games, meet new people, or have a nice friendly competition. Across the hall is where things got a bit more serious for competitive gaming.

Super Smash Bros. Four Player Frenzy

Though I had ample time to get a costume ready, I was just too bogged down with work to get something ready. I'm sure that next year, work will come at me a little more smooth-sailing so I could get a costume ready and participate and hopefully win the crown next year. I've already got something in mind.
My Colleague's Cosplay of Grey Worm

When Hyrule and Metropolis combine








Friday, September 12, 2014

Chuseok 2k14

Hello again everybody, it's me Ryne!

Sorry for the lack of posts, it's been a long holiday weekend which lead to a two day school week and back into the weekend. I (and other colleagues) used that to our advantage and went off east into Busan, to a neighboring island Geoje the next morning and ferried to a botanical garden island called Oedo and back into Busan before taking off back for home. That's Chuseok lite digest... and a video



Here's the long version:

We start off Saturday morning, it's the 6th of September and I'm doing last minute packing, double checking, triple checking... and head off to the rendezvous for a cab to pick us up at 10:15 am to take us to the bus termintal for an 11:05 am departure. Needless to say, our cab showed up at 10:45 and we missed our bus. An inauspicious start, I felt, especially after being spoiled by the meticulous planning of my friends still in China, Becky and Neal, where plans are foolproof and there's small room for error. Anyway, right as we arrive to the bus terminal, we see all the buses leaving. Ugh. We go in and buy new tickets to leave at 11:30 am instead.

A coffee, Dunkin' Donut, 15 minute rest stop, and several dozen selfies later we find ourselves at the Busan bus terminal. We taxi about half an hour away over bridges into the other side of Busan at Haeundae Beach where our hostel awaits. We check in, settle our bags, and decide to go exploring.

Art inside our hostel
I love the feeling of walking into a new city for the first time... and I'm glad there are a lot of them to experience that over and over again. We find the beach, enjoy the water a little bit, and walk over to find food for dinner. On our way up the beach, was a commercial shoot which I'm assuming was a beer commercial; they kept yelling action and about 20 fit looking actors would run through a staged beach party full of picnickers and umbrellas. Up the street we discover a lively little street market full of live seafood, vendors selling foods on sticks, cocktails out of coconuts, everything! We eat some eel in a restaurant then continue eating more as we traipse down the market.
Eel for dinner


Street vendors



The inside of the room in our hostel. It's that small and still fits four people!


After having a Turkish Ice Cream man show off his entertaining abilities, we hang out once more on the beach to enjoy the night sky and people in the distance shooting off fireworks. THEN to sing at a noraebang which is conveniently located four floors below our hostel!

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Day 2 found us starting our day good and early at about 5 or 6 am to leave for Geoje at 7. We head back over to the bus terminal to catch a bus to Geoje then a cab ride over some hilly terrain and winding roads to another, more secluded beach. This time, however, we'd be meeting four new people (there's four of us already, so that now makes 8) to board some kayaks and paddle around the sea for a few hours.

A view from Oedo



Hours later, we buy some tickets to a nearby island called Oedo, known for their botanical garden. The ferry captains tour us around to show us some other, smaller islands before dropping us off for an hour and a half. Once there, it's up to you to decide how fast or slow you want to go as long as you're back at the wharf to catch the boat back. The landscape was awe inspiring and the views spectacular to see past the island into the deep blue sea and the amazing mountainous vistas off in the distance.

Coming back, we hang out a little with our new found compatriots in an unfinished hotel they're staying. It's a bizarre place to be: part studio apartment, part guesthouse, part cafe, part restaurant, and a gorgeous view on top of all that. A couple of drinks, fried chicken, and pizza and off we went back towards Busan. With their help of asking Koreans down the street to help us find a taxi, a kind stranger said no taxis really drive out that far into the village, so he was kind of enough to drive us without hesitation back to the bus station. We pool all our Korean together to try to entertain the stranger and he does the same. Making it just in time to catch the final bus, we head home... AND I forget one of my favorite baseball caps from my university on the bus.

Look closely and you can see a hummingbird looking for nectar
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Day 3 was very nice and was the official Chuseok day (it's a harvest festival to celebrate the moon as in most Asian cultures). There really was no plan until I remembered a message from an old friend about his favorite temple to visit outside of Cambodia. So we did that. This place was very nice, I've never seen a temple placed on the edge of the sea before, so it made for some beautiful photography. Being there on Chuseok made it a little more special to see that Korean people like to go out praying for their thanks of harvest.


















I had seen something on a map about a raw fish street that sounded great for lunch. This ended up an hour and a half later by taxi to Jagalchi, one of the largest fish markets in Busan... which unfortunately was closed. One of the gambles you take traveling on a national holiday I guess. We end up eating some very good Korean food anyway and head back by subway towards Haeundae Beach to wind down on the beach with our own set of fireworks to celebrate Chuseok.



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Our last day, Tuesday, was nothing much but a travel day to get back home. It's strange, despite living out here a little over one month, I missed Gwangju. It feels like home now. This is my community now. That's not to say I miss California, China, or any other places I've lived, I do, but it's strange how much I'm loving life out here.

Hostile cat or hostel cat?

Sunday, August 31, 2014

TV Abroad

Sports: where would I be without it?

When living abroad, it's nice to have a taste of home with television. Most people I know use a VPN and Netflix or Hulu or any other streaming service site to get their tv fix when living overseas. Sometimes, though you just need that fix to watch Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives or Conan O'Brien or The Weather Channel for whatever reason. Getting live TV is nearly impossible or incredibly difficult unless you're looking for sports which you can find almost anywhere with a quick something-something search. I'm not a fan of it because I never know which sites are trustworthy or not.

I own the top model which is now discontinued.
That's why I use Slingbox, it will become your best friend living abroad for those that love to watch TV. How it works: At home, like where your permanent address is (such as your parent's house), you buy this box, hook up the included cables from your cable box (YES, the prerequisite is you need a TV cable plan), plug in the phone jack that leads from your router to get it on the internet (the higher end model is Wi-Fi enabled), set up an account, and configure it so you can figure out the cable TV provider and BOOM you can watch TV anywhere you want with your computer for no additional charge! There are even Android and iPhone apps that you can purchase for about $15. I had the Android app and it was crucial when there was something I needed to watch while I was on the go.

Live TV with a fully working remotely remote control and a rockin' mullet from John Stamos
There are some downsides to it however. Firstly, this is connected to one cable box, so if someone, say your dad, wants to watch TV, you'll be watching the exact same thing he'll be watching AND vice-versa. So if you log in and the box is already on, you can secretly freak him out by changing the channel. Second, there is something like a ten second delay from the moment it's broadcasted to the moment it's shown on your monitor. That's really not a big deal though for this huge convenience. Third, again, you have to have a cable provider... or I guess be very good friends with that manager who owns local the Buffalo Wild Wings and hook up the Slingbox to one of their myriad of cable boxes and their internet.



Watching TV live is a different challenge while abroad. You need to adjust for the time. I'm a huge Fresno State football fan (I will not talk about their decimation tonight) and will sacrifice any amount of sleep to watch them, win or lose. My Korea time trick is to take the time (Pacific Time) add 4 hours and switch AM to PM or vice versa. Thus, games that are aired at 4:30 pm (like the USC/Fresno State game pictured above) it is 8:30 AM for me in the next day. It gets very difficult for NFL games since those first games will start at 10:30 AM Pacific Time on Sunday morning which will be 2:30 AM for me in the next morning. THAT IS, unless you have DVR, which I don't have; that would make life even more luxurious if I had that.

So for those fresh new expats that are fretting about moving and are worrying about TV or sports, I highly recommend investing in a Slingbox. I honestly don't watch it often, only when there's something I really need to watch, but this is definitely one of the greatest technological inventions (along with Skype and Facetime). AND! You don't need a VPN to have it to work (Yes. Even in China.)

Thursday, August 28, 2014

First Mensiversary!

I've been busy this last week, but today marks my one month of living in Gwangju already! Wow, how the time flies! Just this day last month, I was getting settled into my apartment and getting shown around the school, my classroom, and getting to meet a few of the students doing summer school. Since then, I had a teacher prep week, taught my first two weeks, and have been doing a lot (A LOT) of planning lessons. It's a bit challenging to teach a combined class of kindergarten with 3rd graders, but it's also kind of fun to stretch my imagination for what would be not too hard for the little ones and not too "kiddy" for the bigger kids.

I did go out to the grocery store tonight to buy some things for a barbecue tomorrow night, which should be a good night. Inadvertently, I bought some donuts, presumably old, discarded Dunkin' Donuts (this grocery store has a Dunkin Donuts inside it). So, maybe I'll have one of those to celebrate my one month of living out here in Korea... I better hit the "Publish" button before my computer dies. I left my charger back in the school office. Good night!

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Blame it on the Boogie

The first week of the new school year came and went, and boy did it feel like three weeks went by! Anyway, to celebrate, some colleagues and I were just going to go do some dinner. Dinner happened, which was delicious. I sure love that I get to eat more greens out here in Asia than I ever did back home in the US.



Afterwards, we decided to do 노래방 (Norae bang) aka Singing Rooms aka KTV aka Karaoke. The culture in Asia versus the West is to sing with your friends in little private rooms as opposed to singing in front of an entire crowd of drunken strangers. A lot of people seem to prefer the former, I like doing both.




The way it works: you go and tell them how many people are in your party and they find a room suitable for the size. You have a timer counting down on the television set, once it hits 0:00 it automatically gives you another 30 minutes, which you'll pay later. In the room there are tambourines you can play with, you can ring a bell for service, and at the end of your songs you're scored on how well you sung (I hit 100 5 out of 6 times!) We stayed about two hours mostly because we wanted to maximize that time limit, but would accidentally start another 30 minute session. They have a pretty vast selection of Korean, English, and Japanese music. Some of the English music I've never seen in US bars before like Weezer's "Across the Sea" or Muse's " Time is Running Out"; then again there was also a few glaring omissions that were my go-to favorites like "New York, New York", "Minnie the Moocher", and "Walkin' on the Sun".

That two hours of singing took it out of us and we went down the street to a restaurant open until the wee small hours of the morning for some more food. This place was known by a colleague for their "fire chicken" some extremely spicy poultry, but tonight we decide on this meter long skewer full of meat, potatoes, peppers, mushroom, pineapple, and spring rolls. Below the skewer is a skillet with a portable camping gas range. You take the food hanging from above, cut it into pieces and cook them. In the back is a buffet to grab extra things you want like watermelon, noodles, garlic, spicy peppers, and fresh eggs.



I'm nearing my one full month of living in Korea and it's been treating me excellent so far! Tomorrow begins the second week of school. Time to get more learning on!