So, I've been in Korea for 3 weeks or so and it's a pretty sweet place.
Had some success yesterday with longboard glue, thankfully! I noticed my longboard was delaminating along one of the plys and went on a massive search around all the DIY stores I could possibly find. I ended up with some rubber general purpose adhesive (doh) and some "Strong" craft glue. The craft glue didn't work.
Eventually I decided to go into this huge shop called "HomeCC". Now, i'd looked through the main entrance and all I saw was a massive lobby with no one in it. This seems to be a traditional tactic in Korea, rather than putting what you're selling near the entrance, replace it with a nice open space to waste. Oh and make sure you have a desk or something so you can employ someone to do nothing for you. Anyhow, I ventured upstairs (at this stage I was seriously wondering what I was going to find, if it was the UK, i'd be in an office building). Thankfully I found 3 floors of DIY stuff and more importantly, Titebond III! This is the best woodglue in the world. Happy days!
So, apart from longboard related disasters, everything is going pretty well. My miniboard lost a large chunk of wheel yesterday, but I can deal with that. Went screen golfing yesterday, that was fun. Korea is the ultimate masochistic society it seems. They enjoy any sports that they can't possibly do, like golfing. Korea has no open spaces which could be converted to golf courses, yet golfing is like a national pastime. Anyway, they solve this dilema with screengolf, where you hammer golfballs down a green that's projected against a wall. This seems odd, but is great fun. Unfortunatly, although I kick ass at putting, my golfing is pretty terrible. As a result, the machine got hit more than a few time with strange richochets....
The scariest thing I've found so far in Korea are the roads. Like the matrix, most laws in Korea can be bent, some can be broken. It seems more like the drivers are heading towards breaking on the whole though, especially traffic lights! Here's the standard reaction drivers have:
Light on green: Drive faster.
Light on red: Put on hazard lights and/or beep horn. Drive faster.
So basically, it seems to be perfectly acceptable to break the law as long as you have you lights/horn on. This also applies to pedestrian crossings. Actually, pedestrian crossings are interesting. They have the standard green man red man ones that work on the above rules, then there's the non lit ones (like zebra crossings in the UK). The trick here is to slow down enough so the pedestrian doesn't want to step out in front of you, whilst appearing as if you're slowing down to stop. As a pedestrian, this gets very irritating. You're standing there waiting and then they slow down, but you don't want to get killed so you stand there. They get slower and slower then literally crawl across the crossing, however by this stage you can't cross the road as there's a car moving at 2 mph blocking it. As a result, you spend a lot of time waiting at crossings.
Leaving for Jeju island on Saturday, which should be a lot of fun! I'd explain, but wikipedia is better than me at that. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeju-do
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My mum and dad have a blog documenting their efforts to sail round the world. My brother has a blog which is actually quite entertaining and captures his exploits in S Korea. I'd like to write my own blog but I'd have to rename my previous one. Instead of www.ihatetravelling.com I'd have to go for www.ihategoingbackwardsandforwardstoburystedmunds.com or maybe iworkinacivilservicebackwater.com. Are you guys trying to make me jealous?
Well, there's only one thing I can say. I have a hot shower and a washing machine in my house, and I'm about to watch Harry Potter on DVD, eat home-made popcorn and drink real English tea. Hah! xx
Is this the least frequently updated blog in the history of the world? Are you suffering from writer's block?
Exx
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