Wednesday, December 29, 2010

One Person's Winter Wonderland Is Another's Dull And Dreary Work


Head out to Jongmyo Shrine to snap winter at its pristine best before the snow melts.


Then spare a thought for those who have to bear the outdoor chill for hours to clear snow and create a path for walkers like this employee of the Seoul Metropolitan Government working hard at Seoul Plaza.

For more postings on winter:

sources:
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=15836¤t_page=
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=15846¤t_page=

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

One Man's Christmas Tree Is Another's Propaganda Tool

There are Christmas trees and then there are "Christmas trees". The lighting of a Christmas "tree", actually a metal tower,  conducted jointly by the Marine Corps and the Seoul-based Yeouido Full Gospel Church on Aegibong is likely to be seen as a provocative rather than a friendly gesture by the powers that be north of the border. This is the first time, after a 2004 inter-Korean agreement to cease border propaganda activities, that the tree will be lit up. If the lighting of this tree, which is ironically supposed to be a symbol of peace and goodwill, actually gives the North Koreans an excuse, then I suppose it wouldn't be the first time hostilities have broken out over trees on the Korean peninsular.

Even during the Korean War, Christian Koreans managed to set up a Christmas tree.
Those seem like more innocent days when a tree was just a symbol of home and hope.




More from sources:

" The stylized tree’s 100,000 lights were lit up around 5:45 p.m. yesterday by a Christian church in Seoul. Reinforcements of South Korean soldiers were sent to guard the 155-meter (509-foot) peak in Gimpo, Gyeonggi, yesterday, and the military said it was on high alert. Aegibong is just 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) away from North Korean territory and the 30-meter structure, which is used to celebrate both Christmas and Buddha’s Birthday, was a form of anti-North propaganda that was stopped during the Sunshine Policy days of engagement with the North. The last time it was lit was in 2003.


Minister of National Defense Kim Kwan-jin said yesterday at the National Assembly that if the North shoots at the tower, the military would “boldly punish the North.”North Korea’s Rodong Sinmun said on Monday that the lighting of the tree tower would be a signal that an electronic display for propaganda messages that the South Korean military has installed at the demilitarized zone could also soon be activated, possibly leading to a military clash. In the past, the North has threatened to shoot the display and propaganda loudspeakers at the DMZ. “As sharp tension is rising between North and South Korea, provocations that irritate the opposite party could lead to military clashes and to a full-blown war,” the paper said.


A South Korean military official told the JoongAng Ilbo last week that North Korea had specifically requested that the tree tower be dismantled during negotiations in 2004 that resulted in the suspension of all forms of propaganda at the inter-Korean border.“They asked the tower be taken down as the lights on the peak and car lights on the freeway leading there irritate [the North Koreans] most,” said the official. In clear weather, the tower can be seen from Kaesong.


According to the official, the lighting of the tower this year is “not unrelated to the anti-North propaganda that the South Korean military has been involved in since the Cheonan sinking,” and that there is no reason for the military to stop the church from installing the tower and lights.  The Defense Ministry has been sending propaganda leaflets across the 4-kilometer-wide DMZ and into North Korean territory by balloon in response to the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island. Anti-Pyongyang broadcasts have also been made at the border, and 20 locations have newly installed loudspeakers along the demarcation line.The tree-lighting came a day after the South Korean military conducted live-fire exercises from Yeonpyeong Island with no North Korean retaliation.


sources:
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Dm_detail.htm?No=78135
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929997

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Remembering Hwaeomsa With Leftover Regrets

Reading an article by Roger Dix on his recent visit to Hwaeomsa put me into a "wish-I-was-there-again" mood. This temple located on the foothills of Jirisan is worth a visit and I'm still sorry I didn't check out if there was a templestay there.



I'm also still sorry I was in a won-pinching frame of mind when I decided against buying souvenir reproductions of the famous stone lantern.



I'm sorry I didn't stay long enough in the place to do some exploring of the trails behind the temple.


Related postings:

What I Wish I Knew About Hwaeomsa
Great Stone Lantern of Hwaeomsa
Grand Ole Halbeoji of A Tree in Hwaeomsa
Gamsa-Hamnida To Three Gentlemen of Gurye


sources:
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/art/2010/12/144_78179.html

Top Ten Concert Posters for 2010

Here are my favourite 2010 concert posters from  Korea in no particular order:


1. Tables are turned as Wheesung appears here as 13  members of the audience; the singer could give lessons in posing to contestants on America's Next Top Model.


2. Nice touch to this poster featuring music by Jeong-yeop, singer-songwriter and leader of Brown-Eyed Soul but why can’t they remember to add the ‘s’ to the plural noun? Shouldn’t the word read “humans”?



3. The playful arrangement of the Hangul letters even suggests an abstract depiction of a child’s playground in this poster for the “Play With Us” concert, featuring  Kim Gwang-min, Lee Byung-woo and Yoon-sang. Check out their haunting "Lullaby" from the OST for "A Tale of Two Sisters".  



4. This colourful poster for Kingston Rudieska stands out for its imaginative portrayal of music as an organic thing.


5. Liked the energy conveyed by the splash of orange as background to the singer bathed in red light. Lee Seung-hwan , the former husband of actress, Chae Rim, has been in the music industry for 21 years and recorded 10 albums. How’s that for staying power?



6. This profile of Lee Sora reminds me of one of those Buddhist or Kwan Yin statues I must have seen in a museum in Korea. More intensity than serenity,  though, with the slight furrow in the eyebrows.



7. Half expected Johnny Depp’s face in weird makeup to appear under that top hat but what’s more intriguing is the missing vocalist behind the mic. Where's Park Hyo-shin?



8. Three cheers for these two guys, Kim Jang-hoon, a.k.a Donation Angel  and Psy,  who aren’t afraid to ham it up in front of the camera.


9. Featured this poster of former g.o.d. member, Sohn Ho-young before so please excuse my bias for posting this pic again. Need I explain why?


10. Lucid Fall has enjoyed great success at home but has yet to make an impact abroad in other Asian countries. The hand-sketched outlines here of a traditional streetlamp, the artiste and his guitar case as well as the minimal colours are charming in their simplicity. Understated classiness seems to be the hallmark of his music and that’s reflected as well in his album covers. Click here for an earlier posting.

Sources:
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2168
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2291
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2305
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2319
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2341
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2348
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2381
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2401
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2437
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2464
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2482
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2492
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2535
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_concert_detail.htm?No=2546

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

So Just How Cold Is It In Korea Now?

So just how cold has it been in Korea? Temperatures were low enough to freeze the anesthetic supposed to be used on the runaway bear but if that's too abstract, check out the following pictures. If I were working in Korea, I'd save all my leave to stay away from the office in winter just so that I can hibernate at home. Question is, how much leave of absence does the average employee get to enjoy in South Korea?


Caption from source: A man taps on icicles on frozen stream at Jangheung Valley in Yangju, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday when the mercury dropped to minus 10 degrees Celsius in Seoul and its neighboring areas. With a cold wave warning issued across the country, the Korea Meteorological Administration forecast that the temperature will fall to as low as minus 11 degrees in Seoul, Wednesday. / Korea Times photo by Cho Young-ho

Caption from source: Frozen waterfall: A man-made waterfall in Hwacheon, Gangwon Province, is frozen, forming huge icicles, Sunday when the mercury fell to the lowest points for this winter across the nation. The cold snap is forecast to ease this afternoon. / Korea Times photo by Bae Woo-han



Caption from source: Bundled-up pedestrians in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul, shiver on their way to work yesterday morning as cold descends on the nation. The mercury will dip below minus 11 degrees Celsius (12.2 degrees Fahrenheit) in Seoul today, the national weather agency forecast. [NEWSIS]



Caption from Chosun Ilbo: "People wrap up against the freezing cold in Seoul on Wednesday."
Is it just coincidence or do the ladies seem averse to covering up their heads? Is it some fashion trend?
Vanity means little when the temperatures are getting into the negative double digits, IMHO. Seeing these photos reminds me of a scene from the Emperor's March when the documentary film crew showed how they had to put layer upon layer themselves to protect themselves against the frigid Antartica cold.

It's December 16 and the temperature in Seoul right now is minus 10.8 degrees Celcius. Ok - I'll stop complaining about the air-con in my workplace.
sources:
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/12/115_78039.html
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/12/115_77900.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/14/2010121400308.html
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929679
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/16/2010121600435.html

Ggoma's Going "Home" After His 9-day Adventure Out in Cheonggye-san

Annyeong Ggoma or Kkoma or  "Kid" ( if you prefer),

Just read on the Net that your little break from Seoul Zoo has been cut short after you were caught today in a trap placed on the summit of Cheonggye-san. I'm relieved to hear that you're in good shape and I bet you must be secretly glad that the zookeepers finally caught up with you as I can imagine the pickings off the mountain in this chilly winter must be pretty thin.


I trust that the vet at the animal clinic in the zoo will give you a clean bill of health  before you're returned to your enclosure. It was kinda funny to hear how attempts to sedate were more challenging than expected - if the frigid temperature on the mountain top was so cold that it could freeze the anaesthetic, I suppose you must be glad to get back to more comfortable quarters. Even though you do have a fairly thick coat, you were not born for such chilly climes. Don't know where you were actually born and how Seoul Zoo came to be your address but I don't suppose you can call the summit of Cheonggye-san home either.


Poor Kid - mian-he, I couldn't resist putting up these pics even though they are an affront to your dignity! But you did remind me of my own pets looking so vulnerable while they were asleep.


You can take comfort from the fact you'll have more flattering photos of you appearing on the Net soon. You've already got your five minutes of fame as news of your 9-day escape has been covered in places like the UK, USA, Singapore and India. Funny though, Emirates 24/7 posted a photo of another bear -it's not even the same colour!

Don't worry too much if the zoo officials are a little curt with you for forcing them to get out in the freezing outdoors to search for you. The publicity you've created for the zoo will probably bring in more won to its cofffers this December than at any other time.

Pity you can't talk. I'd love to know how you spent your vacation. Just count yourself lucky. I've not even managed to get a week-long break this year!

Kisses and hugs ( metaphorically speaking),
ajumma

P.S.  (updated):


Is it true what KBS World reported? That zoo officials are " planning to find a new partner" for you as they believed you "ran away due to quarrels with the 30-year-old female bear with which ( you were) living"? Do I hear wedding bells in 2011?


Click here for the earlier posting on Ggoma..

source:
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2010/12/15/3/0302000000AEN20101215003100315F.HTML
http://app.yonhapnews.co.kr/YNA/Basic/ArticleEnglish/ArticlePhoto/YIBW_new_showArticlePhotoView.aspx?contents_id=PYH20101215048300341&PAGINGCURRENTPAGE=1
http://app.yonhapnews.co.kr/YNA/Basic/ArticleEnglish/ArticlePhoto/YIBW_new_showArticlePhotoView.aspx?contents_id=PYH20101215044500341&PAGINGCURRENTPAGE=1
http://www.emirates247.com/news/world/best-of-web-runaway-bear-back-behind-bars-2010-12-15-1.329661
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Dm_detail.htm?No=78005

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Wonder Girls Show The Way To Avoid Another H1N1 Pandemic

I posted this before and I'll post it again this year, partly as my humble contribution as a health warning to the community and more honestly, because it's a great excuse to replay this infotaining video taken from the MrBrown Show of Singapore. An article in the local paper today reviewing the recent Wonder Girls Concert held in Genting Resorts reminded me of this hilarious youtube clip and I couldn't resist reposting this.



On a more serious note, though - a bit of googling indicated that while there's no cause for alarm, there are grounds for caution.  See below. 
November 17, 2010

" Actress You Dong-sook, 37, died last Thursday from the H1N1 flu at a Seoul-area hospital after catching the virus at the Fifth International Rome Film Festival last month while promoting her low-budget film “My Heart Beats.” You was given the leading role in the film directed by Huh Eun-hee and was invited to the extra competition session of the Rome festival.You was a theater actress for most of her career.
She started feeling flu symptoms - body aches and respiratory difficulties - when she returned to Korea on Oct. 31. She was hospitalized Nov. 2 at the Korea University Anam Hospital, and died nine days later from complications due to H1N1."


Elsewhere and more recently:
" A group of children at an elementary school in Daejeon were found to have been infected by the virus. A total of 16 students in fifth and sixth grades suffered from fever and tested positive for influenza A, last Friday, the authorities said.  A school in Pohang, North Gyeongsang Province, also closed its doors as a student was confirmed to be infected with the disease and another 100 students showed flu symptoms.

Health authorities said the flu is unlikely to be fatal but stressed that people should have flu shots and wash their hands regularly. “The number of reported flu cases is about one tenth of last year’s but children, the elderly and the physically-weak need to get flu shots as preventive measures,” an official from the Health and Welfare Ministry said. "

For my original posting, click here.

sources:
http://www.mrbrownshow.com/2009/05/26/fan-created-wash-your-hands-too-videos/
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2928491
http://www.arirang.co.kr/News/News_View.asp?nseq=110238&code=Ne2&category=2
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/12/113_77906.html
http://ecentral.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/12/14/music/7612868&sec=music

Cold Waves And Icy Streets


Brace yourselves, those in Korea. A cold wave is heading your way and is expected to make its impact on Wednesday. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA), the coldest weather of the season will happen tomorrow. Temperatures are expected to plunge  to minus eleven degrees Celsius in Seoul and minus 15 degrees Celsius in Gangwon-do.  Brrrr and bring out the snow shovels.

Be very wary too if you're a regular commuter whether as a driver, cyclist, biker or pedestrian. Tourists unaccustomed to wintry hazards, please exercise caution as icy roads and streets can be very slippery and sometimes the ice isn't even apparent to the inexperienced eye. Layer up as well  because the icy winds are not very pleasant.


Of course if you're a first-timer to the season, here's your chance to revel in winter fashions. I'd rather not join the parade outdoors but prefer to snuggle up under a thick down-filled quilt on an ondol floor.




sources:

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929363
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/09/2010120900350.html
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=15724
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daxue_(solar_term)
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Dm_detail.htm?No=77938

Monday, December 13, 2010

Ggoma Go Home?

Didn’t pay much attention to the news of a runaway bear from Seoul Zoo on Monday 6th December until a photo caption mentioned that it was a native of my country. Well, strictly speaking, the sun bear or honey bear ( Helarctos malayanus) which escaped from the zoo in Gwacheon, Gyeonggi-do ( 18 km outside Seoul) may not have been a Malaysian or Malayan bear as it could have originated from the island of Borneo. Still, my curiosity was piqued especially as zookeepers seem to have some difficulty tracking and recapturing it.

This particular escapee goes by the name of Ggoma, which I'm told means "Little Child". It was amusing to read titles of some online reports such as “Bear escapes from South Korean zoo and scales mountain”. It was if it decided to take a break from entertaining Seoulites, stroll through its enclosure door during a routine cleanup to go munro-bagging ( Scottish label for mountain-climbing). Anyway, if you were planning a weekend hike any time soon, strike Cheonggye-san off your list. Apparently 6-year-old, 1.2-meter and 30-kilo Ggoma was last spotted on the peak which is located about 6 kilometers away from the zoo.






So far, he’s managed to elude a helicopter, five armed hunters, between 120 and 200 policemen and zoo staffers sent out on the bear-hunt and now they’re even resorting to setting up a specially designed bear trap. Just in case you happen upon a black-haired bear with distinctive orange-yellow horse-shoe markings on its chest ( see pic), you may want to remember the following bits of advice:


Though the sun bear is smaller and less aggressive than other bear species, you should:
1. avoid eye-contact
2. NOT   provoke it
3. NOT startle it by running away hysterically




Apparently Ggoma’s not the first sun bear to give Korean officials the slip. According to one website, another bear had escaped from a bear bile farm in Whacheun, Wonju district in September, 2007. The female hybrid which was nicknamed “Miracle” caused a bit of stir as people couldn’t decide where to put it if it was recaptured. As far as I know, it still hasn’t been caught but what’s more controversial and shocking is that one source reports there are 1600 bears on bear bile farms in Korea. They are bred to produce Ursodeoxycholic acid ( or UDCA ) used in various treatments for health problems. Criticism of these farms include the existence of alternatives to UDCA, inhumane methods of extracting the bile and little regulation on these farms.


Some other interesting info on the sun bear:
 It doesn’t hibernate so you can imagine it won’t be too thrilled with the winter chills
 It eats small lizards and birds but its diet also includes fruits, berries, roots and nuts. It forages for food by using its excellent sense of smell as it doesn’t have very good eyesight.

 It tends to look for food at night and sleep during the day on lower branches of trees.

 It has been classified as a “vulnerable” specie.

Hopefully, Ggoma will be found and returned safe and sound to enjoy a warmer home with ample meals soon. The Seoul Zoo may not be home but it's a lot better than wandering around the snowy landscape of the Korean landscape. BTW, what are the chances of it reaching the DMZ?

sources:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929509

http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/07/2010120700873.html
http://www.worldzootoday.com/2010/12/07/bear-escapes-from-seoul-zoo/
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/849529-bear-escapes-from-south-korean-zoo-and-scales-mountain
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/12/117_77558.html
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929309
http://www.animalrescuekorea.org/forums/showthread.php?t=2234
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Bear

Friday, December 10, 2010

Horan of Clazziquai and Winterplay - Coming Together



Hyewon and Horan deliver a cool version of the Beatles' classic. Relish the moments. I also like the quaintness of Winterplay's Gypsy Girl. Hyewon's stillness is heaps more compelling than any dance moves by most of the girl groups out there.



The following comes from maria2309.wordpress

WINTERPLAY is a jazz quartet from Korea. Click here for their version of Norah Jones' Don't Know Why

MEMBERS

Lee Joo-han. The trumpeter (43) and group leader made his pro music debut back in 1995 with his solo album “직관” (Intuition). In 1996-97, he was the band leader in MBC’s “좋은밤입니다” (It’s a Good Night), and also put out albums in 2002 and 2009.

Moon Hye-won. Vocalist Hye-won (24) graduated from Dankook University after studying music. She debuted in 2007 as a featured vocalist on the Sonagi Project album “Cinema in Jazz.”

Choi Woo-joon. The guitarist (32) also played with the Woong San Band (Woong San is another jazz artist, a solo singer whose real name is Kim Eun-young). Choi’s musical debut came in his solo 2007 album “Saza’s Groove.”

So Eun-kyu. The contrabassist (35) made his official musical debut with Winterplay’s 2008 debut album “Choco Snow Ball.” He was a former performer in the Gwangju Biennale.


sources:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4nvJMzYt5w&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpC1zbrymRk&feature=related
http://maria2309.wordpress.com/2010/04/04/winterplay-discography/
http://www.wrasserecords.com/Winterplay_150/biography.html

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Inspiring Korea Night 2010 in Kuala Lumpur

Letter To Mr Yun Jae Jin,
Managing Director of KTO KL

Dear Mr Yun,

Thank you so much for being such a generous host for the Inspiring Korea Night 2010 event held at the Royale Chulan Hotel, Kuala Lumpur on the 2nd of December, 2010. It was a real treat to attend the function alongside the other 350 or so guests which included the press, travel agents and some of the more active members of the Saranghaeyo Korea Club ( SKC) in Malaysia.

The Board of Directors of Saranghaeyo Club, Malaysia with Mr Yun Jae Jin

 
I didn’t expect it to be such a big thing – I thought it was just going to be a modest affair with about a hundred or so people but forgot it was the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties between our two countries so the occasion called for something a little more grand. It was a good idea to get people to buy raffle tickets to raise funds for the Special Children Society of Ampang and I’m looking forward to a posting on the SKC website on how much was raised and how it will be used to help the beneficiaries.

Perhaps next year, some of the children who may also be Hallyu fans can be invited to attend the gathering and who knows, even perform a number inspired by K-pop or K dramas. Or SKC members could organize more fund-raising events for local causes – I’ve read that fan clubs in Korea often make donations to charity as a gesture of support for their favourite K-pop idol(s) so it would be interesting to see which fan clubs can raise the most – would it be supporters of Beast or Girls’ Generation or Super Junior?

I didn’t also expect the event to be a proper sit-down affair to a full eight-course Chinese dinner; I’d expected a buffet spread featuring Korean cuisine. After all, the pre-dinner cocktails served had included crunchy apples flown in from Korea, small balls of tteok coated in cinnamon powder and pumpkin soup together with sikhye and bokbunja ( thanks to the unknown sponsor who generously brought in bottles of the lovely wine for the night!)

So it was a little strange to have familiar Korean favourites included in the mainly Chinese menu – the samgyetang was introduced after the first course of “Oriental Four Seasons Combination” and the “Stir-Fried Chicken In Yam Basket”. It seemed a pity that the bibimbap, bulgogi and kimchi were served almost towards the end; by that time most of us were already stuffed with steamed seabass and fresh prawns with oatmeal flakes that there was barely any space left to appreciate the kind contributions courtesy of Little Korea Restaurant.

May I make a suggestion? You could have people still seated around the tables of ten and at the same time serve an all-Korean menu, buffet-style so that more people could be introduced to ‘less familiar’ Korean dishes such as kimchi tchigae, namul, pajeon, gujeolpan and patjuk. Perhaps the different Korean restaurants around KL could be persuaded to sponsor different dishes – great way for them to advertise their business and for locals to learn about other Korean dishes. By the way, getting the guests of honour to kick off the night’s activities by stirring the “giant bibimbap” was a quaint idea –just a small pity giant bowls weren’t available for the occasion!

As for the dance performances, I can’t comment on Epsilon and Ruff Neck as I’ve never seen the MVs featuring the Hallyu stars they were imitating but it was nice to see Wakaka Crew’s varied line-up doing their own thing. Would’ve liked to hear the MCs interviewing Wakaka about their experience in the B-boy competition i.e. the R16 Southeast Asia Finals 2010 (15 May 2010) but then again, it wasn’t the right place for long QnAs or speeches.

That much was clear when, judging by the noise levels in the hall, few people were paying attention to one blogger describing his recent familiarisation trip to Korea. It would've easier if he had provided some photos of his trip and his website address on powerpoint but as it was, the MC interviewing him could barely be heard above the chatter around the tables.

By the way, the demographics at my table revealed an interesting challenge for KTO and the SKC BoD- how to cater to the varied interests of distinct groups? First you have the ajummas who first fell in love with Bae Yong-joon and who probably can't tell the difference between 2 A.M. and 2 P.M. And then there's the younger generation whose excited screams and passionate support for the latest Kpop singers had the ajummas raising their eyebrows in bafflement. And then there are others like yours truly who are more interested in other aspects of Korean culture and travel.

Anyway, I think most people would’ve left on a pretty high note – and I don’t just mean the recently appointed Board of Directors for the SKC and the lucky draw prize winners ( FOUR from one particularly lucky table including the grand prize winner who won round-tickets to Korea ). It was a nice touch to let us choose our door gifts – either a large hanging calendar or a desk calendar – at the end as we made our exit and said our goodbyes.

So once again, thank you very much for your generous hospitality, thanks too to all the sponsors especially the contributor of the delicious bokbunja and apples and the staff of the KTO and volunteers for all their hard work behind the scenes. I hope I’m fortunate enough to get an invitation again to your party in 2011.

Have a great year ahead!

Warmest regards,
ajumma

Click here and here  for other bloggers' reports on the event.

source:

Monday, December 6, 2010

Time For Woollies, Naeboks and Yeontan


Time to bring out the woollies, naeboks and yeontans - winter's already made its way to Korea.

The first snow has already fallen in Seoul.


The winter fashion parade has already started on the streets of Seoul.

Skating rinks all over the country such as this one in Daejeon, have already opened for business.

These fishermen on Yeonpyeong have already returned to work after the fishing ban was lifted 11 days after the attack. The chilly winter winds are making their lives more miserable than usual because they've lost a lot of business when they couldn't go crabbing or fishing for some time.

Check out The Top Ten Quintessential Winter In Korea Pictures

sources:
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/04/2010120400259.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/02/2010120200411.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/11/29/2010112900401.html
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2010/12/115_77451.html

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Bae Yong-joon's Other Hats

Looks like Hallyu actor  of Winter Sonata fame, Bae Yong-joon can add "author and photographer" to his CV. It's been awhile since his fans  ( which are mostly outside Korea) have seen him on the small or big screens as he was busy working on a book on his travels around Korea.


What prompted him to do this book project?


"I decided to write the book because of an embarrassing moment when I was unable to respond promptly when asked to name great places to visit in Korea at a press conference in Japan," he said in one interview. "I felt bad that my fans from abroad spent their entire time watching me shoot films and then went back to their countries. I hope this book can help them understand Korean culture and sentiment."

Apparently the book was popular because it was perceived as "a book to give a foreign friend"  and apparently, many foreigners were impressed and felt they had gained a deeper understanding of the country.... Unlike other celebrity books it is a great guide to Korean culture, and the firm expects a positive reception from readers of all ages."


Call me cynical or says it's sour grapes and I may incur the wrath of BYJ fans but I gotta say the man's quite savvy in getting the attention of KTO. I've not seen the book and I'm curious about who did the translation into English.


Apparently he plans to do more books. He said, "Writing has a unique charm. I would like to write books that introduce places worth visiting in Korea and gourmet restaurants in the future."

If that is indeed the case, why then did he also say this?

"If I get another job in later life, I would like to be a farmer. It would be nice to plant something, cultivate the fruit and give the healthy product to someone."

Perhaps he'll write a book on farming as well.

sources:
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/12/04/2010120400228.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/10/28/2010102800954.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/09/09/2010090900287.html
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2009/09/23/2009092300362.html

Friday, December 3, 2010

Help For Yeonpyeong's Other Victims

It was touching  to receive a comment from a kind-hearted reader who offered to adopt one of the dogs featured on my posting - Yeonpyeong's Other Victims. It's good to know that something's being done for the 200 to 300 stray animals and abandoned pets on Yeonpyeong-do. Three cheers for these animal rights activists, vets and members of the Korean Society for Animal Freedom who provided some relief  for the distressed creatures left behind on the island and who were able to bring back to the mainland some of those which needed medical attention.

It was also interesting to hear on KBS World Radio that improvements were needed for an animal management system to deal with such emergencies in the future. Who was it who said that the measure of a truly civil society is how well or badly it takes care of the weak and vulnerable? Unfortunately in my own country, we're not so advanced so this is a good reminder of how far we have to go.



Animal rights activist Park So-youn holds stray dogs rescued from a village damaged by North Korean artillery shelling, upon her leaving a ferry from Yeonpyeong Island, November 29, 2010.
REUTERS/Jo Yong-Hak

A police officer carries a wounded dog to a ferry after animal rights activists rescued it from a village damaged by North Korean artillery shelling, at a port on Yeonpyeong Island, November 29, 2010.



A South Korean animal rights activist carries dogs to a ferry at the port of South Korea's Yeonpyeong Island Monday, Nov. 29, 2010 after searching the island to look for abandoned or injured animals to evacuate them. On the ship are journalists also leaving the island to return to the South Korean mainland
(AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)






sources:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLlxf22v6V8

Thursday, December 2, 2010

The Wine That Overturns The Chamber Pot

Time to ‘fess up. Two confessions actually.

Some years back, while exploring the grounds of the Jirye Art Village, I came across a bush of dark purple berries. Tempted to claim my first experience of blackberrying but uncertain if the berries were edible, I popped some into the pocket of a jacket borrowed from a friend. Meant to ask my host what the berries were called but forgot and later that day, was dismayed to find the berries creating a purple stain on the jacket. Fortunately, the laundry services took care of the problem and I was able to return the jacket to my friend with a fairly clear conscience.


As for confession number two, more recently, I downed FOUR glasses of bokbunja wine thanks to the generous sponsor at a dinner hosted by the Korean Tourism Organisation. While I cannot understand why Koreans are so fond of soju or makeolli, it’s easier  for me to appreciate this deep red wine made from fermenting wild or cultivated black raspberries which go by the Latin name of ‘ Rubus Coreanus’.





The Korean name, Bokbunja –ju ( 복분자주 ) is more evocative – literally translated from Hanja, Bok (覆) means turning over, Bun (盆) means chamber pot and Ja (子) means man. So the name implies that any red-blooded male that drinks this will be virile enough to overturn or even break the piss pots, according to one legend, while urinating and presumably be strong enough to..ahem..keep the ajummas happy.

There are at least two versions of this legend.

The first one recounts the story of an old man who was looking for herbs in the mountains when his hunger pangs drove him to eat some mountain berries. When he returned home that night, he was surprised to find that his chamber pot overturn from the force of his stream of urine. Not long after, his elderly wife was even able to give birth to a child. The second tale also involves an elderly couple who had a sickly son. On the recommendation of a Buddhist monk, they gave him Bokbunja wine which proved to be effective in restoring his health.


The plant from the Rosaceae family which has its origins in China can now be found in Gochang County in Jeollabukdo, Damyang in Jeollanamdo, the foothills of Naejangsan & Daegwallyeong, Jeongeup and Jejudo. Sunchang Sannaedle Village which hosts the Bokbunja Harvest Festival from mid-June to July each year is another place where visitors can enjoy getting their mouths and hands stained purple from the juice of bokbunja berries. They’d have to be careful to avoid getting scratched while harvesting the ripened blackish-red berries from the thorny bushes.


The rewards are plentiful though. Historical texts such as Donguibogan and Dangbonboncho indicate bokbunja has been used as Oriental medicine. More recently, research shows this fruit is rich in calcium,
iron, malic acid and citric acid though it’s been described as an alkali food. Bokbunja has apparently more vitamin A and C than can be found in cherries and strawberries.

From one source: Lee Kwang-keun, a professor of food engineering at Dongguk University, said… his team measured the capacity of bokbunja-ju from Gochang, North Jeolla Province to remove harmful active oxygen that damages cells and found that the black raspberry wine at a 1000 ppm concentration removes 76 percent of the active oxygen. That is roughly similar to red wine. The team said that if injected with bokbunja-ju or red wine, more than half of various human cancer cells no longer grew further, showing that both have effects of curbing proliferation of cancer cells. Bokbunja-ju sets various enzymes in motion and even leads cancer cells to kill themselves.


The outcome of the research was carried in the April 2009 issue of the Journal of the Science in Food and Agriculture. Lee said this was the first time research on the outstanding effects of bokbunja-ju has been published in a renowned international journal. The team is hoping to develop techniques to maximize antioxidant, anti-cancer capabilities of black raspberry wine in cooperation with the industry. “

The scientific interest isn’t simply confined to Korean researchers. Ohio State University has also published a study on the antioxidant and anticancer properties of the bokbunja. Other claims made include its ability to improve eyesight and memory AND to protect the liver and the hardening of the arteries.

But those who are already believers in the efficacy of bokbunja, can enjoy the fruits eaten fresh or as smoothies when the frozen fruits are mixed with milk or yogurt. There’s also bokbunja jam, tea, snacks and you can even add the juice to pasta dough to make your own pretty-in-purple noodles with their own distinctive fragrance.


Of course, nothing beats Bokbunja-ju ( wine). The deep red wine with a sweet, fruity flavour and alcohol content of about 15 -19%, is derived from the fermentation of berries in soju. It’s been claimed that the drink has been around for at least 1400 years and a popular drink for the villagers near Seonunsa Temple in Gochang, Jeollabukdo. The wine has won at least one award at international competitions ( such as the silver medal at 2005 Dallas Morning News International Wine Competition) and has been served during official dinners for the 2005 APEC summit. It is also now exported to countries like Canada, China, Japan, Singapore and the USA.

Right now, I'm thinking of getting a couple of bottles of bokbunja to share with family and friends to welcome in the new year.

sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bokbunja_ju

http://www.koreansool.com/eng/main_data_02_07.asp
http://www.suite101.com/content/korean-alcoholic-beverages-a111376
http://english.bohae.co.kr/main.php?act=BOKBUNJAJOO&PG=A0201
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SH/SH_EN_7_3_2_4.jsp
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2009/04/21/2009042100410.html
http://www.invil.org/english/tourism/themeTour/experience/contents.jsp?con_no=372757&page_no=1
http://gochangbokbunja.en.ec21.com/
http://www.invil.org/english/speciality/fruit/others/contents.jsp?con_no=856152&page_no=1
http://www.invil.org/english/speciality/fruit/others/contents.jsp?con_no=853875&page_no=1