Saturday, March 17, 2007

Sleeping past times in SK

Usually we go out for dinner with everyone from school on Friday nights. This past week was exhausted, I was past-empty, so we went home for dinner and slept early. Saturday, we rode our bikes past Ansan Lake Park. Afterwards, we slept for three hours and had Tak-Kal-Bi (BBQ chicken and noodles, served with side dishes of coleslaw, Kimchi, dark-green leaf lettuce). The huge meal served for two with all the side dishes (free refills) all for $15.00 USD. We checked shops for baby-clothes for Christie's newborn, sets (shirt/pant/sock) combinations were selling for $125.00 USD. We will find a nice card I'm sure! Baba sounded good when we spoke last weekend. Spoke to Dad and he still has two-years worth of firewood in the backyard, that's ^^++ too. Donald didn't take off during today's phone conversation, "Good Boy!" Hopefully, in December 2007 we can plan a family reunion in Thailand (if there are any takers???). I am hoping to take an extended holiday between contracts. Friends from school visited the The Islands - Ko Phangan & Ko Samui, very nice!

Sleeping past times in SK

Usually we go out for dinner with everyone from school on Friday nights. This past week was exhausted, I was past-empty, so we went home for dinner and slept early. Saturday, we rode our bikes past Ansan Lake Park. Afterwards, we slept for three hours and had Tak-Kal-Bi (BBQ chicken and noodles, served with side dishes of coleslaw, Kimchi, dark-green leaf lettuce). The huge meal served for two with all the side dishes (free refills) all for $15.00 USD. We checked shops for baby-clothes for Christie's newborn, sets (shirt/pant/sock) combinations were selling for $125.00 USD. We will find a nice card I'm sure! Baba sounded good when we spoke last weekend. Spoke to Dad and he still has two-years worth of firewood in the backyard, that's ^^++ too. Donald didn't take off during today's phone conversation, "Good Boy!" Hopefully, in December 2007 we can plan a family reunion in Thailand (if there are any takers???). I am hoping to take an extended holiday between contracts. Friends from school visited the The Islands - Ko Phangan & Ko Samui, very nice!

Sleeping past times in SK

Usually we go out for dinner with everyone from school on Friday nights. This past week was exhausted, I was past-empty, so we went home for dinner and slept early. Saturday, we rode our bikes past Ansan Lake Park. Afterwards, we slept for three hours and had Tak-Kal-Bi (BBQ chicken and noodles, served with side dishes of coleslaw, Kimchi, dark-green leaf lettuce). The huge meal served for two with all the side dishes (free refills) all for $15.00 USD. We checked shops for baby-clothes for Christie's newborn, sets (shirt/pant/sock) combinations were selling for $125.00 USD. We will find a nice card I'm sure! Baba sounded good when we spoke last weekend. Spoke to Dad and he still has two-years worth of firewood in the backyard, that's ^^++ too. Donald didn't take off during today's phone conversation, "Good Boy!" Hopefully, in December 2007 we can plan a family reunion in Thailand (if there are any takers???). I am hoping to take an extended holiday between contracts. Friends from school visited the The Islands - Ko Phangan & Ko Samui, very nice!

Sleeping past times in SK

Usually we go out for dinner with everyone from school on Friday nights. This past week was exhausted, I was past-empty, so we went home for dinner and slept early. Saturday, we rode our bikes past Ansan Lake Park. Afterwards, we slept for three hours and had Tak-Kal-Bi (BBQ chicken and noodles, served with side dishes of coleslaw, Kimchi, dark-green leaf lettuce). The huge meal served for two with all the side dishes (free refills) all for $15.00 USD. We checked shops for baby-clothes for Christie's newborn, sets (shirt/pant/sock) combinations were selling for $125.00 USD. We will find a nice card I'm sure! Baba sounded good when we spoke last weekend. Spoke to Dad and he still has two-years worth of firewood in the backyard, that's ^^++ too. Donald didn't take off during today's phone conversation, "Good Boy!" Hopefully, in December 2007 we can plan a family reunion in Thailand (if there are any takers???). I am hoping to take an extended holiday between contracts. Friends from school visited the The Islands - Ko Phangan & Ko Samui, very nice!

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Weather in South Korea

We havn't seen winter for more than a month. It has been off/on between days of 0 degrees and balmy 50's weather. We've had snow flurries and even rain this past week. School is ever changing, with new classes and scheduling, best to keep up, be more prepared than necessary. Korean society is known to be very "BALI BALI" and it has the opposite meaning of the Indonesian island paradise. In English, it means "HURRY, HURRY" and even middle school students would describe "KOREANS ARE..." as, "VERY BUSY!" The massive development in Korea spurred following the end of Japanese colonialism after WWII and end of the Korean War. Since then, Korea has experienced a period of 50+ years of peace on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula. Home to numerous US military bases with 30,000 personnel. Korea is now as dynamic/modernizing as it is ancient. Working conditions are generally acceptable for a foreigner, but you are never settled here. Most enjoy weekends, as weekdays are demanding with blocks of classes that seem, at best of times, unending. The rituals continue until the Friday 9:00 class signals that in 40 minutes, we will soon be free. Saturdays are for rest, cycling, or shopping. We walk everywhere on Saturday. Friday nights are usually reserved for dinner w/ colleagues at Puffin's, and this past weekend we spent five hours at a local Jim-Jil-Bong, or public sauna/spa. It's an enormous department store sized, two-storied complex with numerous sauna rooms, some in the shape of caves with extreme heat and flat screen TVs. Other rooms have spas, the Green Tea spa is nice. There are also wet sauna (steam rooms) and dry saunas. They sell beer and soda and water at the refreshment counters. There is also a co-ed area where men and women and children can use sauna rooms in their pajamas (provided with $8 admission fee). You sweat and it is invigorating, a must is drinking plenty of water before/during/ and the day afterwards. These saunas are everywhere in Korea, and you can spend the entire night there for $8 bucks! Canadians should think about this idea, we have nothing that really compares. Sunday is service at Dongsan Church, a good Ansan hangout, Pastor Nick delivers great services in English. The band is great, I'm the bongo player. Spring is around the corner, can't wait!!!

Weather in South Korea

We havn't seen winter for more than a month. It has been off/on between days of 0 degrees and balmy 50's weather. We've had snow flurries and even rain this past week. School is ever changing, with new classes and scheduling, best to keep up, be more prepared than necessary. Korean society is known to be very "BALI BALI" and it has the opposite meaning of the Indonesian island paradise. In English, it means "HURRY, HURRY" and even middle school students would describe "KOREANS ARE..." as, "VERY BUSY!" The massive development in Korea spurred following the end of Japanese colonialism after WWII and end of the Korean War. Since then, Korea has experienced a period of 50+ years of peace on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula. Home to numerous US military bases with 30,000 personnel. Korea is now as dynamic/modernizing as it is ancient. Working conditions are generally acceptable for a foreigner, but you are never settled here. Most enjoy weekends, as weekdays are demanding with blocks of classes that seem, at best of times, unending. The rituals continue until the Friday 9:00 class signals that in 40 minutes, we will soon be free. Saturdays are for rest, cycling, or shopping. We walk everywhere on Saturday. Friday nights are usually reserved for dinner w/ colleagues at Puffin's, and this past weekend we spent five hours at a local Jim-Jil-Bong, or public sauna/spa. It's an enormous department store sized, two-storied complex with numerous sauna rooms, some in the shape of caves with extreme heat and flat screen TVs. Other rooms have spas, the Green Tea spa is nice. There are also wet sauna (steam rooms) and dry saunas. They sell beer and soda and water at the refreshment counters. There is also a co-ed area where men and women and children can use sauna rooms in their pajamas (provided with $8 admission fee). You sweat and it is invigorating, a must is drinking plenty of water before/during/ and the day afterwards. These saunas are everywhere in Korea, and you can spend the entire night there for $8 bucks! Canadians should think about this idea, we have nothing that really compares. Sunday is service at Dongsan Church, a good Ansan hangout, Pastor Nick delivers great services in English. The band is great, I'm the bongo player. Spring is around the corner, can't wait!!!

Weather in South Korea

We havn't seen winter for more than a month. It has been off/on between days of 0 degrees and balmy 50's weather. We've had snow flurries and even rain this past week. School is ever changing, with new classes and scheduling, best to keep up, be more prepared than necessary. Korean society is known to be very "BALI BALI" and it has the opposite meaning of the Indonesian island paradise. In English, it means "HURRY, HURRY" and even middle school students would describe "KOREANS ARE..." as, "VERY BUSY!" The massive development in Korea spurred following the end of Japanese colonialism after WWII and end of the Korean War. Since then, Korea has experienced a period of 50+ years of peace on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula. Home to numerous US military bases with 30,000 personnel. Korea is now as dynamic/modernizing as it is ancient. Working conditions are generally acceptable for a foreigner, but you are never settled here. Most enjoy weekends, as weekdays are demanding with blocks of classes that seem, at best of times, unending. The rituals continue until the Friday 9:00 class signals that in 40 minutes, we will soon be free. Saturdays are for rest, cycling, or shopping. We walk everywhere on Saturday. Friday nights are usually reserved for dinner w/ colleagues at Puffin's, and this past weekend we spent five hours at a local Jim-Jil-Bong, or public sauna/spa. It's an enormous department store sized, two-storied complex with numerous sauna rooms, some in the shape of caves with extreme heat and flat screen TVs. Other rooms have spas, the Green Tea spa is nice. There are also wet sauna (steam rooms) and dry saunas. They sell beer and soda and water at the refreshment counters. There is also a co-ed area where men and women and children can use sauna rooms in their pajamas (provided with $8 admission fee). You sweat and it is invigorating, a must is drinking plenty of water before/during/ and the day afterwards. These saunas are everywhere in Korea, and you can spend the entire night there for $8 bucks! Canadians should think about this idea, we have nothing that really compares. Sunday is service at Dongsan Church, a good Ansan hangout, Pastor Nick delivers great services in English. The band is great, I'm the bongo player. Spring is around the corner, can't wait!!!

Weather in South Korea

We havn't seen winter for more than a month. It has been off/on between days of 0 degrees and balmy 50's weather. We've had snow flurries and even rain this past week. School is ever changing, with new classes and scheduling, best to keep up, be more prepared than necessary. Korean society is known to be very "BALI BALI" and it has the opposite meaning of the Indonesian island paradise. In English, it means "HURRY, HURRY" and even middle school students would describe "KOREANS ARE..." as, "VERY BUSY!" The massive development in Korea spurred following the end of Japanese colonialism after WWII and end of the Korean War. Since then, Korea has experienced a period of 50+ years of peace on the southern half of the Korean Peninsula. Home to numerous US military bases with 30,000 personnel. Korea is now as dynamic/modernizing as it is ancient. Working conditions are generally acceptable for a foreigner, but you are never settled here. Most enjoy weekends, as weekdays are demanding with blocks of classes that seem, at best of times, unending. The rituals continue until the Friday 9:00 class signals that in 40 minutes, we will soon be free. Saturdays are for rest, cycling, or shopping. We walk everywhere on Saturday. Friday nights are usually reserved for dinner w/ colleagues at Puffin's, and this past weekend we spent five hours at a local Jim-Jil-Bong, or public sauna/spa. It's an enormous department store sized, two-storied complex with numerous sauna rooms, some in the shape of caves with extreme heat and flat screen TVs. Other rooms have spas, the Green Tea spa is nice. There are also wet sauna (steam rooms) and dry saunas. They sell beer and soda and water at the refreshment counters. There is also a co-ed area where men and women and children can use sauna rooms in their pajamas (provided with $8 admission fee). You sweat and it is invigorating, a must is drinking plenty of water before/during/ and the day afterwards. These saunas are everywhere in Korea, and you can spend the entire night there for $8 bucks! Canadians should think about this idea, we have nothing that really compares. Sunday is service at Dongsan Church, a good Ansan hangout, Pastor Nick delivers great services in English. The band is great, I'm the bongo player. Spring is around the corner, can't wait!!!