Showing posts with label Adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adventure. Show all posts

Going to the @*$&@(@ng beach

Tuesday, September 7

So, I'll count the past few weeks as a hiatus.  I was running late anyway but then a week or so ago my Gramma passed away very unexpectedly.  It was one of those things that makes you realize life at home continues even when you are so far away having this crazy experience.  It's sort of hard to deal with that sort of thing when you can't be there so I dropped off the face of the earth.  Without further ado:



Sometimes travel, like the life it represents, is a complete and spectacular disaster. The trip to Dacheon Beach in on the western shores of peninsula was, and I reiterate, a disaster with a high casualty rate.


It started at 9am on a Saturday, an hour few people ever claim to see in Korea. I met my neighbor Amanda R. outside of our lovely apartment building (my provided fridge ceased to function about a month ago, I have cockroaches, and my toilet is emitting a steady spew of water onto my bathroom floor). A short taxi ride took us to the other side of the river in Cheongju where we met up with Tim and learned that the tiny satellite bus terminal did NOT offer a way to the city of Daejeon.

Daejeon, while not being our final destination, serves as a hub of this general neighborhood. From Daejeon, a bus would take us to Boryeong and another would take us to a splendid hot summer day on a sandy beach. Being that the way to Boryeong from Daejeon was made only hourly and we had already lost some time, we took a cab from the little terminal (I want to say it was called Bukbo, but I have been getting the terminal name confused with a Bill Cosby skit recently so who knows) all the way to the grand monstrosity on the other side of the city.

A half hour or so later we were on a bus heading to Daejeon to meet up with Andrew and Amanda C. We would be getting to Dacheon Beach a little later than we all had hoped with a 2 hour ride from Daejeon to Dacheon but there would still be hours and hours of fun and swimming to look forward to.

Things started going south as the bus pulled off the highway and into the main drag of Daejeon. Amanda, who sat in the seat opposite Tim and I had been minding her own business when the sleeping Korean guy behind her exploded. It sounded at first like somebody springing awake after unexpectedly dosing but was followed then by the unmistakable sound of someone shotgun-barfing into their hand and a sick splattering sort of sound. This was followed by the smell of tomatoes and a look of sheer terror on Amanda’s face and shock on those of everybody else’s.

In hindsight, maybe this would have been the appropriate moment to get off of that bus and straight into another that would take us home, but we went on. It seems that if one believes in omens and such that somebody almost hurling on you pre-10am might be a good indication to get on home.

We met up with the others and were soon on a bus headed to Boryeong with a handful of Brits sitting a few rows behind us. In all likelihood, the only place to which any foreigners on that bus were going to was Dacheon Beach and it is always nice to have reassurance that you are at least on the right damned bus.

We drove on for a long time. It seemed clear already that our chosen route to the Beach probably would be taking a bit more than 2 hours. Still, bus rides are always nice in a foreign country with a unique landscape.

After a handful of stops, some eavesdropping and shared information as to where exactly our stop was we exited the bus in a combined wave of two groups of foreigners.

My mother has always said that Brandon (my adventure friend, with whom I have hitchhiked, climbed and generally wandered for many years) and I should sign up for The Amazing Race. Each time I watched the show with her she would say so at least twice.

If we departed the bus at Boryeong or some other god-forsaken city I do not remember. What I do remember is that we found ourselves walking on a dirt surface amongst the pollution of diesel, a sweltering heat and the chaos of a poorly organized bus stop in some out-post town. We walked, trailing the Brit’s a bit until a Korean lady began yelling and gesturing that we were apparently in the area designated to busses picking up passengers as opposed to the human-only area, full of people trying to get the hell out.

We passed through the divider and were soon bouncing around Koreans under a strong-as-hell early afternoon sun trying at once to get out of the crowd and figure out one: where we were, and two: where we were headed.

Bus stations that go anywhere you actually want to go are generally fairly accessible and well labeled, even if it isn’t in English. This place was not. It was dirty and crawling with locals who had been around long enough to know all they needed to and therefore didn’t care much for the placement of signs to help others.

We stood for a while; our group of Americans here and the Brits off about 20 feet. There was some talk between the two of us as they too seemed to be a little dumbfounded. Passively, they followed us for a little and we them but ultimately it was decided that this place probably wasn’t going to be getting us anywhere we wanted to go.

We wished eachother luck as they hopped in a cab.

We saw them again, 20 minutes later as we waited in another bus station down the way and past a fortress wall perched atop a green hill. This station, thankfully, was labeled enough so that we were soon on a third bus, headed finally to the beach.

On the face of our plans, we anticipated a 2 hour ride from Daejeon that would give us time to relax and then a day at the beach before we made the return journey. Somewhere along hour 4 of our trip to Daecheon Beach, between Tim rocking a hard Texan accent talking about deep-fried butter with Amanda, and a couple of kids who had developed a 2 hour long obsession with Andrew and Amanda C; Amanda C had either the good humor or pleasant sense of sarcasm to say that “hey, at least we’re all together!”

That final bus dragged on forever. We whipped around on the sides of small mountains, on the edges of a lake and through village after village. We passed through town side streets and over highways that divided only one rice-patty from another. We passed even the point at which it was utter denial to think we were going to be spending the same amount of time as we had spent traveling to the beach actually AT the beach.

At some point the bus pulled into a sandy parking lot that housed couple of trailers that served as bathrooms, a convenience store that didn’t sell water, and a ticket counter.



Anyone looking to read about fun at Dacheon Beach will be disappointed to find out that here the bulk of the story ends. All told, we spent around 5 hours trying to get to the place and had now only a few hours to spend beachside before we had to pack on another bus that would take us direct to Daejeon and then home to Cheongju.

The first thing we did was buy beer, water, and snacks. We then proved to be a beach vendor’s good fortune by immediately renting a platform and an umbrella to enjoy what time we had there. We drank our beers and talked and I wandered back and forth looking for some place to change into my bathing suit.

I walked for what seemed like a long time in bare feet towards various buildings I hoped to be a bathroom but had no luck until Andrew and Tim came running up with my heinous flip flops and I found a bathroom in which to change.

Tim and Andrew came back some 45 minutes later (probably a good third of out time at the beach) with a full pizza box and a bottle of Coke (or Pepsi). I have gone on at length here, there, and elsewhere as to the properties of Korean pizza. Never is there real cheese, often there are odd and funky toppings, and always there is corn. This pizza, though, was something special. It proved at once to be one of the brighter points of my day and also the bane of my existence.

It was a cheese pizza. It was topped with sauce and a dump-truck load of cheese. Real cheese. At the time, the amount of cheese on this thing seemed absurd. You could feel its give and snap as you tore off a bite. If I were at home, the thing would probably be lackluster at best; but I was not. As it was, that pizza was the best pizza I have yet to have in Korea.

The water was freakishly warm, something that was quickly blamed on our proximity to China. We were bathing in the luke warm Yellow Sea and I will maintain that it is better to believe that one is swimming in toxic pollution than urine.

Two things happened on the way home. Tim’s wallet never got out of a taxi cab in Daejeon and by the time he noticed (about half a second after he closed the door) the guy was gone. I think things turned out ok, but I don’t imagine it is a good feeling to lose that amount of important objects (money, bank card, Alien Registration Card) all at one go.

The other thing that happened is I all but confirmed my inkling that I might be the slightest bit lactose intolerant by spending an hour trying with all of my might not to crap my pants. The cheese, glorious as it was, turned into napalm somewhere inside of me. I will spare the details but suffice it to say that the pain was excruciating, the sweats were cold, the tremors fierce and at one point my mind had accepted that there was a pretty good chance that I was going to have a worse story to tell than the tomato-barfer.

Beach photo courtesy of Amanda.


What did I eat today? A peanut-butter sandwich and kimchi-fried rice.






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A bit of a prologue

Monday, March 29

I am sitting on my couch in exotic Shrewsbury, MA.


So... nope, I have not left yet, but I am going to start posting if only so I don't have to stare at the mistitled "Soon So Come" of my coming soon entry.

I have included the following in each and every journal / blog that I have ever had, but it is most relevant to this journal. Quite simply this was my Alpha-Adventure; the one that began it all for me. I have climbed mountains, I have drifted through the Bronx and Harlem and stared at a frozen Niagra Falls. I have been to Rome and Milan. I have seen the battlefields of America.  I've spent weeks in the mountains and valleys of northern Greece and pounded stakes into its clay. I have been abandoned in Mexico City and found myself in a doorless motel in Acapulco. I have done many things and hope to do many more, but it all comes back to this. It is a fitting starting point.

I have left it largely intact, meaning it remains as gushy and vague as it was when I first wrote it many years ago. I have given it a once over for the sake of getting rid of any blatant spelling errors. Enjoy, add me, comment.


My "adventures" are, as a rule, never adventures... they're just sort of happenings that help pass dull days... then something to think of, which will at the most make me smile... but the other day, oddly enough I had an adventure. the "little beach hike" taken by Brandon and myself ended up being a 20 mile trek to the border of Maine- complete with bloody legs, torn and blistered feet, hunger, thirst, etc... looking back, we could have easily died at least twice not even counting getting hit by a car. I still have that map; whose note of "map not to proportion" we saw 20 miles after we should have... I still have the tattoo... I still have the sore foot and the lumps from the massive bug bites we got in the marshlands in Rye... Rye is positively the largest coastal small town on earth. I smile at the fact that after walking 15 miles, we were dragging our dirty bloody feet on the side of a road when a RED-BULL truck practically hit us... only to have the driver ask us "Do you need some ENERGY!?" and give us RED BULLs. I still cant believe we hitch hiked with two kids who, although very nice, were also very drunk. and I cant believe even more that that wasn’t our last instance of hitch hiking... this time with old drunk lesbians... one of which had recently gotten out of 9 days in a maximum security prison... and in between references to PAY IT FORWARD and good deeds upon others, jokes of cutting us into itty bitty pieces and throwing us into the marshes were made.... and its still funny... that after 20 miles of walking, 20 miles of riding in cars with strangers, we came back to an amazing Hampton night... with a hole in the clouds... before midnight... it was transcendental... to sit on the cool sands, and rest out legs under the stars... with the surf roaring and breeze blowing... as teens smoked down by the water, or played foot ball... and to sit there and talk and revel in the epiphanies that such a night can have... that everything works out. that at 11pm, when you find yourself in a strange city after hours and hours of blisters and bugs, road races, rain, trash bag rain protection, 20 miles off of only 2 hot dogs and Gatorade, swimming in cold water just to cool down, washing in a run off pipe, after walking all day... and deciding to walk back all night, just to avoid a dreamless night on a cold evening with only a long-sleeved tee... that after a THOROUGHLY bad idea and a 20 mile hike in sandals or bare feet... the night ended better than we could’ve imagined, that before midnight we would find ourselves once again on the sands of Hampton beach... drinking smoothies and smoking peach flavored cigars...alive and safe... and HAPPY!!! forgetting our feet and legs and drenched and dirty clothes, we were laughing at it all, hysterically, and looking for non existing words to describe it all... and in the back ground... that hippie kid playing guitar... it was like a movie... a bit funny how in a way, Brandon and my summer ended on the same beach it started on... down to the parking spot. and the whole experience... like Brandon said... just showed that everything works out. and that’s such a clichéd statement... but it just hit me hard that night... that even when its at its worst, even when it seems that at the very best... there’s a very unpleasant walk ahead... in the end... it’ll all be fine.. it all works out in the end... in the most amazing sublime ways... and I don’t know, this seems so cliché... but its just that when we were sitting on the beach, with the beach combers driving by... laughing and talking... it was so obvious that if we let the situation completely destroy us, if we were walking in absolute misery beyond our jokes... if we let ourselves get brought down by hurt feet, or simple mistakes... we wouldn’t have had the awesome ending to that night... instead of sitting in a sort of still speechless euphoria... we'd be sitting there all pissed off... well aware of our pains and dwelling on them... and I’m just happy that’s not what happened... so if nothing else... our little hike just went to show that its hard as it might be, in the end life will turn out fine, in fact better than we expect when we're in our worst moments... and knowing that... its easier to deal with the situations and dramas of life... that in the end... as hard, or confusing, or painful, or complicated the beginning of a day is... in the end, it’ll just be something to smile about and be happy that it did in fact work out...that in the end... the best nights are worth the long days


and the tattoo on my back will remind me of that... it had meaning to me before... but after it all... after the walking, the joking, the epiphanies... it means even more... and I was worried that id regret getting it the second I did, but I don’t... I’m very happy that I got it...


Ok, in my defense I had not yet begun my journalism studies and apparently had no idea as to the use of ellipses. Someday I will fix it up and someday Brandon and I will write a joint version, but until then this will work just fine.

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All images are my own unless otherwise noted. I am no Capa, but please respect that photography is how I make a living and ask before you use any images.

-Tom

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