Caveat: The Hill and The Mall

Yesterday I went with Curt to go on a small hike up a mountain (well, really just a hill). His daughter came along, who's just entering 4th grade. The mountain we chose is called 심학산 [simhaksan]. It has a view of North Korea, like many mountains around here – it was hazy and not very distinct but I'm always very aware of it – I guess it's just my geographical interest kicking in.

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After the mountain we went to a brand new giant mall and had dinner and bought his little one-year-old a Pororo-branded toy. It was fun. Here are some pictures. I didn't get a picture of the boy with the toy. I should have.

This is near the top of the mountain.

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Curt and I.

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A view southeast, toward Ilsan. Somewhere near the center of that vast cluster of buildings is my apartment and workplace.

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Here I am looking dazed with the community known as Geumchon hidden directly behind me. Geumchon is important because it's where I lived in 1991 when I was in Korea, as a soldier in the US Army.

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And here's the striking view looking North – I've added some useful labels to this picture – you can click the picture to enlarge it.

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Anywhere in Northern Gyeonggi Province, if you go hiking on the hills and mountains, you will run across military structures – fox-holes, fortified hill-tops, bunkers and concrete tank traps and hidden installations. Here's a covered "tank-parking-space" amid the trees on the side of the mountain.

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Curt's daughter (and my sometime student at Karma, too), looking focused and tired on her way down the mountain. She was angry because Curt had promised a snack at the top of the mountain and he'd forgotten, and she failed to complain about it. We had a snack when we got back down to the bottom.

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Here's a turtle-based monument seen along the trail.

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At the mall.

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Lurking in the dusky haze beyond the freeway interchange, there lies the Han River Estuary and the point of North Korea. I wonder what the Northerners think, watching this massive monument to blatant brand-name consumerism through their high-powered binoculars.

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Caveat: 삼일절

Today is a holiday. March first commemorates the 1919 uprising against the Japanese colonial rule. I’ve blogged about it [broken link! FIXME] before, but I read something interesting in the wikithing article on the topic today: “A delegation of overseas Koreans, from Japan, China, and Hawaii, sought to gain international support for independence at the ongoing Paris Peace Conference. The United States and Imperial Japan blocked the delegation’s attempt to address the conference.” (Emphasis added by me).  Not to be a hater, but, looking at the historical record, ain’t it wonderful how my own country stands up so consistently for human rights?
I spent the day with my sometime friend / sometime boss Curt. I’ll post more later.

A delegation of overseas Koreans, from Japan, China, and Hawaii, sought to gain international support for independence at the ongoing Paris Peace Conference. The United States and Imperial Japan blocked the delegation’s attempt to address the conference.
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