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Stone's Throw Away

~ Adventures of a Mom, Teacher and Traveler

Stone's Throw Away

Category Archives: Out in the Big World/Travel

South Korea, Jeju, New Zealand (North and South Islands), Fiji, Thailand and China — the places we’ve been honored to visit on this year-long adventure.

The Stuff of Dreams

12 Thursday Jan 2012

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Out in the Big World/Travel

≈ 5 Comments

It’s easy to dream really big.  I dream, for example, of winning a multimillion dollar lottery.  I dream of being a published writer.  I dream of being the world’s biggest philanthropist.  Part of the fun of dreaming big is that little flit of knowledge that those dreams won’t ever actually come true.  They can’t!  If you fulfill your dreams, what else will you do with your daydreaming time?  Plus, who am I, after all, to envision myself at the pinnacle of a possible life?

This is what I used to think.  As recently as 8 months ago my dream of being an international teacher, and traveler, were just too big to swathe into a giant hug.   8 months ago, with a phone call, someone told me I could do that.  And so, a 15 year old dream came to life, like the Velveteen Rabbit, who, being so well loved, finally takes a breath.  So it is with dreams.

It’s funny, though.  Once alive, that sucker first crawls, then walks, then sprints from the spark that gave it life.  Case in point: After getting the opportunity to move to Korea,  we just spent Christmas in New Zealand and New Year’s Eve in Fiji.  If that doesn’t sound like I woke up inside a dream, I don’t know what does.

But I’m just going to give you this in one fell swoop, so as to spare you multiple entries about our 3 week trip.

Deep breath – and here goes:  While living in our rental RV for 10 days, we first mastered the roundabouts in Auckland, on the North Island, then witnessed the wonder and peace of the glow worms in the caves at Waitomo.  We ventured along winding and narrow roads on to beautiful Lake Taupo, first passing countless gorgeous rolling, hilly farmlands spotted with sheep.  Once there, we took a day trip into the world that is Rotorua, where we bathed in mud heated by underground volcanoes:  the same pools used by indigenous chiefs after the battles of long ago.  After that, we found a place to go zorbing where the kids and I rolled down a hillside in a giant ball in warm water, like cartwheeling embryos.  We also luged down the side of a mountain and ate delicious meat pies bought at a roadside cafe.  At this point, our RV decided it needed a new clutch and we were stuck, albeit poolside, for an entire day awaiting a different one.

Another deep breath.  After Taupo came a 2am arrival in Wellington, a stunningly vibrant and friendly city on the sea.  Here, we met up with a colleague from school and spent Christmas Eve with him and his sister’s friends and family on their deck overlooking the “bush” of New Zealand.  Morning took us to the ferry terminal, which carried us to Picton, on the South Island of NZ.  On Christmas Day, we drove to Kaikoura.  Our favorite.  We had good pizza for the first time in months, discovered a beach and spent a lot of time in the heated pool.  We cooked fresh salmon on the grill and just hung out.  But – also in Kaikoura, my lifelong dream of swimming with dolphins came true!   300 of those amazing creatures came to play that next morning.  If I live to be 110 I will never, ever forget that experience.

More deep breathing.  After the dolphins, a scenic 5-hour drive brought us into Greymouth and an RV spot beside a path that, whaddaya know, led to … one of the most beautiful beaches any of us had ever seen.  One night in Greymouth and we were off to Fox Glacier where the male Hamlins took a helicopter up and away, to walk on the surface of the glacier itself, which of course, is, very sadly, disappearing.  After this jaunt, another few hours and we were in Wanaka where we treated the kids to a trip to “Puzzle World” which was an entire building devoted to optical illusions, and which, despite that trite description, was awesome.  Then, alas, on to Haast, where we spent one night, caught up on laundry and had a quiet and leisurely dinner at a place where there were 30+ antlers hanging from the rafters and where there were awards on the wall, dating back a dozen years, for “Best Rack of the Year.”  We were tired enough to laugh quite hard about that.

Sigh.  Our plan was to get to the base of Mt. Cook, the highest mountain in NZ, but the driving was getting old.  We lucked out and got the last RV spot at much closer Lake Tekapo, which turned out to be golden.  We spent an hour or so in the hot pools staring up at the stars, while the kids went rollerblading.  We slept like rocks in our last night in the RV.  It rained the morning we left, which matched our general mood, as we were not happy to be leaving New Zealand.  We flew out of Christchurch and didn’t have a chance to see any of it, due to the destruction of the recent earthquake.

New Zealand was 10 days of fun, adventure and constant activity.  Fiji, on the other hand, was meant for sitting on our butts.  And that is just what we did.  The kids swam and we relaxed, often in our bungalow, which had A/C and a breeze blowing in off the water.  Fiji was nice.  But it’s New Zealand that stole our hearts.  We would love to have the chance to go back and explore the Milford Sound area.  But this will have to wait.  Besides, a person must have a dream and this one will suffice to keep me motivated on this international adventure.

Christmas in the RV park

 

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Ode to Java

17 Saturday Dec 2011

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Cuisine, Out in the Big World/Travel

≈ 4 Comments

I find it strange how now, more than ever, I am remembering and am tied to the smells of home.  I sometimes spend days at a time without really thinking of home, and then snap! a scent takes me back into a friend’s house, onto a baseball field, under our willow tree in the rain, through time and into my childhood home…

I love coffee. When the welcome aroma wafts into my consciousness, I think of my dad.  He was a Maxwell House lover – and brewed his perfect cup the color of sand on the beach, newly lapped with the tide.  I like mine dark, the color of baker’s chocolate, so the light doesn’t shine through.   Dad sipped his all day long, with every meal and into the evening.  When I was a stay-at-home mom I did the same, but now, I drink one cup, sometimes two, and I’m done until the next morning.

At my school here in Korea, we are amply provided with instant coffee.  It’s not bad.  It reminds me of a cross between dad’s Maxwell House and hot cocoa, because there’s so much sugar in it.  It’s called Contata – which I always thought meant ‘collection of’ – and the same name as the collection of choir music my mother sings at Christmas and Easter at her church.  So coffee now makes me think of my mother, too.

The routine of morning coffee is lovely.  Weekdays; sitting at my desk before students arrive, quietly sipping.  Or weekends; jammies on, FB page being read, snuggled up on the couch…sipping.  Are you with me coffee lovers?

So, the discovery of and consequent frequent visits to the coffee shop around the corner, “The Muffin Tree”, have provided me with short bouts of respite in a busy life.  Nick, our Canadian friend who owns the place, and whom I have mentioned before, makes a superb latte, Korea Vicki’s drink of choice.  His shop is warm, cozy, welcoming and smells like heaven – a combination of pastries, coffee beans and warm bagels.  I told him I thought I’d devote a blog to his shop and he said ‘oh, yeah, that’s been done before.’  Which made me laugh.  I’m not surprised.  It’s a tiny paradise on the outskirts of a big city and is being found by more and more people every day.  I just want to keep it all to myself.  Not unlike a perfect cup of java.

                  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Busan

27 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Out in the Big World/Travel

≈ 2 Comments

Getting off the subway and making our way toward Haeundae Beach in Busan was like enlarging Belfast and plopping it on the other side of the planet, like Emeril – “bam!” and we were home-ish for about 30 hours.  We settled into Busan very quickly, just fell in love.  Maybe it was the sun, the warm day, the beach, the ocean, the fish market … I don’t know.  Whatever it was, we felt refreshed and rejuvinated after only a short stay.

It sounds silly to declare the obvious, but we don’t have a lot of experience with subway systems.  They’re quite simple, however large, and inexpensive and convenient.  But gosh, 24 stops takes a long time!  We had to completely skip our planned trip to the Aquarium to meet friends and go get some lunch and do some fun Christmas shopping.  We had to skip the movie we promised the kids to do the same.  It isn’t like crossing the bridge at home to run an errand.  Things take time.  And the time you’re waiting in line, riding a subway, navigating directions to a location…there can be a lot of it.  It’s good to be with people you like and can chat away with so it seems faster.  It’s a good thing we like each other in this family. 

I learned some things that day:  one, seaside cities and towns move at a slightly slower and more friendly pace.  (There’s nothing wrong with Daegu and Seoul, but Busan — that’s the pace for us.)  Two, there is no shortage of ocean bounty in Korea.  (We saw in tanks,  dozens of types of fish, eel, muscles, clams, octopi and numerous other ocean creatures, including a baby shark,  in enormous bulk.  It is hard to imagine it all gets sold in the amount of time necessary to keep it alive and fresh.)  Three, if you think you’re going to cross the city in less than an hour, you’re wrong.  It’s best to just enjoy the journey, and hey, if you reach your destination, that’s great, too.  Talk to people, let them chatter with your children and practice their English.  It’s quite delightful, really. 

Destinations we reached:  one, a burger joint for lunch.  Happy kids.  Imported beer.  Good times.  Two, the aforementioned fish market.  Three, a wonderful outdoor market where we found, among lots of Korean-made goodies,  t-shirts for gifts.  This sounds mundane, but unlike at home, t-shirts are not sold on every corner celebrating a place, commemorating a festival or the like.  This was the first we had seen them, so we picked up quite a few.  Lastly, a buffet dinner at Party ‘n Play – food choices from around the world and a kid-heaven for when they’re finished eating and you want to have a cup of coffee with other adults.  It was perfect.  Add our comfortable hotel suite with a beautiful view, a breakfast in the morning and I’d call that a superb day and a half.   We will be revisiting Busan in the spring, when we can explore the lighthouse walkway and enjoy the waves at the beach.  An awesome trip!

 

Luke found the sparkliest store in Korea

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