Thursday, April 5, 2012
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Settling In
Maggie is having a rough go of it as she has a live in playmate. Learning to share her space and mom and dad's attention and affection is hard for a 7 yr. old. But, she is SLOWLY learning that when he gets revved up, he does not know how to slow it down. She is such a great helper though. Having two kids in the family triples the jobs around the house. Hmm.. the math does not add up. Anyway... Bok is on E.S.T. now and his schedule is pretty good. He wakes when we get up around 6:30 and naps around 1 PM for about an hour. He goes to bed at around 9 ish (Depends if we run him down going outside). He puts himself to sleep by wrestling his pillows, kicks the walls, and flips everywhere. He is a riot! He does sleep through the night with a few mid-sleep wimpers and moans but he soothes himself back to sleep. All said and done, she adores HIM!
Friday, April 9, 2010
SLEEP NEEDED
Okay... The 13 hour difference is kicking in. His sleep is so erratic. The little cutie is slowly becoming acclimated but not fast enough. He FINALLY went to mommy. He has been attached at my hip every second after running full speed after Nuna (sister) Maggie. I go to work Monday and would like to rest before then. Who knows... I know this is not permanent but being sleep deprived is not quite so fun...
He has been eating well.. 3 oranges at one sitting... Eats a banana a day, loves eggs and Momma went to the Asian store and bought a traditional sticky rice steamer. We all eat sticky rice now 3 times a day!
He loves to climb the stairs but is not mastered coming down, a bit scary! He loves to laugh and RUN, RUN, RUN. We had a Dr. appointment yesterday and all is well. He gets very dry lips so if you have any advice on this issue, please post comment.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Plane Ride!
He wimpered some at night. But wow.. what a co-pilot!... He only cried on the plane when I tried to get up as we sat next to an elderly man with a cane. We were warned that he fears old men. The poor gentleman did not know and kept trying to help. Bok-hyeon just wimpered. He slept 6 hours on the plane and then on the leg to TC from Detroit. He can be my wingman anytime!
Hi Appa (Daddy!)
First time meeting big sis!
Let's Go home...
Gotcha Day
Sorry I am so far behind... Here are some pics of me getting Bok-hyeon. He was the one not crying if you are confused. His foster mom and I gave each other a big hug and then off to the cab we went. He waved bye-bye (anyong) to all and hopped in the cab. He eventually fell asleep. Never cried, freaky! We went to our hotel and played for a while and then went to the aquarium to see some sights. The mall was attached to our hotel!
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Bongeunsa Temple
Today I get my son forever. It could not be any more perfect than to have a relaxing breakfast and then walk across the street to the Bongeunsa Buddhist Temple. It is a working temple in the heart of the COEX area. We heard the people chanting inside. We stayed outside and looked around. It was beautiful.
Link for more info: http://www.bongeun.org/
I am going to rest and then leave at 12:30 PM to get Bok-Hyeon! We will then come back to our room and then head out to the aquarium here in the Mall.
Noryangjin Marine Products Market - WOW
Foods in Korea Link http://www.lifeinkorea.com/Food/menu.cfm
From http://www.gourmet.com/travel/2008/10/jonathan-gold-noryangjin-fish-market --The Noryangjin Marine Products Market is one of the greatest food spectacles on earth. A yawning structure in central Seoul, as large as several football stadiums laid end to end, it’s crammed snout-to-elbow with exotic sea creatures from every conceivable aquatic locale: acres of stingrays aligned precisely as roof tiles; gilt lengths of ribbonfish; regiments of pike; oceans of halibut; endless trays of pickled clams; and more kinds of jacks and mackerels and anchovies than could be identified with a libraryful of reference books. As you weave through the 700-odd stalls, dodging the blasts of frigid water that the merchants occasionally sluice through the aisles, and the very small men charging through bearing very large bags of ice, you may notice the absence of anything resembling a fishy reek, replaced instead by the fresh smell of the sea.
Koreans favor species toward the bottom rungs of the food chain, so while you will see the occasional bluefin or salmon at Noryangjin, they are far outnumbered by croaker and corvina, bubbling clams and giant octopus whose arms extend farther than Shaquille O’Neal’s. You will also pass miles of live-seafood tanks, many of them filled with the usual lobsters, prawns, and crabs, but also finfish of every description, and a disconcerting array of bottom-of-the-sea stuff whose uses are difficult to contemplate. (It’s hard to know which sea squirts are more alarming—the ones that look a little like warty, pulsing pineapples, or the pink ones resembling throbbing uncircumcised phalluses, right down to the undulating slit at the business end.)
There is a big auction area on the second floor of the 24-hour market, but almost all of the downstairs stalls are prepared to slice any one of their fish into sashimi for you on the spot—or better yet, to put your purchases into plastic bags and point you toward one of the cavelike seafood restaurants that line the north end of the complex, where they will serve up your sashimi in the traditional Korean style with sesame leaves, bean paste, sliced chiles, and raw garlic, and transform the rest of the creature into a seething cauldron of spicy, bright-red fish soup. Throw in some steamed Korean blue crabs, a few grilled prawns, some kimchi, and a bottle or two of soju, and you’ve got the greatest Korean breakfast in the world.
Koreans favor species toward the bottom rungs of the food chain, so while you will see the occasional bluefin or salmon at Noryangjin, they are far outnumbered by croaker and corvina, bubbling clams and giant octopus whose arms extend farther than Shaquille O’Neal’s. You will also pass miles of live-seafood tanks, many of them filled with the usual lobsters, prawns, and crabs, but also finfish of every description, and a disconcerting array of bottom-of-the-sea stuff whose uses are difficult to contemplate. (It’s hard to know which sea squirts are more alarming—the ones that look a little like warty, pulsing pineapples, or the pink ones resembling throbbing uncircumcised phalluses, right down to the undulating slit at the business end.)
There is a big auction area on the second floor of the 24-hour market, but almost all of the downstairs stalls are prepared to slice any one of their fish into sashimi for you on the spot—or better yet, to put your purchases into plastic bags and point you toward one of the cavelike seafood restaurants that line the north end of the complex, where they will serve up your sashimi in the traditional Korean style with sesame leaves, bean paste, sliced chiles, and raw garlic, and transform the rest of the creature into a seething cauldron of spicy, bright-red fish soup. Throw in some steamed Korean blue crabs, a few grilled prawns, some kimchi, and a bottle or two of soju, and you’ve got the greatest Korean breakfast in the world.
We were in our little restaurant and did this! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2m6cTaE8YWg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KX6bydmVTnQ
DMZ
Monument in honor
Mines are still around
Kevin at freedom bridge

Ribbons of hope
Look closer to the billboard... It houses ammo to blow the bridges into Seoul in case of an invasion!!
MJ - Our DMZ tour Guide
Tunnel to DMZ
Pic of Me outside the DMZ... Behind me is a sculpture of Korea being reunited.
South Korean Flag (notice barb wire)
Sculpture
Ribbons of hope
Went to the DMZ on Sat. Morning. Very Cool and sobering. Thinking of all those people who died and seeing only a dividing line to keep each other apart is tough. They compared the DMZ to the great wall of china. They said like the berlin wall, great wall, we have the green wall. It is a sanctuary for animals and birds. The nice thing now is the transportation link between North and South. Trains and cars can go to and from with certain permission.
Another few links about the DMZ are:
Another few links about the DMZ are:
Namdaemun Market
ABOUT- Namdaemun Market
Named for its nearby namesake of Namdaemun (Great South Gate) and located near the downtown area, one of Korea's largest wholesale markets covers over 10 acres. It is filled with over 1,000 shops, stalls, retailers, street vendors, and has several department stores nearby. Here you can find clothes, shoes, fabrics, tableware, flowers, vegetables, ginseng products, toys, and watches. Under Namdaemun-no (the main street to the north of the market) is an extensive underground arcade. Although many of Namdaemun's shops are within the buildings that make up the area, the most colorful aspect of the market is the group of street vendors that setup in the alleys and walkways between the buildings. Wholesalers operate from midnight to 6:00 a.m., and retailers are open from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Although most retailers close their stores on the 1st and 3rd Sundays of each month, many street vendors operate stalls in the alleys. Due to its location near downtown and the convenient bus service to and from Itaewon, many foreigners visit here. Most of the vendors can speak a few words of English or Japanese, but you will generally need an interpreter for any intense bargaining. Because many shops are willing to take non-Korean currency, there is also a thriving black market for money exchanging, with rates generally a little better than those of banks. Should you decide to exchange money this way, take great care not to get ripped off.
I bought presents today... What a cool market... There is everything you could imagine!
Friday, April 2, 2010
Tour Day in Seoul
Started off this morning and had breakfast at the hotel. Wow.. I ate a very traditional Korean breakfast and used my chopsticks!... I am getting better every time I used them. Below are pics but our tour guides were great. They were volunteers from Holt. Wait... Mi an was but she brought her boyfriend with her. They were fun to hang with for the next 6 plus hours. We started off from our subway at the Coex Mall/World Trade Center to go to the Main Palace. That was neat as we watched the changing of the guard and toured the grounds. After that we went for some real nice Korean food. I had the octopus (spicy dish) while the kids ordered the Spicy Bulgogi (beef dish). My brother ordered the vegetable pancake (Very tasty). Well, the way the meal works is that it is a social meal. You eat your soup, fix the rice in your bowl and then you share the entire table until you cannot eat anymore! The spice kept you eating your rice. The neat thing is that they poured hot water in the sticky rice bowl to get the crusty rice from the bottom. Mi An said it had a different flavor. I compared that to brownie edges (a treat?). We ate, laughed, and got to know each other.
We shopped around that area but then I asked to go to the big outddor market to get gifts. OMG was that market large. You cannot see the entire market in a day. Saw an outdoor food vendor selling something that looked interesting. Mi An asked me if I wanted to eat it as she laughed. Then she told me it was pupa.. uggh... pre-caterpillars??? Grubbs??? nada.. was not going to happen! Anyway, were were thoroughly entertained by the characters there. The kids got us some decent bargains and then we needed to let them go. We were so tired.
These guides were unbelievable. They were going to stay with us as long as we wanted them. Actually, we just ended up giving them money for a date night out like the movies and popcorn. That got them to go as they were giving up their whole day volunteering. Felt kind of bad keeping them that long. But before they left us, they made sure we got on the right subway train! The Koreans here are such beautiful people!!!!!
These guides were unbelievable. They were going to stay with us as long as we wanted them. Actually, we just ended up giving them money for a date night out like the movies and popcorn. That got them to go as they were giving up their whole day volunteering. Felt kind of bad keeping them that long. But before they left us, they made sure we got on the right subway train! The Koreans here are such beautiful people!!!!!
Pics:
Police...They were shocked to get their pics taken!
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