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Perfect 빈대떡 / bindae-tteok for lunch: Paid for with cold, hard cash.

After a busy morning, this old boy was hungry. Through pure dumb luck, I happened upon just my kind of old school restaurant, with an open front and little plastic chairs to sit on. The two nice ladies there served me up the perfect 빈대떡 / bindae-tteok. Let's call it mung bean pancake.  The dipping sauce was good. The onions in the dipping sauce were great. It's been too long since I chowed down on some nice, fresh, bold onions.

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In addition to the nice ladies who worked there, another great thing was the old school payment system: Cash Only. Allow me to provide a translation for the sign below:

"We don't give a shit about your Cashbee card or your Tmoney card or your Visa or MasterCard. We just don't give a shit. It's cash, and cash only, just like it's always been. If you don't like it, go somewhere else. We don't need your high technology ass around here."

Disclaimer: I sort of embellished the translation. The original text is much kinder, and without profanity.

5000 Korean won / USD 3.75 for an excellent lunch.

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Age 64: I can do 1 chin-up.

Two days in a row, I have successfully executed a chin-up on the chin-up bar on Hwabusan. I'm talking about a proper chin-up, pulling my body up with the strength of my arms so that the bottom of my chin rests on the bar. The first day, I thought: "Okay. Let's do one, and see if I rip or tear anything." But I was still okay when I woke up this morning. 

Today was the second day. Before getting on the chin-up bar, I had the thought of maybe trying for two. That was not to be--at least not today. After the first one, I went straight back down without even attempting a second. 

I'm not sure if I'll be able to make it back to Hwabusan as I'm changing lodging tomorrow. That's probably for the best. When OCD Jerry gets going, he doesn't stop until he injures himself. Given more time, I'm pretty sure I could do two or three chin-ups. Or, maybe not. Maybe the next stop is zero chin-ups, and I should be grateful that I can still do one. 

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Flag pole supports in Daechang-ri, Gangneung City

I'm walking back to my motel this afternoon after a full morning, when I spy a vacant lot. Vacant lots are rare in town due to how expensive/valuable land is. I checked it out, and what do you know. It was a pretty cool piece of history. The people who take care of this town sure do a good job of it. I find it quite admirable that they keep this history intact.


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I must admit that Google Earth was excellent for navigating around Gangneung today.

I have an admission. Google Earth was excellent for navigating around Gangneung today. Is it possible that I, known to be prone to frequent episodes of dumbassery, have been using the wrong app (Google Maps) for my use case (walking in Korean cities and towns)? 

Thank you, Googlers who work or have worked on Google Earth. It works very well--dare I say, excellently, for walking around Gangneung.

Now I understand what my mom was talking about when she talked about Solitaire.

My mom used to talk about playing Solitaire in a bit of a strange way, kind of like she was disappointed with herself for playing it. At the time, I didn't understand. But now, having wasted hundreds of hours playing Solitaire on my phone, I understand exactly what she meant. Nobody at Saint Peter's pearly gates ever said, "Gee. I wish I would have spent more time alone in my room playing Solitaire."

Now get on out there and live!!! (Said to myself as much as to anyone else.)

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P.S. I won this game. I'm just saying...



The perfect shave

Did you know that hair conditioner used as shaving cream may work better than actual shaving cream? I couldn't believe it, but it's true. That's not all I learned. The DORCO disposable razors that we used to make fun of back in the day are actually excellent. Who knew? (Probably people who actually used them...)

For my money, you can't beat the combination of a DORCO and hair conditioner as shaving cream. The perfect shave.


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Confused old foreigner at the laundromat: Did you think this was going to be easy? Hint: Hell, no!!!

Despite the arduous journey to the laundromat, the Friday evening was still young. It was still light outside. Let the youth enjoy their Friday evenings with food and laughter and fun. The old guy's got laundry to do. Either that, or wear dirty, sweaty clothes.

Into the Aqua Wash I go. "Oh. A screen. It says start here. Okay." And I immediately let myself get sucked into the screen. I did NOT take a proper look at the washers and dryers, maybe a quick glance, but that's about it. Can I blame this failure on Microsoft and Google? On smartphones and computers? Am I so drawn to screens that I ignore everything around me in my physical environment? Has my assimilation into The Borg that the Internet represents caused thought defects? Presence of mind defects? I have no way to know. Maybe I've always been like this, and if it wasn't the screens it would be something else. Let me tell you the story.

Maybe because it was a Friday evening, I was the only person in the laundromat. There was nobody around to ask for assistance. Like I said, I got sucked straight into the screen. 

  1. Select language: ENGLISH

  2. Press here to become a member

  3. Enter your telephone number
    (Formatted for Korean phone numbers only, which I do not have.)
    "Okay. I'll put in a fake phone number."

  4. Enter a four-digit password
    "Okay, I'll put in an easy-to-remember password. Same as some of my other passwords? No. Too dangerous. Use something unique, but easy to remember."

  5. Deposit enough money to pay for a load of laundry
    (How much is enough? Are there different prices for different size loads? What do these numbers mean? 39', 43', etc.)
    "F-ing hell. I don't know. How am I supposed to know?"

  6. Deposits 6000 Korean won / USD 4.50
    (4000 Korean won would have been enough as it turns out...)

  7. Use Washer #1
    (Goes to Washer #1, where absolutely nothing is happening. All instructions are in Korean.)
    "Give me a couple of days, and I'm sure I can work it out. For now, I am F-ed."

  8. "Now what? Now F-ing what?And where's the laundry detergent. There's none in here. Do I have to go over to the convenience store and buy some? Why do they have Bounce laundry sheets, but no detergent?"

  9. Purchases a "Bounce" for Korean won 500 / USD 0.37, on the long shot hope that maybe it's laundry detergent.
    (Of course, it's not. It's just a couple of Bounce dryer sheets as you would expect.)

  10. Gives up, massively frustrated.
    "F. I was tested and I failed. I failed the test of doing laundry in Korea the first time."
Having failed the test, I took my dirty clothes out of Washer #1, put them in my backpack, and went outside, where I could take off my Covid mask for air. Yes, I was doing all the steps above with a Covid mask on, hardly able to breathe, as my frustration mounted and finally peaked.

The air helped. Taking a break helped. After a while, I went back inside (masked of course). "Let me see here." I started taking a proper look at the washers. "Hmm. Coins. Price based on load size. I don't have much. I saw a machine for changing bills into coins. Here it is." Now I had a bunch of coins, more than enough for my small load of laundry. "Still, no laundry detergent, but F it. Some cleaning's better than no cleaning at all." I put in the proper amount of coins, selected the water temperature (medium), pressed start, and I was off to the races.

Imagine my joy at seeing lots of soap bubbles. "Oh. The detergent is automatically included. Why didn't you F-ing tell me!!!" But I wasn't too bitter. Rather, I was happy not to be a total loser who couldn't do his laundry at the laundromat. Forty minutes later, the laundry was done. I took out the clothes and headed for the dryers, where there was only one glitch. What I thought was the Start button on the screen didn't work, but I quickly found a physical start button above the screen.

To celebrate my victory, I actually folded my laundry, with the exception of underwear and socks, which will never be folded by this low-budget traveller because to do so would make no sense. The seven-kilometer walk back to the motel had no errors as I had begun learning some streets. Straight back I proceeded, arriving at the motel room quite tired.

Penalty for not properly inspecting physical environment prior to getting sucked into a screen: 6000 Korean won / USD 4.50



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Mission: Find a laundromat.

The low-budget traveller is on the road for a month, living out of a single backpack. I don't mean a proper backpack like hikers use. I mean pretty much a book/computer backpack, the kind that gets used for school. Stuffed full, it could break at any moment. But then, so could the old guy carrying it. For now, they both persevere.

I have about four days worth of clothes, maybe only three if this humid weather continues. I'll probably be doing laundry at least seven or eight times. So it is not a task that can be avoided. And avoid it, I did not. Shortly after dropping off my possessions at the motel, I headed out to do a load of laundry. First issue: Where is a laundromat? Allow me to state that nearly 24 hours after the fact, my rage at Google Maps has not completely subsided. When I say it's a torture app, and not a navigation app, that's not a joke. I mean it quite sincerely. I suspect that the employees at Google Maps have it in for Dumbass, Old Grizzled, Fumble Bumble, as they call me internally. 

The good part about Google Maps being useless for finding a laundromat in Gangneung is that you get to talk to some people. First up was the motel owner, a wonderful young guy who pointed me in the right direction, from which I quickly veered off course. 

Then I met a bright young lady from some Western country at a bus stop. I am still kicking myself in the ass for not being able to identify her nationality based on her speech. She could have been American, but something was different. She certainly spoke Korean well. She did a great job of getting nearby laundromat information from the Korean student girls at the bus stop. (I couldn't ask them myself. Not proper.) I was hoping she lived in town and knew it well, but it sounds like she was a recent arrival, albeit not as recent an arrival as myself at the one-hour-in-town mark.

They gave me great directions: "Just walk straight up there and turn right at the convenience store." I walked straight up there and straight up there some more, and there was never a convenience store. But this is not unusual for me. Operating at 50% comprehension, I often get things wrong--in all languages. Strangely, I don't mind too much right now. The main purpose of this trip is to get healthy, and I planned on doing a lot of walking and hiking. That I have put in a lot of kilometers walking while lost is but a bonus. And it is, after all, a great way to learn your way around. Let me put in a plug here for Dr. Seuss' Cat in the Hat's concept of Calculatus Eliminatus, which has influenced me greatly in my life: "The way to find a missing something is to find out where it's not."

And find out where a laundromat was not, I certainly did. There was no laundromat on the road along the river. Nor was there a laundromat as I walked on and on in the rain (and humidity!!!) under my umbrella. Desperate, I turned back to my torturer, Google Maps. With exquisite torture technique, they showed my blue dot getting closer and closer to the destination until I was upon it. Great! A childcare center and a playground. I'm sure they'd like to have a sweaty old foreigner hanging around the daycare. Well-done, Googlers!!! You got me again.

Like a hostage with Stockholm Syndrome, and no one around to ask, I gave myself up to the Google Maps torture session. They threw up more of their alleged laundromat red flags on the screen, and like the dumbass that I am, I walked--and walked. Towards the real or fake red flag I was driven. Despite my frequent protestations, I have been assimilated just like Star Trek's Captain Picard into The Borg. "F-ing hell. They've got me, and I'll never again be free."

I closed in on the laundromat red flag, Nothing. I went past it. Nothing. But then--humans!!! Two old guys about my age, maybe a bit older, were standing on the corner smoking cigarettes. Now we're talking. These two old guys took up the challenge exactly as I would if you asked me for directions in my home neighborhood. There was some debate between them: "F that. That's too far." "What about over there?" "Yeah, that's close." In agreement, they switched to giving directions mode: "Go up there (pointing). Turn left at the big road. Go about two hundred meters. There's a big building at the entrance to the apartment complex. There's a laundromat in that building."

I followed their instructions exactly, and that's exactly where the laundromat was. Oh, poor, pathetic Google Maps. You have no idea how vastly worse you are in comparison to what those two guys did. Go ahead. Proceed onward with your mechanization of the world. I want no part of it. You've already destroyed a vast quantity of human memory, of knowledge, of memorization strategies and techniques. My God! What are you doing to our brains? And for what? On the road, your Google Maps seldom works, to the point that I'm surprised on those rare occasions when it does work.

But quit you, I cannot. I am your torture victim, and I have been assimilated.






화부산 / Hwabusan right near Gangeung Train Station

With all due respect to the mountain spirits, thank you for letting me climb to the top of 화부산 / Hwabusan, right near the Gangneung Train Station. Even while walking on the sidewalk, long before the entrance, I could smell that beautiful Korean forest smell. The trails are great, extremely well-maintained, making this an easy-enough hike for old folks.




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In Gangneung, lots of people have vegetable patches.

In Gangneung, lots of people have vegetable patches, in most places where vegetable patches can be had. Good for them. Great fresh vegetables here.



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A bicycle ride wearing a KN-95 mask is better than no bicycle ride at all.

I guess it was my dream that the air wouldn't get bad until mid-January. I got back right at the end of the rainy season, and the air is...