N Seoul Tower
We went to Seouls equivalent of the CN tower to see a birds eye view of the city. It was an adventure getting there! It was our first time navigating the subway on our own and even though I've had many experiences travelling on non-English metros during my travels, it's a lot harder when the maps use characters instead of letters! I found very detailed directions and somehow (combo luck and internal compass), we found our way through a windy backstreet to where the cable car was. We were glad we found it! When Jac went to the tower in the summer, they couldn't find the cable car and hiked up the mountain. Ha, can you imagine us doing that? I'm far too lazy.
We took the Namsan cable car up and had a great view of Seoul. We had burgers for lunch and then took the elevator up to the observation deck. The coolest part we're the locks of love. People put their names on lock and chain them to the fence surrounding the tower. There were thousands of them! We couldn't find jaclyns and sarahs that they put up in the summer though.
Traditional Folk Village
Ha, our adventure to get to the village about an hour outside Seoul was interesting! We lost the directions that jac gave us to get to the bus, but figured it out with dumb luck. Then we just showed the driver the brochure of the folk village, he nodded and we got on - not sure if the nod was a confirmation or a hello. But we got there!
Mom and I went here on a freezing cold day where it felt like we were wandering through the ruins of a old Korean town as there were maybe like 40 people in the entire park.
It was very interesting though. We saw how they made their houses, heated their floors, various celebrations and festivals and even some traditional dancing and horse aerobatics! We saw an area that they used for traditional films and pretended we were in historical dramas. :)
A lady showed me how to tie my hair using a chopstick (which I had previously deemed impossible due to my thin hair), we ate what tasted like rubber corn on the cob (no way was whatever we were eating real food) and checked out the amusement park area (think of a mini Centre Island haha).
The Aquarium & COEX Mall
Wednesday found us at the COEX Mall & Aquarium! The COEX mall is Seoul's largest underground (i.e. inside where its not FREEZING) mall. It even had a food court, complete with our lunch of KFC. :) We shopped along our way to the Aquarium which was at the end of the mall.
The Aquarium tour started off with different kinds of fish that are common in Korea (in the small lakes / marshes) which to be honest, wasn't all too exciting. THEN we got to the "fun zone" where they showcased a variety of different kinds of fish tanks! This included things like a fire hydrant, a toilet, a pop machine, an electronic harp (every time a fish passed through it, it would make a ding noise), and even a refrigerator. It was cute, creative and so very Korean. I loved it.
After the crazy fish tank display, we entered the "Amazon" area... which for some reason included spider monkeys (in an Aquarium? Yeah....). There were piranhas (I kept thinking of Piranha 3D!), sharks, eels, etc. I don't know if you know this but along with moths, I am terrified of eels. That's why I don't really ever want to go snorkeling, I keep thinking they will pop out with their dead eyes and sharp teeth!! Along our way (I believe we were out of the "Amazon" section by this point, we saw seals, a beaver, sleeping otters and even some Manatees eating lettuce! Then we came to shark tank area. There was a conveyor belt that took you under a ceiling where the sharks would swim above you. It was pretty neat, but there were no great whites or anything too crazy.
One thing that was hilarious though was that at one area, they had three scuba divers dressed up in Santa costumes doing tricks with fish. It was bizarre, I had no idea what was really going on, but at least it was unique!