The travel consultant said that JeJu Island is one of the
new seven wonders of the world. Wyona looked out the window this morning
and said it first, “I can’t see much of the wonder yet”, and then she said it
again on the walk home from the market, “Are you sure this is one of the new
seven wonders of the world.” I saw a sign board, a low one that was using
the slogan again, so I went over to take a close look. All we have to add
is one word -- that this is one of new natural wonders of the world. I
have seen the posters of a fantastic natural crater and the list of the other
new seven wonders. Next time we come we are taking the City Bus
Tour. We will be back for the next part of this trip is docking
here. This morning we went to the International Market – our local
currency in hand, picked up at the KeJu money exchange. The literature
said that JeJu is known for its tangerines. I wanted to buy one, but when
we were making the sale, we couldn’t tell if I was getting 1 tangerine or one
kilo/
Lurene asked for a pair of squeaky shoes to be brought
home for Kalina. Wyona stopped in every shoe store in Busan looking for
them, and with sign language she would ask them if they have squeaky
shoes. Soon her sign language got so good that they would quickly wave
their hands down and to the back, explaining that they had none of those shoes
anymore.
But she hit the jackpot today – tiny pairs of squeaky
shoes in all colours. Though the Korean man couldn’t understand English
he knew what she was talking about. I asked her how she got the idea over
to him. She claims that “squeaky” is a word that is understood in every
language. I guess it is, they way that she says it.
We walked through the equivalent of Fanny’s Fabrics – so
many rolls of material, and so many women in small kiosks with their sewing
machines, a mat for their noon hour nap laid out by time we got there; others
eating their lunch with the Korean metal chopsticks – not something that has
caught on in the rest of Asia, and if you try to use them you will know
why. Food slips off of metal chopsticks, except in Korea.
We stopped bargaining and Wyona and I headed for home,
while Greg stayed back to explore. We had watched where the taxi drove on
the way to the market and were sure we could make it back to the ship.
The difficulty was getting across 8 lanes of traffic with no traffic light to
help us – just the big wide striped zebra walk, but when we would put our toe off
of the curb, no one stopped. Two Korean mechanics came to the curb, so we
side-stepped over to be behind them and when they walked we walked; when they
stopped, we stopped. This is the first time I have been truly
committed to walking behind a man beside him, They men stopped to
let a big 18 wheeler roll on by, so we stopped. At the other curb Wyona
ran in front of one of them to say Thank You. She could tell by the look
on his face, when he understood that we had been using them for our
protection. The man laughed, said something in Korean and we continued
our walk back to the ship.
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