News of the RAS-KB: Tours
by David A. Mason
The RAS offers tours to sites all
around Korea every weekend around the year, often led by Members of the RAS
Council as expert academic-level guides.
They continue to be very much enjoyed by the participants.
Some of the most successful tours in
the past year have been to the Seorak-san Mountains, Namhae-do & Jinhae
Coastal Areas, the grand Magok-sa, Haein-sa and Tongdo-sa Temples, Ganghwa-do
Historic Island (including a stop at the lovely countryside home of Council
Member Dr. Y D Kim), and the Tong-gang River-Rafting Tour. In March, a special trip to Sudeok-sa Temple
in the Deoksan Provincial Park had 16 people go along, and the Icheon City
Pottery Kiln Tour was as popular as usual, with 23 attending.
April is the month for flowers, and
more than 50 foreign residents attended the two Gyeonggido Cherry Blossom Tours
we held; and 15 joined us for the Chollipo Magnolia Arboretum Tour. May is always the busiest month for tours
and festivals, and this year was no exception.
57 international friends joined us for our famous Buddha’s Birthday Tour
of five different temples in Seoul (led by Professor David Mason), and we saw
two different complete performances of Korea's unique Beompae Buddhist ritual music and dance. In addition, our trips led by Dr. Daniel Adams to the Jiri
Mountains National Park and Gyeongju the Ancient Capital were also notably
successful.
With the high cost of vehicle fuel
and everyone being intensively busy with their lives in Seoul, daylong and
half-day walking-tours inside Seoul itself and within the Gyeonggi Province
area surrounding it are constantly gaining in popularity. Those that by now have become perennial
favorites that were very well attended this year included tours of the Bukchon
Neighborhood of traditional Hanok Korean
Houses (led by Mason), the Joseon-Dynasty Architecture of Downtown Seoul (led
by Peter Bartholomew; he will also guide us to Suwon’s Hwaseong Castle in
June). A recent new edition is our hike
along the 600-year-old Seoul Fortress Wall with Gates, over formerly-closed
Bugak-san Mountain; this has become so popular we are holding it twice per
year.
Another great tour opportunity came
up this year, going for just one day to Gaeseong City in North Korea. This was the capital of the Goryeo Dynasty
when Korea was an officially Buddhist kingdom, 935-1390 CE. It has just recently opened up for tours of
its new industrial zone and few remaining historical relics that are open to
South Koreans and international visitors alike; 30 friends joined us on our
first venture there on May 12th. This
makes a very interesting addition to the other North Korean tour open to us,
the famously-beautiful Geumgang-san Diamond Mountains; this Spring our April
25-27 expedition attracted almost 20 participants. We will probably offer both of these tours twice per year because
it is so popular to get a look at the rigidly-closed and secretive DPRK.
The RAS continues to run a few tours
each year to neighboring Asian countries, and these are almost always
successful and highly appreciated. We
held a special tour to Japan’s main Honshu Island including Kyoto, Nara, and
Osaka on April 11-14th, and this one included more walking, a geisha performance,
and staying at a traditional inn, which were all well received by the 22
participants. That one went so well, in
fact, we will offer it again in the middle of this October.
Those lucky ones registered are now
waiting expectantly for this summer's spectacular excursion to Mongolia (!!) on
July 9-15th, including the Nadaam National Festival of colorful traditional
religious rituals and sporting events.
This Autumn we are offering to different Chuseok Holiday Tours, Friday
to Monday September 12-14th – one to China
(Beijing, Xian and Shanghai) and the other to North Korea’s Geumgang-san
Diamond Mountains. October 3-5th
will see a very special first-time tour to Tsushima Island (off the coast from
Busan, the closest part of Japan to Korea).
For this winter's Christmas Holidays Overseas Tour, we are planning to
offer Cambodia and/or Vietnam, as those nations have proved so rewarding to
travel in.
Back here in Korea, we are now
looking forward to summertime delights such as the various island-hopping and
beach-visiting tours along the West Coast.
A classic tour to Gangneung City on the East Coast led by Peter
Bartholomew, focusing on traditional architecture, will be held later in June,
and our ever-popular Jeju-do "Island Of The Spirits" Tour is also
coming up in that month. And then the new
fall tour schedule gets going in August!
We of the RAS continue to restructure our annual tour schedule in order
to provide more of the kind of tours that our members really want to go on. We remind our overseas members that if they
do visit Korea they should definitely plan on taking at least one of these
excursions during their stay. Just take
a look at our website and then contact the RAS office for more details about
costs and logistics.
On the general Korean Tourism scene,
the government reports that foreign tourist arrivals rose by 12% in the 1st
quarter of this year, and attributed that to the weakened value of the Korean
Won currency – Korea is cheaper to visit now than it has been quite a while,
and if you haven't been here in a few years you might want to consider this
factor. There's been a lot of
interesting recent news on the holding of more major international events,
following the successful 2002 World Cup Finals, 2002 Busan Asian Games and 2003
Daegu Summer Universiad. As you have probably
heard, Pyeongchang County out in Gangwon Province lost its second bid to host
the Winter Olympics by just a few votes; a Russian resort will hold the 2014
Games instead. This was heartbreaking
for everyone across the nation who worked so hard on that bid, but there will
be yet another chance in four more years.
At least, Yeosu City way down on the south coast won its very strong bid
to host the 2012 World Expo, and is now busily preparing new festival-events
and fresh tourism-programs to attract visitors to its spectacular seaside
beauty.
Seoul City is launching a new
tourism package for international taekwondo buffs, now offering a “Taekwondo
with Korean Classical Music” performance for free every Wednesday and Saturday
in the courtyard of Gyeonghui-gung (palace).
Tourists can also experience samulnori
dance, kukak (Korean classical
music), martial arts meditation and other programs. The park-like village of traditional Korean houses located at
the foot of Namsan, the mountain in central Seoul, has extended its opening
hours into the evenings and will hold additional traditional-culture-experience
programs centered on architecture, folk-games and green tea through
October. The restoration of the
Cheonggye-cheon Stream in the heart of downtown Seoul was the most welcome
development in recent years, and it is now attracting 100,000 visitors per
day. It's now possible to start at
City Hall and walk alongside the stream all the way down to the major new Seoul
Forest Park, at its confluence with the Han River; this is becoming an
increasingly popular “urban nature hike”.