This is my favorite time of year in Korea — I love it when the hot, summer rains pelt down — so after dinner this evening I took a little walk through the drenched streets of downtown Seoul. And, well, this is what I found:
Pretty cool, huh? The Cheonggyecheon was pretty swollen. Usually, the stream looks more like this:
This was the start of the Cheonggyecheon this evening, when the rains were really coming down:
As opposed to this:
Anyhow, one of my favorite parts of Seoul is just walking around, seeing what I might find on a random street on a random day. Like yesterday, I was walking near the Seoul History Museum, when I suddenly realized that I had never checked out Gyeonghuigung Palace before, and I really should. So I did:
Gyeonghuigung was apparently destroyed by the Japanese during the colonial era, so this is almost all a reconstruction … But it was quite a nice reconstruction.
Unlike the other palaces in Seoul, this one was dead quiet. No tourists anywhere and just a few folks walking around.
Here’s a view of the palace from a hill behind it:
After checking out the palace, I stubbornly refused to retrace my steps and leave the same way I came in, so I started looking around for a back gate. But apparently there wasn’t one. Undeterred, I kept looking, eventually heading up into the forest hill behind the palace. There I found an old wall, with little steel doors in the side. It wasn’t locked, so I walked through and found myself on a little roadway.
I kept walking up until I got to the top of the hill, and what did I find? The old Seoul Weather Observatory, in operation since 1933, I do believe.
Around the observatory, there’s some rebuilt sections of the old Seoul wall (looking very unhistoric, by the way) and quite a nice path snaking its way around the hill. It led to this park:
Which had a whole bunch of cats sleeping on the stones and in the undergrowth:
By now I was up pretty high, in an interesting taldongne area.
There’s even a walking tour and map through the alleys:
And a few forlorn hanok:
Eventually the road took me back down to Sajik Park. Here is a view of Inwangsan from the park:
Oh, right, I started this post talking about the Cheonggyecheon being swollen by the rain. So here are a couple more pics:
Cool pictures. It looks like the river and channel are doing what they’re supposed to be doing. Gotta admit, it looks hella batter than the rivers-turned-drainage ditches we have have in Southern California.
And the haunted house looks very cool.
Actually, I was told that the haunted-looking building used to be a KCIA house. Which probably just makes it all the scarier.
Thanks for the photo compliment.