The bridges up ahead in the above picture are part of the Suin railway line, currently under reconstruction. When finished it will link Incheon with Suwon.
Looking across some rice fields to the Munhak stadiums.
The new football (soccer) season starts next weekend, which I am thoroughly looking forward to, and then baseball kicks off (?) next month. Incheon FC have thankfully got rid of the popular, but awful, No.31. he has gone to league winners Seongnam, and we (I like to think of myself as part of Incheon FC these days!) have brought in an Australian and ANOTHER player called Dragan, as well as appointing the former Serbian national team coach as manager. Maybe Incheon will fare better this season with him at the helm.
Since our return from Japan, life has hurtled along at the usual frenetic Korean pace. Earlier this month Greg and I and some other Western boys went for a kickabout on a blaze (sand/earth) pitch in Yeonsu-Dong. We ended up playing against and with a whole load of middle-school boys whose coach seemed keen for them to play with 'real' footballers. None of us were particularly good, mainly due to hungoverness and lack of practice, but I did a lot of aimless running about as usual and swung a few decent crosses in which I was happy about.
Team Photo
Last weekend we pulled an all-nighter (the first since university for me I think) before heading into Seoul early on Saturday morning to join the USO (the US army's entertainment organisation) tour to the DMZ. It was Greg's 1st time, Neil's 3rd, and my 4th! If you read the news reports, you would be forgiven for thinking North Korea is about to launch a massive attack on.......well on the rest of the world, but despite this you are still allowed to tour within a few metres of the North and at one point actually step into the country itself (albeit inside a guarded building). If you want to see lots of pictures of the DMZ, have a look at my previous blog posts, as I don't want to look like a broken record on this blog.
Even though this was my 4th trip, the good thing is that they've all been different. This time we were allowed to take a lot more photos, and we spent a good bit of time standing looking over to North Korea inside the JSA, just outside the South Korean meeting hall, something we had not been allowed to do on previous trips. There was only one North Korean guard visible, you can just about make him out in the photo below.
For more photos and video, here are some Facebook links.
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=221333&id=777495416&l=06765
My tossing skills are not great!
And that about brings us up to speed I think. March is looking good, the football next weekend, then Lisa and I are heading to Chungju (in the middle of Korea, a big lake) for the weekend on the 14th/15th, and then Oasis are playing in Seoul on the 1st of April, which Greg and I are going to. The teaching is still going well, the kids are all back to school now so the schedule is back to normal. The new school year begins this week (unlike August/September back home) so a lot of the 6th grade kids are going into middle school, and there will be a new intake of very little people to look forward to as well. Very cute, but no English at all. Hmmmmmm.......
Well, as I look out the window, the sun is setting over the new Incheon bridge, which is now joined in the middle (due to open October this year), there are a steady stream of planes coming in to land at Incheon airport, and the skyscrapers over on New Songdo are inching their way upwards. It's not the same as the view from Lovedale that's for sure, but I still enjoy it.
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