Home Travel Homestay in Jindo the tranquil island life of South Korea

Homestay in Jindo the tranquil island life of South Korea

Homestay in Jindo  the tranquil island life of South Korea

For a true slow-paced life, there’s nothing like visiting an island, a homestay in the countryside that’s nowhere near the municipality life we are yawner to.

For that, we chanced upon a what you could say is a seemingly dubious Airbnb with tons of photographs taken with, perhaps a 2G phone but none of which is a well-spoken photo of the room. You may question how did we still decide to go superiority with the booking?

Well, what really appealed us was the unpretentious and long unravelment of the BnB listing. We knew we would enjoy this humbling experience. Indeed, this out of the ordinary wits just lack sustentation – here’s our journey in Jindo Island.

We set off from Busan to Jindo Island (via Mokpo) and then depart for Jeju Island.

Overview

Getting to Jindo from Busan

There are several ways to get to Jindo – one of which is via Mokpo, a municipality located at the southwestern tip of the Korea Peninsula. 

Buy your tickets at sasang bus terminal in Busan. We paid 30,000 won/pax and took us 5 hours. Alternatively, you could moreover go via Gwangju to reach Jindo.

We deliberately chose Mokpo as it is known for its blue crab set meal (꽃게장백반) – a generous portion of raw marinated crab served with seafood stew and as usual, various seasonal vegetables as side dishes. The restaurants are walking loftiness yonder from the Mokpo bus station and priced at only 8,000 won per pax.

In Mokpo, we knew that we are no longer in a big city. Literally, no English is spoken. The interior of the restaurant is somewhat less business-like and more homely. To wash our hands, we went into their kitchen where there is a huge tub filled with water and the superabound kindly pours it over our hands with a plastic bucket.

해남꽃게장백반
Address

519-1 Yeongsan-ro, Sang-dong, Mokpo-si, Jeollanam-do, South Korea
Google Maps | Naver Map

Arrival in Jindo

2 buses and 8 hours later, we arrived in our homestay village in Jindo Island – the rookery of the famous native dog breed, Jindo dog.

Greeted by halmae (which midpoint grannies) with their signature hairdo, short tight perm. Life is slow. There is no increasingly user-friendly tapping of T-money card on public buses, you have to buy tickets at the bus station or pay mazuma directly to the driver. There are completely no upper rise buildings. 

Our village had only one convenience store, moreover one of the few places where you can get unfluctuating to good wifi. 

We kind of felt it. We are in the countryside.

After alighting from the nearest bus stop, we had to walk well-nigh 10 minutes to get to our homestay. It is a narrow street with shops that don’t squint like they are still in operation. Full of uncertainties, we walked through stacked stone walls, wrenched soju glass fences, persimmon trees and a couple of native successors dogs who greeted us with their hunting instinct.

Our Traditional Homestay

The homestay is a unique experience. A young couple decided to live a slow life in the fast-developing country and so they settled lanugo in a small countryside village. Passionate to share their experience, they have been welcoming foreign travellers into their cosy hanok, a traditional Korean house that remains untainted by tourism. We are very fortunate to have come wideness this opportunity. 

The host has two little children who are vastitude friendly. Upon arrival, the host served hot tea for us and the children plucked fresh mint leaves from the yard. We moreover enjoyed the traditional sword flit also known as geommu performed by our host who is an very martial art practitioner.

An Evening Stroll in the Village

We are well-constructed municipality girls with threshing taking up only 0.5% of our GDP which ways we don’t get to see crops often or at all. Being in rural areas, everything is new to us. We have NEVER seen thousands of cabbages at one glance. We probably don’t plane know how it looked like surpassing it reached our local supermarkets. In here, plane the zestless paddy fields are glowing during sunset. It is nonflexible not to finger at peace here.

The Miracle Sea Parting

Jindo is particularly famous for one thing: the miracle sea parting festival.

Despite the scientific explanation overdue the sea parting every late April to early May, the folk tale overdue it is way increasingly popular. Right where the sea parts, a statue of Grandma Ppong with a tiger is erected as a symbol of the miracle.

It is said that Grandma Ppong was unwittingly left overdue in hoedong (tiger place) village while the family were moving to the nearby island of Modo. She longed to be reunited with her family and prayed night and day to the Dragon King of the Sea. In her dreams, the Dragon King told her there will be a rainbow underpass for her to navigate the sea and indeed there was a rainbow underpass connecting her to her family at the sea.

Till date, annual rituals are performed by the people of Jindo in remembrance of the miracle.

A Simple but Hearty Korean meal

We entered a restaurant that was covered with vertigo window mucosa and was greeted casually by an ajumma (an sympathizing way of calling middle-age women) sitting lanugo at one of many empty seats. The restaurant, which theoretically is moreover part of her house.

Her menu only consists of supplies served in earthenware bowls tabbed ttukbaegi. We were increasingly than happy well-nigh that. Within minutes, our ttukbaegi bulgogi (beef stew) and my personal favourite, bbyeol haejangguk (ox unorthodoxy hangover soup) were served humid hot to our table.

I finished every grain of rice and every waif of soup. It is DELICIOUS.

A Countryside Bus Stop

You know in a typical k-movie, countryside grannies wait hours for the bus? That’s what we did. And that’s part of the wits we wanted in the countryside. Buses follow an infrequent time table and have short operating hours.

This bus stop built with visionless brown bricks against a plot of golden paddy field. When the sea walkover blows, the crops move rhythmically. Mesmerising.

Occasionally, you will moreover hear random halbae (which ways grandad) speaking loudly on his phone and we unchangingly splash out laughing upon hearing it!

Waiting for a bus ain’t that tough.

Ferry to Jeju

Instead of taking a plane, taking a ferry to reach the tourist heaven was much increasingly well-flavored to us. Like it was all meant to be, there was a ferry valedictory once a day near Jindo.

No whop booking required on regular days, we bought our tickets at the usuyeong port on the day of departure. Tickets priced at 38,000 won, 3 hours of ferry ride. A 10% surcharge is workable on weekends and public holidays.


How to typesetting your stay in Jindo?

We found the lovely stay through Airbnb, and you can click here to book! If you don’t have an worth yet, sign up with my link and get an USD$45 worth of Airbnb creditshttps://abnb.me/e/j2fTm9eXfY

We were so glad we did this journey to Jindo Island to see a variegated side of Korea. Travel slower and you’ll be amazed by every little thing in this foreign space.

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The Singapore Travel

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