Search Results for '2007/03/25/bejings-underground-city'

Travel

Over the past few years I’ve been lucky enough to travel around quite a number of places in East Asia and a few other places besides. Along the way I’ve recorded my adventures in both pictures and words including a few travel tips so for what it’s worth I decided to index them here in case it’s of any help to anyone else -

Travelling Light
Combating Jet Lag
Avoiding Internet Censors

China

Beijing

Forbidden City
Temple of Heaven
Yiheyuan (Summer Palace)
Badaling Great Wall
Mutianyu Great Wall
Ming Tombs
Beihai Park
Yonghegong (Lama Temple)
White Cloud Temple (Bai Yun Guan)
Fragrant Hills (Xiangshan Park)
Yuyuantan Park
Confucian Temple
Bejing’s Underground City
Beijing Ancient Observatory
Art 798 District
Xiabu Xiabu (Hot Pot)

Geospatial Beijing (Map of main sites)

Shenzhen

City Hall & Library
Shun Hing Square Skyline
Wutong Shan Mountain
Hotter Than Hell

Yangshuo

Misty Mountains
Silver Cave
Lijiang River

Hong Kong

Hong Kong Moments
Sheung Wan
Victoria Peak

Other Cities

Wuhan
Qingdao
Nanjing
Shaoguan

South Korea

Seoul

Seoul
DMZ (Demilitarized Zone)
Gyeongbokgung Palace
Jongmyo Shrine & Changgyeonggung Palace
Cheonggyecheon Stream
Korean Folk Village
Dongdaemun
Namdaemun
Lotte World
Han River & 63 City
Jjimjilbang (Sauna)
Korea Train eXpress (KTX)

Busan

Evening in Busan
Beomeosa Temple
Kwanganri Beach
Jagalchi Market
Chungnyeol Shrine

Chuncheon

Chuncheon & Soyang Dam
Cheongpyeongsa Temple
Nami Island

Gyeongju

Gyeongju
Sa Rang Chae
Bulguksa Temple
Korean Cuisine

Europe

Rome
Venice
Paris
Amsterdam

United Kingdom

York
Edinburgh

United States

New York
Washington DC
Boston

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DMZ

“The Korean Demilitarized Zone is a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula that serves as a buffer zone between North and South Korea. The DMZ cuts the Korean Peninsula roughly in half, crossing the 38th parallel on an acute angle, with the west end of the DMZ lying south of the parallel and the east end lying north of it. It is 248km/155 miles long and approximately 4km/2.5 miles wide, and is the most heavily armed border in the world.”

DSC_4586

It’s also one of South Korea’s biggest tourist attractions, or as our guide put it “a gift from the North” when talking about the 3rd Infiltration Tunnel we were about to visit! The tour I was on was fairly well orchestrated with plenty of reunification propaganda and troops with scarily real weapons. There are reportedly over 1 million troops on either side of the divide and South Korean men must do at least 2 years military service when they finish school.

DSC_4619

I’ve been in trouble before for taking photos in places I perhaps shouldn’t but this time things went a step further when I was ordered to delete photos taken from edge of the observation platform (see above). For some reason it was fine to take photos 10 feet back behind a line but not directly where people were looking through magnified telescopes! Still, considering the possible consequences I complied without argument this time and those photos of a fairly featureless mountain range are no more…

DSC_4637

One of the rather absurd stops on the tour was Dorasan Station - an almost new railway station located just before the boarder on a recently repaired rail link between north & south… only no trains ever pass through it. This would be my definition of optimism! Eventually trains from here will travel all the way to Pyeongyang (the capital of North Korea) but I wouldn’t hang around for a train any time soon!

Update (18/05): Well, I can eat my words on this one - yesterday two trains, one from the north and one from the south, crossed the boarder each carrying 150 invited guests. However, it was a largely symbolic event and probably a one-off for the time being.

I’d throughly recommend taking a tour to the DMZ if you’re ever in Korea, it was fascinating to see the conflict stalemate up-close and all it’s associated propaganda (on both sides). If you take a morning tour be prepared for an early start though - the bus leaves at 8am!

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