Well, it seems Koreans view camping differently than I am used to. (Disclaimer: Please remember that all this is compared to how I (Margaret) have camped growing up. This will affect some of the opinions about why you should camp, but I do at least have extensive experience with various styles of campgrounds.)
Anyways, Koreans like to sit outside and cook lots of food on their nice gas grills that they brought, then they sit at the table they brought, sit on the benches that they brought, and eat. Then they lay back in their open tents and nap while the kids run around. The campground was next to a nice beach, so between the large meals and the snacks, the kids went to the beach and the men went fishing or clam digging. The wives, between cooking and cleaning up, would just nap.
What I have failed to mention is the most obvious strange thing about Korean camping. The reason I have such detailed information on how Koreans camp, is because there is no space between sites. Tents are set right next to each other. You also have to bring everything because your site is a 12ft x 12ft square of ground. That's it. The one we were at didn't even have sites mapped out, you just had to squeeze it in where you could.
Each tent is on a separate site. You can't see our tent, but its a lot smaller than the tents you see. |
Now, the other difference between US and Korean camping is the idea that there is only one way to camp. (The idea that there is a "best" way to do everything pervades society here and explains a lot about Korea generally.) We stood out in many many ways, and this caused concern for some, and we got lots of strange looks. It didn't help we had the site closest to the edge that everyone had to walk by to go to the store, cars, shower, bathroom, and beach. Every time people would walk by, especially when we were cooking, we would get long looks out of the corner of people's eyes.
One evening it started raining, and all the men grabbed their shovels and dug trenches. We are assuming that they get all their camping skills from the military. It didn't matter to them that we were camping on sand and the rain didn't even leave a puddle, much less be affected by trenches. We had trenches dug for us, since we obviously had no camping experience or adequate camping equipment and were basically considered to be helpless foreigners. After the rain stopped, we had a concerned guy come up to our tent who was extremely concerned that our trenches were too shallow and our tent too small. He was also worried that we didn't have a lantern hanging up somewhere. We tried to convey that we were fine, everything in our tent was dry, and we didn't have a lot of stuff because we carried everything there on our backs. Seeing that we put our backpack on the bare sand, he gave us a lot of giant plastic bags to put our stuff in and our bags on. He even put our bag of plastic bags in a bag. It was all very nice, but it conveys how concerned they were that we did not bring a huge tent with tables, benches, and the kitchen sink.
So in summary, Korean camping is car camping with a lot of food and relaxing, but not in seclusion. This may be similar to what other people do (though how you can go camping and not explore stuff is beyond me), but the two major differences is that the sites are closely packed and anyone who does things differently is considered very strange.
Our tiny tent with our tiny stove and our tiny "table." |
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