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Ep 19: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 2 | Outdoor Jeju

22 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Ep 19: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 2 | Outdoor Jeju

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Continuing Ed's menu of hike-hater-friendly options for his family trip, this episode covers coastal headlands, windmill walks, historically significant trails, tea plantation strolls, and waterfall visits. These are all designed with the same principles: not too long, not too steep, interesting throughout, and easy to bail out of when needed. Key Takeaways * Coastal headlands: Seopjikoji (east coast, flat, canola flowers March-May, views of Seongsan); Songaksan (southwest, loop trail, K-drama filming location for When Life Gives You Tangerines) * Windmill walks: Sinchang Windmill Coastal Road (west coast, 30-60 minutes depending on route, raised platform over water); Haengwon to Gimnyeong Beach (east coast, Camel Coffee starting point, Woljeong and Gimnyeong beaches, snorkeling in summer) * Historical hikes: Sumbisori Gil from Haenyeo Museum through farmlands to Hado and Byeolbangjin fortress (2 hours full loop; take bus one way to halve it); Altereu Airfield (WWII Japanese hangars among garlic and radish fields, connects to Seodal Memorial and April 3rd massacre site; dark tourism, requires car) * Tea plantation: Osulloc (walk past the crowded cafe into the plantation itself; biggest in Jeju; rows of tea as far as you want to walk) * Waterfalls: Jeongbang (only waterfall in Korea that flows directly into the sea); Sojeongbang (small Jeongbang; peaceful, fewer crowds); both connect to Lee Jung-Seop Street walk; art gallery and Sora's House (shell museum) nearby * Blog post with all hikes: vamosajeju.com/hike [http://vamosajeju.com/hike] Next Steps * Plan your Jeju trip at vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] * Follow @vamosajeju on Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook * Leave a review and let us know which hike you tried

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episode Ep 19: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 2 | Outdoor Jeju artwork

Ep 19: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 2 | Outdoor Jeju

Continuing Ed's menu of hike-hater-friendly options for his family trip, this episode covers coastal headlands, windmill walks, historically significant trails, tea plantation strolls, and waterfall visits. These are all designed with the same principles: not too long, not too steep, interesting throughout, and easy to bail out of when needed. Key Takeaways * Coastal headlands: Seopjikoji (east coast, flat, canola flowers March-May, views of Seongsan); Songaksan (southwest, loop trail, K-drama filming location for When Life Gives You Tangerines) * Windmill walks: Sinchang Windmill Coastal Road (west coast, 30-60 minutes depending on route, raised platform over water); Haengwon to Gimnyeong Beach (east coast, Camel Coffee starting point, Woljeong and Gimnyeong beaches, snorkeling in summer) * Historical hikes: Sumbisori Gil from Haenyeo Museum through farmlands to Hado and Byeolbangjin fortress (2 hours full loop; take bus one way to halve it); Altereu Airfield (WWII Japanese hangars among garlic and radish fields, connects to Seodal Memorial and April 3rd massacre site; dark tourism, requires car) * Tea plantation: Osulloc (walk past the crowded cafe into the plantation itself; biggest in Jeju; rows of tea as far as you want to walk) * Waterfalls: Jeongbang (only waterfall in Korea that flows directly into the sea); Sojeongbang (small Jeongbang; peaceful, fewer crowds); both connect to Lee Jung-Seop Street walk; art gallery and Sora's House (shell museum) nearby * Blog post with all hikes: vamosajeju.com/hike [http://vamosajeju.com/hike] Next Steps * Plan your Jeju trip at vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] * Follow @vamosajeju on Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook * Leave a review and let us know which hike you tried

Ayer22 min
episode Ep 18: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 1 | Outdoor Jeju artwork

Ep 18: Hikes for People who Hate Hiking Part 1 | Outdoor Jeju

Ed is planning a family trip to Jeju for Christmas 2026, and some family members love hiking while others absolutely hate it. This episode presents his solution: a curated menu of hikes designed for reluctant walkers. He establishes four benchmarks for hike-hater-friendly trails: under 90 minutes, minimal elevation gain, interesting things to see throughout, and places to rest (preferably cafes). A bonus criterion: easy bail-out options via bus or taxi. Part 1 covers urban walks in Jeju City and Seogwipo, easy Oreums near the airport, and beach walks at low tide. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Urban walks in Jeju City: Jeonnongno Cherry Blossom Street has murals, cafes, and souvenir shops even without cherry blossoms; 30 minutes to 2 hours; quit anytime * Urban walks in Seogwipo: Lee Jung-Seop Street starts at the Olle daily market and goes downhill past cafes and shops to the artist's museum (closed for renovation until 2027, but free gallery available); can extend to Saeyeongyo Bridge and Saeseom Island * Sarabong Oreum: 7-15 minutes to the top; one of the top 10 views from Joseon dynasty (Sabong Nakjo sunset); local kids, rabbits, exercising elders; cherry blossoms in spring * Dodubong Oreum + Rainbow Coastal Road: views of planes landing; cafes with rooftops and elevators; Eoyong Park near the runway; Daiso escape hatch for shopping; buses run hourly * Beach walks: Pyoseon (check tide tables; combine with Jeju Folk Village); Gwangchigi Beach near Seongsan (green carpet of seaweed on lava rock at low tide; stunning sunrise or sunset views of Ilchulbong) * Blog post with all hikes: vamosajeju.com/hike [http://vamosajeju.com/hike] NEXT STEPS * Plan your Jeju trip at vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] * Follow @vamosajeju on Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook * Share the show with a friend who hates hiking but loves views

8 de jun de 202624 min
episode Ep 17: Jeju for DIY Slow Travelers | Hidden Jeju artwork

Ep 17: Jeju for DIY Slow Travelers | Hidden Jeju

In this episode, Ed and Sora wrap up the Hidden Jeju series by exploring activities perfect for slow travelers who want to experience Jeju on a deeper level. Slow travel doesn't require months of time; even a week or 10 days works if you're intentional about skipping the tourist checklist and pursuing meaningful local experiences. The episode covers four off-the-beaten-path activities: walking rescue dogs at a no-kill shelter, Buddhist temple stays, hands-on haenyeo diving experiences and performances, and plane spotting at secret locations near Jeju Airport. This is also the final episode of Handy Korean with Sora Ssaem, where they finally teach the most important phrase they'd somehow never covered: 감사합니다 (thank you). Key Takeaways * Slow travel is about depth over breadth: stay longer, see fewer places, meet more people * No-kill dog shelter volunteering: contact jeju.now [http://jeju.now] on Instagram or email soraya@vamosajeju.com [soraya@vamosajeju.com] to arrange * Temple stays: four temples in Jeju offer overnight stays; two program types (full itinerary with 4am wake-up vs. relaxed rest); food is vegetarian and bland (no garlic or strong herbs); book at the national temple stay website; vamosajeju.com/temple [http://vamosajeju.com/temple] * Haenyeo experiences: shallow-water diving with a haenyeo guide (wetsuit, basket, catch pre-planted seafood); Woman Divers Kitchen offers a media art dinner or a theatrical play based on an 89-year-old haenyeo's life story, followed by Q&A * Plane spotting: Dodubong Oreum for distant views; Granada Cafe rooftop for runway shots; spots along Rainbow Coastal Road and near the runway approach lights for planes flying directly overhead (bring earplugs); rental car required for the best spots Final Handy Korean with Sora Ssaem (쌤) * 쌤 (ssaem) = shortened from 선생님 (seonsaengnim), meaning teacher * 감사합니다 (gamsahamnida) = thank you (formal); trick: "come some eat up" * 고마워요 (gomawoyo) = thank you (casual); 고마워 (gomawo) = even more casual * 안녕하세요 (annyeonghaseyo) = hello; trick: "onion on sale" * Pro tip: mumble and bow — Koreans will appreciate the effort Next Steps * Plan your Jeju trip at vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] * Follow @vamosajeju on Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook * Share the show with a friend who needs a reason to visit Jeju

1 de jun de 202626 min
episode Plan Your Jeju Trip With This Free Planner! artwork

Plan Your Jeju Trip With This Free Planner!

Ed and Sora announce a free trip planner app they built to help DIY travelers organize Jeju itineraries. The app features 50+ activities, from popular Instagram spots to slow traveler experiences, with KakaoMap links for each destination. Ed confesses the real reason he built it: his entire family is going to Jeju for Christmas and he needed a way to get everyone on the same page. Sora tries to get Ed to build one for New York too. He declines. KEY TAKEAWAYS * What the Trip Planner does: * 50+ activities to browse and add to a wishlist * Organize activities across 1-5 day itineraries with time slots * Warns you if activities are in opposite regions (east vs. west) to avoid wasting time driving around Hallasan * Flags seasonal activities (cherry blossoms in April, tangerine picking Nov-Jan) if they don't match your travel month * Sends your completed itinerary to your email with KakaoMap links and additional info for each activity * Helps visualize where activities are clustered so you can decide where to book hotels * What the Trip Planner does NOT do: * Not a booking service * Not based on crowd-sourced reviews; activities are curated based on Ed and Sora's personal experience * Does not include every possible option in a category (e.g., not every green tea farm in Jeju, just the ones they've been to) * Who it's for: * DIY travelers who need to research and plan independently * Tour participants who want to compare what tour companies offer against what they actually want to do * Access: vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] NEXT STEPS * Try the Trip Planner at vamosajeju.com/trip [http://vamosajeju.com/trip] * Subscribe to our YouTube channel @vamosajeju

28 de may de 202613 min
episode Ep 16: Local 5 Day Markets | Hidden Jeju artwork

Ep 16: Local 5 Day Markets | Hidden Jeju

Ed champions the five-day markets (오일장) as the antidote to touristy Dongmun and Olle markets — fresh produce, fair prices, no crowds, and an authentic window into local Jeju life. Sora explains how these rotating markets date back to the Goryeo dynasty, with vendors traveling between villages on a 5-day cycle (dates ending in 2 and 7, or 3 and 8, etc.). Their favorites: * Sehwa (near Haenyeo Museum, statue commemorating anti-Japanese resistance) * Seongsan (shooting location for Our Blues) * Hallim (famous gimbap lady with a waiting list) * Seogwipo (lots of food options). Check dates before you go — they're only open one day then gone for four. TAKEAWAYS * Five-day markets (오일장): Rotate on fixed dates (e.g., 2nd, 7th, 12th, 17th, 22nd, 27th of each month) * Much more authentic than touristy Dongmun/Olle markets — fresh produce, local vendors, fair prices * Vendors are mostly grandmas/grandpas; arrive early (6-7am), leave by 3-4pm regardless of official hours * Sehwa Market: Near Haenyeo Museum, statue commemorating anti-Japanese resistance — combine with museum visit * Hallim Market: Sora's favorite; famous gimbap lady (book first, stroll for an hour, then pick up) * Seogwipo Market: Watch grandmas bargaining in Jeju dialect; sit and eat while observing local life * Goseong Market: Near Seongsan, small, K-drama "Our Blues" filming location Must-try foods: * 빈떡 (bintteok, Jeju-only buckwheat crepes) * 꽈배기 (kkwabaegi, twisted donuts) * 호떡 (hotteok) * 떡볶이 (tteokbokki) * 순대 (sundae, blood sausage — not ice cream!) * 뻥튀기 (ppong-twigi, puffed rice discs) * 짜장면 (jajangmyeon)  HANDY KOREAN WITH SORA SSAEM (쌤) Review of previous phrases for market use: * 이거 얼마예요? (igeo eolmayeyo?) — How much is this? * 이거 주세요 (igeo juseyo) — Please give me this * 감사합니다 (gamsahamnida) — Thank you * 맛있어요 (mashisseoyo) — It's delicious * 안녕히 계세요 (annyeonghi gyeseyo) — Goodbye (to someone staying) Sora's tip: Get straight to the point, but always say 감사합니다, 안녕히 계세요 when leaving. NEXT STEPS 1. Five-day market guide: vamosajeju.com/market [http://vamosajeju.com/market] 2. 14-part DIY Jeju email series: vamosajeju.com/start [http://vamosajeju.com/start] 3. Follow: @vamosajeju on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook

25 de may de 202625 min