After changing into our monk  clothing, we made our way downstairs for our hike.  Geared in my  many layers to protect myself from the bone chilling cold and hiking  boots, I felt confident this would be the highlight of our stay at the  temple despite the record setting frigid temperature.  How very  wrong this prediction turned out to be.
A white toy tiger was held  up to my ear as we waited by the office for our guide. “Listen to  this” said a random laughing monk.  The white tiger key chain  growled a truculent growl.  I laughed.  Who was this silly  monk I thought?
“Let me introduce myself.”  He started. “I am….(I can’t remember his name, but he was the  head Monk of the temple)  “And this is my boyfriend.” He said  laughingly pointing to another smaller Vietnamese monk. The smaller  monk laughed and said, “Are you sure I’m not your girlfriend.”  He said continuing the joke.
We introduced ourselves, and  then headed out on our tour of the mountain.  These silly monks  were our first introduction to the monk-hood and I breathed a sigh of  relief that they were so relaxed and goofy even.
At the ornate wooden bridge,  the white tiger monk suggested we take a photo.  We had debated  whether to take our cameras.  “Will they say, the hike is about  the experience and not to concern yourself with photos?” We had pondered.   In the end, we decided to take the camera regardless.  
Our first clue that this hike  would not be like others was a glimpse of what looked like clear glass  beneath our feet covering the ground. But it wasn’t glass, I might  of even been glad had it been, for most likely anything was better than  ICE on a steep mountain side.  The ice seemed to have implanted  itself into the ground, sprouting roots, taking hold of every dirt molecule.  It was my first experience seeing frozen solid ground. I had read about  it in books, but I had never seen, let alone climbed a mountain on it  first hand.
Our hiking boots, purchased  in Italy, which are wonderfully light and perfect for gravel and rocks,  proved to not handle icy ground well.  In fact, one might say,  that they are more appropriately ice skates when contacted with ice.   One of the monks generously lent me his hiking stick, which I gratefully  took.  Towards the top, the ice lessoned long enough for us to  enjoy the extraordinary view of Seoul in its concrete glory surrounded  by nature.  It was probably the best view of Seoul that I have  ever witnessed.  A sea of concrete buildings squashed together  in a scene of ultimate “civilization” without a spec of green in  between to destroy the urban-ness.  Surrounded by trees and mountains,  breathing the mountain air, it was a spectacular arena, but it reminded  me that no matter where you are in Korea, the urban sprawl is nearby.
Our trip to the bottom, however  made me think twice about the intelligence of climbing an icy mountain.   Had I known the hike we were going on was a labyrinth of ice, I probably  would have opted not to go on the treacherous mountain slip and slide.   It is a wonder that we didn’t slip and plummet to our deaths.   On a particularly steep section, I fell and was miraculously caught  by a tree branch.  It felt at times as if we were playing the game  “lava” as we did when we were children, trying only to step on rocks  to avoid the “lava.” However this game was real, and the “lava”  was slippery ice.   
Near the bottom, our friend  Garret made the ultimate faux-pa, saying, “It is a wonder no one has  actually fallen.”  One more superstitious might credit my fall  to his lack of knocking on wood.  Whatever the case, not two minutes  later, I was on my behind, nursing scratched hands and a sore tailbone.   As luck would have it however, the section of my demise was flat, and  served as a safe place for an ineluctable tumble. 
1 comment:
Your posts are so awesome, it is difficult to know what to say, other than "WOW!"
Post a Comment