Gooam Village is a farming community and also includes traditional style craft workshops. From March to November there is a different crop in season that you can pick. October is for radishes, Chinese cabbages, digging sweet potatoes, and picking apples. We picked apples on our trip. There was a short walk to the harvested rice field, where my oldest found a stalk with grains still on it that she proceeded to eat. So I tried one too; it was like chewing a tiny pebble!
'sheaving' the rice stalks |
After this stop, a tractor picked us up and drove us to the apple orchard. We were given our instructions and set loose! It was pretty fun, though I wish we could have picked more.
While we were in the orchard I found these prickly things, which I looked up when I got home and discovered they were chestnut shells. I tried to pick one up to bring home, but they are extremely sharp!
The itinerary we were given said we would be digging sweet potatoes, but for some reason we didn't do that. I was kind of planning on cooking them for dinner, and Korean sweet potatoes are awesome, so that was disappointing! Our next stop was glutinous rice cake making. It's simply rice flour mixed with water to make a play-dough like dough, then you fill it with whatever. We were provided with what we were told was crushed dried Korean red beans to use as filling. Fun to make, not to eat. My oldest did a really good job, once we figured out what to do, but the youngest thought it was play-dough and kept making a huge mess! Still, they had fun.
This Korean lady kept talking and talking trying to tell us what to do, and I'm thinking "I have no idea what you are saying!!". Finally another lady came over and slowly showed us each step, which was considerably more helpful. One of the translators told us that when he was a boy it was a family affair to get together and make these before their version of Thanksgiving, but they don't do that anymore. I'm not sure if he was referring to his family specifically, or Korean families in general.
Next stop, lunch! Delicious! I don't really know what it was; something with bulgogi, mushrooms, noodles, among other things. It was kind of like shabu shabu, but not. Of course there was also rice along with the Korean style side dishes (collectively called banchan) to include bean sprouts, tiny dried anchovies, fishcake, and obviously kimchi.
After lunch, we could choose to participate in using natural dye derived from a root of something (I never did quite catch that part) to dye a handkerchief or we could make some natural soap. The dye was my personal choice, but the idea of staining two small children overrode that desire. Soap it was. I believe they used glycerin, melted it in a large metal pitcher which we then poured into a cup, added flower petals, honey, orange extract, mixed and poured into a silicone mold. Simple.
While we waited for the soap to cool and harden, we watched a re-enactment of a traditional Korean wedding. Two members of our group participated as bride and groom, and one was her bridal attendant. In olden days the bride and groom met for the first time during the ceremony. She kept her arms up over her face (see picture) during the entire ceremony except for about two seconds where the groom was allowed to see her face for the first time. The table was set...
...the chickens are bound to represent no fighting between husband/wife and to bless with many hatchlings.
The groom was carried in on a chair......then the bride was led out (since she couldn't see)......there was bowing between mothers and fathers and bride and groom......and talking and that was that. The end of our day here. It was really great and I'm so glad they had this for us. Here are a few other pictures of what we experienced.
with a loofah plant |
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