So one Friday night, Hyolee, her boyfriend Lloyd and I took a late bus to her town, and stayed at her mother's house. Meeting Hyolee's mother was a blast. She was very eccentric in her mannerisms, upon first impressions see seemed to be unapproachable, even scary; but once she warmed up to you, she was extremely warm-hearted and nice. She was especially fond of Lloyd, Hyolee's Australian boyfriend, and upon our arrival, the first thing Hyolee's mom did was to call Lloyd over so she could greet him, and didn't even bother to greet her daughter first!
Hyolee's mother operated a restaurant in the middle of a traditional market, so the next day we went to visit her there. The city of Andong is a small enough place that once Hyolee took me out on the street and pointed out the direction to the market, her house, the bus station and downtown, I basically knew where I was and how to get places. At the market we checked out a lot of seafood on display, including some exceptionally large octopuses (!) and also stumbled upon a street dedicated to bosintang, Korean dog stew! On the street they had buckets of dog meat... and dog skins. It was extremely mortifying to see at first, and hard to walk through. But there was a lady at one shop who was in the middle of chopping some meat... and she let us take pictures. And although I can never imagine myself eating this soup, I understand that the practice has been in the Korean culture for centuries, and lately its mostly the older generations who continue to eat it.
After visiting her mother, Hyolee, Lloyd and I made our way to the bus station to catch a bus to Hahoe Village. On the way we ran into Lloyd's friend Dave and his group, who we had heard were visiting Andong at the same time. Due to this chance meeting, we made our way to Hahoe Village together and spent most of the day together.
At Hahoe Village, we saw a traditional mask performance. The performances were broken up into parts, and since it was all in Korean, a lot of it went over my head. However, one memorable performance was one of the butcher and his cow, where during the performance, the bucher chopped off the cow's abnormally large testicles and tried to sell it to the audience! hahaha
After this performance we wandered a bit through the village. The village itself is relatively small but it is easy to get lost wandering through... it's also surrounded by Nakdong River, which winds around it in an "S" shape, creating a yin/yang symbol effect. On the east side of the village a boat takes you across the river to a cliff, and after a short 10 minute hike, you are granted an insanely beautiful view of the whole village.
After some relaxing frolicking time and a visit to an old fertility tree (which may have inadvertently knocked me up...^^), we made our way back to Andong. Our new (and some old) friends were in Andong for a birthday, and had plans that night to stay at a boathouse so they could go wake boarding the next day. Lloyd and I decided to meet with them that night and crash their party. We had a pretty good night, and spent the night on the boat as well.
All in all, my visit to Andong was extremely fun, memorable, and relaxing! And what's more, Hahoe Village was recently designated a UNESCO World Heritage site!

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