The flight to Busan is a tiny one-hour jaunt. Here we are at the gate.
One of our biggest goals was to find Lush. Busan has one of the largest shopping malls, it is GIGANTIC, so it took some searching to find the place. I am a HUGE Lush fan, and to find my favourite magnaminty mask in all it's glory here in Korea was a massive highlight.
We went to the aquarium. I saw some African penguins which was mildly depressing considering I'd seen them in the wild in Simon's Town, South Africa a couple years ago. These little otters were awfully cute though!
Eek! An eel!
I couldn't get over the zillions of Korean kids in their matching jumpsuits.
Here is our lovely hostel. Blake and I were bunkmates and his feet didn't hang off the end. A Korean miracle!
We went to the Museum of Modern Art. I know nothing about art but appreciate looking at it nonetheless.
It's pretty common to see hilarious English translations. Mr. Dutch, for the record, is a coffee shop.
Busan at night!
We visited two temples. The first one, Beomeosa Temple, was very old and VERY cool to see. It was originally built in 678!
The fortress of doom and Blake's twin.
That very same day, we decided to check out this massive fortress wall that runs for 18km around a mountain. It was... a challenging time. We were massively underprepared (no food, no water, no map), so we wandered aimlessly deep in the woods for quite some time. We were all getting a little hangry (hungry + angry) and the amount of stairs and hills were ungodly in our compromised state. We did, however, make it to this lookout, which gave us quite the view of the city.
Post-hike we got back to civilization and DEVOURED some stale fast food that was in hindsight gross but our hunger transformed it into the best meal we'd had in ages. That very same day (it was a busy one) we made it to Yonggungsa Temple as well. This temple was unique because it's on the water. It took a lot of transit time to get there but it was well worth it.
THAT VIEW THOUGH

I really enjoyed this little nook.
Finally, to wrap up a longggggg day of transit (and millions of stairs), we came to Busan's downtown area to check out the famous Busan bridge.
The lights change to the K pop songs being played.
We finished the night off with some drinks in a hilarious little convenience store.
After a good sleep, we set out again. This is Haeundae beach, which was a few minutes from our hostel.
We also did a MASSIVE trek to try and find my favourite stationary store. The streets were packed and crazy and winding and it was intense. SENSORY OVERLOAD!
Last but not least, we visited a place which I would say is the equivalent of heaven on earth. We spent quite a bit of time there. This dreamy place is called SpaLand <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3
Let me tell you about SpaLand.
First of all, it's BEAUTIFUL. SpaLand is a place that I wish existed in every single city. I hate CNN but this article is very accurate about it being Korea's craziest spa. For roughly $15, you can do a whole bunch of saunas and baths and relax and wear these weird pjs and eat and it's HEAVEN. HEAVEN!!!
It was my first time ever doing the Korean baths and Kat and I were originally pretty awkward about being ass-naked in a room full of Korean women. I'm a pretty avid skinny dipper but it was a little daunting. The room was huge and filled with people bathing in pools of various types/temperatures.
I stood out for a handful of reasons, mainly: being a foreigner, having many tattoos, having piercings, having visible leg hair, and for being a size 12.
It kind of felt like everyone did this:
And I was like:
But it was fine, whatever. Within 10 minutes of soaking I was wayyyy over it. Kat and I did a lot of bonding after being naked together for days. There were also these OUTRAGEOUS chairs that would give you a 15-minute full body massage for only $2. The first time around was a little alarming since it seriously locks in all your limbs and squeezes your entire body. But once I realized it wasn't going to kill me, it was THE BESSSST. Here's what it was like (minus the hat thingy). CRAZY RIGHT?!
We used those a lot.
They even had bingsu, aka Korean ice cream. HEAVEN.
It was, as you may have guessed, an excellent trip :)
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