One of the last places we
took a trip to when my mom was here, was Maisan Provincial Park, or “horse ear mountains”.
The name comes from the obvious 2 rock peaks, which from a distance resemble
horses ears. The park is located just near the town
of Jinan, a 40 minute bus ride from Jeonju. We were trying to think of a day
trip to do from Jeonju, and my Korea Rough Guide book had a short description
about Jinan, which gave us this idea. It was a great choice as Tapsa Temple is
a truly unique place and unlike any of the other temples in Korea (which all
seem to look very similar).
After
arriving in the small town of Jinan, we caught a bus from the terminal to the
park. I guess the town doesn’t get many foreigners as the old men who seem to
spend their days hanging out at the terminal, were very excited to see us and
had fun jabbering away at us in Korean.
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Old stores outside the bus terminal. |
After
arriving at the park entrance, you wind your way up through a few tourist shops
and restaurants. We first reached the smaller, more traditional temple of
Unsusa before we got to Tapsa. We arrived early in the morning before most of
the crowds, so the walk was rather empty and relaxing.
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Walking up to Tapsa. |
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Unusa Temple. |
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After passing the restaurants and little shops, you get to this lake just before the temple. You can even hire a swan paddle boat. |
The word “Tapsa”
means “Pagoda” and the temple is surrounded by 80 pagodas. What is amazing
about this, is that the pagodas were single-handedly constructed by one man
over 30 years. Even more amazing, is that these stone towers are not held
together by any adhesive and the rocks simply balance on each other. It is
still unknown how they “stick” together as the valley experiences strong winds
(we can attribute to the very strong winds!). The man behind this magic is Yi
Kap-Yong. After the start of his pagoda “project”, Yi Kap-Yong became a monk
and so the area is now a Buddhist temple.
Behind the
temple, you can walk up to between the horse-ear mountain. Unfortunately, the
rocks are closed for restoration so we couldn't climb them, but the walk to the middle of them is quite a
decent walk (I think around 300 stairs if I can remember correctly), and there
are many pleasant Buddhist features along the way.
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The flowers are lovely in the summer. |
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The temple just below the horses ears. |
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What the horse's ears look like from the distance. |
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You can bang this giant drum and it sends an eary echo down the valley. |
Our trip
to Tapsa and Maisan Provincial Park was well worth it and definitely a truly unique
place to visit.
*Eerie. :)
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pics!
Thanks Helena :) It is a strange place!
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