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Showing posts with the label Ganjeolgot Cape

[A place worth visiting in Ulsan and Pohang] The key point of my trip to Ulsan and Pohang for 2 nights and 3 days in winter.

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Ulsan and Pohang are not many cities to travel to. Moreover, on New Year's Day, the tourist attractions that were operated are bound to close. Nevertheless, he went. What's there to see... The entire schedule is a schedule that is not too hard and comes back easily. Day 1 [14:00] Ulsan Amethyst Cave Country [16:00] Lunch: Eonyang Bulgogi (Park Bulgogi) Day 2 [10:00] Taehwagang National Garden [14:00] Ganjeolgot Cape Day 3 [10:00] Mom's steamed bun [10:30] Guryongpo Japanese House Street [12:00] Homigot [19:00] Cheer Park Space Walk [19:00] Yeongildae Beach [19:00] Iga-ri Anchor Observatory Day 1 Ulsan Amethyst Cave Country Since the accommodation is located in Ulsan, I first headed to the Amethyst Cave Country in Ulsan. Amethyst Cave was not a naturally formed cave, but a mine that began to be dug to dig for amethyst, but it was developed as a tourist destination when it became an abandoned mine. If you go there, there is a Viking, a sledding slope,

Ganjeolgot Cape, which is said to listen if you pray earnestly

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[A place to visit in Ulsan and Pohang] Shortcut to the key points of their trip to Ulsan and Pohang Ganjeolgot Cape is an indispensable place to talk about the sea of Ulsan. It is one of the first places where the sun rises in Korea, so it is a popular attraction where people gather every new year. Of course, we didn't go there to greet the sun. We just didn't have a place to go. I thought it was a place where people go to celebrate the sun every year because Ganjeolgot Cape said it would make their wishes come true if they prayed earnestly, but when I looked it up, I don't think that's what it meant. When I looked up Wikipedia, I heard that the place name originated as below. Ganjeol is a place name derived from the fact that it looks like a ganjitdae, which refers to a pointed and long pole made of bamboo to pick fruits when viewed from afar. Cape was called Ganjeolgot Cape because it means the part where the land protrudes into the sea. - Wikipedia. - Whate