I waited a couple days for the water to recede, and Tuesday evening, I went to the creek with the intention of doing a creekside walk. The water had indeed receded, and all the creekside trails were open. The following photos partially document the walk.
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Looking down the stairs, I can see a path again at the bottom! |
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the shed carapace of a cicada |
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a look down the path and at all the vegetation |
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The water still wants to overflow. |
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silt and debris—a sure sign of flooding (not to mention the smells) |
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Staircase #1 still looks pitiful. |
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another view of Staircase #1 |
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The creek behaves itself. |
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fallen light pole along the Yangjae-cheon |
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fallen and covered in vegetation |
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a fallen tree—one of many |
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barely visible tree roots (different tree) |
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mud and sludge |
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more silt along the Tan Creek (Tan-cheon) |
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tree partied too much last night |
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Don't be tempted to jump the broken fence. |
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a section where the fence is all gone |
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walking toward the Han River, we get a rare glimpse leftward at prefab under-the-bridge offices |
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more mud and silt |
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yet more schmutz |
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This bridge was totally underwater a couple days ago. |
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The lights of a stadium burn brightly. |
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the on-ramp to the north/east side of the Tan-cheon |
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1.3 km to the Han River |
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Is this sign saying there's a road-improvement project going on at the International Exchange Complex? |
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apologizing for the inconvenience caused by all the construction |
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This driving course was totally underwater not long ago. |
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more of the driving course |
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and yet more |
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zee ramp, eet goes ahp |
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Don't know what insect this is, but it looks wind-tunnel tested. |
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Remember the photo of the flooded building? |
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Here's that same building as it's supposed to look, i.e., without the flooding. |
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once again on a familiar path |
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a bridge that spans the Tan Creek |
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a not-quite-straightaway |
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still as a statue, he (she?) sat |
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A tiny orb-weaver—I interrupted her while she was eating. |
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more toad than frog, I think (and very tiny) |
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my apartment building in the distance |
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the view from the restroom by the walking trail |
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a nice, clean-cut path |
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The fallen lamppost is upright again! |
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where the lamppost was righted, new tamped earth |
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onward |
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turn right just after the bridge to cross the creek (which is now clear) |
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a map of the Songpa Loop Trail (21 km)... I've tried part of it and didn't like it |
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The bridge that had been covered in dead trees is now clear. |
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A lot of the dead wood got piled up. Not sure what it'll be used for. |
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If I were a wood sculptor, though, I'd be having a field day. |
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a look back at the path and all the wood |
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more wood! |
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note the tilted lamppost |
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I guess I took another shot of the same lamppost. Sorry. |
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final stretch before the footbridge to my neighborhood |
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the footbridge (called yuk-gyo in Korean and une passerelle in French) |
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bridge-porn angle |
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appreciate the arch |
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the ramp down to Gaepo Street and my apartment (distance) |
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digital zoom: my apartment, Daecheong Tower |
It was good to see that the water had receded to the point that creekside hikes were again possible. While I enjoyed learning about all those high-level routes during the recent flood, I didn't enjoy being on the same level as the traffic, so it's nice to be back on the trails I'm used to. There's more rain being forecast, though, so you never know: the local creeks might flood again before the monsoon season is over. We'll just have to... go with the flow.
"Go with the flow"--I like it!
ReplyDeleteI was surprised there wasn't more damage and was impressed that the cleanup and repairs are so prompt. Another difference between the PI and Korea; things around here rarely get fixed properly after a storm.
So, it looks to be a mostly flat walk. Did the silt and mud make the path slippery at all?
There were a couple slippery spots, but not many.
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