Seoul to Busan Train

Train to Busan

3 mins read

I am writing on the train to Busan from Seoul. My friends are sleeping, and I am trying not to and enjoy the view instead.

The Seoul-Busan route is covered with a beautiful snow blanket, I don’t want to miss it, but it’s pretty hard to stay awake since it has an uber-calming effect (maybe instead of the beach sound, we should invest in snow painting). So I will write to you, that way I can also enjoy the snow.

We left Seoul this morning, and I wish we had more time there. Three nights were not enough for Seoul. There are still many things to see, coffee shops to chill out at, and beauty freebies to get. I consoled myself that at least we have covered all the important ones. Vi did her shopping at Myeong-dong, Yin got to see the palace, and I went to Ssamzigil. The only thing I didn’t get to do was meet Bri from Chai &Bri. We planned to meet up, but unfortunately, it didn’t happen. It would be tots neat if we had, maybe next time, Bri?

I don’t have a set itinerary for Busan besides visiting Gamcheon Culture Village tomorrow.

I am going to make use of the iPad mini I got for Christmas (from myself because I think myself is awesome and deserves it, and I agree with it) to do blogging stuff (writing, posting, photo editing, stalking and bloggers envying) which was the main reason I get it, that and to see a bigger version of the cakes in Bakery Story.

It feels cool to publish a post from a train. I love to train. If possible, I would travel exclusively by train because why not? The train is like moving room service to your next destination. I need to sleep, eat (food delivered by pushcart), be cute and maybe whip a blog post, like now, because KTX has Wifi. Not bad, Korail. Not bad at all.

I often wonder if there are train tycoons, and if yes, do their kids inherit the trains? Can normal people buy a train? I totally would.

Follow me on Instagram @KultureKween for more recent updates.

2 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

Eating Sannakji The Dancing Live Octopus in South Korea

Next Story

Gamcheon Culture Village in Busan