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Expat Advisory Services South Korea

Articles South Korea

Understanding a dog’s mind: an interview with the founder of Korea’s first clicker training center

August 14, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Dr. Park and friend

Diesel’s eyes beam with anticipation—well, for a second. The little dachshund is undecided about this strange game. Every so often he looks up and barks insistently, demanding a treat. He tries to grab it. He hides under a chair and comes out again, curious and sniffing. He lifts one front paw expectantly. Now his eyes are back on Dr. Park Chang-jin, founder of the Korea Clicker Training Center and the Korean Society of Human Animal Bond (KSHAB).

Fostering saves lives

July 7, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Photo courtesy of Tara

Pilot was about three months old when he ran into a stranger's house and made fast friends with the baby, the cat and the weasel. A rescuer posted his picture on the Animal Rescue Korea adoption board and said the orange and white kitten was desperate for a place to go.

Seoul Veggie Club gathers in Hannam-dong

June 7, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

A Veggie Club member enjoys the ssambap set at Loving Hut Hannam-dong

Vegans, stay away from Korea because it's impossible to live here without throwing away your values. Or you could come over anyway and check out this restaurant map posted to Facebook by a member of the Seoul Veggie Club. While vegetarian and vegan groups have been active in Korea since the late 1990s, the concepts are still unfamiliar in most restaurants.

A weekend of animal rescue outreach coming up at the Seoul Information Fair

May 7, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Bath time

Jack couldn't go for a walk the day I met him at the Dr. Pet Animal Medical Center in Gangnam because he had a cast on one leg. The Yorkshire terrier was rescued from a high-kill animal control facility north of the city, but his would-be adopter had changed her mind—he was apparently bigger than he looked on the website. Jack is still waiting for a home at Dr. Pet.

Dunchondong Station (둔촌동역) Line 5 – Station #P549

May 5, 2010 by Charlie Usher

Photo Credit Liz Groeschen

Living in Seoul, one grows accustomed to reading the city vertically. I grew up in small and mid-sized Midwestern cities where architecture sprawls low and wide, and as such, was trained to see urban environments two-dimensionally, as a series of buildings placed next to each other. But after living in Korea for a while one’s perceptions shift, and it wasn’t long before I was looking up as much as left and right. Restaurants on the sixth floor, PC bangs on the tenth: Up is the way the city is built. It takes a particularly unusual tower to strike one as out of place here.

Nonhyeon Station (논현역) Line 7 – Station #732

May 2, 2010 by Charlie Usher

Photo Credit Liz Groeschen

Arriving at Nonhyeon at noon, we emerged from the station to find the morning’s rains stopped and a bright midday sun glinting off puddles and still-wet street signs. What had looked like it would be a gloomy, damp outing an hour ago had been transformed into the perfect weather for Nonhyeon-dong’s signature sport: armoire hunting.

Shelter update: Daejeon dogs get a new pink home, but help is desperately needed

April 7, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Daejeon dogs wait on the truck in Asan

Many current and former Korea expats will remember Jung Nan-young's heartbreaking struggle to rehome more than 200 rescued dogs. Ms. Jung had more dogs than she could possibly care for, and city authorities were trying to force her off the rental property in Daejeon where they were crowded together in a dark greenhouse. Ms. Jung slept in a small room in one corner of the greenhouse, and she couldn't afford to move.

Building a vegan Korea: Two young families discuss their journey

March 20, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Choi and Jimin

I wasn't sure what the occasion was when I took the train to Daejeon to meet Lee Cheol-seung and his wife, Choi Moon-yun, but I was eager to interview a Korean vegan family.

Lee, 38, holds a sales position in Seoul and 32-year-old Choi works as an assistant at a law firm. Choi is also a former animal shelter volunteer and daycare teacher. It was her love for animals that made her decide to go vegan, and she's one of the main organizers of Hanulvut.

Tiffany the Korean rescue dog gets a new face and a new life

February 22, 2010 by Eileen Cahill

Tiffany in October 2009 following reconstructive surgery (photo courtesy of Falyn Jarvis)

In late 2008, the closure of a small private shelter in Daejeon brought some 25 volunteers together to move 70 dogs to a mountainside property in Asan. Photographer Harvey Rosas, one of the volunteers, posted a warning when he shared his pictures on the Animal Rescue Korea website: One image was very disturbing.

One of the dogs already living at the shelter was missing her nose and most of her upper snout. Her teeth were permanently exposed, and in a still photo she could have been mistaken for an aggressive dog.

Wild Women's Performing Arts Festival

February 17, 2010 by Shawn McRae, Liz Oh

Angela Lytle performing at the WWPAF 2008

We will empower women and change the world! It might sound too ambitious, but it is not impossible. For far too long, women’s voices have been marginalized and drowned out, but there are those who are taking steps to give voice and support to the Korean Woman.

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Gig Guide South Korea

Dr. Pet in Gangnam still has adoptable... - Seoul
August 18, 2010 - 10:00am - August 17, 2011 - 6:00pm
Traditoinal Music Class for Foreigners... - Music, Seoul
September 4, 2010 - 10:30am - November 20, 2010 - 11:45am
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