The Korea Times
Korea is a country bordered by sea on three sides, each coastline carrying its own charms. The East Sea draws visitors with its crystalline waters and dramatic cliffs. The southern coast enchants with its labyrinth of islands. The West Sea, flatter and quieter and governed by tides rather than waves, has long played second fiddle. Yet the stretch of shoreline running through South Chungcheong Province makes a compelling case for a slower, less-glamorized kind of travel. Taean and Seosan, two towns situated roughly 150 kilometers southwest of Seoul and reachable by car in about two hours, sit at the heart of this coastline. The region rewards visitors eager for more texture than spectacle: tidal flats and sunset skies, fermented crab stew and octopus broth, cattle grazing against mountain ridgelines, and centuries of history folded into fortress walls. None of it announces itself, but all of it lingers. Tides, sunset and 'haerujil' Kkotji Beach on Taean's Anmyeon Island is perhaps the most iconic destination in the area, and its appeal lies not in any single fixed feature but in the way the
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