BY ROSARIO T. GALANG
Jeju Island, southwest of the Korean
peninsula, is Korea’s largest island. It is 73 kilometers from
east to west and 41 kilometers from north to south.
It is also the site for the much loved
telenovela, "Jewel in the Palace.".
The telenovela has so romanticized and
popularized Korea that the government is willing to subsidize
another movie-telenovela, the Legend.
The island is also the favorite honeymoon
island for Koreans, long before many of them discovered Cebu and
Boracay.
Of the island’s 5.5 million tourists last
year, 5 million come from the mainland and only half a million
are foreigners. The Japanese and the Chinese are the island’s
largest foreign visitors.
Upon landing in Jeju from the Gimpo airport,
the visitor will be struck with how rocky the island is. Black
basalt rocks predominate the landscape.
The fields are even divided by black rock
fences and houses are guarded by the dolhareubang, stone statues
of ‘grandfather’ that guards residents from evil spirits.
The dolhareubang is likened to the statues
found in the Easter Island.
Since Saturday, December 15, the Philippine
Airlines has started its daily charter flights direct to Jeju.
Jeju requires no visa for Filipinos and travelers can just book
themselves online, go to the the Centennial airport and enjoy
four days of great weather and fantastic accommodations.
Jeju has so much to offer, this month,
tangerines are ripe for picking ang visitors can see the heavily
fruit laden tangerine trees that dot the countryside.
The island which enjoys four seasons, offers
specific delight for every season.
The group from the Philippines was hoping
that they would see snow. The temperature was six degrees
Centigrade at Seoul and it was likewise cold in Jeju, but there
was no snow yet. "It is global warming," our guide Hiya, kept
apologizing.
Ko, Kyeong Sil, director general of culture
tourism and sports bureau of the Jeju special self governing
province said that the PAL chartered flights will help increase
tourism between the two countries.
As of November, he said Jeju had earned over
two trillion won (P84 billion ) from tourism, with foreigners
contributing 31 percent of the total. his year.
About 10 years ago, Jeju was catering to
Japanese tourists. Now marketing has shifted to China. Ko said
that the island is now trying new markets like East Asian
countries of Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines.
Ko has a very interesting explanation for the
Loveland Museum and Sex and Health Museum. He said that these
two destinations are fast becoming popular as night tour
packages.
He said the island province is trying to
attract 10 million foreign tourists by 2011.
Ko is recommending three major spots in Jeju. These are the
TV drama sets for the Legend, coming soon in Philippine TV next
year, the site for the highly successful Jewel in the Palace,
the Jeju Falk Museum and the Teddy Bear Museum located in
Jungmun Tourist Complex, and Yeomiji.