🥾🥾 A few moments traversing South Korea with Walking Partner Lee Junseok. Read the latest dispatches from the trail at the link in our bio and at www.outofedenwalk.org ✍️
Balloon Wars
EXCLUSIVE: South Korean activists float homemade balloons carrying religious tracts & dollars across the DMZ into North Korea. These covert launches are rarely filmed by journalists. An Out of Eden Walk story on Korea’s “balloon” wars will appear soon in National Geographic Magazine.
Bookend Oceans
✍️ “The oldest ship known to archaeology is called the Pesse Canoe. Resembling a three-meter-long cigar, it was hauled in the 1950s from bogs in the Netherlands. The lumpy pine hull has been carbon-dated to about 10,000 years old. Without question, humans were crossing open waters long before that. Daredevils floated to Australia, for example, at least 50,000 years ago. Some experts believe that this passage from Southeast Asia to Oceania took pace aboard bamboo rafts. The classic story of the colonization of the Americas, involving mammoth hunters plodding across the Bering Land Bridge between Siberia and Alaska, is being updated, meanwhile, with new evidence suggesting that inshore canoe migrations also played an important role.
I’ll plumb these antique seafaring migrations in the years ahead, as I inch my way to the Out of Eden Walk’s final ocean: the bitter Antarctic waters off Tierra del Fuego.” —Paul Salopek
🔗 Read Paul’s most recent story from the trail, “Bookend Oceans,” a 12-year walk between big waters here: https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2025-01-bookend-oceans
No-Tell Motel
✍️ “My walking partner, Lee Junseok, and I are hiking across South Korea. We are staying in love motels.
What is a Korean love motel?
From the outside, such establishments look much like any commercial lodging. Indeed, many are wholly ordinary in appearance, even low-key: aging faux brick facades, sliding glass doors activated by touch, and an electric sign dusted by carbon pollution. Inside, the transformation into something special begins. First: The clerk is hidden inside a frosted glass booth. (The clerks are usually a man.) You must transact business through a wicket, a small opening of the type that guards push meals through in prison doors. The clerk cannot see you. You cannot see him. This is by design: anonymity. Sometimes, check-in requires no human interaction at all. In the dim lobbies hum automated machines. They look like canned beverage dispensers. You feed them money. They issue your door key. Inside the rooms, more clues appear. Heart-shaped beds. Elaborate hygienic amenities. (Sachets of perfume, cologne, and mouthwash, as well as sanitizing alcohol and condoms.) Windows are optional. In one such room, I discover a laminated menu—not for food but listing women performers available for hire, each photographed attired in the exhausted tropes of male fantasy. (Nun, dominatrix, air steward.) Bought love. Hence: love motel. One rents the rooms by the hour.
‘Tell him we need two rooms for the whole night,’ I instruct Lee at one such establishment.
Lee bends to convey this information in Korean through the clerk’s tiny window. There is an exclamation of surprise from behind the opaque glass.
‘Ask if I may borrow a desk and chair,’ I also remind Lee, because I am a writer. And from behind the glass comes an even louder grunt of astonishment.” —Paul Salopek
🔗 Read “No-Tell Motel” here: https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2024-12-no-tell-motel
📍Seoul, South Korea: 37° 32’ 24” N, 127° 07’ 34
Typhoon trails
Typhoon trails. 📍 South Korea
Yeongnam Daero
The centuries-old Yeongnam Daero, or Great Yeongnam Road of Korea, once featured remote inns a day’s walk apart to accommodate merchants and scholars traveling between Seoul and Busan. Today, convenience stores serve as pilgrim’s stops.
Thank you from Paul
👣 Out of Eden Walk’s motto has always been, “People are our destination.”
As we enter year 13 of this long foot journey, we thank you for making our work possible.
The Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization’s 12th year was the most successful fundraising year yet, with over $130,000 raised in our 2024 crowdfunder.
Thank you all for your support! 🙌
100% of funds raised will go toward fulfilling our mission of connecting people across borders through the power of slow storytelling. 🌍🌏🌎
Your impactful commitment fosters understanding across human divides and emphasizes practical outcomes as well: educational collaborations with schools and campuses along our walking route and a workshop program that provides, for free, the powerful tools of immersive reportage to young media workers and students.
✍️ As we walk together into a year of new horizons and opportunities, we’ll return to our regular content, sharing stories published regularly at outofedenwalk.org along with more videos and photos from the Out of Eden Walk trail.
We’ll be in touch by email with all crowdfunder donors to fulfill community appreciation awards. 🙏
Feedback? Questions? We welcome hearing from you. Write to us via email at info[at]outofedenwalk[dot]com ✉️
Thank you all for walking with us! 🥾
Out of Eden Walk audio dispatches
🎙️ Meet Lucie McNeil. Lucie records audio versions of Out of Eden Walk’s global storytelling.
🎧 With support from the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit and the National Geographic Society, this endeavor makes it possible for listeners to enjoy hearing stories published since the Walk began in Ethiopia in 2013—that’s more than 500 stories documented on foot across some 18 countries over the last 12 years.
🥾 As the Walk enters a new chapter and the 13th year of this 38,000-km foot journey, many new stories lie ahead on the horizon.
✍️ Of course, these stories include the contributions of Out of Eden Walk’s founder and National Geographic Explorer, Paul Salopek, but they also include a multitude of voices of local Walking Partners who have joined Paul on the trail and documented their own experiences.
🔗 Listen to the dispatches chronologically on SoundCloud here: https://soundcloud.com/out-of-eden-walk-audio/sets
Or follow along with the written dispatches here: www.outofedenwalk.org
We update audio quarterly so listeners can keep up as closely as possible to our real time publishing schedule.
Thank you for walking along, and happy listening! 🔈
🥾 We’re 12 years and 25,000 kilometers into the Out of Eden Walk. As ever, our nonprofit organization needs your muscle to help us complete this next stage of our storytelling trek.
✨ Our crowdfunder ends on December 31st at 11:59pm Eastern Standard Time. ✨
We invite you to join us with a donation at any level to support Out of Eden Walk, which is poised to step out of Asia, steam across the North Pacific by cargo ship, and set off on a slow pivot south to our immensely long foot journey’s finish line—the tip of South America.
✍️ Your kind donations will assist us in gathering stories of people we encounter along our upcoming trail—the diverse inhabitants of the tundra, boreal forests, and cities of North America who are grappling with drastically shifting climates, rapid ecosystem change, growing competition for resources among Arctic nations, & the endurance of vulnerable Indigenous cultures. We also will seek out, as ever, solutions to shared global problems by publishing engaging stories of homegrown innovators.
And we will collaborate with local journalists, farmers, photographers, writers, artists, scientists, fishers, & original thinkers, inviting many to walk along and weave their own tales into the braid of Out of Eden Walk narratives.
Exploring the complexity of human connectedness through “slow journalism” seems more vital than ever in our age of global uncertainty, throwback conflicts, profound technological disruption, & troubling political polarization. In an interdependent world, we increasingly confront decisions that impact lives far beyond our own households, to shape the wellbeing of our neighbors and, indeed, strangers living continents away.
Our motto has always been, “People are our destination.” Help grow the footprint of a project that not only fosters understanding across human divides, but emphasizes practical outcomes as well: collaboration with schools & campuses along our walking route and workshops that
Sobaek Mountains
New Eden: Crossing the rugged Sobaek Mountains of South Korea. The seemingly primeval forests aren’t. They were almost entirely scalped less than 80 years ago, during the devastating Korean War.
🌅 After 12 years of walking steadily towards sunrise out of Africa, Out of Eden Walk is poised to step out of Asia, steam across the North Pacific by cargo ship, and set off on its final, slow pivot south to our immensely long foot journey’s finish line—the tip of South America. 👣
As ever, our nonprofit organization needs your muscle to help us complete this next stage of our storytelling trek.
✨ We invite you to join us with a donation at any level to support our annual crowdfunder at the link in our bio ✨
Your kind donations will assist us in gathering stories of people we encounter along our upcoming trail—the diverse inhabitants of the tundra, boreal forests, and cities of North America who are grappling with drastically shifting climates, rapid ecosystem change, growing competition for resources among Arctic nations, & the endurance of vulnerable Indigenous cultures. We also will seek out, as ever, solutions to shared global problems by publishing engaging stories of homegrown innovators.
And we will collaborate with local journalists, farmers, photographers, writers, artists, scientists, fishers, & original thinkers, inviting many to walk along and weave their own tales into the braid of Out of Eden Walk narratives.
Exploring the complexity of human connectedness through “slow journalism” seems more vital than ever in our age of global uncertainty, throwback conflicts, profound technological disruption, & troubling political polarization. In an interdependent world, we increasingly confront decisions that impact lives far beyond our own households, to shape the wellbeing of our neighbors and, indeed, strangers living continents away.
Our motto has always been, “People are our destination.” Help grow the footprint of a project that not only fosters understanding across human divides, but emphasizes practical outcomes as well: collaboration with schools and campuses along our walking route and workshops that provide, for free, the p
Seoul at night
I want to play my komun’go
But my fingers hurt.
So let me place its strings
On the pinetree by the north window.
There they will hum sweet notes
In the wind.
—Songgye-yŏnwŏl, 18th Century, Korea.