Tourists flock to fish on ice at S. Korea's popular winter festival-Xinhua

Tourists flock to fish on ice at S. Korea's popular winter festival

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2023-01-09 11:20:15

Tourists stand on ice and snatch fish with bare hands at Hwacheon Sancheoneo Ice Festival in Hwacheon, South Korea, on Jan. 7, 2023. (Xinhua/Sun Yiran)

Themed "Never freezing warm-heartedness, never melting memories", the Hwacheon Sancheoneo Ice Festival has attracted 130,000 local and foreign tourists to fish on top of the ice in Hwacheon county, and participants are allowed to take up to three fish they caught back home.

HWACHEON, South Korea, Jan. 9 (Xinhua) -- Around 130,000 local and foreign tourists flocked to fish on ice and snatch fish with bare hands at one of the most popular South Korean winter festivals that opened on Saturday in Hwacheon county, about 120 km northeast of the capital Seoul.

The Hwacheon Sancheoneo Ice Festival was scheduled to last until Jan. 29 with the theme of "Never freezing warm-heartedness, never melting memories" as visitors were allowed to fish on top of the ice for Sancheoneo, a mountain trout that is known for living in the first-class fresh water.

Since 2003, the winter festival had been held every January in the remote mountainous county with a population of about 25,000, but it failed to take place in 2011, 2021 and 2022.

Approximately 10,000 fishing holes, slated to be increased to 20,000, were drilled into the ice of a river over the 2-km-long, 100-meter-wide area about the size of 24 soccer fields.

Tourists stand in a lake and snatch fish with bare hands at Hwacheon Sancheoneo Ice Festival in Hwacheon, South Korea, on Jan. 7, 2023. (Xinhua/Sun Yiran)

Surrounded by snow-covered mountains, locals and foreigners stood before the holes and moved fishing poles up and down to catch fish on the ice, of which the maximum thickness reaches over 40 cm as the river is one of the country's first areas to freeze over in winter.

Instead of casting a fishing hook when doing regular fishing, the ice fishing participants were instructed to unwind fishing lines until the hook reached the bed of the river two to three meters deep, before bobbing fishing poles up and down to entice trout to bite the bait.

Because of the easiness of the ice fishing and the guides who were found in places to teach first-timers how to do it, both children and adults enjoyed it amid the higher number of visitors that had topped 1 million since 2006 and hit a record high of 1.84 million in 2019.

Some of the participants jumped with joy after catching fish, and others struggled to separate a slippery trout from the sharp hook. Some claimed two holes with two fishing poles held in both hands, while others sat on small foldable camping chairs to wait for an unsuspecting fish.

Up to three fish that participants caught could be taken home. Otherwise, the fish could be grilled and sliced at a cooking zone.

Organizers planned to release 171 tons of mountain trout during the 23-day festival.

Tourists stand in a lake and snatch fish with bare hands at Hwacheon Sancheoneo Ice Festival in Hwacheon, South Korea, on Jan. 7, 2023. (Xinhua/Sun Yiran)

"The impact of this festival on the local economy amounts to about 100 billion won (80 million U.S. dollars). Around 1,500 local people are now here at the festival to do their economic activities," Hwacheon Mayor Choi Moon-soon told reporters.

One of the challenging and entertaining events was bare-handed fishing, in which participants dressed in shorts and T-shirts, provided by organizers, jumped into a thigh-deep pool of freezing cold river water to catch the mountain trout with bare hands in five minutes.

Some of them leapt out of the pool just seconds later as they failed to endure the cold water, while other successful contenders caught fish and stuffed them in T-shirts. One contender posed in front of cameras by kissing his fresh-caught fish.

"It's cold, but it's okay. This is really fun," Park On-you, a 9-year-old boy, told Xinhua after joining the event.

"I came here with my friends as it was resumed almost three years after the COVID-19 pandemic. The reason I came here is that I can experience new things," said Lee Keun-kyu, a 29-year-old man.

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