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※ This video is part of <Korean Travelogue - Building a Wild House Part 1: The Reason for Living in the Mountains> broadcast on January 29, 2018. Baek Woon-kyung, who is busy clearing the snow and making a road in Soseong-myeon, Jeongeup-si, where heavy snow never stops, is always more excited than worried even when sleet falls. It has already been 7 years since he came down from Seoul, built a house, and settled down. From the day he hurriedly put up the roof and moved in, Baek Woon-kyung’s house has been continuously evolving. Baek Woon-kyung says with a laugh that he had planned a cozy and small house because it was just him and his wife, but it ended up being a two-story house because of the beautiful Geumgang pine trees that he couldn’t cut down. On snowy days like today, he carries snowballs on his back and crosses the curved bamboo tunnel to his secret hideout. A natural sledding hill appears when he crosses the untrodden white snow. The neighborhood sledding Olympics, where he competes with his neighbors, is a fantastic way to enjoy living in the mountains. With mountains behind and a river in front, there is a house in a mountain village in Imsil with beautiful mountains and good water that is always bustling from the morning. Gong Hu-nam thought that if he built a house with a fireplace, he would read comics in the lower room while making a fire and eating sweet potatoes. However, thanks to the house that requires more and more work as it lives on, the couple’s pickaxe work continues even today. We meet Gong Hu-nam, who calls herself a fairy, saying that she has done everything from shoveling to hammering to chopping, and her lumberjack husband, Yang Chan-gyu, in their mountain village diary. ✔ Program name: Korean travelogue - Building a wild house Part 1 The reason for living in a mountain village ✔ Broadcast date: 2018.01.29 #Golladyeondocumentary #Documentary #Documentary #Koreantravelogue #Returning to the countryside