KOREA
MAISAN Provinsial Park
- featuring: Temples Tapsa & Unsusa -
2021-11-03: Initiated, - updated and finished story about Maisan
Maisan Provincial Park is one of the smallest parks in Korea.
It is mainly justified as a nature park because of the twin peaked mountain that gave name to the area, - Maisan.
Maisan means "Horse Ears Mountain", which is a quite obvious name when looking at the twin peaks from a distance, which you clearly see from the picture below, which I took from the bus when leaving the nearby city, - Chinan.
One of the peaks, - Sut Mai -, is considered "male" and the other one, - Am Mai -, is considered "female".
Like so many other scenic or special places in Korea there is a mythical reason for the existence of this peculiar twin peaked "male" and "female" mountain.
The legend says, that long time ago two fairies, .- a male and a female -, lived here until one day their creator ordered them to come home back to heaven where they belonged.
However,- no mortal eye was allowed to witness their flight. Hence the two fairies planned to ascent to heaven on the next full moon night so that their path could be lightened by the moon.
However,- on the chosen night it became overcast, so they decided to wait until dawn, but at that time it was too late - - - - An early rising woman spotted the two fairies on their way to heaven, and instantly they were transformed into stone and fell back to the earth, where you can see them to this day, as the strange twin peaked mountain Maisan.
Fairies or not, - the fact remains, that the strange double mountain is composed from a completely different material than the surrounding mountains. But there is much more to Maisan than the old legend of how it was created - - -
Between the two peaks you will find what is most likely the most bizarre Buddhist temple in Korea! It is the Tapsa temple (Pagoda temple) with an amazing collection of stone pagodas made by the hermit monk, - Lee Kap-yong. From about 1885 monk Lee spent more than 30 years creating about 130 unique stone pagodas of all shapes and sizes up to about 10 meters tall,- all built without the use of mortar. They are so well made, that even during strong winds they never collapse.
The pagodas were built mostly from local stones, but in-between are mixed stones taken from famous mountains from all over the nation. Although only about 80 pagodas are preserved today, Lee Kap-yongs stone pagodas cannot avoid to impress and cause wonder, because he actually transformed the whole area around the Tapsa temple to a strange, surrealistic landscape that seems to belong to another world - - -
If you have a chance,- go and have a look for yourself. But for now,- please enjoy my impressions from the Maisan mountain and the Tapsa Temple, which I had the good fortune to explore in 1997.
During my very rewarding visit to the unusual twin mountain and its strange Tapsa temple, I did not see any other foreigner, but it certainly looks as if the Koreans themselves find the place just as interesting and unique as I did.
Here some happy Korean children, which, - by the way-, must be some of the cutest and most polite children in the whole world - -