There’s Green Gold in Those Mountains . . .

Norimitsu Onishi has posted an interesting tale of hunting for ginseng, down south in Jinan, South Korea. Apparently old plants are very valuable (see the article title for just *how* valuable). Some ginseng hunters also visit a Sanshin shrine for the local mountain they were hunting in and would perform a rite, asking for the sanshin’s help. It actually sounds like fun and good exercise though I suspect that most search for the money to be made by finding that old mountain root.

The article is here. The photo is courtesy of the New York Times.

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4 Comments

  1. Gravatar SomeguyinKorea your flag
    Posted August 24, 2007 at 1:21 am | Permalink

    That’s a lot of money for something that has, at best, very mild medicinal properties.

  2. Gravatar Zonath your flag
    Posted August 24, 2007 at 12:42 pm | Permalink

    $65k is a pretty penny to spend for what’s basically a glorified carrot.

    Still a good article, though.

  3. Posted August 24, 2007 at 1:42 pm | Permalink

    The placebo effect can be worth a lot, if ya truly believe…

    Thanks for the link, that’s interesting. I wrote a fair amount about the connection between Korean ginseng and mountain-worship / mountain spirits in my 1999 book; in San-shin paintings the king of the crags is often depicted holding a large ginseng root. I supplemented that information with more discussion and photos from Geumsan on my site:
    http://san-shin.org/ginseng-1.html

  4. Posted August 24, 2007 at 1:52 pm | Permalink

    This absolutely must be the first time in history that an international story was filed from this Jinan, and it’s probably the last. It’s not the relatively well-known Jinan Town of North Jeolla Province, right above the amazing Mai-san, but rather a tiny village on the southeast side of Jinbo Town, southwest corner of exceedingly remote Yeongyang County, North Gyeongsang Province; the only reason anybody would ever stop by there is because it’s the crossroads of National Highways 31 & 34… I’m amazed that this NYT reporter made it out there — gotta respect that!

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