Nonsan Strawberry Festival: Eating In Strawberry Fields in Korea
Itโs strawberry season in Korea, as if you didnโt notice the bucketfuls being sold in the markets and from trucks driving through your neighborhoods everywhere right now. When I was growing up, I LOVED having strawberry plants that I could pick my own strawberries from and luckily in Korea, there are strawberry festivals where you can do just that. Nonsan is Koreaโs largest strawberry producer and the city welcomes people from near and far every spring in Korea for the Nonsan Strawberry Festival which took place this past weekend to the delight of many, myself included. Don’t miss it next year!
Visitors can taste some of their delicious strawberries freshly picked from the Korean strawberry fields nearby as well as other goodies all involving those delicious sweet seductive strawberries that greet us each spring. Here’s all you need to know about the Nonsan Strawberry Festival and where to go strawberry picking in Korea.
Plan a trip to the Nonsan Strawberry Festival in Korea:
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How To Get There
Address: 319-10 Daegyo-dong, Nonsan-si, Chungcheongnam-do (์ถฉ์ฒญ๋จ๋ ๋ ผ์ฐ์ ์ค์๋ก 522)
By Train: Take a train from Yongsan Station in Seoul to Nonsan Station. Check the Korail Websitefor times. The shortest trip is on the KTX and takes around an hour and a half. (Book in advance!)
By Bus: There are also buses from Central City Terminal in Seoul which should supposedly take the same amount of time as a train, but with traffic itโs hit or miss. From the terminal there are signs directing you to the fair grounds.
What To Know
When: early to mid-April
Cost: W10,000 for picking strawberries + the cost of food
Festival Fun
The highlight by far is hopping a board a shuttle bus that will take you from the festival grounds to one of the nearby strawberry farms. There are numerous farms in the area, so the festival spreads the love and buses visitors to different farms throughout the day, which also ensures there are enough strawberries for everyone. The trip is a short 10 to 15 minutes and upon arrival, the farmer allowing visitors down his precious strawberry aisles explains how to properly pick the strawberries, by pulling up rather than down. Did you know that was the proper way? I sure didn’t.
The busload of people, which sounds like a lot but isnโt once everyone is inside the long covered rows of delicious smelling strawberries, head inside paying the farmer just W10,000 to eat as many strawberries as one can in the allotted time. There are plenty for everyone and everyone takes plenty. If you’re a strawberry fan make sure you get in on this part of the festival which is NOT at the festival grounds.
Weโre told thereโs a 30 minute time limit for munching, but 30 minutes comes and goes and though we may be one of the last lingering in the tent chowing down, no one seems to be in a rush. After our bellies are full and feeling slight achy from the massive amount of berries just consumed, we head to a tent next door where a small carton is provided to everyone as an added bonus.
You canโt take any strawberries away from the eating tent, theyโre all to be eaten on the spot, so the small carton to take home was a lovely surprise. An old woman inside pounds strawberry rice cake and offers free bites to taste and jars of jam and rice cake are being sold to patrons at very fair prices. Each farm may be slightly different so experiences may vary out in the fields of red berry yumminess. Just be open to that very berry strawberry experience.
Back from the fields, the festival grounds offer up tons to see and partake in and plenty to eat of course. The strawberry goodies include strawberry makkoli (rice wine), strawberry cupcakes, strawberry cakes, strawberries dipped in chocolate, strawberry jam, strawberry & pepper paste and then thereโs the vegetarian tent of food, soups, jjajjangmyeon, fishy pancakes, grills to have a grill out and more. Thereโs really something for everyone. There was free popcorn, cake decorating tents, a fondu dipping tent among other experience tents to partake in and plenty of strawberry statues and people in costumes to pose with.
Nonsan is a perfect day trip from Seoul and the strawberry goodness was totally worth the day out. This was festival was so enjoyable, or just love strawberries that much, that I’ve been twice. Another perk of visiting festivals like this is that often you can also buy a ton of local produce and if you don’t have a car, they’ll actually ship it back to your house for you.
This is just one of the awesome spring festivals in Korea, but there are of course plenty more. If you want to add some of the best ones to your calendar, be on the lookout for the Jindo Sea Parting Festival and the Lotus Lantern Festival and Parade in Seoul certainly don’t miss all of the amazing cherry blossom festivals around the country.
Spring is definitely one of the best times to get out and about in Korea and there is so much to see and enjoy. And if you like fruit festivals, there’s also the grape festival on Daebudo Island that is worth checking out too. Don’t miss this awesome experience in Korea.
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