The glass-floored walkway cantilevered over the cliffs at Oryukdo gets photographed constantly, but most visitors skip the 30-minute coastal trail extending south from it. The trail leads to rocky formations where the East and South Seas technically meet, marked by a small stone marker locals consider more photographically honest than the skywalk. Oryukdo — meaning 'five-six islands' — gets its name because the number of visible islands changes with the tide: five at high tide, six at low. The nearby Seungdusan park above has a sunrise observatory frequented by elderly Busan residents doing morning calisthenics, completely separate from the tourist circuit below. Bring shoes with grip; the lower rocks get slippery when waves wash over them.
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