Monday, April 25, 2011

You Know It's Summer When...




halo-halo is the must eat/drink of the day


barbecue stands (above), and fruits on wheels (below),
are everywhere -- day or night
 


  fine dining equals dining in a kubo (  presko na, may nature tripping pa)
and street food includes cleaning fish right by your doorsteps..

again, you know it's summer when...
you can wade in crystal clear waters

cloud watch

find the sweetest flowers in the unlikeliest places



  even in the highways and byways  


you can check out the latest native products from your friendly vendors


 have a chance to choose the biggest, zaniest floats available
and discover basketball courts mushrooming on the streets and in the mountains...


yes, summer is great for...

cara   cruz

habulan

playing in the town plaza
discovering   a  salagubang playing possum

rolling in the grass
sleeping....
..or napping 
diving or
..swimming
boating..

biking 


  motor-biking 

or just plain bonding with a friend or barkada





summer is for tradition...


of religious processions..




parades and...
flores de mayo  
 




of  planting, harvesting and drying










of weaving hats or



preparing for festive fiestas..



and best of all, 
summer is for appreciating the beauty of nature



 




































Sunday, April 24, 2011

make hay while the sunflowers shine at UP Diliman




  












 






 Celebrate Easter with a visit to the University of the Philippines' main avenue to see the sunflowers abloom. For several years now we've  always wondered who plants them and await  eagerly for them to sprout, the perfect sign that summer has arrived. This year, the helianthus (the Scientific name of sunflowers) bloomed right before graduation and are bigger and brighter than they have ever been. They've also become a tourist attraction with cars parked on the side and eager flower lovers having their picture taken, me included).

Surfing through the net, I found UP Professor and Philippine Daily Inquirer's Michael explaining their presence along Diliman's University Avenue, http://michaeltanpinoykasi.blogspot.com/2007/05/ups-sunflowers.html

My questions have been answered! 1. UP Gardeners, and not aliens, plant them early summer to coincide with graduation season. 2. The seeds are gathered after the flowers have wilted and are kept for the following year. 

Whoever thought of the idea, it's a most welcome one as the sunflowers are guaranteed to bring a smile to even the grumpiest person. And I'm glad that their blooming coincide, too, with Easter, a further reminder to us of how God sacrificed his only begotten son so that we may have life eternal.