[food, books, travel & anything under the sun] have gas, will travel; have tsinelas, will walk; see food, will eat....
Monday, September 05, 2011
Friday, August 05, 2011
Sunday, July 03, 2011
A Very Fishy Story (Sa Daungan ng Dipolog City)
The barge comes in and the wharf suddenly comes alive.
Men waiting and watching a few minutes ago, suddenly turned animated with energy -- containers piled on the side are taken one by one and filled with fish from the boat. Inside and outside the boat, the fish fly quickly into the banyera and men-by-twos quickly pick it up and run with it to the waiting motor vehicle.
What we didn't notice right away was there was another outside action happening -- two of the men who were helping out by carrying the fish containers were handed fish to keep while filching some on their own and placing them on the side. It was their "payment" for helping out.
As they scraped the last fish from the boat, the motor vehicle had left the wharf and the barge turned to go, the two men took their hoard and laughingly walked off.
"Tinola pang almusal!"
(Photos taken in Dipolog)
Saturday, July 02, 2011
The Kinilaw Husband and Wife Team
What could be fresher than kinilaw made by the side of the sea?
A pregnant missis slices luya, sili, kalamansi, sibuyas, kamatis inside the pedicab while her hubby cleans the fish (in this case, i think it's dilis) by the side of the wharf. In the meantime, a kaldero of rice is waiting for the ulam at the bottom of the pedicab.
Ang sarap!
(Taken June 24, beside the Dipolog Boulevard)
Friday, July 01, 2011
The Rizal Challenge
Our national hero plus a chance to explore our country? Like!
To celebrate his 150th year, the Department of Tourism, the Heritage Conservation Society, the Intramuros Administration, the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and the National Parks Development Committee came up with the Rizal @ 150 Heritage Trail Project.
Basically, you are asked to be a "Rizal pilgrim" and follow his trail, by getting a passport and having it stamped in the chosen places that proved significant to our national hero (27 stamps). Prizes are available, once you've completed and it's been verified, within a year.
We've decided to take the challenge. Now, whether we'll be able to finish this in a year, I don't know but I intend to have my passport with all the stamps displayed on the wall some day.
It was a stroke of luck that in one of my stalk-Cebu-Pacific-website-for-promo-tickets moment last August, I managed to book my husband and I, less than P700 round trip tickets for two to Dipolog. Scheduled for June 22 till 25 it was the perfect way to start our Rizal Heritage trail challenge.
Unable to get Rizal passports at the Fort Santiago during the 150th year festivities (they ran out by the time we got there), I called up the Office of Product Research & Development of the Department of Tourism (523-1930, 526-7545 and 524-2254) and was informed that I could get passports from the Dipolog Tourism Board. And we did! We got there just as they were having their lunch break but they were nice enough to entertain us. We got our first stamp downstairs for the Dipolog Cathedral. (Tricycle fare is P7, fyi)
For Stamp # 2 - we asked the tricyle driver to take us to the terminal so we could get a ride to Katipunan. (Jeepneys and buses ply the routes outside of the city.) Our super islaw trike driver drove sloooowly but surely and once he found out where we were headed, stopped the jeepney going to Kalayaan (kasi daw if we went inside the terminal it would take us another 30 minutes of waiting) and forced (ay, encouraged pala) the passengers to play rigodon so we could squeeze in. Jeepney fare to Katipunan is around P26 ata. (Sorry, I pocketed the change without counting it). Once we got to the Katipunan plaza, we had our passport stamped at the Tourism site and then proceeded to the farm that was the site of Rizal's presence there. (Distance of Katipunan from Dipolog, 20 minutes. To get from Kalayaan town proper to farm, you need to ride a single, around 5 minutes away)
Stamp # 3 - Left Dipolog early morning to catch a Everlast bus at the terminal bound for Dapitan (fare P25., travel time, 30 minutes, change in bus conductors, around 4) and headed straight to the Rizal Shrine.
Stamp # 4 - From the Rizal shrine we had lunch beside the Gloria de Dapitan, facing the beachfront and then proceeded to the Santa Cruz Beach which has a monument depicting Rizal's arrival in Dapitan.
Stamps #5, 6, 7 and 8 - A tricycle ride from the beach brought us to the Dapitan plaza which the nice local tourist guide (free) told us that Rizal planted the acasia trees there and designed the plaza patterned after the ones he'd seen in Europe. Rizal was one busy, busy man while in Dapitan. Aside from the designing the plaza and making a relief map of Mindanao, he also farmed, taught, built a water dam, healed, wrote and goodness knows what more. Walking distance from the church and the plaza is the Sangguniang Panglungsod Building where we got our four other stamps.
Unable to get Rizal passports at the Fort Santiago during the 150th year festivities (they ran out by the time we got there), I called up the Office of Product Research & Development of the Department of Tourism (523-1930, 526-7545 and 524-2254) and was informed that I could get passports from the Dipolog Tourism Board. And we did! We got there just as they were having their lunch break but they were nice enough to entertain us. We got our first stamp downstairs for the Dipolog Cathedral. (Tricycle fare is P7, fyi)
For Stamp # 2 - we asked the tricyle driver to take us to the terminal so we could get a ride to Katipunan. (Jeepneys and buses ply the routes outside of the city.) Our super islaw trike driver drove sloooowly but surely and once he found out where we were headed, stopped the jeepney going to Kalayaan (kasi daw if we went inside the terminal it would take us another 30 minutes of waiting) and forced (ay, encouraged pala) the passengers to play rigodon so we could squeeze in. Jeepney fare to Katipunan is around P26 ata. (Sorry, I pocketed the change without counting it). Once we got to the Katipunan plaza, we had our passport stamped at the Tourism site and then proceeded to the farm that was the site of Rizal's presence there. (Distance of Katipunan from Dipolog, 20 minutes. To get from Kalayaan town proper to farm, you need to ride a single, around 5 minutes away)
Stamp # 3 - Left Dipolog early morning to catch a Everlast bus at the terminal bound for Dapitan (fare P25., travel time, 30 minutes, change in bus conductors, around 4) and headed straight to the Rizal Shrine.
Stamp # 4 - From the Rizal shrine we had lunch beside the Gloria de Dapitan, facing the beachfront and then proceeded to the Santa Cruz Beach which has a monument depicting Rizal's arrival in Dapitan.
Stamps #5, 6, 7 and 8 - A tricycle ride from the beach brought us to the Dapitan plaza which the nice local tourist guide (free) told us that Rizal planted the acasia trees there and designed the plaza patterned after the ones he'd seen in Europe. Rizal was one busy, busy man while in Dapitan. Aside from the designing the plaza and making a relief map of Mindanao, he also farmed, taught, built a water dam, healed, wrote and goodness knows what more. Walking distance from the church and the plaza is the Sangguniang Panglungsod Building where we got our four other stamps.
Dapitan Church Built in 1883, St James Church of Dapitan has a historical marker which can be found in the exact sport where Rizal stood every Sunday during his exile from 1892 to 1896. |
Relief Map of Mindanao - A National Cultural Treasure, Rizal creaed this map as an aid in teaching history and geography to the locals. |
Dapitan Plaza Planned and beautified by Rizal durng his exile. |
Four more stamps! |
Region 9 - done! Six more regions to go :) |
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