Wednesday, February 27, 2013

our little girl is now a big girl!

16 years ago the only word that you can utter was piyaka...lola pusa...lola dumping...you cried too much when your tummy hurts because you're hungry or when you slipped off the ground or even when we dont feel like holding you. you were really that cute and you smell so good. we rushed home from school if we learned that your mom brought you to our home. we've witnessed how you first walk. how you first say a word. how much you cried. how cute was your first smile. the very first time you get your tooth...the very first time mother fairy took your tooth.  i cannot tell how happy i was when i heard that you're going to school.  we teach you your first abc...how to tie your shoes...how to write...how to sing...even how to whistle. aboeji love you more. my mom love you the most. my big sister love you very much. you were so lucky that tito lao change your diapers. feed you with gerber. told you fancy stories. wash and change your clothes. 

we were so happy watching you change from this....
to this!
we are so proud of you honey! we wish you the best! enjoy life! 
we cant wait how are you going to be 16 years more from now!

Sunday, February 24, 2013

nothing compares to Baguio!

 Panagbenga Festival is a month-long annual flower festival occurring in Baguio, the summer capital of the Philippines.





The festival includes floats that are decorated with flowers, street dancing presented by dancers clad in flower-inspired costumes, band competition and many other events have been added with civic organizations holding privately run and funded activities, too. 

The Panagbenga has always received huge media coverage because of the instantaneous popularity it has enjoyed from the very beginning. Every year, visitors are treated to a display of the strength of the local community spirit as the residents stage the hottest show in the coolest city in the Philippines.



This year, the theme of Panagbenga 2013 is “A Blooming Odyssey”. It is a celebration not only of the season of blooming, but also of the progressive economy and prosperity of the City of Pines.
A side from economic boosts from tourism, the festival also helped the younger generation of indigenous people to rediscover their culture's old traditions. The indigenous people was first wary with government-led tourism because of the threat that they will interfere or change their communities' rituals.

with all the beautiful floats, the flowers, the weather and the people nothing beats baguio!
(photo credits to gma7, siningfactory.com, lakbay baguio)

Thursday, February 14, 2013

as we waved goodbye to lola sabel

As the heavy rain pours from the sky yesterday, the tears from the eyes of my beloved family pours heavily too as we waved our last goodbye to our inay, lola sabel. She was 89 years old and the only inay in our family since all of our great grandfathers have departed some 20 years ago. Inay sabel was the sister-in law of my grandfather. My mom grew up with her. She’s a great fish angler. She catches fish easily using improvised rod. I remember her rods. She got a lot of it. My mom called her the queen. She was very kind to every one of us. When I was a still a kid she used to give us different eggs. She got so many fowls and poultry. The year has passed and she became older and bid ridden. She can’t walk and fish anymore. She used to stay in her house but one of my aunts took her to her place just near her home so that she can be well taken care of. The place she’s staying is quite far from our home and we only see her for real during special occasions only if we happen to attend one all the rest is from internet.

this is lola sabel casket. she is so calm and still looks beautiful.
on her way to the church. she was put on a carriage that produces bubbles.
 heading to the church they played all her favorite songs.
kakang talen, her second child was crying so hard.
and mama onding too she even got unconscious.
sign of sympathy kept on flowing even on her last day.
all of my cousins went home to send her home.
including those who live on the other parts of the world came home too. that's how we loved lola sabel. a sort of family reunion on a very sad moments happened all through out the wake.
i seldom see them crying but on that day even the most tough man on earth cried out loud.
kakang lando her first born son cried so much. 
kakang lando is paralyzed that he cant go to the funeral. 
aunty hermie who went home all the way from Florida cried so much.
the mass in our parish was solemn.
hundreds of people gather inside the church wearing only black and white.
think of how tired  my family was for the 12 days wake.
the last pose with their mom.
inside the family museleum. 
our final glance to lola sabel
sad moments of our family.
aunt floremena's rose for lola sabel. a very sad picture.
the rain continue to pour outside and so many got wet. the air is breathing heavily. i went outside because i cant take the view. my eyes hurt and kept on pouring liquid maybe because of the wind. i've been in this situation not just once but twice four years ago but i just cant take it. i run and go to my aboeji's grave site and there i cried a lot.
tantoy her great grandson not even know what was happening. But even though he's that small  he was so lucky enough to have him held on lola sabel's arm. 
as these balloons went up to heaven so as with our dearly beloved lola sabel.
we will greatly miss you inay sabel. its hard to let you go but knowing that you will be happy in heaven the family is letting you go.
we will always live by the values and love you've taught us. thank you so much for the love. thank you everybody for your prayers and love to lola sabel. thank you for all the kind deeds and for comforting our family in our bereavement.
until we all meet again inay. be our guide.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

He is still The World's Largest Crocs!

Lolong was the largest crocodile in captivity. He was an Indo-Pacific or Saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) measured at 20 feet 3 inches (6.17 m), making him one of the largest crocodiles ever measured from snout-to-tail. Guinness World of Records confirmed that Lolong is the world's longest crocodile ever caught and placed in captivity replacing cassius from australia.
Lolong was caught in a Bunawan creek in the province of Agusan del Sur in the Philippines on September 3, 2011.
He was captured with the joint cooperation of the local government unit, residents and crocodile hunters of Palawan. The giant crocodile was hunted over a period of three weeks, and, once he was found, it took around 100 people to bring him onto land.He became aggressive at several points during the capture, and twice broke restraining ropes before eventually being properly secured. He is estimated to be at least 50 years old.
Lolong was suspected of eating a farmer who went missing in the town of Bunawan, and also of consuming a 12-year-old girl whose head was discovered two years earlier. He was also the primary suspect in the disappearance of water buffaloes in the area. The capture of Lolong is a good advantage in protecting him for survival, against danger he posed to the humans, an attraction and income for the locality, and an opportunity for scientific study.
Bunawan made Lolong the centerpiece of an eco-tourism park for species found in the marshlands near the township. Since its capture and subsequent measurement and confirmation of international crocodile experts that Lolong was the planet’s largest in captivity, Bunawan town has become a tourism draw, with revenues running in the millions of pesos.The resort in upland Consuelo village where the crocodile had been kept was drawing hundreds of eager local and international tourists daily, generating up to P20,000 of gate receipts per day.
But a sad news broke out to the world at around 8:30 PM last sunday. The 20.4-foot worlds largest croc is dead. Filipinos expressed sadness over the death of Lolong.  As early as after Typhoon Pablo hit Agusan del Sur and other parts of Mindanao last December, Lolong, showed unusual changes. He refused to eat since last month and one of his caretaker noticed  there was a change in the color of his feces and  an unusual ballooning of his belly and the weather has been cold lately, maybe, that affected him. The cause of the croc death is still unknown until the result of his necropsy .

Experts from Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau, Palawan Wildlife and Rescue Center, and Davao Crocodile Park perform a necropsy on the belly of Lolong at the Bunawan Eco-Park in Agusan del Sur early dawn Tuesday (12 January 2013). Their initial findings were inconclusive, and the experts said they have to conduct more laboratory tests and results may come in two weeks. 
It took several men just to turn the 20-foot crocodile’s body upside down. I read all the news about his death and I was in awe of what could have been the cause of his death. I have learned that lolong suffered and died because people wanted to make money off his captivity. The concrete pen where Lolong had stayed for about 18 months is not an ideal place to live in for a crocodile its size. He suffered extreme distress and misery. No zoo can come close to providing what even small crocodiles need, much less a crocodile the size of Lolong. Crocodiles are hardwired to roam freely, seek out mates, and hunt for food. These genetic imperatives are compelling, and the way that they are fulfilled in the wild cannot be replicated in captivity. They are nocturnal and, in their natural homes, they feed primarily at night. Crocodiles shun contact with humans, and captive crocodiles like Lolong never become tame.                       
This harsh truth made me asked should the government stop capturing animals from the wild?
Lolong had put Bunawan and the Philippines on the map by being the world’s largest reptile and that’s a record that can’t be erased anymore. The local government asked assistance from the National Museum to have Lolong’s body preserved. In that way we can still look and marvel at him. Last night i heard that they're going to make him 3D! Goodbye Lolong!                                                                                                                                   
 Lolong, you've been part of the Philippine History and in the heart of every Filipinos worldwide you're still the worlds largest crocs ever!   (picture credits to reuters, getty, mindanao news and google.com)