Travel Log: Bohol


12/27/01 7.30am : Flight to Cebu


Away messageManila to Cebu by plane, 1 hour.

I’m writing this on my handheld, from the window seat of the plane. We’ve just taken off from Manila, and it’ll be about an hour’s flight to Cebu.

This is my first time flying since 9/11. No, I’m not stone-cold terrified, in case you were wondering. I *am* a bit apprehensive. I normally enjoy riding planes, but recent events — including but not limited to: 9/11, the Brooklyn crash, and the explosive shoes — have made us all painfully aware of the dangers of air travel. Terrorism! Wake turbulence! Pressure pockets! Upper atmosphere radiation!

Bad airline food! Ugh. The flight attendants just handed out Presto cream sandwich cookies and Zesto “juice.”

Oh, time for the inflight “Bring Me” game! Stewardess stands at front of cabin. “Bring me a cedula! Bring me a passport! Bring me four 10-peso bills!” Yippeee.

… We’ve landed at Cebu. Just waiting now.


12/27/01 10.30am : Boat to Bohol


Cebu to Tagbilaran by boat, 1 hr 45 mins

We’re on the Cebu-to-Bohol passenger ferry now. The passenger cabin is large, airconditioned, and well-lit, almost like the plane we just rode this morning. I’m just glad I’m not seasickness-prone. The waves today aren’t exactly friendly.

They’re showing a Discovery Channel documentary on helicopters. Mom and Dad have gone upstairs to check out the open-air upper deck. I’m sleepy.

… On the upper deck now. It’s actually an open-air passenger area, with rows of seats. Covered, of course, so the sun doesn’t beat down. But there isn’t a whole lot of wind, since this is a rear deck, and all the wind is coming from the front. I think I’ll go back down.


12/27/01 5.00pm : Panglao Island Nature Resort


We arrived at the port of Tagbilaran, Bohol, around 11am. From there, we boarded a van which took us through town, across a bridge to Panglao Island, and to the resort itself. (did I say earlier that we would go by banca? I was mistaken.)

View of the beachWhat a delightful beach resort it is! Narrow paved paths run through lush tropical foliage, connecting a maze of quaint little bungalows and cottages, capped with pointed nipa roofs. The rooms themselves are cozily equipped, with aircon, hot water, and at my parent’s bungalow, a splendid patio and hot tub overlooking the beach and bay.

After a hearty lunch, we spent the afternoon sleeping off our long morning of travel. I opted not to swim, there being a cold, stiff wind blowing in. Tomorrow, the family will go out to Balicasag for a day of scuba diving. My brother has beamed me a Palm Dive Log just for the occasion.


12/28/01 11.00pm: Balicasag diving


Balicasag Island isn’t directly accessible from the resort; we had to take a van with our gear to Alonas, on the other side of Panglao Island. While Panglao Nature Resort is a nice place, Alonas is definitely where the watersports action is; a strip of small seaside resorts targetted at, and equipped for, scuba divers. A bit more rough and tumble in terms of accomodations, but certainly charming with the rural atmosphere of barangays and sari-sari/souvenir stores. There were also a couple of internet cafes, and most of the little resorts take major credit cards. Not too shabby for a little island, eh?

Me in my Starfleet diving suitWe loaded our gear onto the bangka, and headed out to Balicasag, 30 mins from Panglao Island. Scattered clouds and a stiff wind made for a cold dive, but once we were in the water and had moved around a bit, things warmed up a bit.

Dive 1 was at “Black Forest,” a steeply sloping reef marked with soft black corals which give the site its name. I saw a couple of parrotfish, a school of small neon-blue fish, and some nice fan coral. Um, yeah, that was about it. Then we surfaced, swam back to the bangka, ate a packed lunch, and fell asleep.

We did our 2nd dive about an hour later, at “Marine Sanctuary.” The water was colder, and murkier, despite a mild current along the wall. Several other dive groups were there as well, and between all the bubbles, the cold, the murk, and a funny taste in my tanked air, it got a bit disorienting at first. Not fun. Still, there was some pretty sea life: a striped zebrafish with expansive fins like open hands, a venerable old stonefish encrusted and drowsy, a surly little clam which clammed up at the slightest touch, and a circling school of friendly jacks which followed us along the reef wall.

Post-dive on the bangkaAfter this dive, we decided it was too cold and cloudy for another one, and opted to head back to the resort.

I like the resort community in that area a bit more. Though somewhat rough and tumble, there’s more room for sport, spontaneity, and improvisation, as compared to the shielded hotel environment back at Panglao Nature. Plus, the beach at Alonas is nicer.


12/29/01: Bohol tour


I’m writing into my Palm on the resort tour bus. The countryside is typically Filipino provincial, lush and verdant, equal parts thick jungle and sprawling rice fields, dotted with villages of small concrete houses and nipa huts.

Site of the blood compactCrossing the bridge to Tagbilaran now. Huge mangrove plantation. We’re heading now for the “blood compact” site, where tribal Filipinos and Spanish first made peace. Getting down now … Okay, I got pix!

There’s a town here called “Alburquerque.” Heh. Oh, now they’ve shown us a local blacksmith, where they make bolo knives from old car parts.

Now approaching the town of Loboc, deeper inland. Lots of squat palm trees sprouting from muddy ponds; it’s from those swampy fronds that nipa is made.

A tarsierNow we’re going to see tarsiers! … Okay, back on the bus now. I got to hold on to a few; or rather they got to hold on to me. Tarsiers are tiny monkeys, no bigger than a fist, with long tails and big round eyes. They hang onto branches and tourist’s arms with dextrous, spidery fingers. Cute and friendly when tame; rather bewildered, they jump from branch to branch with startling speed.

Now we’re going up the winding road to the Chocolate Hills, and passing through a manmade forest of mahogany trees planted by students in 1958.

Within sight of Chocolate Hills! 1,628 round grass-covered hills, formed from the gradual erosion of coral-encrusted limestone formations, sprawling across 3 municipalities. We’ll be going up the highest hill, which is equipped with a viewing deck and canteen.

Chocolate Hills

…Okay, we’re back! The hills are much bigger than I thought, averaging about 100-200 ft high. It’s a beautiful view from the summit deck; large, round hills in all directions, stretching as far as the eye can see. In the valleys between the hills lie cottages and rice paddies. At this time of year, though, the hills are well-watered by the rain, so the barren brown color from which they derive their name is replaced with the green of fine grass.

According to our tour guide, the Chocolate Hills were so named when an American compared the conglomeration of mounds to Hershey’s Kisses. The name stuck. Am I the only one struck by the colonial irony of one of the Philippines’ most famous natural landmarks being named for an American food product?

On the busAfter Chocolate Hills, halfway to the next leg of our tour, the bus broke down — out of range from any landlines or cellsites. Ever resourceful, our tour guide flagged down a passing provincial bus, asked the passengers if they minded the company of a large group of tourists, and herded us on, children and all.

We got off the bus to board a large covered raft docked along the Loboc River, furnished with tables, chairs, and a meal of grilled chicken, eggplant, and shrimp. As we lunched, the raft headed upstream, pushed by a small motorized banca. About 30 minutes upriver, when most of the group had finished eating and were just enjoying the scenery along the riverbank, we arrived at a set of small, picturesque waterfalls, called “Busay.”

Resto-raftThe raft tarried there for a bit, while we took pictures, and a few of the kids swam. Then, it was a swift ride back downstream to the dock, where our newly repaired bus was waiting.

From there, we stopped at a hotel in Tagbilaran to buy snacks and souvenirs, before heading back to the resort on Panglao Island. That’s it. It’s time for dinner in the resort garden, under a full moon, with the voices of the Loboc children’s choir serenading us. :)


12/30/01 2.26 pm: Bleh.


Something we ate yesterday did not agree with us; half the family, myself included, was downed by severe stomach cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea. Hence, I spent the whole morning in bed, groaning from cramps, and standing up only to go to the toilet.

I feel much better now, if a bit cross, and am eating rice porridge in the breezy hotel restaurant. I still have a fever and headache, and will need to pass the rest of the day in bed.


12/31/01 7.44 am: Not delightful


Feeling better this morning, but still a bit queasy.

Did I call this resort “delightful” a few days ago? Perhaps not so entirely. Between this nasty stomach flu, the shower in our room that refuses to run hot water despite numerous calls to housekeeping, constant power interruptions, and the lack of any room for improvisation outside of hotel facilities, I don’t think the place is as much an idyllic paradise as I thought it was. The scenery’s great, the staff is friendly, but some of the facilities are getting on my nerves.

I think that next time, we may be staying in one of those smaller diving resorts along the Alonas beach area.


12/31/01 10.56 am: Heading home.


On the ferry now, heading back to Cebu. It’s the same helicopter documentary showing, again and again. I’m getting really tired of Apaches and Hinds and Notars and Blacksharks and Ospreys. I’m going upstairs. Within sight of Cebu now.

My brother tells me diving wasn’t too great yesterday, what with it being cold and overcast.. Perhaps all the better I didn’t go.


12/31/01 4.02 pm: Landed.


A colorful planeBack in Manila! I’m spending New Year’s with my family, then it’s back to work to tie up those tenacious loose ends.

And so ends my December Bohol trip.

Day after Christmas

It’s the day after Christmas. I’m home from home, rested and unpacked. Now I shall take a few minutes to blog before I head for the office.

To continue where I left off last night, we woke up Christmas morning to a breakfast of lugaw (rice porridge) with various Chinese condiments (e.g. pickled seaweed, spiced cucumbers, mahu meat powder). Then we gathered around the tree to tear open our gifts. I got three nice polo shirts, five handkerchiefs, a lavender-oatmeal body bar, a rather large flashlight, a Palm IIIxe from my parents, and a pack of WriteRights from my brother.

Yes, that’s right. A PalmIIIxe. Oh-ah.

I’m quite glad Dad liked the VCD I authored for him; an MPEG-1 transfer of our Palau dive trip. For Mom, a backpack for her camping and hiking trips. For my elder brother, a shoe hanger/tote and a Jim Chappell CD. For my younger brother Raymond, a new Verve Pipe CD, and for my younger younger brother Javi, a Bench belt and a game: Thief.

The rest of the day was spent tinkering around with our respective presents and resting up, while Mom presided over a gaggle of maids in the kitchen, whipping up roast turkey, cranberry jelly, pesto, buttered corn, and other savory dishes for a Christmas party at home. At around 7pm, relatives from Dad’s side began arriving; the same people we had visited the night before. It was quite a fun night, which I spent mostly speaking with Lola again, and watching my cousins and uncles and aunts and nephews and nieces run around or play cards or generally sit around and talk about things (action dependent on age group). Later on, we capped off the night with Christmas Karaoke. I sang a pretty good “Yesterday” and “Sound of Silence,” if I may say so myself.

I slept late because I typed out that blog entry last night, and I spent about another hour fiddling with my Palm under the blankets. I’ve transferred my whole phone book in there already.

I need to get to work now, to tie up all the loose ends before the company officially closes shop in January. Early tomorrow morning, I’m meeting up with my family at the airport for our diving trip in Bohol.

Merry Christmas

It’s not Christmas in this hemisphere anymore. :( But I know it’s still Christmas morning for you folks in the US, so Merry Christmas to you over there. :)

It’s been a pleasant holiday for all. Christmas Mass at my Aunt’s was okay, and I was quite edified by Father Unson’s homily, where he covered the basics of the Incarnation with a surprisingly biblical viewpoint: that God became man to atone for our sins and save us who had no merit. Quite a pleasant message for this ex-Catholic to hear from a Jesuit priest, and I thanked him heartily for it after the Mass.

(Fr. Unson — not sure of the spelling — is current campus chaplain at Ateneo Grade School, and is quite a fun priest to share dinner with. Interestingly, when I told him I was an ex-Catholic Evangelical Baptist, he said, “Of course not! Once a Catholic always a Catholic!” Hmmm. I wonder what he’d have to say about old Martin “Anathema” Luther? ;)

After Mass, we stuffed ourselves silly with lechon (roast pig), jamon (ham), balut (stewed duck embryos), goto (rice porridge with pork tripe), ensaymada (sugary cheese pastry), and other horribly unhealthy fattening holiday foods. I spoke at length with my Lola (“Lola” is Tagalog for grandma, by the way) about a variety of things, from the ravages of sickness and age, to reminiscences of her teenage years during the Japanese invasion in WW2.

We got home and dropped off to bed at 3am. More later, because I’m blogging this from my parents’ room, and they want to sleep already. Good morning, and Merry Christmas!

At the name of Jesus.

Christmas Eve 2001

Christmas Eve! Quite often, it is on this night that I feel even more Christmas-y than Christmas Day itself.

I’m at home now (family-home in Greenhills, that is, not my apartment-home in the south suburbs), having arrived earlier this afternoon by taxi. Tonight we’ll be going off to my aunt’s place for Misa de Gallo and Noche Buena, along with the whole Ordoveza clan on my Dad’s side. (The family is Roman Catholic. I’ll just be sitting quietly during Mass, very assiduously NOT doing the sign of the cross. Yes, I’m a bad little evangelical Christian fundamentalist. At least I’m not breaking statues. ;)

Problems, though. Dad’s car stalled at the mall, and he’s still there, so our departure has been delayed a bit while the car gets repaired. In the meantime, here I am, just blogging away from my parents’ room while Mom catches a nap.

*******’s folks have already opened their gifts. I got her The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England, knowing how much she loves early/medieval European history. However, I cannot for the life of me understand why her family always opens their gifts on Christmas Eve. Presents are meant to be opened first thing Christmas morning, after Santa Claus has passed, right? When do you people open your presents?

Wait, just a moment. I can’t believe I’m blogging on Christmas Eve. Well, since Dad isn’t here yet, I’ll just turn on the telly and see if It’s a Wonderful Life is showing anywhere. Hmmm… Demolition Man is on HBO. Uh-huh.

Isn’t it Ironic?

I was anemic but now I’m not, thanks to 325mg tablets of Ferrous Sulfate. Now I feel ironic.

Holiday Hustle And Bustle

Holiday hustle and bustle will probably keep me away from the Internet right up until Christmas Day itself, but I’m just getting on long enough to give a big smiling “Thanks!” to everyone who’s sent in a comment or an email of concern, encouragement, or simple holiday cheer! Have a merry Christmas, everyone and through the season, never forget this integral truth:

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God…”

The Word made flesh, Christ our Lord, came to be the one and only true Light of the world. Look to Him alone, our God who was crucified for our sins, for your salvation, and know with all blessed assurance that He will redeem you in love, for all eternity.

Makati Bomb Scare

At 7am this morning, a powerful explosive device was found between the Allied Bank and PLDT buildings on Ayala Ave. The area was evacuated, traffic cordoned off from the area, and a police squad was able to successfully defuse the bomb. (NEWS REPORT)

This was less than a block from my office; practically across the road. Some reports claim that if it had detonated, several buildings in the area would have been damaged. Our building was not within the immediate danger zone, but this incident nonetheless highlights the threatening shadow under which we all live here in the Philippines; faceless terrorism hitting close to our work and our homes.

Well, this is my last day in the office before Christmas. I’d better get down to cleaning up my stuff and removing sensitive data from my hard disk.

Closing Shop

Well, it’s official. As I expected, the bosses came in yesterday to tell us that, due to a combination of unprofitability and the Current Situation, the company is closing shop. Effective 1 Jan 2002, I will re-enter a state of employable mobility.

It’s okay; the Lord provides in times of need. I’m getting interviewed tomorrow for a multimedia opening here, and I’d also like to see if there are openings here and here, though those are pretty tenuous thus far. Other possibilities are open, and I have enough saved on the side to survive while I explore.

Prayers and pointers to Help Wanted ads would be appreciated. Those of you reading, anyone want to hire me? If you need a graphic artist, web designer, or digital video author/editor, take a look at my resumé and portfolio, then drop me a line. Legazpi/Salcedo Village areas in Makati preferred.

(Actually, what I really want is to work in the new RCBC Plaza Towers, because (1) it’s near my girlfriend’s office, and (2) the Food Court there makes me feel like I’m in EPCOT Center, and (3) it’s a certified IT Zone, which means the buildings cater to the kind of company I want to work for.)

Given a couple of months’ notice and adequate initial provision for living, I’m also relocatable to almost anywhere in the United States. Again, Baltimore is preferred, though Denver is nice too.

Well, I need to get bustling. My Christmas calendar is too full to let me blog over the holiday season. I need to spend tonight and tomorrow morning wrapping up gifts, then I need to get to work to tie up the loose ends and have commiserating Christmas lunch with our boss, then go for that interview. I’ll be out all day Saturday to relax with Tiff in the mall (and maybe catch LOTR if it’s showing), then I might join the folks to go scuba diving on Sunday. After Christmas, the family is going down to Bohol for more scuba diving, right up till New Year.

As you can see, I’ll be rather occupied, so expect only sporadic updates. Go out and gain those holiday pounds, and I’ll give you all the monumental life-changing updates after the fireworks have died down.

Merry Christmas, all of you, and remember: He whose birth we celebrate is He who saved us by His death and resurrection, and in Him alone are we Redeemed for all eternity. May that same God bless you this season.

Apostasy

I’ve read Heb 6:5-6 in context and wondered how that could possibly be reconciled with our eternal security in Christ? Then I realized something: the Bible is not saying that God withdraws his love and salvation from one who falls away. Rather, that verse in Hebrews states that the man who falls away — who outright and deliberately rejects the salvation of which he was a part and turns away from God — is exactly the kind of man who can never be convinced to come back to Christ….

To put this apostasy concept another way, if I have repented of my past sins and accepted Christ as Lord and Savior in faith, then I am saved. If, after this, I read a porno magazine or shoplift a pencil, I am still saved, and I should come back in repentance to be forgiven by our Gracious Advocate, Christ.

If, however, I suddenly say that Christianity is a lie and Jesus was a sham, and stamp my foot three times and walk out of the church in a sudden agnostic huff…. if I commited such a rejection, I could not be saved because I am the kind of person who will not come back. It’s not because God has turned his back on me — never! Our God is too kind and lovng for that! — but because I have irrevocably turned my back on God, and the Epistle to the Hebrews confirms that as an observation, not as a pronouncement.

I’m just a layman, of course, so in no way do I put my view forward as authoritative. How do the eminent Christian scholars around me respond?

un-Christian Erap

Atty. Raymond Fortun, lawyer of ousted leader Joseph Estrada, says it is un-Christian of the courts not to let him go on a Christmas furlough to visit home for the holidays.

WHAT?!? First off, ex-president Estrada is under incarceration because he is charged with the non-bailable offense of economic plunder. He is by law supposed to be confined until his trial. The government is already going out on a limb letting him stay in that luxurious hospital annex suite. (Well, we give you an inch, you ask for a mile…) Even having once been President of the Republic does not grant him special holiday privileges to just waltz home for Christmas as though he had not spent millions of dollars in public funds to fund his and his mistresses’ ostentatious lifestyles.

Finish Erap’s trial and let him prove his innocence — or, more likely, guilt — and then we can talk about letting him go. The man wants parole before he has even begun serving his sentence! (Let’s see what he thinks about that in his online secret diary.)

Second point: since when have the Republic’s judicial courts been subject to “Christianity?” This is a predominantly Roman Catholic country, but it is not a theocracy. Church and state are separated, and the rule of law is in no way obligated to submit to what Erap’s lawyers think is “Christian” behavior. Funny that this should come from the same sector of loyalists who once lambasted Cardinal Sin (yes, the local archbishop is named Jaime Sin) for meddling in the political struggles of last year’s impeachment and resignation movements. Now they suddenly expect “Christian” action from a judicial body which is founded on a constitution and not a church.

The impeachment trial is delayed further and further by the incorrigibilities of Filipino politics, showing just how poorly the law is implemented and enforced in the Philippines.

Behold! the farcical comedy of native political foibles, and witness how this country goes nowhere with haste!