BootsnAll Travel Network



Archive for the 'The Philippines' Category

« Home

Christmas time

Monday, January 1st, 2007

Christmas eve, Jeff was flying in from Thailand to meet us in the evening and we were going over to the village to play Santa and give out the presents. First a ridiculously extravagant breakfast at a French crepe restaurant. Peaches, whipped cream, ice cream and liquors…but hey its Christmas time!

To get to the village we had to put a big ladder over the wall and climb down it, in true Philippine style poverty and wealth are meters apart separated by a big wall and guards with guns, was cool passing all the presents down then getting down there. Took about an hour to read through all the names and take a photo of each family. They also got new hoops and basketballs for the central area so Andy and all the others stayed for a while to play a bit of basketball with them. I think its so cool that they can actually do stuff like that and make a bit of a difference and actually see it, not like at home sending money off to some country you’ve never even heard of. So great feel-good stuff. Jeff was arriving in the evening so Andy dropped me, tash and Jess off at yet another mall to by a few last minute things while he went out to the airport. After finally deciding on some presents we went back around to buy them all and discovered everything was closing! So unfortunately missed out on a few things and Jeff ended up with a terrible present! But did manage to get to the supermarket and buy some things for Christmas day. Great to see Jeff who had been leading a mission’s trip in Thailand, now our little travel team for the next 6 weeks was together. So Christmas eve, no midnight service instead Jess made huge batches of brownies and a big pot of coffee and we drove around Brentville handing them out to all the guards (which is a lot) around the school and houses. Jess and Andy get on really well with all the guards and staff around, probably more than most as they actually talk to them and make a bit of an effort to learn the language, so it was really cool to help them out and do this with them.
Christmas day came and like anywhere we stuffed ourselves the whole day, first with a pancake breakfast and then a big combined street BBQ later in the day. Spent a bit of time at the pool doing ‘photo shoots’, snacked away on chocolate from NZ and opened up presents. Finished the evening off with a movie, and rolled into bed swearing I would never eat that much again (yeah right…).
Only a few days left before we went our separate ways for new years, spent boxing day in another gated community, but much bigger and much flasher, the place to live if your wealthy and in Manila is Alabang. Headed down to a field to play some touch with a whole group of expats. Well Jess, Andy and Jeff played while me and Tash sat around and ate ice creams, just like we would do at home. Another big lunch then headed to a kiwi family’s house for a swim. Jess and Andy teach the kids, about 5 in total I think. Moved over a few years ago for the dads work and living in a huge house with bedrooms the size of most people’s living room and kitchens combined. Really cool family so was nice to chill out there for a while before we said goodbye and headed 42 stories up to what must be Manila’s highest restaurant. With amazing views of the city, we had seafood entrÈe’s and drinks, really flash and funky place, but probably not a good idea if you’re scared of heights. On route back home we stopped to buy some VCD’s to watch, amazing than you can go into a department store and by VCD’s completely legally for $2.

Back home at Brentville we decided to let off the fireworks we had brought a few days earlier. Andy and Jeff were clearly in ‘boy-heaven’ and had brought fireworks that are illegal in every other country. Already dangerous with very short wicks and way too much gunpowder they sellotaped a whole lot of them together to create this mega fire work, that would either be amazing…or blind and maim us. Much to Tash’s protests we all went down to a not so developed area while the guys fiddled around with it and we watched from the safety of the car. Eventually it was lit, it was short but still very impressive for homemade fireworks and did what it was meant to going up rather than shooting towards the car. Check out the video, which is on an earlier post.

Early the next day we crammed into the car and set of for a night at the beach, 3 hours later we drove along a dirt road with lots of signs for beach resorts. Clearly most of them had seen better days with decrepit signs and potholed roads leading down to who knows what, one place we drove past was called “Aroma Magic Cream” hmmmm…
We ended up at the cheesy looking ‘Blue Coral” which at least looked more like a resort. Clearly not aimed at western tourists at all, our buffet meals over the next 24 hours were meat, meat, more meat, weird looking meant, rice and meat for breakfast, and more meat. Needless to say my inquiry about a vegetarian option got blank stares. However this was real Filipino cuisine so at least we were ‘experiencing the culture’, so the Philippines wins the prize for the worst local food. Thanks goodness for imports. Aside from the food and the chained monkeys in the ‘zoo’ it was a really nice place and we had a bungalow right on the beach. Lay around in the sun, went swimming and walking down the beach, all very nice. After an interesting lunch me Jess, Tash and Jeff went off in search of fresh coconuts, surrounding by coconut tree’s surely this would be easy…but no….after wandering through villages the most we got was a lot of blank looks and to see a pig slaughtered, probably for breakfast the next day.
Watched Bridget Jones on our cable TV then somehow ended up playing Karaoke for far too long, scaring away just about everyone. Filipinos are big on Karaoke and have it pretty much everywhere. Songs are destroyed completely by someone on a synthesizer and put to odd video clips, but they love it and there’s even a TV channel with it on all the time. So after a few terrible songs we played a bit of table tennis and pool then off to bed. Out of there pretty early the next day desperate for some fresh food. Found coconuts on the way home and had an amazing lunch when we got back of fresh prawns, salad, bread and for dessert this amazing traditional coconut pie (well at least they can cook something), thankfully Jess and Andy arn’t too keen on Filipino food and have been cooking us amazing meals the whole time. After packing up all or stuff and our last dinner together we said good-bye to Jess and Andy who we wouldn’t see until next year when they’d next be home. It was such a great week and we were looked after so well, probably saw a different side to the Philippines than most backpackers, would like to come back and see a bit more of the country, but another time. Anyway I was dropped at the airport to catch my plane to Thailand and Tash and Jeff went off to get their overnight bus somewhere up north where they will be having a bit more of a cultural and quieter New Years than me as I head to the ultimate tourist destination for the biggest beach party there is.

Living it up in Brentville

Monday, January 1st, 2007

It was so good to see Jess and Andy again after almost 2 years of them living in the Philippines teaching at an international school just outside Manila. Seeing the school they teach at and staying at their house, which is all included, has made me seriously becoming a teacher. Its such a sweet deal! The school and where they live is in the area called Brentville that is like this cheesy American style gated community. Normally not what I’d go for but its pretty nice, 2 mins walk from an amazing school, lovely house with a ‘helper’, who is lovely and cooks and cleans for them a couple of days a week. Everyone is friends with the neighbors there’s 2 pools to choose from and pretty much everything is included in their job and they get paid more than at home and work less. I don’t understand why teachers would even stay in NZ. Plus they have weekends and holidays to travel around the Philippines, which is an amazing country with practically no tourists. So we spent out week living it up in luxury which was well needed after India. Spent quite a bit of time just chilling out, swimming in the pool and visiting people for mega settlers of Catan games.
The Philippines is really cool, very westernized, heaps of malls around, billboards for Gap and massive highways where people are actually driving in lanes and there’s not cows wandering around everywhere. Lots of imported stuff means Starbucks are everywhere, as well as French restaurants and Jess and Andy’s cupboards are filled with Balsamic vinegar, pita breads, pesto and topped off with fresh mangos and pineapples, so pretty much perfect place to live.
What was really cool when we arrived was that a group of the teachers were organizing a whole lot of Christmas presents for the little village that lived literally on the other side of the fence that surrounded Brentville. Lots of the guards and workers live there so it was like a thank you present. So first day Tash and me were bagging up presents that had all been donated by teachers. Everyone family got a food bucket and every person got a massive bag filled with gender and age appropriate presents. We just came in at the end to help for a few hours but would have been a massive job.
Our second day we went out with a bunch of Canadians, first to Starbucks then up to the ridge of a big volcano that has a lake in the middle with another volcano in the middle of that with a lake in the middle of that one as well. We headed to the edge of the water and hired a couple of boats and speed out for about 30 mins to the second volcano where we hiked up the top. The Canadians, like Andy, were P.E teachers so they all charged up while me and Tash slowly followed sweating in the humidity we were not yet used to. Every so often there was holes in the ground with hot steam coming out because as we realized it was still an active volcano, and all the rocks up the top were too hot to sit on, a bit freaky! Amazing views from the top across the water and down in to the lake in the middle. Had a few team photos and a fresh coconut, which I was hanging out for. Back down the dusty track and into the boat that got to about half way in the middle of the lake and…stopped. For a few long minutes we were bobbing about with land looking very far away and the already dodgy sounding wooden boat struggling to get the motor going again. Luckily, it spluttered back into life and we were off again, with the wind picking up by the time we got back we were all pretty much soaked.
Day 3 was off into Manila to do some Christmas shopping. One thing the Philippines do well is Christmas, being a catholic country it is huge and everywhere is decked out with lights, nativity scenes. We went to a few massive malls that are super flash, far nicer than anything at home and because of the heat (we were there in winter and it was hard to handle) air con malls are they way to go. The afternoon we headed into Intramuras the old Spanish area of the town for a walking tour to get a bit of Pinoy history. The guy who takes the tour is a fast talking, hilariously funny and very knowledgeable Pilipino, with a bag full of props this tour was for those ‘with short attention spans’, good for us as the afternoon sun and a morning of shopping were taking its toll. The 3 hours went surprisingly fast and we learnt heaps mostly about how the country had been screwed over by the Spanish, the Japanese and the Americans. And particularly how Manila had been destroyed in WW2 and never really recovered. We learnt about local food (pig stomachs in bile), interesting house designs, dodgy Spanish friars and how Pinoy culture is a sort of mix between so many different things. It was really really good and really interesting. The area we walked around was what was left of the Manila before it was bombed, beautiful Spanish architecture and cathedrals. Really worthwhile tour and increased my knowledge from about zero to at least a little. Very interesting history with colonialization and the war etc.
After that we were pretty tired but still more shopping to do! And know we had a little secret santa going on. We headed to this mall that had been attached to a covered market. I would have brought a lot but know I can get all rip off labels in Thailand so had to wait. After fighting our way around and dinner at a yummy Chinese restaurant (so nice and reasonably cheap) we went to stay at one of Jess and Andy’s friends who live in an apartment in central Manila. He’s away for the holiday and just gave us they keys to stay there as much as we liked. This definitely set my mind on being an international school teacher, the apartment was amazing! Like a big house inside a building, beautiful views, 2 floors with swimming pools and one more outside, a masseuse came at 10.30pm to give Andy an hour massage for $10, cable TV, huge rooms with massive on suits and walk in wardrobes. Great place to just hang out after a pretty busy day!

home-made fireworks in The Philippines

Thursday, December 28th, 2006
Well when I get around to it I will write a proper blog about my last week of luxuary in Brentville, Philipines. But for now here is a little video of our firework we made from all the crazy and ... [Continue reading this entry]