Just a quick post to say that yesterday I was on a very popular live TV show here in the Philippines. If you can google the show you might find a posting online, don't wait too long since they take them down after a few days. I held a sign that said "Hello to South Carolina, USA - Go Gamecocks", also got to pretend to play and electric guitar and rock out for the show....
It's Showtime June 12, 2012 - Philippines TV show - ABS-CBN Network.
I am in Part 1 about 11 minutes in and I am in Part two about 3 min. in.
What an experience! I got text messages from people all over the Philippines while the show was going on asking "Is that you on TV now??" Since yesterday was a holiday, Philippine Independence Day, a lot of folks were home and watched TV...more to come - The Philippine slogan is certainly true - It's More Fun in the Philippines..hope you can find the TV clip and watch it.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Monday, June 11, 2012
Part 2 of Back to School
We stepped off of the banca onto a bamboo raft and then were towed to shore |
First Island school we visited, no electricity |
I saw a lot of these native type homes |
Kids on line to get their teeth checked, notice the photo over the blackboard |
What we saw upon arrival stop #1 |
Mam and I prepare to leave, yeah I need to quit eating rice |
We head for another part of the island |
enroute to stop #2 |
Next stop, beautiful flame tree in bloom top right |
Buko juice a natural..... |
Yes, we had to eat at every stop, no matter the time of day |
Filipinos love getting their picture made, the gr. 1 class had 85 pupils and 1 teacher, ahhhh!!! |
Really cool partnership between an American Solar Panel Corp. and the Philippines, free panels and they will create electricity to power a generator, then the school can have electricity |
We head for our next stop, via this old volcanic cone |
Not sure who this guy was but check out what he had stashed in his pants |
Made a quick extra stop to change banca drivers and get fish |
Tilapia waiting in the net |
We got really wet on the way home |
At our last stop, the earth/sand was black volcanic type silt. It was SO SO hot on the island, sort of like the molten lava way down inside the earth was radiating heat up to us |
Look carefully at this photo, those bags weigh 50 kilos each and the guy in the foreground has 4 on his back!!!! |
Wow the Philippines are such an incredible place...
Got a great shipment of donated books from Books for Peace in California, finally setting up a mini-library. Veron and I hope to transfer to grade 5 soon. Heading to the big city for medical visit, Walk for Freedom anti-human trafficking rally, weekend here at home then off to a marvelous spot with gorgeous beaches and hopefully incredible snorkeling next week! Will research the old leper colony....stay tuned.
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Back to School
Our town parade, gr 6 tchr left and gr 4 right |
Sir Joey fixing computer for our in service training, we are lucky to have been given computers and an interactive white board |
Pupils line up by grade level on the first day, national anthem, pledge and exercise, uniforms and polished shoes |
Teacher Veron loves green, our gr. 1 room |
The department of education is launching a new initiative K-12. many people are against it but it is best for the country to enable them to compete globally. |
My adventure via boat with my former principal |
The bancas ready for us to go to the island inside the Taal Lake Crater |
One of our sweet gr. 1 pupils, notice her baon of mostly rice |
What we saw on our adventure to the island inside Taal Lake |
We arrive at the island |
Enroute to the island |
I spent the second day of the new school year traveling with my former principal to an island that is inside the large crater of Taal vocano. It is a crater with in a crater. Basically an island inside a crater with another crater within. I went to visit the very remote schools on the island, no electricity, horses for travel - actually the best day I have had exploring the Philippines!!!!!!!!!!!!
More to come, internet is VERY slow tonight, part 2 soon.....
Monday, May 28, 2012
On a more serious note.....
I was blessed with a trip back to America for two weeks to see my family and see my "bunso" (youngest child) graduate from college - Magna Cum Laude! Four years flew by, seems like just yesterday we packed all his stuff in the car and headed off to the dorm for freshman year. I am really proud of him- he, like his brothers, earned his education - financially as well as intellectually. Three engineers, yeah I feel kinda proud. I knew they would be successful, I kept telling them they could.
Two weeks went fast, SC, NC - 5 different beds in 9 days! It was a little weird to drive again - we are not allowed to drive here in the PC, I was a little nervous especially since I was borrowing my BFFs Mercedes! Got to see my sweet pup and his momma and sister, ate a ton of shrimp and scallops - yummy - had a nice walk on the beach alone with God, IOP is the best!
So now I am back to sweating and sweating, at least it has begun to rain occasionally. The new batch of volunteers are due to arrive in July - wow we won't be the newbees anymore. We have corresponded via email and Facebook, the benefits of modern technology.
Still don't know what grade I am teaching and school starts next Monday - the Philippines is beginning a new education initiative K-12, with K-3 being taught in "mother tongue" - so I cannot be in grade 1 this year. My wonderful counterpart teacher may stay in grade 1 but no one has decided what to do with me yet. So stay tuned and I'll let you know.
Enjoy a few photos of aking pamilia...
Two weeks went fast, SC, NC - 5 different beds in 9 days! It was a little weird to drive again - we are not allowed to drive here in the PC, I was a little nervous especially since I was borrowing my BFFs Mercedes! Got to see my sweet pup and his momma and sister, ate a ton of shrimp and scallops - yummy - had a nice walk on the beach alone with God, IOP is the best!
So now I am back to sweating and sweating, at least it has begun to rain occasionally. The new batch of volunteers are due to arrive in July - wow we won't be the newbees anymore. We have corresponded via email and Facebook, the benefits of modern technology.
Still don't know what grade I am teaching and school starts next Monday - the Philippines is beginning a new education initiative K-12, with K-3 being taught in "mother tongue" - so I cannot be in grade 1 this year. My wonderful counterpart teacher may stay in grade 1 but no one has decided what to do with me yet. So stay tuned and I'll let you know.
Enjoy a few photos of aking pamilia...
Tuli here, Tuli there, Tuli, Tuli Everywhere!
Okay, I admit it, I have a "thing" with signs. Yes, advertisements, directions, congratulations, store names, warnings - they are everywhere here in the Philippines. Many are in English and many in Tagalog. The ones in Tagalog are fascinating - I basically try to figure out what they are saying.
I walk by this office every day and I see the following sign posted on the door-
I didn't look the words up in my dictionary and just kept wondering what was so special about Tuli that you would want it painless?
Yesterday there was the huge banner out in front of the town hall advertising Libreng Tuli - free Tuli at the health center. I tried to find it this morning to take a picture and it is no longer there.
Okay so I was wondering what the heck is so special about Tuli?
Apparently here in the Philippines, male babies are not circumcised at birth. They wait until they are 12 years old and have it done then - thus, the ads for Tuli.With school starting June 4th, boys will not want to enter high school without having it done, so I guess that is why the ads are everywhere.
I know, a little weird, but seriously?? Tuli here, Tuli there.....
I walk by this office every day and I see the following sign posted on the door-
I didn't look the words up in my dictionary and just kept wondering what was so special about Tuli that you would want it painless?
Yesterday there was the huge banner out in front of the town hall advertising Libreng Tuli - free Tuli at the health center. I tried to find it this morning to take a picture and it is no longer there.
Okay so I was wondering what the heck is so special about Tuli?
Apparently here in the Philippines, male babies are not circumcised at birth. They wait until they are 12 years old and have it done then - thus, the ads for Tuli.With school starting June 4th, boys will not want to enter high school without having it done, so I guess that is why the ads are everywhere.
I know, a little weird, but seriously?? Tuli here, Tuli there.....
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Trees and plants galore!
Atis fruit tree behind my house |
Calumnius tree, fruits on the tree trunk |
Acacia Trees blooming in March, pink/white/yellow fluffy flowers |
Nara tree (the national tree) blooming yellow flowers |
Papaya trees behind my house, bananas in the distance |
Mahagony trees blooming at school |
Baby pineapple :) |
Veron, Nika and pineapples in her front yard |
Spectacular Boughanvilla in bloom |
Coffee tree behind Veron's house |
My harvest!! |
Hanging Birds of Paradise flowers |
Tilapia farm |
Orchids are everywhere!! |
Malungay tree and seed pods |
Baby avacado behind my house |
Our school Bahay Kubo being built |
My tutor (on right) and her friend taking me to the Paminta (pepper) Plantation |
Pepper is a woody vine and grows up a host tree |
Close up of pepper vine growing |
Owner of another plantation, still picking and keeping her young at over 70 |
After it is picked it is put out in the sun to dry and turn black |
A basket of harvested paminta |
Bamboo ladder, traditional basket and happy picker! |
What you see along the road, sometimes it is rice sometimes it is pepper. |
Enjoy!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)