Showing posts with label Jomi Garrucho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jomi Garrucho. Show all posts

Sunday, September 5, 2010

THE WORLD FAMOUS MASSKARA FESTIVAL

This October, I am looking forward to go home to Bacolod City... dubbed the “City of Smiles”, as it celebrates the world-famous MassKara Festival every October of the year.

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This year Bacolod City is on its 31st year... the 19-day festival promises to be even more vibrant, colorful and fun-filled.

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This city is known for its great food, warm smiles, and happy people. Bacolod City is the capital of Negros Occidental, which is the sugar capital of the Philippines. Bacolod is the biggest and highly urbanized city in the island of Negros, the fourth biggest island in the Philippine archipelago.

Bacolod is the entry point to other sugar-rich cities and towns in the province. (Negros Occidental has 13 cities and 19 municipalities.)

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Come to Bacolod where great cuisine is a tradition, as great food comes mostly from family heirloom recipes. Taste the famous chicken inasal (chicken marinated in native spices and herbs and then grilled to perfection), that gave birth to another festival (Manokan Country Inasal Festival launched in May 2009).

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Come to Bacolod where her people speak in mellifluous lilting Hiligaynon accent, coupled with captivating sweet smiles breathed from their long-term romance with the sugar industry which, for centuries, have been the lifeblood of her economy.

Bacolod’s charm as a destination is in her half-a-million people exuding legendary hospitality and a trademark smile—from the porters you meet at the airport and seaport terminals, taxi drives, bellboys, receptionists and almost everyone in the streets.

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It helps, too, that almost everyone understands and speaks English, often spiced up with a smile by those deficient in the language. This smiling nature of her people has earned for Bacolod the moniker, City of Smiles.

The Bacolenos’ propensity to smile stems from a happy disposition towards life, which gave birth to the 31-year old MassKara Festival.

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Bacolod is also known as a city of contrast. Her rural ambiguity lends a certain mystique to her stylish modern urbanity. The Bacoleno is uptrend in his ways, as Bacolod has almost all the conveniences one can look for in a growing metropolis. Visitors can have a choice of modern first-class hotels or other accommodation establishments. Uppity restaurants, coffee shops, and fast-food joints dot the city’s thoroughfares. Malls and big department stores, boutique and souvenir or handicraft shops offer limitless shopping while the market stalls offer amazing bargains.

Aside from being hailed as a “Billionaire City,” Bacolod today can truly bask in the many national awards she got for excellent government practices, which now makes her a favorite of many local government units around the country as a destination for learning experiences or “benchmarking.”

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But with all the new urbanization developments, the rustic ambiance is still felt all over. The Bacoleno way is familial, almost laid back even, as everybody seems to know everyone—who is either a relative, a friend, or a nodding acquaintance. Despite the modern way of living, traffic is still manageable. The lush greenery in many parts of the city, and in the public plaza, known to be the shadiest and most pro-active plaza in the country, gives her the rural touch and the award as the Cleanest and Greenest Highly Urbanized City in the Philippines.

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This year’s theme, “Kari sa Bacolod” will once again pitch Bacolod’s invitation to the world to come to the City of Smiles and celebrate the goodness of life, through food, music, sights and pageantry.

The festive mood in the City of Smiles becomes contagious as masked dancers line the streets during the three-day street-dancing competition, dancing along with the music from the major streets all the way to the Bacolod public plaza.

Another highlight is the Electric MassKara at the Tourism Strip in Lacson Street where dancers, whose bodies are colorfully lighted, gyrate to the infectious rhythm of festival music.

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Started in 2004, the Countdown is a giant street party with live bands as the city keeps vigil for its 72nd year celebration.

72 seconds to midnight of October 18, 2010 or the eve of October 19, 2010 the party counts down and at 12 midnight, city officials lead by Mayor Evelio Leonardia, and the people partying at the New Government Center, sing “Happy Birthday, Bacolod!”

It’s 72 seconds because Bacolod ushers into its 72nd year as a chartered city.

The party at the NGC will be beamed through giant screens at the old City Hall, where there will also be a simultaneous partying. It can be said that the traditional Countdown to Charter Day has brought street parties to Bacolod.

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See you guys in Bacolod City, Philippines every October!!!

Thank you Jomi Garrucho for the wonderful photos!!! :)

Info source: themasskarafestival.com

Monday, August 30, 2010

FAIRY TALES

Once upon a time... happier ever after.

The stories we were told and we tell are the stuff of dreams. Dreams we used to dream of as kids.

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As an adult reading this, do fairy tales do come true? For the lucky ones, fairy tales told to us when we were young, happened.

However, what's with the most of us? What happened to our dreams?

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Isn't it that the epiphany for most of us is that in reality, life is much stormier? That the reality is much murkier and much scarier?

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Life's pains... we all just have to ride it out before we chase our dreams. There are no easy solutions... no easy answers. We just have to breath deep and wait for it to subside.

Reality... is indeed much stormier, much murkier and much scarier that we actually thought or think of.

I have had such a happy solid childhood. I miss Pinky and HH Lero... my first friends and I can't help but wonder... how life treated them. Hope one day, we get to talk about this... One day perhaps...

Thank you Jomi Garrucho for allowing me to post your wonderful photos here :))

SCARS

People have scars. We all have scars... scars in all sorts of unexpected places.

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Scars are like secret road maps of our personal pasts and histories. They are the very diagrams of all our old wounds. Although our wounds heal in time, still, they leave nothing behind but a scar. Some wounds don't but with some wounds, we carry them with us everywhere... and although the cut's long gone, the pain still lingers.

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What's worse... new wounds which are so horribly painful or old wounds that should have healed years ago but never did?

Maybe our old wounds teach us something. Old wounds remind us where we've been and what we've overcome. They teach us lessons about what to avoid in the future.

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There are just some things in life that we just have to learn over and over and over again.

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There are some people though, who believes that without history, our lives amount to nothing...that at some point, we all have to choose - do we fall back on what we know or do we step forward to something new? It's really hard not to be haunted by our past... by our scars. History is what shapes us... our history is what shapes us... what guides us. Our history resurfaces time and time again and we are left to no choice but to remember that sometimes, the most important history is the history we’re making today.

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Photography by: Jomi Garrucho
Thank you, Jomi for letting me post your collection here. :))

Monday, August 16, 2010

DANJUGAN ISLAND, PHILIPPINES

This is Danjugan Island... A marine reserve and wildlife sanctuary in the Philippines that I'm promoting.

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Fast Facts:

Lying in the Sulu Sea, 3km west of Negros Occidental, Danjugan Island (1.5km by 0.5km) rises steeply to 80m and is covered in rainforest - home to a nesting pair of sea eagles, rare pigeons and doves, threatened Tabon scrubfowls and coconut crabs, fruit and insect bats and many other wildlife species that struggle to exist in the
mainland.

There are five lagoons: three landlocked and two flooded at high tide and colonised by coral and reef fish species.

Danjugan is fringed with turtle-nesting beaches and surrounded by diverse coral reefs.

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Danjugan is a small island of approximately 43 hectares, measuring approximately 1.5km long with a maximum width of 0.5km. The islands lies in the Sulu Sea adjacent to Negros Occidental (Barangay Bulata, Cauayan) in the Central Visayas region of the Philippines. It has a high relief topography with limestone hills approximately 80m in height covered in tropical forest and is surrounded by fringing coral reef, a combination of two of the most biodiverse ecosystems in the world. The total area of island and reef is approximately 200 hectares.

Danjugan has five lagoons, two of which are open to the sea and four of which have surrounding mangrove stands. The island has a broken shoreline with numerous inlets of coral rubble and coarse sandy beaches. One of the sandy beaches is a confirmed nesting site for green turtles (Chelonia mydas). There is no permanent freshwater on the island.

Danjugan is one of the few small islands in the Philippines with relatively unspoilt vegetation. This vegetation includes plants like Pandanus spp. (screw pines), Veitchia merrilii (previously only known to occur in Palawan) and the threatened Pemphis acidula. The sub-tropical rainforest is an important bird nesting and feeding site for at least 55 resident and migrant avifauna species. The small limestone caves throughout the island act as important refuges of at least six bat species.

The island is completely encircled by fringing coral reef descending to a depth of approximately 30m. Seagrass beds occur along the western and eastern margin of the island. Prior to this report very little was known concerning the physical and biological composition of the reef system surrounding Danjugan (PRRP, 1996).

Getting There
Danjugan Island is located off Barangay Bulata in the Municipality of Cauayan, 151 kilometers from the City of Bacolod, Negros Occidental, the latter a 50-minute plane ride from Metro Manila, Philippines. Transport options include flying commercially from Manila to Bacolod City, then renting a private car or taking a public bus (Ceres Bus Liner) to the village of Bulata, a 30-minute banca (boat with outrigger) ride to the Island.

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Day Stay

Price: Php 1,500* per person

Inclusions:
Food. Lunch and 2 snacks
Boat transfers. From the mainland to the island and back
Trekking & Snorkelling Guide.
Unlimited use of kayak. First come, first serve basis.
Unlimited use of binoculars for birdwatching. First come, first serve basis.

Overnight Stay

Price: Php 2,500* per person per night

Inclusions:
Eco-cabana accommodation. See accommodation & facilities section for description
Food. 3 main meals and 2 snacks per day
Boat transfers. From the mainland to the island and back
Boat tour. Go around the island on your the first day
Trekking & Snorkelling Guide.
Unlimited use of kayak. First come, first serve basis.
Unlimited use of binoculars for birdwatching. First come, first serve basis.

For reservations, visitwww.prrcf.org/about_danjugan Danjugan Island - Marine Reserve and Wildlife Sanctuary

Thanks to Jomi Garrucho for the photos!!!