Tuesday 27 November 2018

January 2018 photo dump

Ron's favorite stalls at Carbon Market.  He'd like to eat them all!

Most businesses have an area for motorbike parking.  There are an incredible number of "motors" in the city.  Because they can maneuver around cars that are stuck in traffic, they can often get somewhere in half the time it takes in a car.

Typical businesses

Water meters to homes behind the businesses

Us with Elder John and Sister Thelma Infante from Calgary and Elder Wilson and Sister Jodi Ganir
at Marco Polo Hotel Lobby

Dainty white flowers at Sirao Gardens

Nancy River's favorite type of flower

Sis. Ganir on stairs

Celosia

Sunflowers-- here they are considered exotic floewrs!

This looks more exotic to me!

Yellow Bell kalachuchi

More of Sirao Garden

CANADA Drive!  Had to stop for a picture!


Local police station

On our way to the corner store-- JY Supermarket

Along Salinas Avenue

Patron House-- our apartment windows are the two at the top right

Fighting cock on a leash

We call this a spider lily

Canna lily

Another canna lily

Favorite pastime


At JY

After our training in Salt Lake


Assembly Hall on the fourth floor of  the Salt Lake Temple where we had our last instruction. 
This is where the temple dedication was held in 1893.  
Here's one of my first shots of the temple, and still one of my favorites.  When a taxi driver drove us through the gates of the Temple Complex a while ago, he said, "I remember this place.  It feels good to be here."   We told him that it was the spirit of God that he could feel here.  It's so  peaceful-- such a contrast to the busy, noisy, crowded streets of the city. 
Truly it is a refuge from the world.  We are so blessed to be here!

Tuesday 16 October 2018

Mission Report October 16, 2018

We were asked to send a report of our mission for the Raymond Stake history.  Ron wrote and I added a few things.  It's a summary of some of the highlights of our mission.  We are so blessed to be here.


Cebu Temple

The uncropped view from Gorordo Avenue. 
We can usually hear traffic noises in the Celestial and sealing rooms.

We are blessed to be serving in the Cebu City Temple Mission in the Philippines with nine other missionary couples, seven from the USA, and two from the Philippines.  The Cebu Temple has been in operation since its dedication by President Monson in 2010, the second temple in the country.  The temple looks much like the Calgary temple and is similar in size.  It serves the southern region of the Philippines, mainly the Visayan Islands having a population similar to Canada’s.  When the Manila temple was closed for four months this year, newly called missionaries from Mongolia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Cambodia and Vietnam came here to receive their own endowment.

Missionaries first served in the Philippines in 1962, and in its first few years three elders from Raymond served here, Mark Evans, Jim Ackroyd and if my memory is correct, Phil Helgerson.  Elder William R. Walker, who grew up in Raymond and had responsibility for temples in the church, was at the Cebu Temple dedication in 2010.  A number of missionaries from Raymond have served in the Philippines in recent years.  In 1963 when Elder Evans served here, church membership was 80; in 1969 when I, Elder McMullin, served as a young missionary,  the membership had risen to 6,000 saints.  Only one chapel existed in the country in 1971 and the membership grew to 10,000.  In June of 2018, the Church reported a membership of over 765,000 in the Philippines.  The Philippines is the fifth country in the world with 100 stakes of Zion. 

One of our great thrills in our service here has been to see people that I baptized on my mission, or their posterity.  While being trained in the baptistry shortly after our arrival, Sister McMullin was sitting in the baptistry’s chapel one morning.  She knew that some youth from Mindanao, the big island at the south end of the Philippines, were coming to be baptized.  We had corresponded for some 48 years with two families from Mindanao.   Sister McMullin asked the sister sitting in front of her if she knew of a family whose surname was Villejo.  The sister responded, “No.”  But another nearby sister said, “I am Villejo.  I am Mary-Rose.”  She was named after Mary-Rose so with joy Mary-Rose met her name sake for the first time.  I had great joy in seeing Mary-Rose Villejo, now Estrada, as well.  Later on that day, I was helping with some sealings, and was a proxy son at the alter.  To my great joy, the young couple kneeling there included another Villejo granddaughter.  I shed some tears that day, tears of joy.  “How great shall be your joy in heaven” came to my mind, as I experienced a bit of that great joy that day.  We have also seen members of another two families from Mindanao, the Origenes and Barrizo families.  Both of these families had 10 children, and 6 members of each family served missions after their conversions.  It has been a thrill to serve here and have these heart-warming reunions.

Mary-Rose M. and Mary-Rose Villejo Estrada

We have had other special experiences here.  For instance, one brother brought a family name slip to do the beginning part of the endowment.  Before we started, feelings welled up in me and I could hardly keep from crying.  Once complete, I asked this brother who this person was, telling him of my feelings.  He said, “He is my brother who died last year.”  I am sure there was joy on the other side of the veil that moment. 

At times, couples who come to the temple to be married for time and all eternity arrive without any family or friends accompanying them.  Either the family cannot afford to come, or the young people are the only members in their family.  Sister McMullin has had the opportunity of being an attendant for several brides, even helping with small receptions and hosting a dinner or two on short notice.  

Our first wedding couple, the Wongs, Feb. 28, 2018.
Speaking of feeding people, we have carried on Grandma Jane’s tradition of feeding people.  We have rounded out our temple mission with a “feed the hungry” mission. On one occasion, a group of 15 people did not have the money to buy food when they arrived at the Patron House and so were invited to our 450-sqare-foot living/dining room to eat supper with us.  (We are blessed to be at the end of the hall, so we have a foyer outside our door to use for overflow!)  Other people from their island in similar circumstances were invited by our guests, and we fed what seemed like an endless stream of people totaling 32 when all were fed.  We had enough left over to feed another five people the next day.  Another time we hosted a birthday party for our two-year-old “adopted granddaughter” and the 15 guests we expected turned out to be 51 people.  All were fed and filled, including two sets of missionaries, members of the bishopric and their families, and many others.  It is not uncommon for us to feed from 35 to 60 people throughout a month.  For Canadian Thanksgiving last week, we cooked turkey, dressing and gravy and coleslaw for the 24 temple missionaries, with the cooking of rest of the meal being shared.  We saved some turkey, and had another Thanksgiving dinner for 12 of us on Tuesday.   

Here are the last of the 50 or so  birthday party guests.  Fun! 

Thanksgiving #1

Thanksgiving #2
As I, Mary-Rose, was reading Alma 10:7 recently, these words came from the Spirit as a message of approval of our “feeding the hungry” mission: “…and he is an hungered, and thou shalt receive him into thy house and feed him, and he shall bless thee and thy house; and the blessing of the Lord shall rest upon thee and thy house.”  We have been so humbled by the faith of these people who sacrifice so much to come to the temple, and often have to scrimp to buy food here.  It is a privilege to share with them and be blessed by their example and their conversion stories.


Picture-taking is a big thing here. We started out with a small group of leaders from the Davao group.
Then more and more of the leaders and youth joined us.  Lots of fun!
In the Philippines, we are four things that we aren't at home: tall (at least Mary-Rose isn't tall in Canada), rich, popular,
and beautiful-- people like our fair skin and straight noses!
They're surprised when we tell them that in North America, we tan to make our skin browner.  
One of our great delights is being baptistry coordinators one shift per week.  We hear that Cebu temple does more baptisms for the dead than any other temple in the church.  Youth from the various islands take time off school or come here on holidays and do baptisms for their ancestors after finding family names, or for family names shared by other members of their stakes.  Each group will stay at the Patron House for two or three days, and come to do baptisms twice a day.  Their stake has a fund for the transportation and housing, but the youth still have to pay for their own food.  Last Friday’s group included 37 young women and 18 young men, for example, and they were from the nearby island of Negros, another island where I served on my mission.  There was no branch there in my younger years of service and now there is a vibrant stake.  The area of Bacolod on this island where I served is sometimes referred to as “Little Utah” because there are chapels everywhere.  When I served in Bacolod, the branch had about 50 members and we met in the basement of a house.  In a nearby community, Victorias, where we bussed on Sunday afternoon to hold Sacrament Meeting, we met in an outdoor kitchen.  What a change.


Workers sacrifice much to serve in the temple.  Few have their own transportation because they cannot afford it and they pay to ride a jeepney or on the back of a motorcycle to get to the temple, both coming and going.  That money could have been used to feed their family or to buy clothes, etc.  Some couples and singles from other islands come and stay at the Patron House for a week or two at a time and do that each month, serving each day in the temple as workers.  One such brother was very excited when I gave him a pair of shoes that were the wrong size for me – he was wearing slippers because he could not afford shoes.  Despite their circumstances, you hear no complaints, and day after day, month after month, these brothers and sisters serve gladly.  The Filipino people are a people of great faith and are kind and caring.  We love serving with them. 


Sunday 14 October 2018

Lami!

Just a few of the candies

From Ron: Mary-Rose is working on making 300 chocolate-covered peanut clusters for a farewell social for the temple presidency who will be released at the end of the month.  We buy the peanuts for $2 US a kilo, roast them in the oven, then melt and mix in chocolate (not Cadbury’s though) and spoon them out onto a sheet of parchment paper. Lami! (delicious)  I have eaten one – one peanut that is.

Monday 17 September 2018

Bojo River Trip


 Bojo River Trip by Elder Ron, in a verbose ( he says that he was in a "descriptive") mood.

Clear skies, the first in a week, welcomed us as we climbed into the van with three temple employees and two other mission couples on an adventure to the Bojo River.  Preparation day, at times, allows us to visit new places in the Philippines and when Brother Manning, who had served here once before, offered us a chance to go on an excursion that included snorkeling, we jumped at the chance. 
Cebu is a long thin island in the middle of what are called the Visayan Islands, which collectively are located in the middle of the Philippines.  Along the island’s coast is some relatively flat land sloping steeply up to inactive volcanic mountains, which form the island’s spine.  We headed south of Cebu City for about 1.5 hours, transversed the mountains to the west side of the island, then traveled another hour’s drive to the south just past a small community named Alinguinsan.  Notice, we did not say how many kilometers since that gives illusions of a quick drive when in fact, driving speed in the Philippines rarely goes over 30 km per hour due to heavy traffic and narrow roads.  The first part of our upward climb took place on a road that was partially washed out and the suspension of the van was sorely tested.  By and by the road improved and we drove faster than 10 km per hour.  The road coming down the west side of the island was of fairly new construction, the road being concrete – a relative super-highway where we could travel 50 to 60 km per hour, except for the curve in the road every few hundred metres.  The view of the mountains is beautiful, however, with little development off the main road.  Mountains here are clothed in jungle from head to foot, and the mix of coconut palms and a myriad of plants we don’t recognize is beautiful.  An occasional piece of ground sports a small farm.  Houses along the highway often block the view but the vistas show up once in a while like teasers along the drive.

Dragonfruit plant
 Our first stop was at the bottom of the road before we had reached much development along the west coast.  To my delight, our stop was an agricultural demonstration farm, operated by the local barangay (a small jurisdiction in a community or like a small county in the rural areas).  We were welcomed with cool drinks made of kalamansi and lemon grass, a mild sweet, citrusy beverage with a hint of the lemon-grass taste.  Then we sampled a buffet of sliced saba (cooking bananas that are boiled in their skins but served without the skins), a coleslaw made of banana blossom heart, onion and some other things, sticky rice (a sweet square with carmelized brown sugar on top – great for a low sugar diet we are on), and a relatively flat oval bread without anything on it, and, oh yes, local hot chocolate that has little sugar, no milk and a lot of dark chocolate flavour.  Included was a fish paste as well, with as much salt as fish.  I guess that would kill the taste, but we never found out.  But we did go back for seconds of the other items.  Our hostess was gracious and waited patiently as we dined.  She also shared with us where the CR was, that is the Comfort Room, typically fitted with a toilet and a couple pails of water nearby with a large dipper to flush.  Still appreciated.  And they provided toilet tissue!  We always bring our                                                        own, because you never know…

Close-up of dragonfruit

Next a relatively tall and mid-aged gentleman guided us on a tour of their organic hog production – one sow, and five pigs about 40 pounds each at this stage.  Mary-Rose really enjoyed feeding the pigs some branches cut off of nearby trees.  The leaves on these branches are eaten by people, as well, as a sort of spinach.  We have seen a lady coming out of the temple block carrying a load of them that she had cut in the vacant property here that is awaiting future construction of another chapel.  Bedding for the hogs is woodchips which the hogs incorporate into the ground making the beginning of an organic fertilizer as they blend it with manure in their walking about.  The bedding-manure mix is then put into large, rectangular boxes about 10-feet long and 3-feet wide – although pigs are smart, this is done by the work crew.  The workers that transform the bedding into fertilizer are earthworms, protected from the free-range chickens by a covering of coconut-palm leaves that also serve as a mulch and shade the ground from the intense sun at this latitude near the equator.  The pig poop turned-to-earthworm-poop has no particular smell and can be handled and used as a fertilizer to grow local crops, which included tomatoes, eggplant, dragonfruit, cucumbers, bananas, mangoes and lemon grass.  I don’t recall seeing bananas on this small one-hectare farm, but there must have been some as the workers use what they grow in feeding visitors both here and at our next stop, as much as possible.

Pig-poop-turned-
earthworm-poop
Cute, not-stinky piglets 
In his element





















Warning: TMI if you're not interested in botany!
FYI, when a banana tree (it is not a tree) is spent and has produced its many hands of bananas (the bunch) on its stem (also called rachis:  read about bananas if you are a pure botanist, at the following URL: http://www.promusa.org/Morphology+of+banana+plant#Stem), then it sends up new shoots from a corm as the leaves, which form a  stem-like trunk, die off.  Or simply, like a begonia bulb, the banana plant sends up new shoots once the top dies off, and just like an onion, the stem is really a bunch of leaves that grow up together to form the structure that supports the flower on-top.  Any of the banana shoots can be transplanted to grow a new banana plant.

Meanwhile, back on  the farm... 

Elder and Sister Pace and Steve Villanueva in the garden
Mango trees grow really big!

See if you can find the little round passion fruit.
 As we exited, we walked under a bamboo trellis covered in a semi-healthy plant-covering growing about 8 feet above the ground that sported one passion fruit and a number of miniature cucumbers, each 3 inches long.  We were informed these cukes were “wild” cucumbers.  We accepted one as a gift from our guide who stretched his body from his toes upward to grab one of the tiny fruits. 

Fed, educated and contented, we loaded into our van and headed onto a new adventure – navigating the west coastal highway.  The difference between the west side of Cebu from the east side is the degree of westernization.  Near Cebu on the east, the coastal highway is filled with large trucks with the various loads of cartage, along with a mix of relatively new Japanese and Korean and a few Chinese and American vehicles (they are almost all new except the taxis because the ability to buy vehicles is  new for the middle class in the Philippines), flowing along in a matrix of habal-habal (motorcycles for hire) drivers swerving in-and-out amongst the traffic, trying to gain advantage at some risk to self and passenger in order to move quicker than the cars and trucks that are limited in their speed by sheer number of vehicles on the road.  (In the time it took you to read the last sentence you might have been lucky to drive 10 feet).
The west side is different – there a fewer large trucks, though there are some; there are fewer cars, though there are some; and there are fewer habal-habals on the road, though there are some.  Introduce another “species” of traffic regulation, which ensures slower driving speeds – the tricycle.  Not a three-wheeled one you recall from your childhood, but a pedal-drive bicycle or sized-down motorcycle with a sidecar that can hold two to four people somewhat comfortably if you are small, but up to 13 if you stack every square inch with at least one or two bodies.  The smaller number is the norm.  You also see cargo of an occasional hog or two, and I have seen a cow in one. 

Not our photo, but we've seen this!


Again, not our photo, but notice the schoolgirls in uniform top left.

 One blessing of the Philippines is that there are many schools; one mixed-blessing to drivers is that these schools are usually along the busy roads, and many of the children arrive in a tricycle.  With narrow roads filled with all these types of vehicles and their cargo – your vehicle sometimes does not travel very fast.   Where there is a school coming up, a barricade is placed upstream a hundred metres of the school on one side of the highway and downstream on the other side of the school for a hundred metres.  This slows the traffic down, as you can imagine, but keeps kids safer.  How many big trucks and tricycles can you wait for to take your turn before you lose your patience?  As many as needed, since there is nothing you can do about it and it is fun to see all the kids dressed smartly in their school uniforms (with a different set of colours for each school, and the girls in skirts) and generally with bright smiles on their faces.
Now we are out of the school areas and onto the “freeway” reaching speeds regularly of 30 km per hour with bursts up to 50 km per hour when it is safe to swerve toward on-coming traffic because we are bigger than they are and they know to move over, or where there actually is room to pass.  Glimpses of the sea to the right, and the occasional banana stand of a hectare or two (no real plantations along here) add variety to the usual visual fare of small houses with their tin roofs, and small businesses at almost every house.  The famed “Sari-Sari” store that used to be the neighborhood 7-11 run by one of the moms has been replaced by a business in most every dwelling along the busy highways.  You have to make a living and the road traffic provides a continuum of customers.  Everyone has to eat so many of these are food-based businesses, with phone load signs popping up frequently and the occasional money-transfer operation.  Small dry goods are on display, but the main display is snacks.  Bananas and other fruits in season are popular items as well. 


with our leis
We arrive at Alinguinsan, a small community that would have started out as a fishing village.  Mary-Rose and I have been here before to catch a bangka for dolphin-watching and snorkeling.  This time, we drive through the town and continue a bit down the road until we see the second river, the Bojo.  We turn off the highway to drive down a much smaller, narrower road.  We have arrived at our destination.  A member of our reception committee guides Brother Manning as he moves the vehicle onto the left side of the road and parks in the space parallel to the road which is about the size of the van.  We all hop out, glad and thankful to be here.  We stretch our legs and aging bodies to get them going again, and find our bags of snorkeling gear and changes of clothes.  Down the road we go to a path that will lead us to our next adventure.  We are pleasantly surprised as we each bow our heads and receive a home-made lei from one of our new Filipina hostesses.  Each lei is totally covered in various patterns of seeds along the strand of fibre that supports colorful flowers and tiny round, brilliantly colored fruits that adorn each unique creation.   


Steve on the walkway
Nipa palms and other growth along the river



We follow our hostess and senior host to a bamboo walkway that takes us past nipa palms (local shingle making-palms) and other lush growth along this tidal river.  Purposefully, we have arrived at high-tide time.  The water is 9 feet (3 metres) deeper than it was in the night, so a boat can move along the river to the sea and return after an expedition before the water drops too much.  The mangrove forest typical of tidal waters crowds the narrow, spring-fed river, and each unique tree type is labelled with the Latin species name.  The guides are proud of their being able to tell you both the Latin and local names of the trees, since this is a botanical reserve and our day here will help pay for the continuation of a reforestation project in the adjoining mountain area, while providing wages for locals.  



Ron toting our snorkeling gear in our fancy Canadian pillowcase

Again we are greeted warmly, but this time by a chorus of four aging ladies and their aged guitar player.  After our applause we are again given welcome drinks – buko juice.  A young coconut has been trimmed at the top for each of us, a small hole cut into the thin layer of young coconut meat to let a stainless-steel straw enter the refreshing coconut water inside.  A hibiscus flower adorns the top of each coconut, bringing out the deep reds of the large blossoms.  We are seated and then again welcomed in local tradition by the aged man bringing a smoking smudge pot and manoeuvring it around or by each chair to ward off evil and provide safety.  The thick thatched nipa palm roof provides a deep shade as we refresh with coconut water and enjoy conversation with our hosts and hostesses.

Welcome song and dance

Buko (young coconut) welcome drinks



It’s time to get ready to go on the boat and head out to sea.  Mary-Rose and I had seen the connection of this river to the sea on our dolphin-watching expedition – I cannot say the estuary because there is none.  It is as if a large knife cut a narrow passage for the river through the landscape to form two large cliffs on either side at the meeting place of the river and the ocean.  Here at the small boat dock, we saw a relatively flat narrow river valley with a broad ribbon of vegetation on-and-in either side, sloping up the vegetated landscapes at all angles towards hill tops off to the sides.    Our gazes turned to duty – don’t be the one holding up the boat ride.  Get your snorkeling gear together and put on your rash guard.  We climbed laid-stone steps up to the combined CR-dressing room building that had two toilet stalls and four other shower rooms big enough for a person to get into their gear. And amazingly, it also had toilet tissue!  Meanwhile, Elder Manning negotiated our travel in a glass-bottomed boat as part of the deal with no increase in price (amazing in the Philippines, since usually every little extra has an accompanying price tag, often not much extra but annoying).  We are assisted in to the boat by some male helpers.  Our guides are two ladies, mga babaye.  One speaks to us as we travel along the river about the project to preserve this area and to develop sustainable farming practices in the region.  She points out the various species of trees as we travel slowly along the narrow free-water surface of the river between the mangroves on either side and I am sure none of us remember the Latin or local names, but enjoyed the message that came along with those.  Our journey was not long, just 1.4 km until we saw it – no trees, just sheer walls on two sides and the conjunction of an azure blue river with the deep almost black-blue depths of the ocean.  From 3 metres to 90 fathoms in a few feet.  

L to R: Lea, Armi, Steve, Boatman, Elder and Sister Manning, Ron, Sister and Elder Pace, Mary-Rose


Out into the ocean
Calm, sunny, with great company and beautiful surroundings

Our second guide, Rosanna, now took over.  She is a botanist of other sorts, a marine biologist who knows the corals and the fish and the dangers.  We get instructed first.  We paid 250 pesos ($5 US) each extra for this opportunity to snorkel, not always offered on these tours.  Brother Manning had come many times before and so they knew him and knew we would be a cooperative group that would respect their responsibility to maintain the area and follow instructions.  We floated out the passageway onto the ocean.  What a beautiful day!  The last time we passed by here out on the ocean a few hundred metres off-shore, we were fighting 4- to 5-foot waves in a small bangka as we traveled back from our dolphin search and some snorkeling and picnic at Hermit’s Cove, a wonderful little, secluded beach just a couple miles away.  Today the waves were no bigger than those in a swimming pool.  I debated whether to get in the water, as my last snorkeling activity included being in 5- to 6-foot waves off Apo Island where my snorkel did not work well and I had difficulty breathing and panicked a bit.  Another story but the guide hauled me a hundred yards back to boat, and I later got in again but in calm water on the other side of the island.  So I debated, but my life jacket was the right size and I slipped on my snorkeling mask and fins and followed Mary-Rose, merlady, into the water.  The guide reminded me to relax, and I just bobbed to test the life jacket – it worked.  I pulled the mask over my face and breathed to make sure things worked okay this time.  I put my face in the water and breathed a few breaths, and then relaxed and headed out for about 40 minutes within easy stride of the boat.  

Looking and learning about different corals

Photos can't capture the peace and beauty of the underwater world .

 When shallow coral meets deep, deep ocean, life teems.  The fish were as varied as they were beautiful.  My first sight was a school of small, striped fish each with vertical tiger colors as if each was stamped in the same mold.  They swam as if they were ignoring me while basking in the sunbeams that pierced the water like an above-ground sunburst.  Tiny gold fish – not orange like the ones in a glass bowl, but really gold-colored, swam in doubles or triples.  Emily Dickinson would have delighted in the sight and her poem describing a humming bird would have been apropos: “A route of evanescence, …a rush of cochineal”.  Sorry, or maybe not sorry that is all of the poem that I remember from poetry class at the U of L in 1972.  Let it be said that the colors were as a kaleidoscope and the variety of fishes kept me glued to travelling the edge of the undersea precipice where little fish could feed in the shallows of the corals and bigger fish could hide at depth.  Scuba gear next?  Not likely, but I only caught glimpses of the bigger fish that occasionally flashed a silvery side toward the sky above for the depths below.  Nothing really big though.


I had some minor cramping in my foot and so I headed back to the boat to make sure I was okay.  Our guide took Mary-Rose, Brother Pace and Brother Manning over the corals explaining their different names and roles in the coral ecology.  Although they were about 100 metres away, I thought I would swim toward them as I tested my rested legs out again.  One of the male guides was swimming that way with a life ring and so I stayed within 20 or so feet from him as I extended my range and met up with the others.  They had seen some sea horses and I was interested.  At least until I saw one and it looked more like a worm than the seas horse we see in picture books.  But with every 5 to 10 metres covered, new and interesting life added variety to the ocean’s beauty.  We will miss this when we go back to our land-locked Alberta.  In our newly renovated bathroom, our shower curtain is a montage of dolphins and ocean fish in their brilliant colors over an ocean-blue background.  I told Mary-Rose she could put on her snorkeling gear in the shower, but I don’t think she is “biting on that bait.”
All good things must come to an end.  I had regained quite a bit of confidence in snorkeling again and we had seen more of creation that beautifies the earth.  These memories will be locked into our minds – we forgot our underwater camera – but we are glad that Brother Pace and Brother Manning brought their cameras along so we can also put them on to a screen to relive our experiences again.  Should I say, it snowed at home today?

Coco the grasshopper with his creator, Lea


Although the highlight was past, our adventure continued.  With all that energy exerted, it was time to refuel.  We returned, got into dry clothes, and were treated to a Filipino buffet of fried fish, fish soup, rice, pork adobo with saba (cooked bananas), and more buko juice, for those who had ordered it.  We all found something that was delightfully delicious.
Then came the demonstration of how to make the traditional rice cooker – an 8-side container made by weaving one coconut leaflet into a structure about 4 to 5 inches total height and about 2.5 to 3 inches in width.  If you can imagine putting two, four-sided pyramids one on top of the other, that would be the shape.  In brief, the mid-rib of the coconut leaf is stripped out, leaving the two long sides of the coconut leaf.  The strands of leaf are about 2 cm (3/4 inch) wide and are still joined together at the bottom.  These two strands are woven together to form the little, double pointed basket.  When the strands are loosened at the top once the weaving is completed, rice can be inserted into the container which can now be lowered into a pot of boiling water.  Once the rice is cooked, out comes the rice pre-packaged.  You can buy these for 10 pesos each with the rice inside.  Small ones sell for 5 pesos each including rice.  We received 4 of these and I tried to make one with lots of help so we have 5 of these as decorations in our apartment.  Decorating our wall is also a 6-inch long grasshopper, origami-like, made of coconut leaf as well.
Rice pouches

Our send-off came from the same singing group as they expressed their thanks in song and wished us on our way.   Mary-Rose purchased a number of small and larger handbags woven by local folks, before w
e bid a fond farewell.

Off to the van, and a small miracle followed – the traffic heading home was much, much lighter than we expected.  We quote MacArthur “I shall return.”