Thursday, May 10, 2007

The Luciana collection

They carried us inside their wombs for nine months, taking very good care of their health in order to ensure our healthy development as infants. They have experienced many sleepless nights answering our baby cries in order to feed us, change our diapers and put us to sleep late at night. They have prepared our baons, neatly putting them inside our lunch boxes before going to school and have made sure that our uniforms were well ironed. They have taken good care of us when we are sick, making sure that we drink our medicines on time. They have and would continue to sacrifice on our behalf because we are their most valuable possession. To them, we are the most beautiful, despite violent contradictions from other people, and most priceless beings in this world.

They are our mothers.

It is mother’s day this coming Sunday. It is that day every year where we get the chance to pay our mothers tribute and show them how much we love them and appreciate what they have done, and would do for us.

Here is a simple tribute to one of the special mothers in our family, my grandmother Lucy.




Happy mother’s day to my wonderful mom, my grandmother and to all your great mothers! Happy mother’s day to you! We love you!

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Spoilt pocket of Eden

Lying at the foot of Mt. Banahaw is a once pristine waterfall more popularly known as the Majayjay falls. I got the chance to visit the falls for the first time last April 28-29 and the first reaction I had was that the water is very clear. But contrary to my reaction, a mountaineer friend who has been to the place prior its popularity told me that the water was much clearer and much pristine before. It is relatively dirty now. So this made me wonder. If I find the water clean and clear now, then the waterfall and the stream flowing from it must have been like paradise before.


Majayjay falls was unheard to local tourists before and was only frequented by mountaineers that regularly climbed Mt. Banahaw. This was their small hidden paradise. Mt. Banahaw, Luzon’s highest peak is temporarily closed to allow the mountain to rejuvenate. Similar to the beautiful waterfall that lies in its foot, the trails climbing its peak have been spoilt due to the constant large number of mountaineers climbing it. Taytay falls, which is another name referring to Majayjay falls, was kept from most people until a sports television show featured it in one of their episodes.


Mountaineers bear a creed of leaving nothing but foot marks and taking nothing but pictures. This is an informal creed they all follow that aims to maintain and preserve the places they explore and in general, the environment. What is unfortunate in the case of Majayjay falls is that the new groups of local tourists that visit it during weekends do not practice this. They are uneducated and unaware of the consequences of leaving their trash there. During our visit, we encountered empty bottles of alcohol beside the stream and plastic bottles floating on the stream that were used as toys by children swimming in the ice-cold water. Others on the other hand were bathing in the stream using soaps and shampoo, which could likewise harm and pollute the water due to the chemical components of the soap they are using.


Indeed there is now an environmental fee before one can enter the vicinity of the falls. The fee is to give financial compensation for those who clean up the place after the tourists have left. But this should not be the case. Tourists should have an initiative to clean up the place and bring all the refuse from their stay with them as they leave. Doing this manifests a simple gesture that they, we, all care for our environment and would want it to share to future generations so that they may also enjoy its beauty as we did.

About Me

Powered By Blogger
www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from senyorito_gwapito. Make your own badge here.