Showing posts with label Travel Reportage by Lester Ledesma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel Reportage by Lester Ledesma. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2013

LAYAG-LAYAG YELLOW BOAT VILLAGE: HOUSES @ ZC JANUARY 2013

Again, I want to share about another theme: the houses in the Layag-Layag Mangrove Village.
This is one of the floating villages we passed by before we reached the community we visited. Indeed, these are houses on stilts.
And here are the houses at the village:
 
photo credit: Doc Anton Lim

And sometimes, houses are connected to each other by bamboo poles.
Do you notice the ropes?
These are the ropes to stabilize the houses.
And these are the tires to where the ropes are attached.
Abs confirmed that they really stay in the houses while there are typhoons!
This is the undersurface of the house.
And here is an example of a weather-beaten house!... Can you imagine if this is the effect of the typhoon?
Photo Credit: Michelle Lim
And this is the community further on, already partly on land... 
Mosque from afar

We have witnessed how they live in this village... and definitely, it is not easy.
We know how we complain of floods, but here, they actually live it!
But as they say, the Tausug are sea people and literally "Tao" means people and "sug" means (sea) current, therefore, "People of the Sea Current"!
Their life revolves around these stilt houses and the seaweed farms but still they need to go to the mainland to sell their seaweeds and where they get their other needs such as marketing, shopping and schooling!
Gangnam style by the Travel Reportage group Photo Credit: Doc Anton Lim

THE ROAD TO LAYAG-LAYAG YELLOW BOAT VILLAGE @ ZC JANUARY 2013

Our second venue was even more challenging for us.... out of the box.... out of our comfort zone!!! Definitely many will be intrigued because not everyone is given the chance to come over to Layag-Layag, the mangrove community off Talon-Talon in Zamboanga City!
A friend told me its name has the same style as Talon-Talon, which means "Jump Jump". 
Layag-Layag means "Sail Sail" because it is a water community!
Here is a map of Zamboanga City showing the relationship of Layag-Layag to Talon-Talon and the rest of the City.
As you can see from the map, Layag-Layag is separated from the mainland by mangroves and we venture to Layag-Layag by way of open sea.
I am sharing " the Road to Layag-Layag" to borrow the phrase from my Travel Reportage classmate, Jess Yu.
We left at about 8 a.m. 
Doc Anton (of the Yellow Boat of Hope Foundation and also our classmate in the Travel Reportage Class) chose this time because of the high tide so we could ride the boat to Layag-Layag, the easier way.
Here I am at the Talon-Talon Salinas (Salt Bed) which we pass by on the way to the mangroves where our jump-off point is.  I am ready with my Tzu-Chi vest!  But, even in the Salinas, Mich already had a share of her adventure!
OOOhhhh! So this is what we are going to ride, the bigger version of the Yellow Boats and very apt for visitors... but, I am not so into boats!
We pass through the mangroves on the way to Layag-Layag. It was about a 10-15 minute boat ride. The boat trip was calm, but I don't know why it seemed to tip to each side. It may be an uneventful ride, but others could feel some fear of tipping and others simply had seasickness!
They said, we shouldn't worry about tipping over because the water was mostly shallow... and clear contrary to what we think of mangroves! 
Maybe, it is clear because the place is close to the open sea... 
Photo credit: Doc Anton Lim
If we left too late, we would really have to walk through the mangroves and this would really be difficult. At some areas, others do it this way...
We see a community, although, we are moving on to a different community further on.
So as we move further, the sights are even more breathtaking. And the sandbar is so pristine!
sand bar
Finally, we arrive at the Layag-Layag village.
The mangroves are so beautiful.
Now we are landing in the Yellow Boat village...Layag-Layag!
I didn't realize, we were really going to walk around knee high water and eventually, thigh high!
Yes, you would notice the yellow boats around...the Yellow Boats of Hope!
the Bagong Pag-asa arrives
This is the learning center/day care center which  was featured last March 2012 and sponsored by the Tzu-Chi Foundation.
The community's main livelihood revolves around the Agar-Agar.
We see the mosque at one end of the community. The folks of Layag-Layag helped construct the mosque!
We were all amazed and touched by our Travel Reportage experience at the Layag-Layag Community. 
We were able to relive how the kids do it... 
During low tide, they walk through the thick sea mud. 
But during high tide, they wade in the waters and considering they were little kids, they were practically swimming to school... with wet school supplies!
Travel Reportage Group with Lester Ledesma --- photo credit: Doc Anton Lim
Doc Anton, the local coordinator for the Yellow Boat of Hope Foundation was very wise to introduce us to the place to discover its beauty and the beauty of the people!
We hope we too could help in our own little ways... and also reach out to our friends who may also want to extend their helping hands.
I would like to thank in advance my friends and  High School schoolmates from UP College Cebu, Harry Abilla and Jason Duterte now in the US who have expressed their intention just by seeing this picture! 
Thanks, Jun Lim for the picture... 
They worried about us not wearing any protective footwear... for the possible pain and infection, we may be inflicted with.
So what more for the inhabitants of this village who live this way everyday!
Those who are interested in learning more about the YELLOW BOAT OF HOPE can check out these links:  
and their Facebook Page: YELLOW BOAT OF HOPE FOUNDATION http://www.facebook.com/YellowBoat?fref=ts P.S. Thanks to Doc Anton Lim for sharing the experience with us. Thanks to the Travel Reportage with Lester Ledesma class because the opportunity was opened to us. Thanks to the Travel Reportage teacher and classmates who made the activity more enjoyable. Thanks to Mary June Bugante, DOT RIX director for supporting the group with the escorts and for joining us, too! P.S.2 Here is a backgrounder for the Yellow Boat of Hope which I lifted from Wikipedia on Jay Jaboneta with this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay_Jaboneta

Yellow Boat of Hope Foundation (2010-Present)

On October 29–30, 2010, Jaboneta served as a featured speaker at Mindanao Bloggers Summit in Zamboanga City. It was at this event that he first learned about elementary school students from Layag-Layag, an island community in Zamboanga City. Close to 200 of these students could only attend school by swimming half a mile to get to the mainland.[3][11] Disturbed by what he had just learned, and encouraged by his friend Josiah Go to do something more than just post on Facebook about it, Jaboneta began a movement he called Zamboanga Fund for Little Kids, in an effort to help. The group began by raising funds to be able to provide the community of Layag-Layag with boats which the students could ride to school. Meeting initial success, the group kept pressing forward, searching for ways to be able to serve the Layag-layag community more sustainably while identifying other communities with similar needs. The effort eventually resulted in four separate Yellow Boat communities in the Philippines as of May 2012. His focus is on education, medical support, local ecology, sustainability, and empowering others. Strong community support combined with social networking contribute to the growth of the Yellow Boat Project. Today, the project is formally known the Yellow Boat of Hope Foundation, Inc.[3][5][11] with Jaboneta and Anton Mari H. Lim[12] as co-founders.

[edit]
Communities served by the Yellow Boat of Hope Foundation (January 2013)

  1. Zamboanga Funds for Little Kids: Layag-Layag, Brgy. Talon-Talon, Zamboanga City[13]
  2. Masbate Funds for Little Kids: Isla Mababoy, Brgy. Guinhadap, Monreal, Masbate[14]
  3. ZamSur Funds for Little Kids: Lakewood, Zamboanga del Sur[15]
  4. CDO Funds for Little Kids: Cagayan de Oro[16]
  5. Sibugay Funds for Little Kids - Sagip Bahay: Yellow Dorm Project: Zamboanga Sibugay[17]
  6. Negros Funds for Little Kids: Island of Roma in EB Magalona[18] and Matabas Island, Sagay City in Negros Occidental[19]
  7. Zamboanga del Norte Funds for Little Kids, Siayan and Dipolog City[20]
  8. Monte Central Funds for Little Kids, Subanon, Zamboanga Peninsula[21]

[edit]

TASTE OF ZAMBOANGA: DARAL @ 2013

Our visit to the Zamboanga City Public Market was a very enlightening experience. We learned about many Muslim delicacies which we never really encountered before. As Rowena said, her customers were usually Badjaos. 

You will find her in Building A. 
These are her two stalls... one is where she cooks  and the other where she sells her delicacies and also complete meals.

Here is another one that she cooked in front of our eyes: the DARAL!
The Daral caught my attention because it looked like the Lumpia!

Rowena Anuddin, the lady in the food stall again showed us her skills!
It was like making crepe...
Photo Credit: Michelle Lim 

Photo Credit: Michelle Lim


This is the "lumpia wrap" or "crepe wrap" for the daral!
Photo Credit: Michelle Lim

She placed the Bucayo mix into one side of the wrapper...
Photo Credit: Michelle Lim
Then, she starts rolling this in "lumpia" fashion:
She was so serious showing us how to do the daral!
And now, she is done... with a smile!

Lo! The DARAL!!!
Here are the other delicacies or ban-ban:

This is the Pali Kambing, according to my friend, Jean, but she told me don't let me spell it out!  
As I understand, banana is inside this fried flour! 
While this is the Pan Pan Mongo:
This one caught the eye of Teacher Lester Ledesma and asked us about it. I had to research about this sweets and it is called Pasung.

The Pasung or pasong is steamed sweetened rice flour held by banana leaf "balisungsong" or cones.

This is the Pitis, which my friend Jeanrose loves.
The Pitis is a sweet, sticky, violet rice flour (similar to Putli Mandih) boiled in coconut milk and brown sugar.

This is the Pangih Pangih.

This looks like a Donut. I don't know if there is a Muslim name for this.
I wasn't able to ask anymore about these other delicacies...

Maybe, someone can enlighten us with these!



P.S. 1
I was glad to meet Rowena and her daughter, Luna. She impishly told her Mom that she would be in the internet if she talked to us!
Bright kid, huh! Indeed, she is now in the web!


P.S.2
Here is a link of other Muslim delicacies, I posted about:
http://inpinaystummy.blogspot.com/2012/08/hariraya-puasa-gift-muslim-delicacies.html

P.S.3

This is another output from our Travel Reportage by Lester Ledesma experience!