• 31Jul

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    The theme for this week’s Litratong Pinoy is seashore. We all know that the Philippines is surrounded by water. We also know that this is the primary selling point of the tourism industry in luring tourists to visit the country. How do we take care of our seas and seashore?

    Do we have to have legislation just to guide us how to take care of our seas? Or do we voluntarily do these taking care ourselves.

    Ang tema para sa Litratong Pinoy ay dalampasigan. Alam nating lahat na napapaligiran ng tubig ang Pilipinas. Alam din nating lahat na ito ang pambenta ng ating pamahalaan para pumunta dito ang maraming turista. Pero paano ba pangalagaan ang dalampasigan?

    Kelangan ba na may batas para pangalagaan ito o dapat tayo na mismo ang gumawa ng paraan para ito ay mabigyan ng proteksiyon?

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    Diaper at the beach. Diaper nasa dalampasigan.

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    Machineries that pollute the waters. Mga makinang nagdudulot ng pulosyon sa tubig.

    My only wish is to see clear, clean blue waters which can give us joy as well as nourishment. Ang tanging hiling ko ay makakita ng malinaw, malinis at bughaw na tubig na siya ding nakapagbibigay sa atin kasiyahan pati na din ng mga pagkaing-dagat.

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  • 31Jul

    Everyone wants to have their own place to call their “home sweet home”. Several friends were able to get their own homes already and they have lots of stories to tell regarding the process of getting a house.

    First, even if one has enough money saved for the purchase of a new house, or even the purchase of a house with a previous owner, it seems that there is never enough funds to pay for everything that has to be paid for. One has to get home mortgage to be able to finance all the necessary expenses to be able to purchase a house. Home mortgages like the Mortgage Finders Network should be able to help those who want to get into a mortgage loan process.

    These expenses include all the paperwork, not to mention the expenses incurred in doing the legwork. Not to exclude the fee to be paid for the architect or engineer and carpenters who will build or remodel the house. And what about the furnitures? Well, at times, these have to wait. One can either use previously owned furnitures even if these seem “old” for the new house.

    When done right, getting one’s home sweet home would not be a hassle but a breeze. Planning and timing are just two of the major key concepts in doing so.

  • 30Jul

    Last Sunday, when we went to Market One Sunday Market, I chanced upon some root crops being sold. I thought it was “kamoteng kahoy” or cassava and I thought about buying several pieces. The salesperson told me it is in fact yacon. And I asked what it was again. She told me it is called yacon and it is good for those who are likely to suffer diabetes.

    Hmm…I have heard about this a few months back from a student’s mom who buys the same root crop in the same place.

    I asked the salesperson what it tastes like and she said it tastes like “singkamas” or what is erroneously referred to as turnips. Singkamas is in fact called jicama (pachyrhizus erosus). I got curious since I love munching on this singkamas.

    I got one piece only. It was a bit expensive, compared to singkamas which can be bought for PhP25.00 for a bunch of 5-6 pieces. The one piece I got was PhP40.00(almost USD1.00).

    I peeled the yacon around noon today. And took photos of the sliced flesh.

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    After a while, I noticed that the flesh discolored. I didn’t know that discoloration happens the flesh has been exposed to air, like apples and eggplants.

    I tasted one piece and it tasted good. Sweetish, like a part apple, a part jicama and a part pear. So that is why it is also called the Apple of the Earth. It is also dubbed as the Healing Crop.

    I didn’t want to eat it as it is so I thought about making a salad and putting some pieces which I sliced in strips. This was what I got:

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    Click here to read about more about this root crop called yacon.


  • 29Jul

    The 8th State of the Nation Address by President Gloria Arroyo was both a look at the past and the future. PGMA compared the goals she has set in 2001 to the goals she has set for 2008.

    This is my reaction to your 8th SONA, PGMA:

    Complex times, you say, I agree with you. not only complex but compelling and challenging. These complex times could either bring out the worst in us, or the best in us.

    We need to build bridges and allies, yes, I agree with you. But we need to choose too, the bridges and alliances we want to do business with.

    The figures you gave were impressive. But one thing stuck in my mind. Arthur Yap said in an interview before your SONA that almost one million hectares of farmlands were irrigated. You said in your speech that its 1.5 million hectares. So what is the real figure here?

    The money earned by that father from Donsol increased from PhP100/day to PhP1,000/day ever since he got himself involved in the whale shark/dolphin watching industry. Is this a daily earning? Isn’t it that whale watching only happen from June to November? What happens to his earnings during the other months?

    The different goals you have set are quite agreeable with me because in a sense, my husband and I try to inculcate these values to our children:

    • self-sufficiency ( I always tell my children to rely on themselves than ask for help from others, because they themselves would be able to help themselves.)
    • self-reliance (Same thoughts as in self-reliance)
    • less dependency on energy (We still depend on energy but we utilize ways to conserve energy.)
    • sacrifices (We have done a lot of sacrifices already. These in fact can’t be quantified as sacrifices but necessary steps for survival.)
    • strategy (We think of ways to be self-reliant, self-sufficient and think of ways to conserve whatever resources we have, in order for our family to survive.)
    • special care for the great hour of need (We try to do these too, for during these times of needs, of difficult times, we are vulnerable to do things that we might regret later on)
    • Leadership which means doing what is necessary however hard. (In the Parenting Seminar I attended last Friday, leadership should happen when the children are aged 2 - 7 years old. We try to be leaders to our children, even as my husband and I commit mistakes, we acknowledge these in front of the children, so they too, should be vigilant in observing how our parenting skills or lack of it, work for them, without them taking advantage of our mistakes.)
    • Responsible parenthood. (This is difficult to do because we tend to commit mistakes but we readily accept these. We work hard for the children)

    You acknowledged the farmers, the fisherfolk, the jeepney driver, the teachers and the workers given technical skills to prove their capabilities.

    You talked about renewable and alternative energy sources, giving lands to the farmers and developing the irrigation system to yield more crops. The population control should be given concrete steps as to how these should be controlled because I believe, that population, specifically our ballooning population contributes much to the difficulties we are experiencing as a nation.

    These are good promises for we await for these things to happen, not for the good of everyone in the now, but for the good of our children’s children.

    And now the waiting begins.

    But as we wait for tangible results, we start doing what we think is best for our family, work even harder, for no matter how sweet these promises seem, it is still up to us to do what is necessary, for we try to be self-reliant and self-sufficient.

  • 28Jul

    It has been a longtime since we last visited Sidcor, now called the Market One, located at the Lung Center in Quezon City. Here, one can find a lot of fresh produce, freshly baked goodies, organic food, live crabs and other fish products, cooked food, plants, pets, furnitures and the usual stuff like accessories, clothes and knick-knacks.

    This is a few minutes from where we live.

    Why we chose to go there yesterday resulted in both good and bad decisions.

    It was a bad decision because it rained a just after we got there. Hubby and the two younger kids just got themselves a box of pizza, some drinks and went to eat in the car. Trixie and I went around to look for things to bring home. I wasn’t able to take photos too.

    On the other hand, it was a good decision because we were able to get good fish parts. We had a “maya-maya ulo sinigang sa miso” or snapper (head) sour soup with miso. We also got vegetables, a tray of eggs (30 pieces), a grilled tuna for lunch and a piece of yakon (this is going to be another post).

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    One of the many fish stalls at Market One. This was where I got my snapper head and other fish parts (upper right side of photo).

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    Grilled fish. The stall’s tarp sign says it is Grilled Tuna but it doesn’t taste like tuna to me. Anyway, we still enjoyed it for lunch. I had it with fresh tomatoes and raw onions (gah!).