Author Archive

Wednesday at Alona Beach

Globalization’s reach is limited

21 Feb – Today we began our excursions into the provinces. I am writing this on a computer attached to the Internet, of course, a few blocks from the Dunkin Donuts where we had coffee and the Jollibee (mega-corporate burger joint) where we had supper; and of course always within range of a cell-phone tower. But those outposts of modern globalization have not (yet) displaced all the variety of human life. This is, in a nutshell, why I like to travel and why it feels necessary to go so many timezones away from home when I do.

Alona Beach is about as remote a place as I’ve ever been. It lies about 9 degrees above the equator, a bit over 600km south of Manila. I’m writing this in a town called Tagbilaran City, from which we caught a bus this morning to reach the beach. I commented to Luis at dinner that the human genome here is especially nice: the place is full of really cute local guys (and women too!) They speak a different dialect here but they also learn English and Tagalog in school, so it’s not hard to communicate.

One thing which struck me along the way back from Alona Beach was the local architecture. Whether the houses were shanties or villas as we drove by, they were all different. I’m so used to seeing a limited range of styles, caused either by the vastness of whatever construction company built them cookie-cutter style or by the tendency of home buyers to buy only whatever’s trendy during the decade or two that a neighborhood was built. Alas our ride was too bumpy to capture any of this with my camcorder, so I wanted to note this memory here. One style that I did notice repeatedly was a particular type of coarse-woven bamboo installed in square grids (2 feet or so on a side) on many of the exterior walls.

Thought I’d write up some of the social customs in the Philippines that are different from my past experience…

  • Women, while they are not considered 2nd class in any meaningful way, are segregated from men in various places that seem surprising to one who has grown up with the American feminist movement.
  • Armed guards are basically everywhere, and the people I’ve asked can’t remember a time when they weren’t.
  • It’s fairly hard to bargain with vendors; this is like America where no one negotiates prices for small-ticket items but unlike everywhere else I’ve been where the asking price is virtually never the actual price paid. (Don’t believe your guidebook, either; asking prices are generally higher than the ones you read. You will burn pesos here about as fast as you do at home–this is not Thailand–some things are inexpensive but most things aren’t.)
  • At the table in a restaurant or bar, the check will not come until you explicitly ask for it at the end of your meal.
  • If you pay by credit card, you’ll get whacked with at least a 5% charge, if not a 10% charge, credit-card company (and Philippine government) policies be damned. ATMs are ubiquitous and all are on Cirrus/Plus networks so leave your Amex at home, just pay cash for everything (including plane tickets, hotel rooms, and nights out).
  • SMS text messaging costs about ½0th as much as in the USA, so Filipinos prefer to text you on their cell phone. In fact virtually every driver, and of course every social contact, wants us to have his cell number (they’ll type it right into your phone’s address book). When traveling here (or indeed most places I’ve been outside the USA) it’s essential to have a cell phone with a local number for this reason; despite the fact that cell phones have been widespread for only about 15 years, this is an aspect of life that has reached more people than any other innovation since I was born. Expect many text messages each day, and expect to see even the fairly destitute local kids to be quietly texting each other all day. (The teenaged assistant on our boat ride today was doing this out in the middle of the sea…) It’s not like this in America, where everyone talks on the phone, loudly and in public.

Well that’s it from Tagbilaran for now. We plan 3 nights here before moving on.


Tuesday in Malate

Feb 20 – Well good morning from Malate! Yesterday was our latest night out so far. A friend took us out to a hustler bar–we got separated from far too many pesos–where I chatted with a group of Lufthansa aircraft mechanics for a while, talking shop because for years in the 1980s-90s I was an aviation engineer. A group of 6 go-go boys did an energetic dance routine several times (far better than most go-go dancers but not as talented as the amazing high-school troup we saw at the reunion Saturday).

Monday also featured a trip to the Mall of Asia, which goes on without end. I was malled-out after the first aisle! Luis got some music CDs and a replacement for a misplaced battery charger. (My IEEE hackles get raised every time I fume about the lack of standards in battery technology, every device requires its own easily-lost wall-wart …grr… why doesn’t the Institute use its clout to force manufacturers into a standard charger? I dropped my membership just recently after 20 years. Well enough geek-speak.)

Our visit to University of Santo Tomas was highlighted by the most grand vista of Manila! Ang ganda! The campus is dominated by a 100-foot tower, above a 1927-vintage building used in WW-II to intern thousands of American POWs. The building was restored after the war to its original use, a home for administrative bureaucracy and a college of science. After being treated to some of the bureaucracy (Luis can proudly display his badge of honor, an alumni ID card), we were taken to the roof in a vintage elevator. It was the clearest day yet! We have many pictures of the burgeoning skyline.

This city is clearly in the midst of as much of a condo-mania construction boom as any city back in the States. Luis’ realtor friend John tried to sell us on an “investment” in these condos, he is sales agent for one of the new skyscrapers. Foreigners are being encouraged to purchase property here. I am considering Philippines as a possible eventual retirement home but would have to know a lot more about real estate here before contemplating such a commitment.

In the local news has been a heart-rending story about the fate of 17,000 Filipino nursing graduates whose class year (they use the term “batch” to refer to a graduating class) has been impacted by a cheating scandal. As many as 10% of those who took the international-accreditation exam had access to advance copies of the exam materials. The other 90% are being told that their working visas cannot be approved without re-taking the test. And Supreme Court of the Philippines has ruled only that a fraction of the graduates should re-take the test. How this will play out, I don’t know, but it’s destroying many careers of innocent hard-working people.

Today is a low-key day here in Malate. We plan to watch the sunset over Manila Bay, and then meet up with a local leader of Long Yang Club.

Bukas (tomorrow) in the early morning we begin our excursions, starting with a flight to the town of Tagbilaran on island of Bohol. That’s all for now!


First Impressions of Philippines

Why didn’t we come here a long time ago?

It’s Day 5 of our trip already! The jet lag is finally dissipating but we still wake up way too early most days.The people here have a well-earned reputation for friendliness. They smile, make eye contact and make a genuine effort most of the time to help if you have a question. But of course Manila is a world-class, huge city with many of the problems of any huge city anywhere. Mostly, it’s big and chaotic – it took a couple hours to find an airline ticket office the day before yesterday – we had to ask at about 5 other ticket offices before we could find anyone who knew where the United office had moved in recent months.

Yesterday we went down to Paranaque where some of Luis’ relatives live. We got to see the humble childhood abode of our brother-in-law Carlos, with its nice gardens and barking dogs, and the relatively upscale remodeled home where great-aunt Purita lives with her family. The flavor of the neighborhood is very friendly; a thatched gazebo sits in a vacant lot next door, and serves as a hangout and meeting point for the neighbors to drop by.

Today is less humid than yesterday. I love the warmth here, though I don’t love the dress code: Filipino men dress the way tropical men do everywhere I’ve been outside the USA, in long pants and short-sleeve shirts. I am writing this in a busy Internet cafe where there are several other white guys, some in shorts and some in long pants. We stand out in our shorts; I bought a pair of locally-made jeans the first day but can’t abide wearing them during the day. When we’re wandering around, we don’t see too many American-looking people. We’ve noticed a fairly big presence of Koreans.

One of the other big impressions I’ve gotten here is the presence of armed guards, working for private security companies, at virtually every business. The only time I have been confronted by one was this morning, when Luis and I were doing our morning exercise in the hotel’s 39-story stairwell. We took a break on the roof deck, and a guard menaced us with his rifle while politely pointing out that this area is considered private (it was unlocked and had no signage pointing this out, so I shrugged it off). The BSA Tower is not a place I would recommend staying unless you want to be in this specific neighborhood locale, which is a convenient urban location attached to the huge Greenbelt mall complex. It has no lobby or other common space at all, and they penny-pinch on everything (to the point of shutting down one of the 3 elevators most of the time to save on electricity–a big inconvenience in such a tall building). But the rooms are quite large so you can more or less ignore the things that don’t work (like the door lock to our balcony).

I made eye contact with a guy at the next table during our merienda three days ago; he left a note with his mobile number on it so I struck up a cell-phone text message conversation with him. I think Luis has probably already written up the story of our later encounter: a Valentine’s evening stroll along the Baywalk of Malate with Dondon and his two friends (he said one was a cousin).

Cell-phone texting is quite big here, as it is in other Asian countries. It’s priced cheaper than voice calling and everyone–even businesses like the travel agent that we used for a couple of our local plane tickets, and even in their ads and business cards–gravitates to it as a primary means of communication.

Well our hour here is up so I’ll write more another time!


Copyright © 1996-2010 Dorland St.. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress