THE HINTERLANDS OF THE CORDILLERAS
THE CULTURE, TRADITIONS, BELIEFS AND PRACTICES OF THE PEOPLE OF KALINGA
Friday, January 11, 2019
Friday, September 21, 2018
The Baguio Cabs of long ago...
Today, while going home from a dinner date with my sister after a long day’s work, I was fortunate to ride a cab with at pilot who seems not to care if his passenger is comfortable or not. He does not give a damn if he is going over a hump so long as he gets his car over it. He steps on the breaks with the force of a horse gallop that renders the unaware passenger helpless in the face of such carelessness
I requested the cab driver to step on the breaks gently and mind the humps. What did I get? “Di saan ka aglugan ti taxi”. I said “manong, saan nga kasta a, ammom met ngata nu anya ti regulasyon. Nagbastos ka nga driver, wala kang paki alam. Awan naglakayan yo” I am paying to be transported safely to my destination with the rate he was going I might end up bruised by the time I reach the place. Unfortunately, becoz of my anger, I haven’t thought of getting the cab’s plate number.
I am a Baguio born and bred person and I have witnessed the changes that the city has to undergo from its environment to its people including the ever-loved transportation system – the taxis. I remember the old cab drivers of the city who step down off their cabs to help their passengers with their luggage, take time to talk amiably with their riders and more importantly treat them with respect.
How I loved to ride a cab then.
My Lesson? Walk happy na lang sa Baguio or buy my car hehehe
Lesson to share: Courtesy is basic. …. Whoever you are dealing with.
Lesson to share: Courtesy is basic. …. Whoever you are dealing with.
Saturday, October 28, 2017
What to see in Balbalan, Kalinga..
Commune with nature in Balbalan, Kalinga. If you want to try it, get in touch with the Provincial Tourism Office of Kalinga
Asibanglan, Ga-ang Kalinga
Soak in the cool river of balbalan and get refreshed.
Sesec-an Balbalan
Saturday, June 24, 2017
Reminiscing the Taloctoc that I knew..
Taloctoc is a barangay of the Municipality of Tanudan. It requires about 2 hours hiking to reach the Poblacion- Mangali and a 5-hour hike to reach the Municipality of Tabuk or Lubuagan. The beautiful community can be reached by foot either through the municipality of Lubuagan or barangay Naneng of Tabuk.
It is a laidback village of hospitable and warm people of the Kalinga tribe. I grew up imbibing the culture and tradition that molded me to what I am today - an ikalinga.
I remember growing up in Taloctoc. There was only the catholic church below the foot of the mountain that people go to when the priest who visits once a month is around and the grade school that I attended.
There are no amenities, no stores, no cinemas, no electricity, recreation facilities except for a basketball court found in the school premises, neither were there any kind of entertainment of the modern world. Nothing that you find in an urban area but nature surrounding you. It was truly a laidback community.
Taloctoc is traced by the Tanudan river like a necklace and surrounded by mountains in all sides. It is a valley in between mountains with a beautiful river flowing freely for a long stretch of rice fields until it merges with the Chico River at barangay Naneng.
The people live by tilling their own lands and the mountains nearby called "UMA" that means "kaingin". The kaingin practice is done every summer (March to May), because this is the most appropriate season for kaingins.
Labor is done thru "innabuyog" - meaning "bayanihan" to help each other clean and prepare the kaingin and plant it with rice until the rice crop is harvested. Summers are the happiest time of my life because of two things: every summer it’s either I stay in Taloctoc or I go to Baguio City. Either way, it was always fun for me.
It is also the time when relatives, kins and many people visit the quiet village to see nature, mingle with people and learn their culture. I am lucky that I got to meet a lot of people from different places with varied purpose, education and culture. I was always a when there are visiting dignitaries because my parents were both people who have large hearts and they love to entertain.
On rainy days the rivers gets high and isolates the place from the rest of the world. People are transported into the barrio using a raft made of bamboo (“pataw” – village dialect) when the water is high held by at least 5 men on its ends to balance and keep it from capsizing. The river gets cruel at times and quiet on summer time and when it is quiet, people enjoy its serenity and blueness.
On a summer when I chose to stay in Taloctoc, I join the grown- ups go to the kaingin and contribute whatever I can. My grandad would ask me to fetch water from the spring and with a gallon I would run down the cleared area of the kaingin and bring home fresh water.
I used to get scratches all over my feet and hands as I stumble on tree roots along the way, but these were nothing compared to the joy I feel for being with nature. (I am wishing I can enjoy that once again).
In the day time, I wear a straw hat to keep the raging sun rays from scorching me while bringing water to those tilling the mountains including my grandma and grandad. I can feel the heat and wind on my skin but I loved it all.
I would spend my summer in the mountains with my grandad and grandma. I enjoyed taking a bath in the undiluted spring water of the mountains in the early evenings and later watch the stars as they lace the skies with their beautiful glow. On a sunset, you can hear the sounds of the forest, and in the night the stillness of the Earth.
Before sundown, I go up the highest peak of where I am and view the vast tracks of lands and mountains that inspired me... the miracles of life.
In summers too, folks from the place would organize a fishing activity. This is done by changing the path of the water in the river to free up a part of it. The fishes that are in the freed- up part are left with little water to sustain them and that is when the people start picking these up.
If by coincidence I am at the river when that happens, I use to go and pick some fish too. The folks would say, that’s maestro’s daughter, let her be. They would even fill my container and send me home. My dad would say “do not do that again, it’s not proper” but I loved getting my feet wet catching fish in a shallow water.
I am a Baguio born but a taloctoc-bred kid until I was ready to move out to continue my studies. I am an Ilocano-Kalinga and Bontoc mix but an Igorot nevertheless. I left the village when I was 12 and never returned to this day. It was not because I didn’t want to but circumstances made it difficult for me.
It was such a nice experience to live with simple people. I grew up in an environment untainted by modern development.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
THE HINTERLANDS OF KALINGA : The beauty of flowers ......
THE HINTERLANDS OF KALINGA : The beauty of flowers ......: Flowers that heal the Heart.... Panagbenga 2017
Monday, May 16, 2016
A Genuine Igorot..
Many wonder how an Igorot looks. It seems being an Igorot in other peoples' minds is someone barbaric, uneducated and naive of the world. Mind you ladies and gentlemen, Igorots are English speakers what with the influence of Americans, they too know a lot about commerce, a trait from the Chinese and so on and so forth. Many are schooled in the best universities in the North of the Philippines. Many are acknowledged in their chosen fields.
Like this gentleman, a successful practitioner in local governance.
Mabuhay ang mga Igorot!
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