After a gorgeous ride, a sporadically rainy hour and change later I arrive at Puerto Galera; it was beautiful. All of the scuba diving departs from Sabang port, but my hostel was a big hill and small village away in Sinandias. Getting used to the Philippines here, I took an Advanced Open-Water dive course and enjoyed getting stuck as a typhoon in the southern seas passed, cancelling all of the ferry rides.
I made some great friends on Mindoro. After buying bananas from the closest stand to my hostel two days in a row, some young guys invited me into the stand for gin and pulutang (snacks or appetizers) on the third day. Feeling that 9:30 or 10:00 is a little early for shots of gin, I join imagining I'll leave after a few minutes. Apparently one of the guy's mother owns the stand and bananas but he was running the shop that day because he wasn't working a taxi.
The Philippine style of drinking involves one bottle of rum or gin, one shot glass, and pulutang. You pour our own alcohol into the cup, drink it, and then pass the bottle and cup around to the next person. This goes on until the bottle is empty to which another is opened, or someone runs to the store to buy more. I think the culturally appropriate way to participate but not be drunk as a skunk before noon is, when the bottle and cup come around to you, pour yourself just a trace of gin. The idea of a small shot or partial shot doesn't inspire the ridicule and jokes it would in the US. So several hours, bottles, bananas, and pulutang later I have three new friends that I will remember for life. Being quite close to Christmas, many businesses and organizations are having Christmas parties. So soon after making new friends, I get invitations to a pair of Christmas parties the very next day. Agreeing to join, I wake up early the next morning, rent a scooter for the day, meet up with one of the guys and head out.
We pick up another one of the guys and his wife and then start a long ride along the beautiful and windy coastline back towards Calapan. Almost half way there we turn inland and the hills, trees, and wind all turn into wide quiet valleys filled with rice paddies and old farmers working their carabao with egrets or storks filtered here and there. Further in, the evidence that this is a less-developed or third-world area sets in. Virtually no technology is present within sight. Just a single power line running through open bamboo houses and warped tin shingle roofs; kids playing with a patched soccer ball in the middle of the street, laughing like the happy ones at Hope Elementary School during recess. The pavement ends and we park the bikes. We still haven't arrived so a 10 or 15 minute walk through the jungle is necessary. Thinking we'll get lost and then have to draw straws to see who to sacrifice for the rest, I get reassured with "follow the power line." We went to where the power line (and trail) ended; I don't think I'd ever seen the end of a power line--it gives a strange feeling. Despite being on the last fringe of civilization, the house was well maintained and even had a karaoke machine running for every one's enjoyment. My new friend was part of a group called the guardians, and it was their Christmas party I was attending. An entire pig was chopped and cooked up along with a handful of other dishes. I was requested to sing karaoke all the time, although I never figured out if it was because they thought I would enjoy it, or if they wanted to hear popular songs with an authentic American accent. After a great meal, many smiles, and many handshakes my second friend and I left the first friend and his wife there to attend his company's Christmas party back in town.
The second party is much smaller and is at a nice hotel. Karaoke is the still present, and I must say, generally speaking, Filipino people love to sing love-songs. Heavy rains that evening so several hours later I ride back slow enough that the rain hitting my eyes doesn't hurt, which is also slow enough to be drenched to the bone with the warmth of a Philippine storm.
The Filipino language is by far the oddest combination of others I've heard. There is a very SE Asian island language at its core, but so much borrowed language from English, Spanish, and I think even Arabic. Even the illiterate can speak numerous words in English, and most signs (government and commercial) and advertisements have various English words on them. Many nouns like table, chair, fork, and the days of the week are all accented Spanish, and even to say "how are you" is "kamusta ka." I don't know if Arabic has had any influence on its language, but thank you is "salamat" and there is a strong feeling in my ignorant mind that much more Arabic is perfused throughout the Filipino language.
There's a trick when you're getting used to traveling in the Philippines, it's quite funny. Everyone says everything runs on "Philippine Time" which is later than scheduled. So expect to wait if you're early, and if you're late, the bus or boat will still probably be there. So when I was early for the ferry across the unpaved section of the north I had to wait for a very long time. After spending the afternoon and night in a small town with hardly any tourism (I felt like a celebrity walking down the one paved road of the town as everyone under the age of 30 waved at me saying hi) and miles of gorgeous coastline, this Philippine Time came to my advantage. I woke at 5:00 caught a van going south at 5:20, and got to San Jose at 8:20. Online the ferry to Coron was supposed to leave at 8:00, but a tricycle driver says it's leaving at 8:30 or 9:00. Thinking I'm about to get swindled I hop into the sidecar in hopes of getting out of the extremely industrial and impoverished San Jose that day. We get to the port at 8:40 and I still get a ticket for the ferry with enough time to buy a few snacks up the road.
There is one traveler I am comically bound to, Mohamed Chenine. After unintentionally staying in the same 4 hostels in Mexico we opted to travel to Guatemala together (it was already both our plans). This time, only knowing that we're both going to be landing in Manila within 2 days of each other and plan to go south from there, we both end up on the same ferry from San Jose to Coron on the same day. He's traveling with another Frenchman he'd met in Manila and so the three of us enjoy the sights and sounds of Christmas in Coron.
After a few days Mohamed's friend, Tim, got sick and was living by the toilet and suffering at both ends. I got a low-grade fever, lost my appetite, and felt very lucky in comparison. After recovering from illness, Tim's luck continued to roll in the doldrums as his scooter slide from under him when turning on some gravel. Unable to bend his left knee we continue with our plans to boat to El Nido the next day. Tim opts to go to the tiny ER in El Nido and gets an X-ray; 99% chance a small part of the tibia has chipped off from the rest, and 1% chance a small pebble has lodged itself in front of Tim's tibia.
A few beautiful days in El Nido and a few more in Puerto Princesa and I've almost run out of time on my visa in the Philippines. I can say that the Puerto Princesa Underground River maybe one of the 7 new wonders of the natural world, but the tour the public is allowed to go on doesn't warrant that acclaim. Also, a great story about NYE 2018 could be told, but that one is best in person. A solemn farewell to the small tropical towns of Palawan and a return to Manila to catch a late flight to Vietnam. Stay tuned.
David: What a fantastic adventure! The Filipino people looked out for you. The karaoke scene was funny. I can't imagine you singing karaoke much less singing in the jungle. I guess you are in Vietnam about now. I enjoyed this posting so much. Stay safe. dad
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