Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Travels That Stirred The Love Of Wandering

The site and presence of the coconut trees gives an atmosphere so near to nature and family
When Jose Rizal was young, he was much pleased with the thought of travels. His journey started with his rides on a casco as he traversed Laguna de Bay and Pasig River. Like the young Pepe, we too have started a relationship with taking   trips. If the young Pepe started it out with a casco, how would that be for you? Would a trike ride stir up your awareness of wandering from one place to another? Did the trike ride strike you? Or was it just a simple stride along the beach that started you to crave for more beach walks. Beaches would run miles and stretches of shoreline.  A shoreline that has white sand with lots of shells and starfishes to collect and play with.






At what age did you start traveling? Age 1? 2? 3? 13? 18? 21? 30? What would it be then?  We may have varied experiences, and these catapulted us to long for more journeys to take. Let us then take a look at my own travels. While I was yet a grader, I enjoyed trips to the farm in Catumbal, Panabo. During the town fiesta, my mom would tag me along with cousins and her siblings. We usually stay overnight where all my cousins sleep on the second floor of the farmhouse. All lined up and cuddled on top of a “banig” or local mat made out of dried colored plant fibers and inside a mosquito net. The farmhouse was mostly surrounded with coconuts. Indeed, the industry that thrives with our farm tenants is “copra” or dried meat of the coconut. We also have lots of “buko” or coconut juice to partake along with other coconut by-products. Since it was a fiesta, palo sebo was the main attraction alongside hitting the pot. Oh, the grandeur of farm life seems to be unending. At breakfast, we partake of the so-called kapeng Barako which almost burned my tongue. The burning sensation lasted for almost a week, though. Of course, a fiesta won’t be named as one if we didn’t pay homage to the patron saint San Isidro Labrador.  Thus, the entire clan along with the other farm dwellers troop to the chapel for the town fiesta mass. Then the feast begins with games and much fiesta meal on the tables.

 


            Travels during those times seem to be unstoppable. We have to trek our way to the shore and with only our slippers on our feet we have to go through the sand and fight to save our slippers which seemingly sink in on the swampy area near the fishpond by the shore.  The trip was not via a casco, though; we traveled by car from Davao City Proper to Panabo City.

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