4/13/08

I’ve heard somewhere that if you shoot a roll of 24 or 36 exposures and from that 1 or 2 come out decent, then you should be happy already. Well, here’s the one shot that had me smiling on the way home from Megamall when I had my roll of Kodak Ultramax 400 developed at Fujifilm. In fact, as my token souvenir from my Caramoan trip, I had this shot printed 8″ x 12″ and is now taped to my photo wall.

While waiting for our jeep in Caramoan, there were three girls playing near us and this cute one caught my attention. She had these beautiful eyes and her hair leaked of sunlight.

Girl In Caramoan

Paslit
Caramoan, Camarines Sur

I’m off to Zambales later for a day trip! Gotta charge my batteries!

Not So Sepia

4/11/08

Before heading back to Manila, we got a chance to roam around Naga City primarily to buy pasalubong. Since I wasn’t too keen on buying, I just used the time to shoot some “city” scenes.  I desaturated these images and applied a sepia treatment to it in CS3.

Both Alike In Dignity

Both Alike In Dignity

In the market, I saw this stand selling small, plastic sachets containing different stuff like sulfur, methylene blue, incense and oxalic acid, to name a few. She was like a pharmacy micro-retailer.

Microeconomy

Microeconomy

Then, while looking for dinner, some 2 or 3 men walked by carrying big, shiny, red and white balloons.

Lobo

Lobo

Welcome to the Brown Parade

Eight hours via bus from Manila, Naga City is the provincial capital of Camarines Sur.

4/10/08

I learned digital photography before film and I wished it was the other way around. Still, it’s not too late to start learning a different craft, is it?

There were 47 of us in this trip and only two of us had film cameras, I had a Canon EOS SLR while Tin brought lomos. Most of the time, the others were puzzled why in this age of sophisticated digital technology, some people still shoot with no-frills film. One even commented, “Mukhang mas ginagamit mo yang film ah.” (Looks like you’re using the film cam more.)

I think film has a more organic feel to it, and the images are just warmer, especially on print. I’m a complete noob on film photography so for this trip I just used the all-around Kodak Ultramax 400.

Green Day

Green Day

What I like about film is that highlights are not easily blown. But I think this Kodak’s blues aren’t that sweet for landscapes. Or maybe it’s my cheap-ass CPL.

As Clear As Gin

As Clear As Gin

Their goggles are made with indigenous materials. Woot for Pinoy ingenuity!

Swim Meet

Swim Meet

To Market, To Market

To Market, To Market

A Stun Of Clouds

A Stun Of Clouds

While having these processed at Fuji in Megamall, I scanned the available films and got myself a Velvia 50 and a generic Superia 400. They say Fuji films produce better skin tones and the Velvia has wonderful colors.

I also saw Provia. What’s up with that?

4/9/08

Since Gota Beach beach and its surrounding areas are closed due to “massive development” we had to search for a different spot to camp during our ocular inspection trip about a month ago. Fifteen hours after the traffic at EDSA, we finally dipped our feet in the clear waters of Sitio Manlawi, Lahuy Island. This time, we were blessed with spectacular weather and a fairly interesting sunset.

Sa Wakas, Dagat

Sa Wakas, Dagat

Sitio Manlawi is actually a huge cove with clear, shallow waters that’s perfect for swimming. After eating lunch, almost everybody dove into the cool waters.

Vast

Vast

There are a few families, mostly fisherfolk, living on the Sitio. Here, a boy gamely poses for the camera.

Cool Off

Cool Off

We thought we’d have an uninteresting sunset but suddenly, all these colors sprung from behind the hills.

Washing

Washing

Explosions In The Sky

Explosions In The Sky

After this, the whole campsite was enveloped in a cloud of drunken stupor brought about by an overflowing supply of Ginebra San Miguel.

Good times.

Sitio Manlawi or bust!

More photos here.

4/8/08

Our trip to Caramoan involved an initial 8 to 9-hour bus ride to Sabang Port which is about an hour away from Naga City, the capital of the Province of Camarines Sur. From Sabang Port, we then embarked on a 2-hour ferry to Guijalo Port, which is Caramoan’s gateway. Because a weather disturbance had just passed, we encountered huge waves which made our sizable ferry bob up and down in hair-raising heights. At first it was fun and thrilling, the girls were even screaming as if they were in an amusement park thrill ride. Then nausea crept in and quieted them.

Porter

From Guijalo, our group boarded a jeep which transfered us to Bikal Port where we would ride another boat to our final destination.

Toploading

Agriscape

Our timing was off. When we got to Bikal Port, the tide was too low and our group’s boat was in the distance in deeper waters so we had to divide ourselves into groups of 4 or 5 and get into small boats which the fishermen painstakingly pushed against sand and silt.

Bikal Port

And The Sea

Low Tide

Steermaster

In the islands, we are all under the mercy of the sea.

Long weekend incoming. Have to escape the Manila heat.

Must escape Manila or will self-destruct. Good thing I’m headed for Caramoan, Camarines Sur tonight! I can already imagine the seemingly unending stretch of white sand. That photographic opportunity afforded by the emerging tidal pools during sunrise. The salty breeze. Enough, I’m feeling sandy already.

And then there’s the wakeboarding action at CWC in Pili.

Gonna be offline. Be back Tuesday.

Woot!

CAMSUR or BUST!

Guijalo Port, Caramoan

“Kuya Ced, nilalamig ka ba?” asked curiously by Joy one of our youthful guides.

It was close to dusk and I was sitting near the banca’s bow absorbing each and every splash as wave after wave pounded our wooden vessel. Without the benefit of a rain sheet, I was also being drenched by a freakish late afternoon downpour.

“Minsan. Halimbawa, ngayon.” I delicately replied.

At last, after a really long day, we finally parked our boat in Daraga, a small fishing village in Lahuy Island. This was where Leia, Mhef, Dondon and I were going to spend the night. We originally planned of setting up camp at one of the beaches we spotted but our guides insisted that we take up on their offer.

Several hours earlier we arrived at the town of Caramoan armed only with Mhef’s knowledge of the place having visited twice already and being a Bicolano herself. But Gota Beach, her usual go-to place was closed to the public because Survivor Asia was filming there. We found it kind of frustrating because the presence of a bunch of foreigners was denying access to travlers. It would’ve been okay if they picked an “isolated” island (true to the Survivor premise) but Gota Beach is what White Beach is to Puerto Galera. Puntahin kung baga. Even locals are barred from entering the premises. Even the fishermen who live there were rudely displaced. Something is seriously wrong here.

A Street in Caramoan

It’s a good thing there are so many places in Caramoan. All undiscovered.

We were instructed to come knocking on the mayor’s door. Unannounced, but having no choice, we dropped in anyway and came upon who probably is the kindest mayor ever. Considering we were total strangers, he opened up his home, fed us, gave us all the info we needed and even sent out his sister and 2 other municipal employees to serve as our guides. This was on a Saturday! Asking about the Gota Beach and the Survivor Asia issue, the mayor lamented that it was out of his hands as the orders are stern and direct from the governor himself, without coordination with the municipal government of Caramoan.

We were surprised to see the mayor and his siblings in Daraga. It turns out they had some sort of get-together at their ancestral home, a simple wooden house by the beach, also our shelter for the night. Famished from a whole day’s worth of island-hopping, we were thankful that we were eating hot rice, and ginataan at adobong posit under a roof instead of feeding on bread and canned goods in a cold, damp tent.

It was only when I looked at the mirror that I realized how burnt my skin was. And then I remembered how the sun worked its way starting from the 2-hour ferry from Sabang Port to Guijalo Port in Caramoan and continuing on to Lahuy Island and its surrounding islets, scanning for possible camp sites and places of interest for the Travel Factor group Leia plans to bring by the end of March.

Bangka

We first stopped at the backside of Lahuy, where a gold panning community exists. Ate Weng, who seemed to know everybody led the way into the barrio and showed us how gold was sifted from the sands, cleaned and then heated to solidify into a golden ball. I never expected to witness this from this trip but there it was!

We visited numerous other places, all of which had fine white sand and gin-clear waters. It was ironic that the Caramoan’s pristine beauty was beginning to be repetitive and redundant. But when we saw Sitio Manlawi, even from afar, we knew that it was going to be our camp site. Sitio Manlawi is a cove on Lahuy Island which at low tide, becomes a barren desert of white sand sprinkled randomly with driftwood, dotted with rocks and its surface sculpted with wavy lines created by the receding water. At this time, one has to walk ridiculously far from the shore just to have water at waist level. If only the weather had cooperated. Hay. Babalik naman ako eh.

I can just imagine Manlawi during sunrise. The sun will rise on the horizon and the coast will be exposed with puddles of water creating a rich, colorful reflection instead of a dull, underexposed foreground. One more time. Hay. Babalik naman ako eh.

Most of the villagers, the mayor included, have converged in a small shack nearby. Made with the simplest materials of nipa and used wooden boards, the humble establishment boasts of an ubiquitous Filipino contraption: a videoke machine. There is actually no electricity on the island. The machine is proudly powered by a diesel generator. They can live without refrigerators, television sets or radios. But they can’t live without their videoke.

It’s no surprise that this Caramoanon community can carry a tune. Everybody seems to have their own masterpieces! Mayor Cordial’s seems to be Larawang Kupas as he didn’t even need to look at the lyrics, belting away like a pro. As the countless five-peso coins clinked to every well-performed song, so did the bottles of Gran Matador and Ginebra which almost surely, plunged the whole place into a drunken cloud. Us, most definitely included as there only about 3-4 of us downing two Ginebra 4×4s. Take this: no ice, no chaser.

And then they began to play “Touch By Touch”, a quirky, somewhat irritating, ancient dance song. This drove the lolas to the “dance floor” grinding with reckless abandon. Pretty soon, they were pulling us in as they desperately needed dance partners. The village men cheered on, amused by the sight of pit-drunk Manileños who gamely drank with them. And then they played “Touch by Touch” again. And again. And yet again.

More photos at my Multiply account.

Powered by WordPress Skins and skD Theme