Thursday, June 29, 2006

The Adventurer's Handbook

When it rains, it pours. Meaning, sometimes, you get what you need just when you need it. So to spread a bit of goodwill, I'd like to share one of the fun books I've read, with the hope that you'll enjoy it as much as I have.


The Adventurer's Handbook
by Mick Conefrey
published March 2006

This was one of those "impulse" buy books...those books you don't really look for, and don't really plan on buying.

At that time, I was in a bookstore looking for a slim light-weight book to buy so I can kill time while waiting for a flight. But as I was browsing through the bookstore, I came across this book and got intrigued by the title. Surely, it would be one of those boring self-help books ("life lessons" nga). But the magic word ("adventure") was there, so I gingerly took the book from the shelf and browsed through the pages.

The book is a collection of different anecdotes and stories from the glory days of Exploration. As Amazon.com describes the book, it is "a powerful punch of self-help, how-to, popular history, and humor....Mick Conefrey takes a new look at the larger-than-life tales of many famous American and European adventurers." The descriptions of the adventures are funny (and factual), there is tongue-in-cheek humor there, plus real life lessons on forming teams and planning ahead. What caught my attention then was the section on the difficulties that women explorers then encountered with regards to attire...how difficult would it be to hike up Everest in a skirt? There are numerous other anecdotes about explorations to the Antarctic, the numerous failed Everest expeditions, expeditions through the Sahara and the Australian desert. These are funny, insightful, and bite-sized stories that you can read and come back to again and again.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Surviving on Coffee

...or what to do with $500...

I am very sleepy, thus the title. Hindi ba obvious? Gusto ko ng kape pero tinatamad ako magtimpla. Plus kelangan ko pa tuloy maghugas ng baso, dahil wala na akong iinuman. I am also a bit broke, and I can think of many uses for $500:

1. bayaran ang amex bill
2. upgrade my pc!
3. buy a new cellphone unit!
4. upgrade the car stereo!
5. save it

Haha. So there. That's why I love me. Ang labo ko rin minsan. In the meantime, excuse me while I go wash the dishes first.

Monday, June 26, 2006

Alaena's First




Alaena Guela's First Birthday Party...it was a cool luau party for Jasper & Jinky's beautiful baby girl. After the kids (the real ones) had their fun, the old kids had fun too.

Mocorro Tan Wedding

In Fervent Prayer

***Mocorro-Tan Nuptial photos here***

It was a solemn wedding and the church was packed full with friends and relatives of the couple. Nuestra Senora de Gracia church in Guadalupe (near Loyola Memorial) is a beautiful stone church that evokes images of old history...I have no idea how old the church is, but the stained glass windows and old stone structure lends to that effect. It's a fairly narrow church, with only two columns of pews as compared to the usual three or four columns found in most big churches. On this rainy Sunday, the lives of my former officemate Dennis Mocorro and his girlfriend Cindy Tan were united as one.

Reception followed at the New World Hotel in Makati...lots of good food and desserts. Hehe. Also saw some common friends from UTREK who are members of SOLV. The couple will eventually be going back to Singapore to build their new lives there. God bless!

Friday, June 23, 2006

When In Montalban

visit venue92 bar
** drinks, food, bands, stand-up comedians

Venue92 is located near Roosevelt Highschool in Rodriguez (Montalban), Rizal. From Cubao, take an FX going to Montalban and ask the driver to drop you off at the "highway" (The landmark would be a Mercury Drug store on the right side, and a BPI Family Bank across the street.) Then take a tricycle and tell the driver to drop you off at "venue92". If they tell you they do not know, then tell them "sa roosevelt high school". Venue is located at the corner.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Island Spa

Last Christmas, I won a complimentary full body massage at Island Spa. Six months after, I finally took the time to try out the facilities at this spa that UTREK's Judy manages.

First impression: What?? A spa in the floor below IO KTV? Isn't this where the old Don Henrico's resto was? I had visited IO KTV many times and totally ignored this space, for some weird reason dismissing it as something meant for Japanese tourists.

But it turns out the facilities here are really nice. There are individual rooms and rooms for couples, all nicely decorated, private, and complete with a flat screen TV in each room. They serve complimentary ginger tea before and after your massage, and wet floor facilities (shower, sauna) are included in the full body massage package. All this for the fairly reasonable price of 550 pesos (for the full body massage). On a separate occasion, we also tried the foot massage, and it was the best -- just perfect after a hard day of hiking or walking around the metro. There's also a mini cafe where you can wait, and lately, a hair salon.

So if you're on the lookout for a spa around the Makati area, try out Island Spa in Jupiter.

** ISLAND SPA is open daily from 1230pm-1230am, and located at the 2nd flr, Jupiter Place bldg., 136 Jupiter St., Bel Air, Makati. Tel# 8991234; 7518296.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Travelogue - Macau HK

Some travel memories stick with you. Like stepping out into the wide open spaces of Utah with fellow wide-eyed travellers, or drinking cold 5-peso beer with backpackers in Hanoi, or hiking in Sagada, diving in Coron and my very first trip to Boracay.

Two weeks ago we went wreck diving in Subic, and all I can say is, diving through the holes and windows of ship wrecks is the closest thing I have felt to flying. Sure, I felt like a dog doing tricks and jumping through hoops, and swimming 90 feet below sea level is hardly what you can call the closest thing to flying, but I really felt like I was floating out there. And for 750 pesos a dive, the experience was well worth it.

So when I have to remind myself why I am currently living beyond my means, this is what I hold on to. The promise of a life well lived. The lure of living in the moment, of seizing every opportunity, of not being a slave to what society dictates should be the priority. The fulfillment of having done the best that I can, in the way that I wanted to. In simpler words, what the heck, I tried to be happy.

Of course, travel is best experienced with someone. Sweet dreams are made of these, memories and shared dreams. Over the weekend, we boarded a Tiger Airways flight to Macau. It was my second time to go to Macau this year. The first time though, will always be special. This time around, I arrived in Macau and met up with my friends (Jao and Wacks) who were there a day before me. We were supposed to meet at the Fisherman's Wharf area...and so from the airport I boarded the airport bus without even knowing for sure if the bus would be passing through Fisherman's Wharf! More than 30 minutes into the bus ride, I was praying "Please God, let it pass near Fisherman's Wharf". And guess what, next thing I knew the next stop was Fisherman's Wharf. Talk about coincidences and blessings!

In Macau we stayed at Auguster's Lodge near Casino Lisboa and Senado Square. The owner's wife was Filipina, and though the bathroom was common, the bedrooms were clean and well maintained. During the next few days we travelled via ferry to Hongkong and visited Disneyland, Ocean Park and several other HK tourist spots. In Hongkong, we stayed at the relatively cheap Joy Guesthouse in the Sham Shui Po area. At HK$ 225 each night for three people, it was relatively a bargain (as compared to HK$ 450 in the Causeway Bay area). The place was clean and had its own toilet in the room, although the rooms were smallish, similar to most Hongkong guesthouses. There was also a slighty suspicious chicken-poop smell sometimes, but after a few minutes the aircon masks the smell (either that or your nose will get used to it).

Back in Macau we spent a lot of time snapping pictures at the Macau Tower. We contemplated whether or not to do the SkyWalk (where you can walk on the edge of the tower), but the couple we saw doing the SkyWalk were a bit bored. The SkyJump though was out of our budget already.

We also spent some time getting lost in the bus. It turns out the buses have a different route going to one place, and another route when doing the reverse trip.

During our last night we gave in and ate a hearty dinner at one of the Portuguese restaurants at Taipa Village, ordering curry crabs, baked mussels and fried rice.

Macau-HK photos at my Multiply site.

Looking back, it was a miracle we survived such a hectic IT. Imagine, going to Lantau Island in the morning to view the biggest Buddha (which we didn't get to see because of the super thick fog), and then spending the whole afternoon in Ocean Park, having dinner at the Causeway Bay area, then going via Star Ferry to the Tsim Sha Tsui area and walking around the Avenue of Stars. Our first day in Hongkong was no different...upon arriving at HK after lunch, we were greeted by rain, rain and more rain. Finally we were able to board the bus towards Sham Shui Po, then we walked and finally arrived at the hostel. Leaving our bags there, we proceeded to Disneyland, spent the afternoon til early evening there, catching the fireworks and going straight to the night markets afterwards. And then onwards to Lan Kwai Fong to sample the expat nightlife. Since it was "expat" nightlife, of course the prices were expensive. We ended up buying beer at 7-11 and hanging out like the jologs we were. We did almost everything listed in our IT, except for Victoria Peak (too foggy), and Coloane Island tour (lack of time).

On the plane ride back to Manila, there were dragonboat rowers from Manila Dragons on the flight. They just came in from a competition in Guangzhou, and were bringing with them their dark blue Nike sponsored jackets and winner trophies.

Which reminds me...I haven't rowed in a looong while either. And with me spending another late night, I doubt I'll be able to wake up early later to row.

Oh well, there's always next time.

Macau - Taipa and Senado Square




Midnight Thoughts

Man, I am tired. Just juggling the math in my head makes me want to give up and throw in the towel.

Time passes quickly...too quick sometimes.

But we survive...we have to anyway. As Pico Iyer mentions in the only piece I have read so far, Manila has a "wistful desperation". And maybe I am wistful...and bordering on desperate.

But we make do. And we try to live in the moment....because otherwise, we'd go crazy and write a blog post at 1 in the morning.

So...I am thankful for every blessing that I have.

We travel, initially, to lose ourselves; and we travel, next, to find ourselves...

Abroad, we are wonderfully free of caste and job and standing...And precisely because we are clarified in this way, and freed of inessential labels, we have the opportunity to come into contact with more essential parts of ourselves

And if travel is like love, it is, in the end, mostly because it's a heightened state of awareness, in which we are mindful, receptive, undimmed by familiarity and ready to be transformed.

That is why the best trips, like the best love affairs, never really end.

"Why We Travel", by Pico Iyer

HK Ocean Park




Popular Posts