Showing posts with label philippines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philippines. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

squirrel at fort mckinley

ever since i was a kid 
i always dream of 
having a 
squirrel as a pet


i always look 
for their pictures 
on magazine
and Internet






i even plan to go 
to
the places
where squirrels
live
when i grew up





all i want is to see a 
live
squirrel as my childhood dreams





i want to see them 
playing out some nuts
jumping from trees to trees
moving like a splash of water






but 
just a while ago





the day after




my birthday





November 15 2011
Tuesday at 8:45 am






while  i was 
in a cab


bored to death 
due to heavy traffic






i saw this....





















wish granted!=)





Monday, October 24, 2011

worlds best island

Because of whats happening in the Philippines this few weeks, months and years  ,
 Philippines name become smelly like a stagnant canal, 










from the worst airport in the world,












 to a one of the most corrupted country in Asia,








 and some of the worst label for the country  










and then my face enlighten like a candle in the dark, when i saw this article:







http://travel.yahoo.com/p-interests-40804393












because 








 behind  every darkness there's  a light that hiding in the clouds
behind every bitch , is the man who make her that way .



























Top 10 worlds best island.. ito ang top 10 list


No. 1 Santorini, Greece












No. 2 Bali, Indonesia










No. 3 Cape Breton, Canada 






No. 4 Boracay, Philippines








No. 5 Great Barrier Reef, Australia








No. 6 Sicily, Italy 







No. 7 Big Island, Hawaii









No. 8 Kauai, Hawaii








No. 9 Maui, Hawaii





No. 10 Galápagos, Ecuador



courtesy of :

Travel + Leisure readers pick the world’s best islands for your next warm-weather getaway.
By Jennifer Miranda 


Friday, May 06, 2011

IN SOME POINT, FILIPINO ARE STILL HOSPITABLE.


THE COUPLES JOURNEY AROUND THE WORLD

 Dailymail.com.uk

For most families, a long car journey is the bane of any trip.
But for the Zapp's, their 83-year-old vehicle has become a home for the last 11 years, as they travel around the world on a never ending trip of a lifetime.
Spanning four continents, Herman and Candelaria Zapp have covered an incredible 142,000 miles  while becoming parents to Pampa, eight, Tehue, five, Paloma, three and Wallaby, one.
Long way round: The Zapp family has grown on the journey. (L - R) The Zapp family Herman, Pampa,Candelaria holding baby Wallaby, and Tehue pose in front of their 1928 Graham-Paige vintage car in 2009 in Australia
Long way round: The Zapp family has grown on the journey. (L - R) The Zapp family Herman, Pampa,Candelaria holding baby Wallaby, and Tehue pose in front of their 1928 Graham-Paige vintage car in 2009 in Australia
Intrepid: The couple have faced many obstacles on their continuous journey. Here Herman Zapp balances the 1928 Graham-Paige vintage car in 2000 as it is ferried across the Amazon.
Intrepid: The couple have faced many obstacles on their continuous journey. Here Herman Zapp balances the 1928 Graham-Paige vintage car in 2000 as it is ferried across the Amazon.
Instead of returning home to buy a house, the couple decided to keep driving and show their family the sights of the world.
Former IT specialist Herman, 42, and his wife Candelaria, 40, set off from Argentina in 2000 and began driving across South and North America, as well as Australia, New Zealand and now Asia.
Herman, who was born in San Francisco, moved to Argentina to work on his grandfather's cattle ranch when he was a boy.
While in Argentina, 10-year-old Herman met his child hood sweet-heart Candelaria when she was only 8, and the couple have been together ever since.
They married in 1996.
When the money quickly ran out on their first trip, they decided to rely on the kindness of other people who give them shelter, food and petrol.
'We were happy, we had everything a young couple could want, but we felt we had to go,' said Herman, currently in the Philippines with his family.
'My grandfather knew that we wanted to travel and to never stop so he gave me the old Graham-Paige car he used on his farm and gave me some advice.
'He told me, 'If you want to get far, you need to go slowly', so what could be better than a vintage car.'
Arid: Herman and Candelaria Zapp in 2000 in the Atacama Desert, Chile. The picture was taken on their first jaunt before their children were born. They say there is no plan to end the journey yet
Arid: Herman and Candelaria Zapp in 2000 in the Atacama Desert, Chile. The picture was taken on their first jaunt before their children were born. They say there is no plan to end the journey yet

A map of the Zapp family's first trip from Argentina to Alaska
The only hard rule the couple have to stick by is the 40 mile per hour speed limit the 83-year old car is restricted to.
The Zapp family are always on the move, only stopping for short periods on their journey.
They began in 2000, setting off from Patagonia, Argentina to Alaska.
After returning to Argentina in 2004, they settled down for a couple of weeks before deciding that they missed travelling too much and had to get going again.
They have been travelling ever since, with a trip around South America between 2005 and 2007, then central America, the U.S. and Canada until 2009.
The car was shipped to Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea as they travelled those countries and they are currently in the Philippines on a tour of South East Asia.  
The longest they have spent in any one country was the 13 month trip around the U.S. in 2008-9.
Journey: the couple are currently in the Philippines after travelling through Japan and Seoul
Journey: the couple are currently in the Philippines after travelling through Japan and Seoul
Family: Candelaria Zapp holding baby Wallaby, Tehue, Pampa and Paloma Zapp eating lunch in 2009 in the Western Australian Outback.
Family: Candelaria Zapp holding baby Wallaby, Tehue, Pampa and Paloma Zapp eating lunch in 2009 in the Western Australian Outback.
Remarkably, each of their kids has a different nationality, with Pampa, eight, being born in Greensboro, North Carolina, Tehue, five, being born in Argentina, Paloma, three, a native of Vancouver Island and little Wallaby, one, obviously from Australia.
Each night the six Zapps either sleep in or around a tent set up next to their car, but more often than not they find a friendly local who will put them up for the night.
'This isn't just a feat by my wife and my young family,' said Herman.
'This has a roll call of 12,000 people who have helped my family over the past 11 years.
'Almost 90 percent of the time we stay in people's homes.
'Once in the Philippines we were in a family's home which had only one room.
'They gave us their only piece of meat to eat, their only bed and when we left they apologised for not having more.'
Home: Baby Pampa resting on the family car in 2002 in Washington D.C. The car has become home for the Zapp family and their four children
Home: Baby Pampa resting on the family car in 2002 in Washington D.C. The car has become home for the Zapp family and their four children
Only the beginning: The family celebrate the end of their first trip from Argentina to Alasaka in 2002.
Only the beginning: The family celebrate the end of their first trip from Argentina to Alasaka in 2002.
The children are home schooled by their parents through an on-line service that gives them a regularly updated curriculum.
Every time they stop and are near a computer they print off the latest classes and teach them to their kids.
'What better way is there for my children to be educated than to see the world,' said Herman.
They see the kangaroo jump and a grizzly bear roar in their natural environment.
'My children have seen the space shuttle take off and have learnt different words in different languages and experienced so many different cultures.'
During the first trip to Alaska they printed the first book, Dream Chaser, which was the best selling book of the International Book Fair of Costa Rica.
The couple sold 12,000 copies since and their second, 'Spark Your Dream', is a best seller in Argentina following its 2005 publication.
And as for any plans of stopping - 'We have driven almost the distance to The Moon from Earth and we aim to keep going,' Herman said.



Tuesday, May 03, 2011

MORIONES at ang MARINDUQUE

april 20 2011to april 24 2011, kasama ng walo kung malalapit na kaibigan ay naglakbay patungong marinduque upang magbakasyon, na ang dala ko lang na budget ay P3,000...alright sisimulan ko ang mga ginastos ko mula sa bahay namin hanggang makarating santa cruz,. marinduque at hanggang pagbalik sa manila......break it down yow.......


jeep from house to guadalupe..................................11.00
bus guadalupe to kamuning (JAM liner) ..................20.00
kamuning to lucena (pier)........................................227.50
lucena (roro) to marinduque (pier)...........................210 (ordinary)..310.00(aircon)
terminal fee.............................................................30.00
pier to sta. cruz (bahay)...........................................30.00 (*each)
food from day 1 to day 2.........................................175.00
souvenirs.................................................................385.00
dried foods(*pasalubong)........................................240.00
alcoholic drinks.......................................................100.00
tricycle to pier..........................................................30.00 (*each)
boat to the unknown island.......................................50.00
foods and other drinks..............................................100.00
boat to pier again......................................................50.00
tricycle to bahay........................................................30.00
tricycle to pier...........................................................30.00
marinduque to lucena (*roro).....................................210 (ordinary)..310.00(aircon)
lucena to mandaluyong...............................................210.00
guadalupe to my house................................................11.00
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Total...........................................................................P.2379.5




-----------------Ngayun sulit ba ang P2329.5?----------------
-----------------Uulit ka pa ba?----------------



Ito ang mga larawan

maskara =P 5000

tel, lala, morion, meng, jemar

jump shot

lakad para mamalengke

resort ni congressman

pier

meng ang jemar


nagprusisyon ng lasing

palo maria


welcome banner

simbahan







3 musketeers ,ayy morion pla lols

RORA asawa ng RORO -carla "lala" padua

palo maria beach

pulot mode muna si  bossing..

palo maria 1

palo maria 2


palo maria 3




friendly morion






key chain = P 25











survivor?










-----------------Ngayun sulit ba ang P2329.5?----------------
OO, NAMAN

-----------------Uulit ka pa ba?----------------
SYEMPRE