Sunday, December 31, 2006
Lenox is home
Two proud grandmothers and a great-grandmother.
Click here for a slideshow with more pictures of Lenox's first 2 days.
Saturday, December 30, 2006
My nephew is here!
Friday, December 22, 2006
Sunset in Bagabag, Philippines
Bagabag to Old Manila, Philippines
I've been back in the states for a few days now, but have a few more pictures to post from my travels. I'll explain a little what you'll see in the slideshow that shows the contrast of life in the
The first pictures are of rice drying. Since the road provides a nice sunny flat space, there’s often rice there, it doesn’t seem to bother them if it’s actually in the road and cars must drive around it. We also passed several funerals. They are frequently on Saturdays when everyone is available to attend. The barricades in the road are often found near schools. I’m not sure that causing both directions of traffic to share one lane and weave around them is the most effective way to slow traffic down, but that’s what they do. I’m convinced the mountain pass is the world’s birds nest fern capitol. I’m not sure if they grown them and sell them or what, but they are plentiful. The rice fields traditionally were plowed using caribou, but now you often see motorized plows which can also be hitched to a cart and driven to town.
Molly is enjoying her merienda (snack) at Jolibee, the common fast food restaurant that’s even found in the small towns. Its menu includes the every popular rice, fried chicken and spaghetti along with the French fries and other more typical fast food. I would never have expected fried chicken and spaghetti to be such favorites.
Rice is still planted by hand; it looks like back breaking work, not to mention hot. And, the popular sport is basketball; you’ll see a court of some sort in every town and school.
In Old Manila we saw parts of the Spanish settlement:
Finally, are the most familiar sights in
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Solano, Philippines
The many faces of Molly
Friday, December 08, 2006
Baguio, Philippines
Here's the slideshow of our trip.
This is the Stallsmith's house and if you look closely you can see Molly and Ida, the helper, out waving goodby to us. The little house I'm staying in is next door.
These are some of the many rice fields we flew over. The view was fantastic!
We shopped and shopped for bargains in the market - till we ran out of pesos! Here Sarah is buying asparagus, something you can't find in Bagabag.
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
Tagaytay, Philippines
We left the guest house in Manila early and drove south to see the Volcano Taal with a stop to see the world’s only bamboo pipe organ. We also had a wonderful lunch at Sonya’s Bed and Breakfast, also in Tagaytay. The gardens were gorgeous and they grew the lettuce for the salad right there.
In the slideshow you’ll see the Stallsmith family enjoying a treat of Starbucks on Manila Bay, street scenes on the drive to the church with the bamboo organ, lunch at Sonya’s Bed and Breakfast, volcano Taal, a roadside nursery in Tagaytay, a pineapple field on the drive back and school kids boarding a Jeepney. Jeepneys and tricycles are very common forms of transportation and are everywhere, like cabs in NYC. The last slide is coming into Manila. The metal structure is a billboard – which are huge and everywhere – with the sign taken down for the typhoon season.
Frankfurt, Germany and Corregidor, Philippines
My first day in Manila Glenn, Sarah, the girls(Catherine, Madeline and Molly)and I took a boat over for a tour of Corregidor Island. It was a significant spot in many wars as it is located at the entrance to Manila Bay. The Spanish Lighthouse remains, but all the buildings built by the Americans during World War II are crumbling. This picture is of the movie theater that once entertained thousands of American soldiers. We had lunch at the hotel on the Island. The drink is buko pandan (translated young coconut and leaf - the coconut you can see, the green color is from a leaf). Here's a slideshow of Corregidor.