After our descend and good night socializing in the middle of a Filipino world class heritage, we all woke up to another exciting day. We started the day with sumptuous breakfast prepared by our coordinator and a few were not yet done with their breakfasts when our tour guide arrived. Yes, we have a tour guide to our next destination - Tappiya Falls!
The start of the hike is traversing the rice fields then go up to a view deck. Just like our descend from the school where our outreach was held, we did not want to join the crowd so we - Anne, Justin and I but this time with Jen who joined us in our room last night - immediately followed our tour guide.
When we were about half-way to the view deck, I looked down to see a few who haven't yet started the climb. Still trying to hold on to the air so as not to fall down? Maybe...
This was when I noticed the fields were not uniform. A portion is full of grasses, another has stalks of harvested rice, one is vacant and another has pitiful rice plants which, even from afar, look infested. I easily noticed the differences because it was not what I got used to during my childhood.
When we finally reached the view deck, this nature beauty presented right before my eyes! It is the more that I noticed the different patches of the fields. I was used to all-gold when harvest time is nearing, all-brown and water when the lands are empty and being tilled, or all-green with young rice plants. I am sure it will be lovelier to see these terraces in single color.
The next batch after us finally caught up. We asked our tour guide to take our group picture and this is what I got. Apology to those whose head were cut on the photo but it was not intentional. I was wrong to just take my phone back and go back to taking more photos without checking first our group photo. I could have asked for another shot. Anyway, at least I have this souvenir.
After the group photo, the others who just caught up got busy too with their phones and cameras. On the other hand, Anne asked that we move on. We asked our tour guide if we can go ahead and she agreed. She said the others can just follow us. She was saying that they won't get lost anyway since the way is not complicated. They just follow the concreted pathway. Yeah, right. The trail is concreted so that makes life of any hikers a lot easier.
At about one-third of our way down, we came across this thrift shop. It has the typical souvenir items in a tourist spot like key chains, ref magnets, trinkets, purse and more. What's unique in this store were the native products in the mountains like where we were at this point. They have the wood crafts like eagle and carabao table decor, paper holder, ash tray, wooden display utensils and those very cute rattan baskets.
"It is like a small and solo version of Maria Cristina Falls," was the first thing that came to my mind when I saw Tappiya Falls. With the steam-like splash of the water hitting the pool below, I had the impression that the volume of water coming down is really huge and heavy. That was the same observation I had with Maria Cristina Falls when my friend and I visited it years ago. It is a twin falls with very strong current that gave the government the opportunity to build hydroelectric plant beside it. Back then during our visit, one of the locals were saying that we were lucky because they released the water thus we had a sight to see. That is because sometimes, the government stops the flow of water and trap it into the hydroelectric plant. It is the primary source of electricity of industries in Iligan City.
Of course, the water volume of this Tappiya Falls is much much smaller as compared with Maria Cristina Falls but looking at its current, I can say that it is still strong enough to carry a human being along.
Then here comes the batch behind us. The three senior citizens were with them. The seniors were not able to keep with our pace that they went along with the rest. While they were having a commotion for photo shoots, we were already done and watching them instead.
... and I did my appreciation by taking photos here and there, including of a worm that majority would consider as a pest! This is just one of the worms that my mother would scare us to stay away from in the fields when we were young. She was saying the spikes would sting so we should never touch worms with the spikes. That kept me away from touching them but did not make me scared after all.
Looking down to my feet, I noticed these cute plants that look like ferns but small enough to be classified as moss. I did not know its name but what amused me to take a photo is how they lined up decorating a rock. These will be very nice to have in a home landscape. In the city, these will cost money and will not be cheap. Here, there are many of these around that one can take home as many as he wants for free. I can not help to think how one place has abundant supply of something while it is scarce in other places. If the locals can learn to earn from what they have, that will certainly help their way of living. However, on another thought, I'd rather that the locals leave these natures untouched.
When Anne noticed that I was not taking photos of myself, she volunteered to take mine. I said I am fine and declined her offer but she insisted. She took my phone and motioned me towards the edge of the platform.
"So how do you want me to pose? Just stand here and face you with the view at my back?" I asked her.
We were enjoying our photo shoots when a young local guy came and stood by. He was observing us. I started a conversation in Ilocano dialect as I was sure he will understand. I asked how many cropping do they have in a year and he said, "it depends." I asked further and I did not understand what he said. Oh well, he is just a teenager. He may help in the fields but my not care about cropping cycle.
Then he asked if we are with the tourists who lost their helicopter yesterday. Yes, he said the word helicopter so I stared at him.
"You mean there was helicopter crash here yesterday!?"
"Yes. There were foreigners who came here yesterday asking if we saw their helicopter. The very small one."
"Ahhhh! Drone!" I exclaimed. Not helicopter. I thought I would burst into laughter but for some reasons, the joke did not kick in.
"Why are they looking for their drone? What happened?" I asked instead.
"They said it ran out of battery power so it crashed somewhere."
I frowned at him. "Why would anyone fly a drone without making sure that it has enough power to fly?"
He laughed. "They said they forgot to re-charge last night."
I frowned all the more, and he laughed louder. We both understood the unspoken.
Not a soul from our fellow volunteers have shown up yet when we looked down behind the view deck. We decided to move on and get down.
Aside from catching insects, I was also observing the rice plants. It was a saddening sight because the grains were not good. They were infested by pests. Harvest will be bad and I can not help to think how bad the farmers will feel. It takes so much of hard labor to till the lands, plant the rice and take care of them, only to come to the end of not having anything to harvest.
When Anne came back to join me, I told her about my observation that the harvest will not be good for the owner of the field where we were standing on. She asked why.
"Look at the rice grains. They are not good. They were infested by insects."
"How did you know? How do you tell good from bad grains?"
She asked then how good grains would look like. I can not find a whole panicle with good grains so I told her that I will show her when I find one. What I showed her instead is this panicle with a pest camouflaging with the grains. Do you see the insect?
The rice grains are still young and supposed to be forming its content. But with the pest hovering over it, the grains were already consumed before it got matured. That dark brown grain has nothing in it anymore. That pest got them all. This is the challenge when you want to go organic and yet pests are the enemies. These little devils will not respect the thought of organic product for humans.
I hoped to find a panicle of good grains and show to Anne before we leave. I will keep an eye on the plants along the way while we are still in Batad.
The hike was so exciting that we had a great early morning exercise. When we got back to the inn, we immediately lined up to the bathrooms before the mob arrives. At least we were not competing with four bathrooms. Let the other 26 find their slots later on. We will see how fast we all can get ready for our trip back to Manila. It will be another climb, the reverse of our descend yesterday.
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