Cities We've Been

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Philippines - Manila to Cebu

Manila, Philippines Day 69 (April 9)

Manila, Philippine Map


Our timing is not so good, because this is Easter Holy Week, and all the travel agents and most stores are closed. Manila is mungbucket, and we can’t wait to leave. The book says there lots to like if you dig a bit deeper, but we spend the entire day between the hotel, convenience store, and internet café. Vana absolutely hates it; especially the children begging on the street. With every other business employing a security guard in front, I am guessing they have a crime problem.

With 7104 islands in the Philippines, Kevin’s head is ready to explode from reading the travel book we bought in Hong Kong. On facebook advice from Norwegian friends we met in Ko Phi Phi, we buy plane tickets to Cebu City, and book hotels to visit an outlying island for diving.

On the plus side, we make a lot of progress with our travel blog posts.

Manila City

Filipino breakfast - garlic rice, beef jerky and egg


Manila to Cebu City, Philippines Day 70 (April 10)

Philippines Map

We spend the morning in the internet café, and then fly to Cebu City, in the middle of the Visayas islands. Cebu is a large island, and manufacturing center. It’s a bit less mungbucket than Manila, but not by much. It’s Good Friday, and the ferries are not running, so we stay at the Fuente Pension House in uptown Cebu City. The only thing open for dinner is McDonalds, Pizza Hut, and a fast food Chinese chain restaurant.

Cebu city plane view

Cebu city - street scene (reminds me of of T.J., Mexico)

We look for it on the TV, but we don’t see any Good Friday news. In San Fernando Pampanga, volunteers are nailed to crosses and whipped until they bleed. We could have traveled there easily from Manila, but it didn’t sound that appealing to us.


Cebu City to Alona Beach, Panglao Island, Philippines Day 71 (April 11)

We take the 9:30AM ferry to Tagbilaran on Bohol, and then taxi to Alona beach on Panglao Island. When exiting the ferry, scores of naked children paddle to the dock, and unload to beg. This is the most shocking display of begging we’ve witnessed. The children look more like Monkeys than people, and we are speechless.

begging children with their parents

I realized two things after this experience.
  1. Birth control is one of the most important modern inventions.
  2. As the heavily Catholic influenced Filipino government shuns birth control, birth rates exceed economic growth, and the Philippines are in for several difficult decades.

On advice from our Norwegian facebook friends we stay at Cherrys House Too. Although five to ten minutes walk from the beach, it’s a very pleasant and clean hotel with swimming pool. Unfortunately, the food in the restaurant is really bad, aside from pancakes. I even throw up a ham sandwich and fries from lunch. This is the first time either of us gets sick from the food in Southeast Asia. We heard the food in the Philippines is really terrible, and so far it is true.

We’ve had several unpleasant travel days, but we catch up on our blog posts, and feedback from our friends makes us feel much better!

12 comments:

ksimpson said...

Too bad the end of your trip has you sick! I was actually thinking about you guys yesterday wondering if you were back yet. Guess not, see you soon!

Unknown said...

That's the only SE Asian country I have yet to visit, and it certainly doesn't sound to appealing after the blogpost. I'll still have to check it out someday!
Was their English ability good for the most part? Koreans and Japanese always study there, so am curious.

seth said...

jeez. ummm. go back to thailand maybe?

Marc McCotter said...

I've loved every post (and read a few of them a few times)! You two have inspired me to look into scuba diving, thank you! How many more days are you planning??!!

Kevin and Vana said...

Vana, just got your latest post.

Hope to see you and Kevin sometime soon.

Erich D.

Kevin and Vana said...

Hi,
Too bad about the beggars and poverty, that is the hard part about traveling to different countries. Make sure to watch your back and of course- your luggage. Makes you appreciate the things you have back here in the states.
I'm doing much more boring stuff in Santa Barbara, walks on the beach and watching the Matrix trilogy. I hard a weird dream on Sunday where I was in Southeast Asia and being kidnapped by pirates, similar to Somalia. It was a very weird dream.
Oh well, we careful, have fun and looking forward to seeing the two of you when you return back home to Santa Barbara.
By the way, if you are going to be in the USA August 16th and want to climb Mt. Whitney, a co-worker did the lottery and got 6 spots, she is looking for 4 more as she doubts her six will end up going.

Darren

Kevin and Vana said...

Hi Guys!

I loved the pics from your diving cert. Can’t wait to go diving with you someday soon. Charles and I wanted to go diving in Mexico for my B-day next month but because of this Swine Flu it’s not in our best interest to travel.

I love traveling vicariously through your pics.

Miss you much!

Nicole Pardini

Kevin and Vana said...

A great place not to be -- spent 3 months there when I was in marine corps ( back in early 60's most of that time spent in bars drinking San Miguel beer ( it was cheaper then US beer) and avoiding being stabbed with a butterfly knife -- I agree -- you're not missing much if you skip the whole place

Al Bradley

Kevin and Vana said...

Hi Vana!!

Guess what!!! I picked up the Bridesmaid dresses last weekend. they are SOOO pretty--the color is gorgeous and I love them. Linda, Susan and Dusty all really like them too. ;-) Yours is hanging safely in my closet for you when you are ready for it!

Guess what ELSE!! My mom and I ordered the invitations today!! We shopped around a lot, but ultimately ended up ordering them at Papyrus in the Paseo Nuevo mall. They had the best prices, and were super helpful. Didn't you get yours there too?

Exciting Stuff!!!

I hope you and Kevin are still enjoying your adventures. I sure do love reading your blogs, and I think about you guys VERY often.

haha, btw, my Kevin told me that you offered to keep the secret from me if he told you where we are honeymoon. But he didn't fall for it! haha, well, it was worth a shot. ;-) I'm having a lot of fun being in the dark about it. I know it will be awesome.

Muah!!
-Jess

Kevin and Vana said...

Hi,
Santa Barbara is having it fire season start early. Started near San Roque canyon, 2000 homes threatened, 1000 mandatory evacuations, 5000 voluntary and helicopters dumping water all through the night.
But the worse seems to be behind us, 420 acres burned and no homes lost.

Hope everything is going well with the trip. I haven't seen an email for a few days, which means everything is either going very well or not so good.

So, I hope you are in paradise away from the internet and having the time of your lives. Keep up the good work sharing your adventures.

Darren

Kevin and Vana said...

I'm so, so very relieved to hear that Vana and Kevin have left the Philippines alive, although perhaps not healthy.
As I mentioned in my earlier e-mail, I would not recommend that country to any traveling Westerner. While geography and topography are beautiful, the lack of infrastructure, dire poverty, and desperate means of survival are extremely shocking. Even more disturbing for me is the wide chasm between the ultra-rich (landed families and corrupt politicians, including the President herself) and the really dirt poor. You can almost visualize a French Revolution-like response, if only the Filipinos were not so passive (probably too starved and hungry to mount a revolution) and Catholic. What's interesting is that when I was growing up there, it seems I didn't have a social conscience because we used to see beggars in the streets, though perhaps not as in-your-face as today, when we were driven to school and it was like they were just part of the backdrop. When you see them day-in and day-out, you either become outraged or indifferent.

The thing is, if one were really insistent on exploring the country (I don't know why one would be when there are many other alternatives - my preference, Seychelles, Mauritius, Maldives, etc.), because it is practically third world, it is still cheap enough that one does not have to travel the Lonely Planet frugal way. Hiring a dedicated chauffered car while staying in a luxury hotel is still very inexpensive by Western standards. My sisters and I stay at a beautiful mahogany-paneled, marble bath suite in a hotel in a first-class commercial center near my mother's home and next door to the Asian Development Bank which is the Asian counterpart of the World Bank, with daily extensive Western/Philippine/Japanese buffet breakfast included, for the equivalent of $30/person/day! The chef knows us well and cooks dishes especially for us when we come down for breakfast. Absolutely no need to suffer. You can live like their ultra-rich do without denting your wallet, at least until the Revolution.

Anyway, scratch this off your and BJ's list of places to see.

Take care,

Isa

Kevin and Vana said...

Isa,

Here is first report from the Philippines.

Doesn't sound too cool.

On the upside, another e-mail today says they are now in Japan, staying with one of Vana's 1000 cousins and going on a hot spring trip with them.

So they survived the Philippines.

Ernie