Friday, May 2, 2014

Ongoing Yolanda Relief Work

While I have left the Philippines, I was struck by a news story that flashed before me at the ferry terminal in Ormoc: "Corpses are still being recovered in Tacloban." It was four months after Super Typhoon Yolanda blasted through Tacloban City and bodies were still being found and people were still lining up for rice and food rations.
Feet dangling from the top of a jeepney on the way home from work.
© 2014 Andrea Rip

Tacloban, the area hardest hit by Yolanda, is All Hands' next area of concentration. When I left, there was a small group of six to eight people setting up a new base there and getting started on a major neighborhood rebuild project. With a number of projects to be completed between Ormoc and Kananga, All Hands was following through on their commitments to the area I served in before moving everyone to Tacloban.

While parts of the Island Leyte are getting electricity, each home and business has to pay to reconnect to the lines - and with little business income after the storm, this can be impossible for many. Depending on the size of the home, it could be P400 (~$10USD), but too much for many on the Island.

Despite rainy season's end at the beginning of February, mid-March tropical storms and a small typhoon have dampened a week's worth of work. When people are living in temporary cardboard, plywood, tarpaulin, and tin huts, the extra and unseasonable rain and wind makes for difficult circumstances. One of All Hands' teams in the mountains was virtually rained out of a weeks worth of work in their wind torn tents with battered equipment.

This is the reality of working in the Philippines and serves as a reminder to stay aware of people who need help: Please do not forget the Philippines.

A sign I spotted in Ormoc: "Ormoc is now HOPEFUL and We are THANKFUL
to YOU generous PEOPLE."
© 2014 Andrea Rip
Yolanda was a wicked and destructive storm and the work is far from over. There is so much work to be done yet - so many homes (temporary and permanent) to be built, unsafe structures to be taken down, people who need food, and families who need their livelihood back. My All Hands donation site is closed now, but here are several ways you can still donate if you are able:
A recent update (with a video) from All Hands puts some numbers to the Project:
"We established Project Leyte in late November, and since then we have assisted 2,998 families, and 22,571 people total, in the recovery...we have relied on 6,550 days of donated labor by 286 volunteers from 32 countries around the world."

One of the women who joined Project Leyte, Chloe "Crutches" Lyttle, with her 19 Toes Productions, put together a beautiful video that summarizes what our Project looked like: Hard work, cute kids, and occasionally a little play.

Riding back from work on the back of a jeepney.
Photo Credit: René Serrano
I returned grateful for the work I was able to contribute in the Philippines; amazed at the hard working, peculiar, and beautiful people who were part of this experience; simply incredulous at the amount of resilience and number of smiles I saw from the Filipino people; relieved that I returned without major injury; and without words to describe the thankfulness I have for all those of you who supported my trip with their money, positive thoughts, and their prayers.

Amen!





Thursday, May 1, 2014

Swimming with Whale Sharks

Up well before the sun thought about rising, I witnessed it's beauty from my
bus window on my way to Oslob on the Island of Cebu.
© 2014 Andrea Rip
The soonest flight from Cebu that I could board was three days after my volunteer work completed on Leyte. With a three night stay booked in Cebu City, I planned to enjoy my clean hotel room, get some much needed quiet sleep and rest, catch up on the news, repack my luggage, and make use of the free WiFi in my hotel room.

It wasn't until I checked into my room that I realized how much I needed some quiet time and some space. It was pure luxury to spend time in my pristine room at the Mandarin Plaza Hotel (that was still in its "soft opening" phase) by myself.

An underwater selfie with a whale shark.
© 2014 Andrea Rip
I couldn't squander the little bit of time I had left in the Philippines, and put some time into researching some activities that I could do in my final three days. I settled on swimming with the whale sharks and determined that as much as I wanted to sleep in the next morning, Monday was going to be the day I trekked down to Oslob, a small barangay (municipality) on the southern end of the Island of Cebu.

Whale shark eating krill. They are very friendly to humans, but a person
could definitely fit in that mouth!
© 2014 Andrea Rip
I woke up at 3:30am to gather my belongings and catch my prearranged taxi to the bus station. The taxi driver helped me find my 4:something a.m. bus and I prepared to pay the P120 fee (~$2.75USD) for the two to four hour air conditioned, WiFi enabled bus ride. The bus departed promptly and the early bus meant we made a magnificent coastal trip in two hours. I slept here and there, but was quite keen on watching the sunrise. Watching the colors creep over the beaches and blue ocean felt idyllic - like Leyte's devastation was on the other side of the world.

After hopping off the bus with a couple other intrepid early morning tourists, we located a hotel that allowed guests to pay a small fee (like $1.50USD) to use their facilities. They would also accompany us to the whale shark watching company and bring us out to the underwater oddity. Afterward, they provided showers and comfort rooms (toilets), and a little cafe.

The highlight, of course, was donning my favorite snorkel and entering the water with enormous fish. The sharks are very docile toward humans though their mouths are massive. When one such creature crept toward me with its mouth open, my thoughts were twofold: that I didn't really want to be in its path and that I was probably also eating some of the krill he was after.

Tumalog Falls in Oslob are gorgeous with cool water.
© 2014 Andrea Rip
Philippines law dictates that tourists can only be in the water for 30 minutes, but I swam with about 10 sharks for that time. Sometimes they would sneak up and swim right under me. Other times, they would bob like me in the water waiting to be fed a bit more. Some dove deep down to where the scuba divers anchored themselves on the bottom. The entire experience is rather "canned" and touristy, but I couldn't escape how surreal it felt to see such beautiful whale sharks so close.

After I dried off at the hotel and had a bite to eat along with a mango shake made by Mark, my "tour guide," he took me on his motorcycle up to Tumalog Falls. The beautiful waterfall cascaded down a mossy cliff to create a gorgeous aqua-colored cool pool. The waterfall is fed by a spring and is always flowing.

I was content with my swim with the whale sharks and didn't venture in this pool, but Mark made the short hike with me and I learned some things about the falls, the Philippines, and his life while we walked. Afterword, he timed out the bus and hailed it for me to ride back into Cebu City. The ride back was a bit longer - more than three hours, but I was back in the quiet hotel room by 3:30pm and discovered the Ayala Center Mall a couple blocks from the hotel where I did not eat rice, but found a number of options for meals outside the hotel.

The next day I wandered around that part of the City, repacked my luggage, rested, and prepared to fly out on my third morning. The return trip was quite uneventful and included a much shorter layover in Hong Kong, and a three day layover in Los Angeles where I stayed with my generous and wonderful friends, Seth and Amanda, while saturating myself into American LA culture including Whole Foods, Starbucks, fancy indulgent SUV's, and no rice.

List of Personal Trip Expenses (USD)

  • Airfare DEN-CEB-DEN, $61 (+ FF miles)
  • Transportation in Philippines, $50
  • Hotel for Overnight in Hong Kong, $174
  • Work Socks (1 pair gift), $15 (extra 1-2 pair)
  • x - Granola Bars (cash gift)
  • x - Gatorade + EmergenC (cash gift)
  • x - Work Gloves (wishlist & cash gift)
  • x - Immunization for Typhoid (cash gift)
  • x - Three nights in Cebu (cash gift)
  • x - Mosquito Repellent (wishlist & cash gift)
  • x - Mandatory Travel Insurance (cash gift)
  • x - Dust Masks (wishlist gift)
  • x - Mosquito Net (wishlist gift)
  • x - Rain Boots (wishlist gift)
  • x - Bed Sheets (cash gift)
  • x - Work Boots (borrow/gift)
  • x - Secondhand Work Tshirts + Pants (gift)
  • x - Extended Philippines Visa (cash gift)
  • x - Safety Glasses (wishlist gift)
  • x - Sun Hat (wishlist gift)
  • x - Medical Kit (wishlist gift)

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