Friday, April 19, 2024

Mystery of the Stone Carabao

                                Mystery of the Stone Carabao

Dr Abe V Rotor
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It was already dusk when my family and I decided to visit the sunken church of Bacolor, Pampanga. We had just spent the weekend in Morong, Bataan and we were on our way back to Manila.

Figurine made of volcanic rock from Mt Pinatubo eruption. 
Sculptor unknown. Bacolor, Pampanga (c.1989)

An old woman, frail and bent in the waning light, met us at the entrance of the old church.

"Sir, bilhin na ninyo eto. Pambili lang ng pagkain." (Please sir, buy this thing to buy me some food.) She was referring to a stone figurine she was holding.

The thing was a roughly carved figure of a lying carabao, made of volcanic rock from the recent eruption of Mt Pinatubo.

"One hundred pesos lang, sir."

I pulled out a hundred peso bill from my wallet and got the figurine.

"Salamat, sir." Light shone on her wrinkled face.

We did not actually go inside the church because it was half buried with    lahar. You have to stoop low to get through the arch of the entrance. So we just stood at the entrance and Cecille, my wife, led us to pray.

There must have been pilgrims ahead of us, but the place was now deserted. It was eerie silent. So with the abandoned buried houses not far from the place. Not a stir of life. A gust of wind came, then another. I pulled my jacket close. My children did the same. Cecille cut our prayer short.

Curious, I looked for the woman. She wasn't around. Where could she had passed? There was a long stretch of footpath down the road, but there was sign of her. Not a silhouette.

I thought I was the only one who noticed her sudden departure.

"Papa, uwi na tayo," my children chorused and we drove home.

When we reached home I examined the figurine. Why it's a work of art! Did the old woman make it? Who was the old woman?

It didn't take a long time I had another chance to visit the church. This time there were people around. It wasn't yet sunset. I asked those apparently familiar with the place who the old woman was. I described her like how I saw her face when she handed me the stone carabao.

"Wala pong matandang ganong dito." (There's no such old woman here.) And they looked at each other in bewilderment.

I pondered on this puzzle if it has any message at all. Or could it a reminder of doom like the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah? In this    biblical story God commanded a righteous couple to flee the wicked city, and never to look back. But pity on the dying stopped them on their track and they became into stone.

Stone figures take us even farther to Greek mythology – to Medusa who wears a headdress of snakes. Anyone who looks directly at her turns into stone. Aware of the danger the hero Perseus used his shield as mirror in slaying Medusa. And when he presented Medusa’s head to the tyrant king and his court, all of them turned into stone.

The story in the bible of course is not to be taken literally, more so with Greek mythology. But these stories usually take us to a higher level of consciousness about life and about the world we live in. What could this puzzle of the Stone Carabao mean then to us?

When I told the story to a good friend of mine who is an expert on carabao, he stood up and exclaimed, "Why, don't you know that the Philippine carabao is now a threatened species? So with other buffaloes all over the world?"

Yes, now I have a story to tell. ~

25 Homes and Nests of Different Organisms

   25 Homes and Nests of Different Organisms  

Lesson in Biology: Describe each of these abodes of organisms, and present it as a research or a special project in class. 

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog

Orb spider

Ensconced porcupine in a hollow log

Spent finch nest

Earthworm castings

 
Burrow of mole cricket (Gryllotalpha africana), right

Termite mound and comb (Macrotermes gilvus)

Nest of a colony of fire ant (Solenopsis geminata)


Barnacles

Pit of antlion

Paper Wasp or Putakti 

 Sea Turtle

Clown Fish and Sea Anemone 

 Tree Rat

 Wild Honeybees

Bird's Nest in a City  

Parrot Fish on Coral Reef

 Egg Froth of Frog 


  Green Tree Ants Nest 

Drynaria fern on Acacia 

 Colony of mushroom on dead wood

Furniture Beetle Larva and Adult

Colony of Moss on Rock

 
 Cockroaches on Garbage

 Crustaceans and Coelenterates live at the base 
of coconut trees on the seashore

Lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) author with Ms Melly C Tenorio 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday

GO NATURAL! 10 Rules Set by the Advocates of Organic Farming.

Go Natural!
10 Rules set by the advocates of organic farming.

Dr Abe V Rotor

 
                                                     Best for health: fresh fruits and vegetables 

1. It is always better to eat foods grown under natural conditions than those developed with the use of chemicals.
This statement can be captured with one term "natural food". All over the world this is a label found in food grown without chemicals. People are afraid of becoming ill because of chemicals introduced into the food. There are banned pesticides still in used such as methyl parathion, endosulfan, DDT, BHC, among others. These are also harmful to all living organisms and to the environment.

2. People are avoiding harmful residues of antibiotics and pesticides.
Poultry, hogs and cattle are given high levels of antibiotics to safeguard the animals from diseases. As a result, the antibiotics are passed on to the consumers. Unless we are ill, the body does not need supplemental antibiotics. We have adequate natural sources. Every time we eat commercial eggs, chicken, pork chop, steak, and the like, we are taking in antibiotics which accumulate in our body, shutting off our immune systems, punishing our kidney and liver. To many people, antibiotics cause allergic reactions.

3. People are getting scared of food contaminated by radiation. Nuclear reactors are being built in many countries as a fallback to fossil fuel.
With the nuclear plant meltdown in Fukoshima, Japan, the Chernobyl nuclear incident in Ukraine, and that of the Three-Miles Island nuclear plant in the US, people have become wary about the consequences of fallout. A trace of radiation can be absorbed by grass in the pasture, finds its way to milk, then to infants. Radiation can remain active for hundreds of years. People are still dying today in Nagasaki and Hiroshima, more than sixty years since the bombing of the two cities with the first atomic bomb.

4. People are becoming aware of the deleterious effects of toxic metals, such as lead, mercury and cadmium.These find their way through the food chain and ultimately reach humans. They escape to the air and enter our lungs, as in the case of dusts from old paints. Since they are in soluble compounds, they are easily absorbed by plants and animals. Kangkong (Ipomea reptans) for example absorbs lead. Tuna has high mercury in its tissues and liver. Cadmium from batteries is absorbed by crops.

5. People are becoming more conscious of the nutritional value of food rather than its packaging and presentation.
More and more people are shunning away from junk foods, in spite of their attractive packaging. Soft drinks have taken the backseat, courtesy of fruit juices and mineral water. People have even learned that different plant varieties have different levels of food value. Beans grown on naturally fertile soil have higher calorie and protein content than those grown on poor soil, or with chemical fertilizers. This is also true with animals. Animals raised with proper nutrition give meat, milk and eggs with higher protein, minerals notwithstanding.

6. Freshness is the primordial rule in choosing a perishable food.
There is no substitute to freshness. While freshness is a function of efficient handling and marketing, the farmer must enhance farm-to-market freshness. By keeping his standing plants healthy, his produce will stay longer on the shelf life. Products that are free from pest and diseases also stay fresher and longer. Too much water or fertilizer reduces shelf life of the commodity.
Buko is a complete food 

7. Food processing must be efficient and safe.
Food processing, such as drying, milling and manufacturing is key to higher profits. Whenever feasible, food must reach the table fresh. But processing is designed to extend the shelf life of perishable commodities. There are products that require processing before they are used. These food items include vanilla, coffee, cacao, wine and vinegar, soya, fish sauce and the like. Profits generated through processing are value-added to production.

8. Food must be free from pest and diseases.
By all means, food must be free from insects and pathogens. There are cases of food poisoning as a result of food deterioration, or contamination. Take salmonella and E. coli. Khapra beetle in grains may even cause death to animals. Weevils hasten the deterioration of the food.

9. Food preservation must ensure quality, and above all, safety.
Be aware of the fish that is stiff, yet looks fresh. It is easy to detect the odor of formalin. Salitre is harmful, so with vetsin or MSG (Monosodium glutamate). Too much salt (sodium) is not good to the body. Some puto makers add lye or sodium hydroxide to aid coagulation of the starch. We wary of sampaloc candies enticingly made red with shoe dye. The same diluted dye is used with ube manufacture to make it look like the real violet-colored tuber.

10. Beware of GMOs.
Many countries warn of the potential dangers of genetically modified food and food products, popularly called Frankenfood, after the novel Frankenstein, a mad scientist who created a monster. This move is not only to safeguard health, but also the environment. 

No GMO, please, for the sake of the children.

Genetically modified plants and animals – as well as bacteria, protists and even viruses – are now a threat to the natural gene pool, giving rise to a new kind of pollution - genetic pollution. Once a gene pool of a certain species is contaminated with a GMO genetic material, the genic pollutant cannot be eliminated, even in subsequent generations. Thus, it also disturbs natural evolution. ~   

Kids' World of Nature - Where childhood is forever

Kids' World of Nature -
  Where childhood is forever
 
                     "Fleeting moments are most precious,
ephemeral yet eternal.  The child in you 
    lives to the golden years of your life."- avr

Dr Abe V Rotor 
 Catching land crabs with a bamboo trap. Palauig, Zambales 

How I love to catch gammarong (Ilk) crab 
when I was like my son Leo Carlo;
he learned the skill early from me, passed on
by old folks by the sea; Leo in turn 
shall teach others before the art is lost,
as  treasured trade and  tradition.  
   
 Building sandcastles.  Morong, Rizal 

Building sandcastles, building dreams,
on waking up are gone, but they return  
as sandcastles and dreams again 
throughout  youth, higher and bigger,
 crumbling, leaving ruins of memories, 
ruins where castles once stood proud,
uniting reality and fantasy into a happy,
wonderful and fulfilled life.    

Summer fun on the beach.  San Juan, Ilocos Sur

Frolic in company with the waves and tides, 
when the sea is as blue as the sky, and wish
boyhood is forever and never dies;
or you'll always tarry in later years if you don't;
for fleeting moments are most precious,
ephemeral yet eternal in that child in you 
who lives into the golden years of life.  
    
 Christmas for under-the-bridge children.  Pasay MM

The bells of Christmas sound louder among the poor;
the Bethlehem star shines brighter, too.  
The angels come earlier in their homes without door.
 in exchange of a simple lantern or two.  

 Instant swimming pool from busted pipe.  Sta. Mesa, MM

A swimming pool in the middle of a street,
a busted pipe, blessing to a dozen kids 
in the neighborhood in frolic and laughter;
like a Riviera or Thoreau's Walden;    
it's a children's world, a corner of Eden. 

   
Mushrooms growing on a tree stump. UP Diliman QC 

Mushrooms on a stump, home of the dwarfs:
red, yellow, white, or in disguise,
each color a character, a foe or a friend,
to find where the pot of gold lies.

Nipa Hut by the river, Tagbilaran, Bohol

Frolicking - game of the vibrant and the young,
recreating a primordial social bond;
where innocence means freedom and adventure, 
In sweet abandon, here and beyond. ~

The Blue Stream: "Wonder if the stream reaches the sea."

 The Blue Stream 

"He wonders if ever the stream reaches the sea.
That's too far out from here, he thought." avr

Painting and Verse by Dr Abe V Rotor 

Blue Stream in acrylic, AVR c 1990

A painting is never finished, I must say.
     In it the artist discovers himself;
He is sitting on a rock ledge in deep thoughts,
     afraid of the water perhaps;
He flies the white kite, the others the red ones,
     why the white one he wonders;
He wades chest deep, goes upstream, 
     wonders at the salmon returning;
He whistles for the wind to take his kite higher 
     above the red ones. Whistles again.
He feels the chilly wind from the hills, did it 
     come all the way from Siberia? 
He looks up, the sky's gloomy, clouds heavy;  
     at this time of the year? he questions.
He traces the source of the stream, ah, 
     the watershed, he said, it's like a funnel;
He turns downstream, will the stream 
     join a river. He thinks of the Nile;
He wonders if ever his stream reaches the sea;
     that's too far out from here, he thought.
He returns on the rock ledge in deep thoughts, 
     looks at the blue sky and water. 

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Pictorial Essay and Integrated Art

 Pictorial Essay and Integrated Art 

Painting by Dr Abe V Rotor


Write an essay in 1000 words to describe the sight, feeling, 
and impression arising from this scene.

Make your own versions in the following fields:
1. Musical composition -  song with lyrics, instrumental
2. Poetry - traditional and contemporary.
3. Visual - creative art on the computer, or with conventional art tools.       

Present your work in class or in a community workshop on the subject, Nature and Environment.

Trees - Nature’s Gift to Man

Trees - Nature’s Gift to Man

Acacia trees, Ateneo de Manila University QC

 By Anna R. Rotor

We grow up with trees.
We want them to grow big;
we want them to be around us
to give us shade in which we play,
to give us strong trunk and branches
on which we climb and swing and laugh;
to give us fruits which make us full,
healthy and strong,
medicine to make us well,
wood that keeps our body warm,
cooks our food;
leaves to keep our air clean
and to whisper and sing
and dance with the breeze;
and above all,
to give us aesthetic beauty
through which we feel
how lucky we are alive.

How irrational would it be to kill a tree,
even if we reason out that we need its wood,
its bark, its roots, its flowers and fruits and seeds,
to keep us alive!

It is a paradox
that for us to survive and progress,
we kill the host of life –
life of birds that build nest on its branches,
passersby who find respite
from the beating sun,
a myriad of small life forms
from insects to lizards
that find a home
and harbor on its roots and crown.

What a paradox
if we kill the tree that gives us oxygen
that brings down the cloud as rain,
that keeps the environment cool, clean and green
to kill a friend,
a companion and a guardian,
the link of our earth and sun,
God and His Son.

Excerpt from a speech of Anna R. Rotor, then
16 years old at School of St. Anthony QC, 1999.