The Rotor family's "Living with Nature" Residence by the University of Northern Philippines (UNP) is a testament to the family's deep connection with nature and the arts.
ANNEX 2 - A Tour at the Living with Nature Center
ANNEX 3 - Heritage Basi Wine Industry
ANNEX 4 - Arboretum - Microcosm of a Tropical Forest
20 FEATURES
Orientation Outline
1. Renovated old home
(survived typhoons, earthquakes, other calamities, WWII) for four generations.
2. San Vicente Botanical Garden – living gene bank, shrine, outdoor classroom.
3. Living with Nature (Center), advocacy, hands-on, on-site learning
4. Community-based (visits, tours, workshops, research, practicum)
5. Refuge (respite, retirement, recuperation, balikbayan, childhood experience)
6. EcoSanctuary - Wildlife habitat, orchard, open field, local ecosystems
7. Natural for healthy and happy living (food, air, herbals, pets, sense of freedom)
8. Family museum (library, archive, souvenirs, achievements, paraphernalia)
9. “The Morning After Syndrome” - preparedness for the worst upheaval (COVID-19)
10. Exodus from the City (reversal from traffic, congestion, high cost of living)
11. Right brain shift (creativity, hobbies, nature-friendly)
12. Integrated and holistic (The Humanities, back-to-basics, skills development)
13. You are not alone (“So far yet so near,” the world at the living room)
14. Ecological prayer (Love God through Nature, Nature is God’s greatest gift)
15. Don’t be a victim of Instant Syndrome (DiY, home garden, cookbook)
UNP University of Northern Philippines) students study plant specimens with author..
16. Save, save from impulse buying, planned obsolescence, ostentatious living.
17. Be simple and practical (countryside living, bayanihan, kamag-anak)
18. The golden years of life (It’s not too late, you are missing life itself)
19. Yes, you can paint, cook, build your home, do the things you dreamed of.
20. Search for the meaning of life (Learn from Victor Frankl, Schweitzer, Rizal)
Globally linked on the Internet avrotor.blogspot.com and Naturalism – the Eighth Sense in 6000 articles to date. Search topic, download, print for your educational use in your school, community, and organization. Linked with 14 books written by AV Rotor, Bannawag magazine, (Okayka Apong), Radyo Katipunan Ateneo de Manila University, Usapang Bayan, Radyo ng Bayan, other websites. Welcome to the Living with Nature Center, San Vicente, Ilocos Sur. Contact – 09954672990

Art Workshop for Children before a wall mural by the author in his family
residence (Living with Nature Center) in San Vicente Ilocos Sur, 2017.
Basi and other wine products in different labels depicting important events and scenes in the Ilocos Region.
I remember Lolo Celing (Marcelino) made basi in the cellar, the ground floor of our house made of thick brick wall. In dad's time we had around 500 jars. He was one of the biggest brewers in town in post Commonwealth era, and probably after the infamous Basi Revolt in 1807 when the Ilocanos took arms but lost to the Spaniards who took monopoly over the industry. Many were killed in that short-lived revolt along the Bantaoay River, a river where my brother Eugene and I used to fish purong (mullet) in summer.
The revolt took place 400 km north of Manila where Diego and Gabriela Silang heroically fought Spanish rule 50 years earlier. It was ignited by the declaration of Wine Monopoly by the Spanish government, depriving the natives of their centuries old cottage industry. Basi was among the goods exported through the Galleon Trade plying Ciudad Fernandina (now Vigan City) and Europe via Acapulco, Mexico (1565-1815). The final battle took place along the Bantaoay River that runs through the town of San Vicente where scores of Spanish soldiers and natives were killed. It culminated on September 29, 1807. Fourteen big oil paintings depicting the Basi Revolt are displayed at the Vigan Ayala Museum, housed in the original residence of Filipino martyr, Fr. Jose Burgos. The painter, Don Esteban Villanueva was an eyewitness of this historic event. Today, the basi industry is being revived by Ilocano entrepreneurs whose ancestors may be traced to the heroes of the Basi Revolt of 1807 (Dr. A.V. Rotor)
Product Guarantee: Basi is brewed and aged in the traditional way in glazed earthen jars (burnay) from upland sugar cane, glutinous rice, and botanical ingredients – Pithecolobium dulce, Macaranga tenarius, and Syzygium cumini. The final product is harvested directly from the jar one to three years after aging. No flavoring and coloring added, no filter and plastic containers used. The product meets the European Standard for grape wine – Champagne, Port and Sherry. (Reference: PFDCS 2498 and PFDCS 9429, Food Development Center, National Food Authority) Approximately 21 proof. (Reference: 01-00-0CL-0017, Industrial Technology Development Institute, Department of Science and Technology) A product of NACIDA Home Industry, San Vicente, Ilocos Sur, Philippines. Content 750 ml /375 ml.
Basi Revolt of 1807 in Paintings by Esteban Villanueva
Fourteen big oil paintings depicting the Basi Revolt, also known as Ambaristo Revolt (named after its leader) can be seen today at the Vigan Ayala Museum, which is housed in the original residence of Filipino priest martyr, Fr. Jose Burgos. The painter, Don Esteban Villanueva was an eyewitness of this historic event.
Dr Abe V Rotor
This towering native mango is more than four generations old. It dominates several heritage trees which include talisay (Terminalia catappa), caimito (Chrysophyllum cainito), and macopa (Eugenia jambalana), and other upcoming heritage trees in the arboretum. On its limbs and branches hang lianas and epiphytes like rosary bead (Abrus precatorius), philodendron, ferns, bromeliads, mosses and lichens. The tree in itself is an ecosystem, complete in biodiversity and dynamic balance season after season in a state of homeostasis.
Music of nature - chirping of birds, shrill of cicada, fiddling of crickets, rustling of leaves, bass of toads and frogs - all these constitute a soothing and harmonious symphony. Mozart's Effect must have originated in such ambiance, so with Beethoven's famous symphony, Brahms's Lullaby and Grieg's Prelude to Morning.
In Latin, an arboretum is a place planted with trees, not necessarily in this specific sense, and "arboretum" as an English word is first recorded used by John Claudius Loudon in 1833 in The Gardener's Magazine, but the concept was already long-established by then. Wikipedia
1. Achiote or Annatto – Bixa orellana - Bixaceae
2. Alagaw – Premna odorata - Lamiaceae
3. Anahao - Saribus rotundifolius - Caryophyllaceae
4. Apatot – Morinda littoralis/citrifolia - Rubiaceae
5. Arios – Podocarpus costalis - Gymnospermae
6. Balete - Ficus benjamina - Moraceae
7. Bird’s Nest fern – Asplenium nidus - Aspleniaceae
8. Bougainvillea – Bougainvillea spectabilis Nyctaginaceae
9. Bromeliad – Portea spp - Bromeliaceae
10. Caballero plant – Caesalpinia pulcherrima - Fabaceae
11. Caimito – Crysophyllum cainito - Sapotaceeae
12. Calamansi – Citrus macrocarpa - Rutaceae
13. Chico – Achras (Sapodilla) zapota - Sapotaceae
14. Chinese Bamboo – Bambusa multiplex - Poaceae
15. Coconut – Cocos nucifera - Arecaceae
16. Creeping Fig – Ficus pumila - Moraceae
17. Cyperus – C. papyrus Cyperaceae
18. Dalandan – Citrus decumana - Rutaceae
19. Duhat – Syzygium cumini – Myrtaceae
20. False Bird of Paradise – Heliconia psittacorum – Heliconiaceae
21. Giant Bamboo – Dedrocalamus giganteus - Poaceae
22. Giant Thorny Bamboo – Bambusa bambos Poaceae
23. Aplas - Ficus hawili - Moraceae
24. Kalachuchi – Plumeria rubra/ P alba Apocynaceae
25. Ilang-ilang – Cananga odorata - Annonaceae
26. Makopa – Eugenia jambalana - Myrtaceae
27. Mayana - Coleus blumei - Lamiaceae
28. Red Anthurium – A. andraeanum - Araceae
29. Sanggumay – Dendrobium anosmum Orchidaceae
30. Bromeliad – Guzmania spp. Bromeliaceae
31. Gumamela – Hibiscus rosa-sinensis Malvaceae
32. Maguey – Agave cantala – Asparagaceae (sub-F Agavoideae)
33. Mahogany - Swietinia macrophylla - Meliaceae
34. Strangler’s Fig (balete) Ficus benjamina - Moraceae
35. Molave – Vitex parviflora - Verbenaceae
36. Narra – Pterocarpus indicus - Dipterocarpaceae
37. White Lauan – Shorea contorta - Dipterocarpaceae
38. Bitaog - Calophyllum inophyllum– Calophyllaceae
39. Bikal Bamboo – Schizostachyum dielsianum - Poaceae
40. Staghorn Fern – Platycerium bifurcatum - Polypodiaceae
41. Oak fern – Gymnocarpium dryopteris - Cystopteridaceae
42. Balimbing – Averrhoa bilimbi -Oxalidaceae
43. Tubang Bakod – Jatropha curcas - Euphorbiaceae
44. Jatropha (coral plant) – Jatropha podagrica/multifida - Euphorbiaceae
45. Castor bean – Ricinus communis - Euphorbiacae
46. Calamansi – Citrus microcarpa - Rutaceae
47. Sampalok – Tamarindus indica – Ceasalpiniaceae
48. Banaba – Lagerstroemia speciosa - Lythraceae
49. Golden Shower – Cassia fistula - Fabaceae
50. Lobster’s Claw plant – Heliconia rostata - Heliconiaceae
51. Soro-soro – Euphorbia neriifolia - Euphorbiaceae
52. Buntot Tigre – Cordyline roxburghiana - Agaveceae
53. Barbados Cherry – Malphighia emarginata
54. Kamachili – Pithecolobium dulce - Fabaceae
55. Pandakaki – Tabernaemontana pandakaqui - Apocynaceae
56. Pandan – Pandanus amaryllifolius - Pandanaceae
57. Mahogany – Swietenia macrophylla - Meliaceae
58. Maiden Hair Fern – Adriatum raddianum - Pteridaceae
59. Lantana plant – Lantana camara - Verbenaceae
60. Nangka – Artocarpus heterophyllus - Moraceae
61. Philodendron – P. melanochrysum
62. Indian Mast Tree – Polyalthia longifolia
63. Fishtail palm – Caryota mitis - Arecaceae
64. Shanghai Beauty – Jatropha integerrima - Euphorbiaceae
65. Selaginella – S, lepidophylla/braunii - Selaginellaceae
66. Tsaang Gubat – Ehretia microphylla - Boraginaceae
67. Manga – Mangifera indica - Anacardiaceae
68. Mulberry – Morus nigra - Moraceae
69. Yellow Bell – Tecoma stans – Bignoniaceae family
70. Kamias – Averrhoa bilimbi - Oxalidaceae
71. Forget-Me-Not – Myosotis scorpioides - Boraginaceae
72. Rambutan – Nephelium lappaceaum - Sapindaceae
73. Bromeliad – Portea spp - Bromeliaceae
74. Sisal – Agave sisalana - Agavaceae
75. Thorns of Christ plant – Euphorbia milii - Euphorbiaceae
76. Mickey Mouse plant – Ochna serrulate Ochnaceae
77. Lagundi – Vitex negundo Verbenaceae
78. Lotus – Nelumbium nelumbo Nelumbonaceae
79. Nymphaea – Nymphaea alba/ colorata - Nymphaeaceae
80. Santol – Sandoricum koetjape - Meliaceae
81. Tibig – Ficus nota - Moraceae
83. Gummamela - Hibiscus rosa-sinensis - Malvaceae
84. Palmera – Borassus flabellifer - Araceae
85. Talisay (Lugo’) – Terminalia catappa - Combretaceae
An empty wall comes alive with freshness and joy and a message to the old world.
"Young hands at work before an empty wall to make a mirror
of themselves for others to see now and in the years to come;
Innocence is preserved and revered, captured for posterity,
when childhood shall have passed its time, and life has began."
"In their mind, it's outdoor with nature,with amenities through art, they are;away from the cellphone, from the mall,as they while away time, worry and chore."- avr
"The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature." –Joseph Campbell


















