Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Grow Pechay without Soil (Hydroponics)

 Dr Abe V Rotor 

NOTE: Hydroponics solutions are specific to specific crops, unlike foliar fertilizers, fertilizer sticks and "magic fertilizers" claimed for general use.  The rule is, formulate your own in a laboratory.  It is a chemist's work, and the setup is designed for a particular crop.  The Bureau of Plant Industry, UPLB and other agricultural institutions can be of assistance regarding this soiless culture technology. (Commercial ready made hydroponics solutions are rare to find. AVR August 3, 2016)

 Among Filipinos, perhaps the most popular leafy vegetable next to kangkong is pechay (Brassica chinensis).  No beef or pork stew (nilagang baka or baboy) is without pechay, so with “kari-kari,” a specialty originally made from ox tail topped with bagoong 
alamang (shrimp paste). Pesang dalag (mudfish stew) is without pechay.  Fried meat with pechay is common in carinderia. Pechay salad, anyone?  

     What do we get out of pechay?  What nutritional value does it have which contributes to health?

     According to nutritionists, pechay is rich in vitamins, iron, phosphorous and calcium. Vitamins and minerals constitute the so-called “glow” food group, which together with “go” food (carbohydrates) and “grow” or protein-rich food, completes the balanced diet pyramid.  Vitamins and mineral are keepers of good grooming, and protect the body from the attack of harmful bacteria and fungi.  They also make our bones and muscles strong, and make us active and attractive, adding zest to life.
Laboratory Analysis Report

     Nutrient analysis was conducted on pechay grown on two mediums by the Central Analytical Services Laboratory of the National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (BIOTECH) of UPLB.  Organically grown pechay (cultured in conventional plots fertilized with organic matter such as compost), was compared with pechay grown on hydroponics solution (soiless medium). Here is the result of the comparative analysis.

Table 1 – Food Nutrients
___________________________________
Medium Used    % Ash   %Crude Protein   % Crude Fiber   % Crude Fat

1. Org Fertilizer    1.06                 1.19                   0.38             0.09
2. Hydroponics     1.23                 1.32                   0.51             0.11
___________________________________

     Other than minerals and vitamins, we get from pechay digestible fiber which helps in the elimination of wastes and toxins from the body.  Regular elimination of toxins protects us from diseases such as colon cancer, kidney and liver ailments. It makes us more active and resistant. Although low in crude protein and crude fat, the amount is nonetheless important in supplementing poor diet.

     The advantage of hydroponics grown pechay over organic fertilizer grown pechay is in the amount of calcium, while the difference in iron is not significantly different as shown in this table.

Table 2 – Mineral Nutrients
Medium Used            Total P (ppm)  Total Ca (ppm)  Total Fe (ppm)

1. Org Fertilizer                 381.33                 918                   25.81
2. Hydroponics                  322.33               1400                   28.17

     Higher calcium content in hydroponically grown pechay is traced to the volcanic cinder used as substrate to keep the plant upright and its roots well spread in the solution. 

     These findings were derived from a group thesis conducted by   Anthony Pantaleon, Ian Sampelo, and Jason Javier, entitled Comparative Nutritive Value of Pechay Grown Organically and in Hydroponics in Tagaytay.  It is a collaborative work between this research group from the College of Pharmacy of the University of Santo Tomas and the University of the Philippines at Los Banos. (Author served as thesis adviser to the UST group.) The samples were procured from commercial farms in Tagaytay that grow vegetables using both mediums. The increasing popularity of organically grown food on one hand, and the commercialization of hydroponics grown vegetables in the Philippines, on the other, has opened a new interest on the subject of nutrition.

Mineral Nutrients
     Iron (Fe) aids in the oxygenation of the body through the lungs and blood.  Since oxygen is essential to life, people who lack iron are anemic, docile and sickly.  The most practical source of iron is leafy vegetables.  Aside from pechay and other members of Family Brassicaceae (formerly Cruciferae), sweet potato or kamote tops (Ipomea batatas) is an excellent source of iron.

     Phosphorous (P) is important in the proper functioning of the brain and nerves, for which it is also referred, “brain element”. Iodine and phosphorous are very important in brain development of young people. Adequate phosphorous is also derived from other vegetables, meat and fish, grains, seeds and nuts. 
    
 Calcium (Ca) is important to long life because it does not only build but rebuild tissues in the bones and muscles - and all cells of the body for that matter.  Since women deplete calcium faster than men, higher calcium intake is recommended specially toward the menopausal stage. Other sources of calcium are milk, other vegetables, specially onion, cereals, poultry and fish. Calcium maintains balanced pH (acidity-alkalinity level) in our body, and promotes the production of hormones.

     People who are well provided with calcium have large and heavy bones. They are active workers and athletes and are sexually active.

Hydroponics

     Hydroponics is not new in the country.  Way back in the 1950’s, the former Araneta Institute of Agriculture (now De La Salle University (Araneta) had been growing tomatoes and other vegetables in soilless medium or hydroponics. I had a chance to study and work on  hydroponics in its modern greenhouses. The professors of the institute were some of the country’s foremost scientists like Dr. Nemesio Mendiola, Dr. Eduardo Quisumbing, Dr. Deogracias Villadolid, Dr. Juan Aquino and Dr. Fernando de Peralta, who were then professors in this first private agricultural college in the country.

     These scientists saw the need for a scientific approach in agriculture even as Mindanao then was newly opened to agriculture.  It was the first time I realized that if we want to have food that is nutritious and safe, we must be able to control both the physiology of the plant and the environment in which it is cultivated.  These scientists were talking of agriculture very much ahead of their time.  

     Today the best tomatoes are grown in hydroponics.  In Japan I saw large-scale hydroponics in sprawling greenhouses covering several hectares of floor area.  Plants grow on continuously flowing solution without soil, systematic and fully computerized.

     In Taiwan, off-season melons are grown in hydroponics in greenhouses. They command premium price locally and abroad.  In Israel,  hydroponics is practiced virtually in the middle of the desert, a modern version of the biblical saying, “the land flowing with milk and honey.” 

     To give an idea what the solution contains, the formula is one that is based on specific nutrient requirement of a particular crop in its various stages of growth and development. Dr. Fernando de Peralta based his formula on University of Nebraska hydroponics and modified it according to local conditions for common crops, like tomato.

      For a hydroponics project, here is the procedure and the materials required.

1.         With 20 liters water, mix potassium nitrate, 20.1 gm; calcium nitrate, 6.7 gm; double superphosphate, 5 gm; and magnesium sulfate, 5.0 gm. 
2.         Separately mix in 1 liter the following: iron sulfate, 26 gm; manganese sulfate, 2.0 gm; basic lead, 1.6; zinc sulfate, 0.8; copper sulfate, 0.5. 
3.         After pre-mixing each group, add the second solution to the first and measure at least 18 liters. Together with tap water the remaining balance will be used to replace evaporation as may be needed. 
4.         Start with seedlings, of say, tomato.  Be sure they are sturdy and uninjured.  Keep them in place with string and mesh wire, care being undertaken to keep the roots undisturbed while the shoot is held upright towards the source of light.  

     Organic farming on the other hand follows the conventional method of cultivating crops on plots.  The big difference is to use organic fertilizer prepared from compost and farm residues, instead of chemical fertilizer.  Generally, organically grown plants are healthier and sturdier than those applied with chemicals. Chicken droppings are effective in controlling soil pest like nematodes, crickets, grubs, damping-off fungi and bacterial wilt.  Because of this there is little need to protect the plants by spraying chemicals.  If spraying cannot be avoided, use botanical pesticides such as nicotine, garlic extract, derris, and the like, which are safe to health and the environment. 

     Here is an insecticide solution against common pest of pechay.  In 5 liters of water, mix garlic extract from a whole bulb, and a little  Perla soap. (This brand uses coconut oil in saponification, most commercial brands used fossil-based oil.) Filter and use this solution as spray, or with the use of sprinkler. It is best to apply after watering the plants, so that the pesticide effect remains longer or until the next watering. Repeat application until the plants are two weeks old.   

     Repellants like garlic, lantana, chrysanthemum, ginger, and the like, have been found to keep off many insect pests, thus eliminating the need to spray with chemicals. Do not hesitate to consult your local agriculturist.
    

The Hydro Garden, Talisay City, Cebu, of Ms Ulyssa Marie. Practical hydroponic gardening - passion and hobby. 


Grow Pechay  at Home
First, sow the seeds in seed trays made from discarded carton egg trays, one to two seeds per “hole” or socket.  At transplanting time, scoop each seedling from the tray without damaging the roots, and transfer it to a one-liter plastic pot filled with soil and compost.  This substrate is prepared by scraping the topsoil of a garbage pile.  Include the ash.  Sieve to remove other materials. 

     Old tires can be used in place of pots.  It can accommodate up to twenty plants.  In 30 days you can start harvesting pechay, leaving the smaller ones to allow them to grow further.  You may harvest only the mature leaves so that you can have a continuous supply of this vegetable until it flowers and produces seeds, in which case you can start a seed nursery for a second or third crop. 


     Why buy pechay when you can raise it at home, either through organic farming, or hydroponics -  or by simply growing them in pots or old tires.  Think of both economics and ecology: nutritious food, good health, outdoor exercise, source of income, and a beautiful and clean surrounding.

Organic Pechay: Corazon showing her organically-grown pechay
500 model farmers will be trained on organic farming to increase their production at the same time mitigate climate change. They will establish model farms and teach the technologies to other farmers.

Acknowledgement: Internet


Monday, January 13, 2014

Postmodernism - "Living Tomorrow Today"

Postmodernism -  "Living Tomorrow Today" 

Dr Abe V Rotor

"Postmodernism claims that modernity which began with 'the Enlightenment', industrialism, Darwin and Marx, has collapsed. We now live in an endlessly contemporary culture full of contested meanings. The resulting postmodern culture embodies parody, pastiche and cultural cross-over. It is a virtual world of hyperreality containing such strange phenomena as post-Holocaust amnesia, Disneyland, cyberspace and Fukuyama's proclaimed 'end of history'..." - Authors of Introducing Postmodernism

Postmodernism is a late-20th-century movement in the arts, architecture, and criticism that was a departure from modernism. Postmodernism includes skeptical interpretations of culture, literature, art, philosophy, history, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism. It is often associated with deconstruction and post-structuralism because its usage as a term gained significant popularity at the same time as twentieth-century post-structural thought. Criticisms of postmodernism are intellectually diverse, including the assertions that postmodernism is meaningless and promotes obscurantism (the practice of deliberately preventing the facts or full details of something from becoming known).

To a layman postmodernism has virtually limitless applications: 
  • Living in a home twenty years or so to pay, under various amortization arrangement;
  • driving a car likewise acquired through down payment and installment plan;
  • selling the potential harvest of a crop like wheat, even before it is the planted, or even if the cropping season has yet to come. (future marketing); 
  • melting clocks of Salvador Dali's surrealism; 
  • supplying the missing arms of Venus de Milo, and at the end deciding not to. 
  • carrying smartphone or tablet all the time, and updating its features with new models; 
  • model of [de]FORM[mation] in Picasso's art, like Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
  • credit cards, advantage cards, discount cards, VIP cards in a wallet; 
  • wearing oversized or undersized RTWs, fashion or for whatever reason; 
  • gay is gaining acceptance by society; gay marriages rising, legalized in certain states in the US, some countries in Europe. 
  • obesity is a major problem in health, employment, sports, design and engineering, among others. Governments in obese populations are now intervening into the epidemic before it gets out of hand. 
  • increasing role of women, even surpassing that of man, in many aspects. Janet Yellen takes the helm of the US Federal Reserve, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, Yinluck Shirawartra of Thailand, Dilma Rousseff, first woman elected president of Brazil.
  • wearing coat-and-tie, short pants and rubber shoes;
  • drive-in funeral parlor (e-libing);
  • e-learning, e-library, e-mail, e-commerce;
  • Man-induced calamities creating never heard havoc;
  • shifting of currency - Latvia will adopt the euro becoming the 18th country to switch to the EU's current currency. Similar moves are being planned by other countries to balance the US dollar currency.
  • bitcoin, (PHOTO, above) software currency, a peer-to-peer payment system and digital currency introduced as open source software (cryptocurrency). (photo)
  • rise of nones, people who move away from organized religions;
  • globalization, homogenization, global village, terms about our "shrinking" world; 
  • From Einstein's E=mc2, comes the discovery of now Higg's Boson that gives mass to matter, known as God's Particle; 
  • The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator. PHOTO, right
  • Human Genome Map tells a person's genetic makeup - reference for health, job, career, marriage, etc. 
  • longevity increasing, more and more centenarians all over the world; 
  • music revival of classics and oldies, on the other, avant-garde music on the rise; 
  • Unmanned war machines - drones (e-warplanes). Air force stealth drones spend up 24 hours behind enemy lines without being detected. PHOTO
  • unmanned testing of NASA's Orion designed to take humanity into deep space.
  • private space race (not the Col Way space race) is on: SpaceX, Sierra Nevada, Virgin Galactic, Orbital Sciences Corp., aimed mainly at space tourism.
  • emerging cultural center - Riga, Latvia will become the 2014 European Capital of Culture, a shift from traditional Western Europe and other regions.
  • world design capital will shift from the West to Cape Town, South Africa.
  • odds of a serious strike - Asteroid colliding with Earth - this year are very, very low.
  • new cures for old ailments: a valve that can fix your heart, pills that stop Hepatitis C, a vaccine for malaria, a once-a-week medication for diabetes, a better breast-cancer drug.
  • Death of the PC (Personal Computer); desktops and laptops are on the decline.We now carry computers in our pockets, palm size or even smaller.
  • fossil fuel independent cars: hybrid cars (Prius), battery cars, solar powered cars, hydrogen-powered cars. What's next is car that can also fly and cruise on water.
  • One World Trade Center will be completed, 13 years after 9/11, at 1,776 ft (541 m). it is the tallest building in the US. (PHOTO)
  • finding other Earth-like planets in the universe that can also support life. There are more than 4,200 potential exoplanets, perhaps billions in an entire galaxy like our Milky Way.
  • There will be as many mobile-phone subscriptions in the world as there are people (UN's prediction).
  • Facebook now has one billion users 10 years after its launching, and still increasing.
  • testing asteroid mining technology in space (Planetary Resources).
  • China's e-commerce market becomes the biggest in the world. It will have more online shoppers than there are people in the US. (Forester Research)
  • crisis, and emergence, of new leadership, fueled by the new "enlightenment' brought about by social media, mass media and distance or e-learning.
  • down fall of dictators (Qaddafi of Libya, Mubarak of Egypt); weakening of the dynasty political system. (Kennedy's, Sukarno s, Peron's)
  • emerging people-based leadership, grassroots focused, Christ-like, Gandhi-like, Mandela-like, Lincoln-like.
------------------
Scenario of a baby born in 2014
(By Alice Park, Time January 13, 2014)
Evaluate the scenario of 2014 today, after more than 5 years
  • If girl, her name is likely to end in - lyn, as in Marilyn, Annalyn, Genelyn. (Likely a girl, a margin chance over a boy)
  • 11 billion world's population during her lifetime. She will share the planet with 3 billion more people who haven't been born yet.
  • 172 million. That's how many she will be competing with for a job when she will be in her 20s.
  • 1 to 2 children. She will have few siblings, since families will remain small.
  • 69 years. She will probably live close to seven decades on average.
  • technologically dependent generation ever. She is a part of, but more than relying just for communication, she will increasingly use them to learn.
  • likely to be among the heaviest children in recorded history - a troubling sign that may actually keep them from outliving their parents.
  • by the time she is an adult, she will find herself living in a society with the largest number of elderly ever (about 20% of the population will be over 65 by then, compared to 13.7 today).
Research: Create a similar scenario, say five years - 2025 

Friday, January 10, 2014

What I’ll Do Till I’m Eighty

By Sedfrey A. Ordoñez

They say life starts at forty.  Not really.  It starts, to many people like justice secretary Ordoñez, at eighty. As life span gets longer and longer, people will ask, "What will I do when I'm eighty?  

Dedicated to those who will turn eighty in a few years or so. Facing the sunset of life is perhaps the most rewarding, the most beautiful, the most fulfilling stage of man's brief sojourn on earth. And it is the most important because it bridges our being mortal with meeting our Creator, indeed a singular gift of God to Man.      


 This is a memorable photograph of some of our own literary giants: (left to right) the late poet and author of Life Cycles, Sedfrey Ordoñez (Justice Secretary and permanent representative to the United Nations); doyen of Philippine contemporary poetry Ophelia A Dimalanta, Hortencia Santos Sankore, Larry Francisco, and the late national artist and poet Jose Villa. Like Secretary Ordoñez, the late Dean Dimalanta and Jose Villa left invaluable lessons in life to the younger generations.  

Today the first of September
In this year of our Lord
Nineteen Hundred Ninety-One
I am clear-minded seventy
And ten years from now
As tumultuous twentieth century
Slip away like a leaf in the wind
I will be, God bless me, eighty.
I will not count the coming years nor be
Worried by calendars thrown away
Because I will be very busy –
Not engrossed in counting my blessings
For these are blazed in the brain
But work figuring the ways
Of loving humanity,
Striving to be human,
Making peace and avoiding war.
When I reach eighty
You and I will date our letters
Two thousand one A.D.
But have you ever pondered
What is a mere two thousand years
Beside the life of a universe?
Merely simply contemplating
The enormity of the tasks ahead
Urges me to start right now
And fill my last ten years
With music
With the wisdom,
With the daring,
With the vision
Of the Master.

The late Sedfrey Ordoñez served as Secretary of Justice, Human Rights Commissioner and permanent Philippine Representative to the United Nations.  I have had the rare opportunity of meeting him as a writer and friend.  

Monday, January 6, 2014

UST-AB DevCom Lesson: Typhoon Yolanda tops Philippine News 2013

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class Monday to Friday (www.pbs.gov.ph)

UST-AB DevCom Lesson: List down the good news of 2013, other than those listed here. (Regular bond paper, handwritten) 
In this aerial photo taken on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013, and released by the Philippine Air Force, a ferry boat is seen washed inland from a massive storm surge caused by Typhoon Haiyan, in the city of Tacloban, central Philippines. Acknowledgement: AP FILE PHOTO
Philippine Top News 2013

January 6 - Thirteen people were killed in a mass murder in Atimonan, Quezon
February 10 – Lolong, the Indo-Pacific crocodile died at BunawanAgusan del Sur from 7:59 pm.

February 12 – Philippine gunmen claiming to be part of the "royal army" of the Sulu Sultanate landed on Lahad DatuSabah causing a standoff which tested bilateral relations between the Philippines and Malaysia

April 20 - A Chinese fishing vessel with 20 fishermen on board, ran ground at the Tubbataha reef, almost two months after an American navy ship ran ground on the same reef. The fishermen will face charges of illegal poaching and attempted bribery.

May 9- A Philippine Coastguard vessel open fired a Taiwanese fishing vessel, allegedly inside Philippine maritime territory, leaving one Taiwanese fisherman dead. Tensions between Taiwan and the Philippines heat up as Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, threatens to impose sanction on the Philippines following a day after the incident. The Philippine Coast Guard sympathizes with the victim but refuses to apologize for the incident and insisted that its personnel are just doing its job to address illegal fishing.

June 27- Tropical Storm Rumbia (2013) brought heavy rains to the northern Philippines, triggering more landslides and flashfloods.

July 26 - At least 8 people dead, and 48 people injured in a bomb blast at the Limketkai Center in Cagayan De Oro CityPhilippines.

August 5 - At least 8 people were killed and 40 others injured after a car bomb exploded in Cotabato CityCotabato province in the Philippines. It is the worst such attack ever in Cotabato City.

August 12 - MNLF leader Nur Misuari unilaterally declared the independence of the Bangsamoro Republik. The Philippine government refuses to recognize the republic and no other foreign governments has officially recognized the republic.

August 16 - MV St. Thomas Aquinas collided with MV Sulpicio Express Siete resulting in 55 deaths. 65 people remain missing.

August 18 - Typhoon Maring hit northern Luzon, but affected the whole areas of Luzon through the "Southwest Monsoon" or "Habagat".The "southwest monsoon" brought by Typhoon Maring hit Metro ManilaCavite, some parts of Rizal and Laguna, leaving many areas flooded.  Eight people were reported dead, with over 200,000 homeless.

August 26 - Widespread protests against the Priority Development Assistance Fund scam was organized nationwide. Some Filipino communities worldwide also held solidarity protest. The biggest demonstration that was held on this day was the Million People March held in Luneta Park in Manila

September 7 – Mutya Johanna Datul was crowned Miss Supranational 2013 and is the first Asian and first Filipina to win the title.

September 9–28 - The Moro National Liberation Front and government forces clash in Zamboanga City, paralyzing economic activity in the city.

September 28 – Miss Philippines Megan Young (photo) was crowned Miss World 2013 and is the first Filipina to win the title.

October 15 - A magnitude 7.2 earthquake struck the island of Bohol with a depth of 20.0 km (12.4 mi). It was centered about 20 miles below the town of Sagbayan. As of October 15, it was reported that the death toll was at least 93, including people in Cebu. The following day, the death toll had risen to 144, with 291 people injured.

October 19 - A road accident involving three buses and five other vehicles which occurred on a zigzag diversion in Maharlika Highway in Barangay Santa Catalina, Atimonan, Quezon province. The road accident killed 20 people and another 54 were wounded.


November 7 - Janet Lim-Napoles, the alleged mastermind in the P10 billion pork barrel scam faced the Senate for the first time to answer the allegations against her.

November 8 - Typhoon Haiyan (known in the Philippines as Typhoon Yolanda), the deadliest Philippine typhoon on record, caused catastrophic destruction in the Visayas, particularly on the islands of Samar and Leyte, killing 6,166 people. About 11 million people have been affected by the typhoon with many left homeless.

November 9 - Miss Philippines Ariella Arida won third runner-up in the Miss Universe 2013 in Moscow OblastRussia.

November 19 - Miss Philippines Annalie Forbes won third runner-up in the Miss Grand International 2013 in BangkokThailand

November 20 - The Supreme Court of the Philippines abolishes the Priority Development Assistance Fund otherwise known as the 'pork barrel'.

November 21- Miss Philippines Amber Delos Reyes won Miss Teen Expoworld Universe 2013 held in Guatemala. Mister Philippines Gil Wagas won fourth runner-up in the Mister International 2013 held in Skenoo Hall, Gandaria City Mall, Jakarta, Indonesia.

November 29 - The Manila City government passed a resolution urging President Benigno Aquino III and the Congress of the Philippines to recognize Andres Bonifacio as the first president of the Philippines.

December 7 - Alyz Henrich from Venezuela crowned as Miss Earth 2013.

December 11 - The highest number of journalists is killed in a single year since 2009 in the country reaching a total of twelve.

December 12 - The Comelec disqualified governors Vilma Santos of BatangasE. R. Ejercito of Laguna, Ryan Luis Singson of Ilocos Sur and Amado Espino, Jr. of Pangasinan. The commission also disqualified congressmen Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo of Pampanga and Rodolfo Biazon of Muntinlupa and several elected government officials failed to submit their Statement of Contributions and Expenditures. 

December 14 - Miss Philippines Koreen Medina won third runner-up in the Miss Intercontinental 2013 held in MagdeburgGermany.

December 15 - Former Pagadian mayor Samuel S. Co and his wife, Priscilla were arrested. Both are facing syndicated estafa case in connection with the multi-billion Ponzi scheme of Aman Futures. 

December 16 - Don Mariano Bus falls off the Metro Manila Skyway near Bicutan, Parañaque, killin18 people and injuring 20 others.

December 17 - Miss Philippines Bea Rose Santiago won Miss International 2013 held in TokyoJapan.

December 20 - A shooting that occurred at the arrival area of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila killed four people, including Mayor Ukol Talumpa of Labangan, Zamboanga del Sur and his wife Lea Talumpa, and left five others injured.

December 31 - Miss Philippines Angeli Dionne Gomez won Miss Tourism International 2013 in PutrajayaMalaysia.

TRIVIA: December 4 - Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago exchange of accusations at the Senate plenary against fellow Senator Juan Ponce Enrile.

UST-AB DevCom Lesson: A Portfolio of Superstitious Beliefs (Part 1) Human behavior is influenced by the phases of the moon, hence the term lunatic.

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class Monday to Friday

UST-AB Development Communication -  What is the role of Media in dealing with superstition? (Essay on whole bond, handwritten) Note: The lesson is in three parts.   

 1. Schedule weddings when the moon is at its fullest.

2. Forego your trip when a black cat crosses your path – it is bad luck.

3. Don’t clean the house at night, more so, if you sweep the dirt out of the door. You drive good luck away, (Lalabas ang suwerte.) 

4. If you get lost in the wilderness, reverse your shirt, so that you will be able find your way back.

5. One who cries every time she cuts onions means she does not love her father- and mother-in-law (biyanan).

6. Three persons in a picture means the one at the middle will die.

7. A mole (taling) on the sole indicates the person is a wanderer (gala’).

8. A mole (taling) located along the path of tears means the person is going to be widowed. 

9. Bride must never try her bridal gown before the wedding; the ceremony might not push through. 

10. Don’t hang on the window; you court bad luck. 

11. Itchy palm means you are going to have money. 

12. Keep your fingers close together and if light seeps through between them, it means you are not frugal.

13. Singing while cooking means you are going to remain a bachelor or spinster – or marry someone much older than you. 

14. A victim of maternal impression (paglilihi) loses pep (sigla) and may even get sick. 

15. You get Ascaris (bulate) if you eat uncooked rice (du-om Ilk).

16. If a pregnant woman is in labor, never sit at the center of the stair. 

17. A comet in the sky means war is coming.

18. Eat raw eggs to enhance easy delivery of your baby. 

19. A pregnant mother should not eat eggplant, else her baby will have dark complexion.


20. Tikbalang (Filipino version of a centaur) comes out when it is raining while the sun is out. 

Acknowledgement: Wikipedia, Internet photos

Continued