Saturday, December 31, 2011

Reveling in that good old Unconditional Puppy Love

It's been a while since I've had a dog - maybe 8 years now - and I've missed the love that surrounds you when you return home - that wriggling bundle of tongue-licking, whining energy that wraps itself around you, without any criticism or performance review!

And I'm reveling in it now....as well as mopping up the occasional accident that accompanies those wriggling bundles.

I blame PCV Emily Palese for dalawang tuta ko (my two puppies).  We all know what a sucker I am for any kind of animal - I'd take anything in (evidence the disastrous "Sparky" who marked our nice wooden furniture as his territory - Dave told me to "nuke" him....but did find him a home).   Emily is worse than I am about pets, and reminds me of my college roommate, Janet Herbruck, who was incensed when the San Diego rescue took an oxygen resuscitation unit from a sea lion to use on a human who needed it (I think she actually wrote to the editor of the paper). (And how bizarre is this - before I posted this, she and I reconnected via Facebook and are making plans to travel SE Asia after I close service!  Borneo orangutans, here we come!)

After Mid Service Training, many of us PC volunteers returned to Pension Natividad in Malate for several days to complete our medical and dental exams (mine was pestilence- and fungus-free - verified by 3 stool samples viewed under the microscope for parasites).  In addition to visiting the weekend farmers' market in Makati, I finally got to visit Cartimar - the area of Manila where breeders sell their wares to pet stores throughout the country via the Cartimar middleman.  There are perhaps 100 pet stores here - and I was looking for a hedgehog.  My "daughter" Aja told me I must go there just to see the place, and encouraged me to get a hedgehog, as well as see the sharks (the salt water aquariums were unbelievable).
Emily is a pet lover, and although we had just met, we had that commonality binding us....so we set off from the market directly to find Cartimar.

Emily is a more extreme pet lover than me - she lectured the sellers of Rottweiler pups about the ills of docking puppies' tails rather than leaving them as god had intended.  We looked at several puppies and I considered buying one (a Chocolate Lab for 7,000 pesos, with papers and shots) - but then said that I'd wait until the end of my service.  Emily's response was, "But, think of all the love and bonding you would miss over the next year."  Uh oh - definitely not the type of person I should have come here with.

Then we found these two 'hybrids' (Labrador and Japanese Spitz) and my heart melted - of course they were in an open cage so that we could pick them up.
The pups' first 'home'
When I said "Maybe", Emily thought "We'll take three" - we'll at least I limited that.

I mean, I had told people that I was going to take it easier this next year and travel more around Palawan and internationally - what was I thinking?  I guess I was thinking that I wanted a special pal and someone to cuddle.  And, although I never would have believed it, our last dogs - Bayley and Coast, were littermates and so easy as a pair - Two IS better than one.  So - of course, I got 2 puppies!  As they say, loca-loca...I doubt that I need to translate.

And this was BEFORE I left on the overnight bus to hike into Batad and go on to Sagada for Thanksgiving.  Thankfully, Matt suggested that I find a kennel for them since they would be placed in the cold, dark cargo area of the bus and be traumatized.  So, the day before we left for Batad, I found a kennel - not American standards as I found out when I picked them up coated with tics, but they were okay.  Another PCV, Megan, also got a dog - a Rottweiler pup (she didn't have the problem that Emily did with the tail docking), and texted me that Cebu Pacific Airlines would not allow them on the plane if they weren't at least 2 months old and had their rabies shots.  Oh Shit - they were only about a month old which is way too early for rabies shots - what was I going to do?

Succumb to national corruption of course.  I'm sure that's how all corruption starts - thinking "Well....I just need to do or have x, y or z - and I will only do it this time".  So, I asked a vet to give me a doctor's certificate stating that they were 2 months old and that I would give them rabies in Puerto at 4 months old and that I had a vet already in Puerto....all of this is true.  What wasn't truthful was the document that he gave me (for 800 pesos) - he wrote that they were 4 months old and that he had given them their rabies vaccination on October 12th.....which is the date that they were born!!! (well, I don't know that for sure, but Ashley's birthday seemed the right approximation).

And things went as typical here - show the official looking papers and all is wonderful - they let me on the plane (for 700 pesos) - no questions asked.  That was after spending a rather sleepless night with the pups at Pension Natividad (the home-away-from-home where PCVs stay when in Manila) in a room that could have doubled for a closet.

     


 
All the PCVs LOVED playing with the pups, and babysat them so that I could run out to Robinson's Mall and get dinner and pasalubong to bring home with me.

That night we had a contest as to their names - Ate and Kuya (Sister and Brother) were popular, but when I told someone this in the cab, the driver turned around when I said, "Kuya" - which is also a term of respect for a driver....so that might not work well when I called them at night to come in...I might have hundreds of sisters, brothers and trike drivers running to my door.

Possibilities were George or Phil (a possibility since it is the PHILippines - but would I need to name the girl Philippa?)   Then we moved on to Philippine fruits - Pinya, Durian, Papaya, Buko, Dalandan, etc.  The lalake (boy) is a sorrel or chestnut color - rather red - so I settled on
Rambutan



Rambutan (Rambi for short) - a red tropical fruit here that is weird and hairy on the outside but sweet and delicious inside!





Pinya (pineapple) was a close runner up for the babae (girl), but the name, Chika-Chika was my favorite - in Tagalog it means something close to "Gossip or Rumour".  My neighbors stare at me when I call her, wondering what in the world I'm doing now.

It was a hot flight home and I rescued them as quickly as possible, giving them water and carting them outside of the airport so that I could pay for a cheaper trike ride home.  We got home in one piece and they seemed to like it, especially the cool tile floors
            As well as playing outdoors

They helped with the laundry


They liked eating together


Of course I took them to work with me for the first couple days - Ofel and Mon just shook their heads, while Bart asked me to clean up their pee in the middle of a Chamber meeting.....           On the third day, I was in the Chamber office, doing paperwork and received a call from the Peace Corps - "We are having an emergency drill - please proceed to your consolidation point...check into the hotel and wait for all the others." What?  Right now?  Should I go home and get my passport? "No - proceed to your consolidation point immediately."  Well, okay, it's only 11am, but, sure, I'll go.  I was the first one there - me and the pups (who were with me at the time of the call).  OMG - there is a television in the room - and Airconditioning.  I may be in heaven - I've not seen television for 8 months now...    So, I took a shower, and returned to see this
Cracked me up, but I'm worried about his seeing violence at such an early age.

   
We played in the luscious grass outside
And rested in the nice, cool room


                   But, the emergency drill ended and we returned home - to normality, just like it looks!



They both love playing with their (filled) bowls

Taunting, playing and biting each other is standard fare

Wiped dog, cool tile
Cool and wet tile in the shower


Rambi has evidenced an attraction to birds
He begins stealthily stalking the hen and her brood of six
Closing the gap
Whoa!    I'm outta here!


So, although they get tangled and have accidents,
They are fun companions around the house
And at my favorite place
Where we explore
And frolic
What more is there?

SMILING!

This is the Philippines??? Riding the bus from Sagada to Manila via Baguio

The Day After, 2011 (Turkey Day, that is)
I had decided not to join the group going to the Sagada caves, although I was sad to miss the hanging coffins - it sounds so 'me' - but wading through cold water in a cave didn't sound practical, given I'd contracted some virus...I've gotten more cautious over here - not a germaphobe, but treatment here for simple things is not quite reassuring,  Plus, the memory of Batad was magical and I was satisfied with that.  So, I clumped down from the third floor and found left-over mashed potatoes for breakfast; waddling out the door to hike down the hill to the highway where I hoped to catch the 9am bus.  I couldn't quite believe it - the bus stopped for me; the driver lugging my backpack and stuffing it above my seat - at 9:03am!!  Impressive...as was the rest of the trip from Sagada to Baguio.

I had only brought sandals and capris, but had my fleece jacket and blankets to warm me in the crisp air that threatened rain.  We set off and quickly remembered transportation in the Philippines.  I'm not sure why we are on the left side of the road in this picture - except that the other driver decided that it should be us who plummeted over the cliff and not him.  The buses passed with perhaps 3 inches to spare.

But, the views were gorgeous - the rice terraces filled with water, 
       and the mountain range stretching in the distance....no beaches here!




Even in the rain and cold climate, people hang their laundry to dry...possibly for quite a while!








One of our first stops was in the fog at the top of a mountain - a village called Mountain Home.  The wind was blowing and it was sprinkling.  I couldn't find the famous Mountain Tea to purchase, but bought a siopao (asado) and went to the CR (the sign said 5 pesos to pee and 5 pesos to poop...don't know why they had to make the distinction - I mean it was the same price)


This little sari-sari was tended by two women - you can see one sitting at the left with a head wrap - and one on the right with a woolen ski hat!  Yes, it was that cold - in the Philippines!!
The rain started to mar the windows, but I noted the Billiard Hall
and then we were back to appreciating nature











in a BIG way....
where now and again, the sun shone on the lush hillsides and incredible mountainous backdrop.












The scenery was lovely, and even the homes here looked nicer and sturdier than in other provinces - but perhaps they need heavier weather protection 


Just like picking me up on the side of the road, the bus lets off people wherever they ask - for this man, right at his front door.

This may seem a funny sign, but I have never seen so many people spitting in my life!  And I'm talking about beautiful young women who hawk up a gob and spit it out - yuck.  I wonder if this sign works?


I loved this church and was going to photoshop the picture - then decided I liked the juxtaposition.


Still in the Mountain Province, but far from Sagada - this was obviously market day - but I'm not used to seeing parkas and caps on folks!




Every purchase at every stall is put in a small plastic bag, usually colored, and you carry around maybe five of these...unless you have brought a larger bag of your own.


During the holiday season these Mandarin oranges
(in the crates) are in great demand, and are delicious.
I know I've said before that although "English" is spoken here, it is a very different language than what we speak.  This is an example - what would you say this shop does?  You find them in every town.

I took this picture for Katie - one of only a handful of horses I've seen here.

I took this picture for Stephanie and her dad - his style, half a world away - but no sheep!

                                                 and we climbed...
looking out onto a range that reminded me of Yosemite Valley



It was just glorious!

Oops - when accidents happen here, they can be spectacular.  I've seen two motorcyclists crash head-on (two separate incidents), a drunken trike driver take a turn too sharply and upend in a stream, and this...and no one was badly hurt!
But, with such accidents, you knew you were getting close to a city - Baguio, where I had to change buses - the stations were really far apart...a 10 minute trike ride.  I had wanted to explore Baguio, but as we got to the 2nd station a bus was on its way out to Manila...and I hopped aboard.