Four things I learnt from travel to the Philippines

I am fortunate that I’ve had the opportunity to visit some of the top tourist spots in the Philippines: I’ve climbed Taal volcano, gazed in wonder at the Chocolate Hills, floated on the green Loboc River, rafted down the rapids of Pagsanjan River, swum from a sand bar into a warm turquoise sea and looked in awe on Mount Mayon. I discovered a country of real beauty, of dreamy beaches and dramatic mountains. But my time spent in the Philippines is much more than memories filed away in dusty photo albums. I may be thousands of miles away but the Philippines is part of my here and now. It shaped who I am today. So I’ve tried to distill it down to why it had such an impact, this is what I came up with:

The Chocolate Hills, Bohol

  1. Smile

Whilst visiting the Philippines for the first time, I was often asked “What will you take back from the Philippines?” It sounds a bit silly but my answer was always “the smiles”. As part of an exchange visit organised by Rotary Clubs in Laguna and Bicol, we visited lots of schools and community-based projects. Everywhere we went, we were greeted with beautiful smiles.

The smiles are still with me, though sometimes, I do have to remind myself to smile more.

Filipino kids smiling and laughing

  1. Biodiversity is truly diverse

The wildlife in the Philippines astounds me. I’ve been lucky enough to see wide-eyed tarsiers and swim with wide-mouthed whale sharks, but there is so much more. Although most of it I will never see, it is fascinating to discover that there are unique species of mice found on single mountain tops and to see how bleeding-heart doves have have evolved to have different plumage on different islands.

It’s also simple things that really made me stop and think: the funky centipedes, colourful beetles and the ridiculous number butterflies – I was amazed to see twenty-two different species of butterfly on one short walk!

I have worked in wildlife conservation all my working life, I know what biodiversity means but only in the Philippines did I truly witness it.

Philippine tarsier

  1. The power of community spirit

Children danced for us when we visited this school on the shores of Laguna de Bay; the next time I saw an image of the school was six months later; adults were wading through water that was up to their chests.

Typhoon Ondoy (Ketsana) had stuck with all its might. The moment when I heard about it on the radio, in a BBC news broadcast, is permanently etched into my mind. But it was what happened immediately after the typhoon was inspiring. My Facebook news feed and email inbox filled with updates from Filipinos I’d met. They took immediate action to help those affected, delivering food, clothing, whatever was needed in their communities.

All communities come together and support each other in times of need; it is the human spirit. But in the Philippines, there’s even a word for it bayanihan. 

(Read more about it on this blog: The Bayanihan Spirit).

School children dancing

  1. To embrace the inspiration

Spending time in the Philippines changed my perspective and sparked my imagination.

After visiting the Philippines I started drawing again (which I hadn’t done for years) and began to write stories. I didn’t set out to be an author; that some of my stories became published picture books in the Philippines is remarkable. Maybe they will help raise awareness of some of the wildlife in the Philippines, before it is too late.

Measured in miles I am a long way from these islands that continue to inspire me, sometimes it feels a little crazy, but I have decided just to carry on. To embrace the inspiration and see where the stories and pictures take me.

And I hope, in a small way, it gives something back to the children that greeted us with their smiles.

School children with picture books donated by the Rotary Club of West Bay, Laguna

 

Twenty-two mga paruparo

When I visited the Philippines in 2015 for the launch of my picturebooks, we went on a short trek on Mount Makiling. Short probably because I spent so much time chasing butterflies and taking photos that we didn’t get very far!

The butterflies were amazing, I had never seen so many different species in one place. I didn’t know what they were, but made a note of their colours and markings. A very small blue one, a white one with a large black eyespot, one that looks like a zebra. By the end of the trek, we’d see twenty-two different species!

Nakakita tayo ng dalawampu’t dalawa na ibat-ibang klase ng paruparo. Nakita din natin ang malaki na gagamba …but that’s another story (NB I had help with the tagalog!).

Such a remarkable number of species on one short walk.
20160725_182001

This is my identification book for the butterflies of Britain and Ireland. It’s not very big because there aren’t many butterfly species. Just 59 species in the entire country. I’ve seen 39 of them.

To see 22 butterfly species in just a short walk; it was as if Mount Makiling was demonstrating to me the true meaning of biodiversity (perhaps it was Maria Makiling herself showing me).

I failed to get photos of most of them and the ones I did get aren’t great but thank you to the wonderful people at Philippine Lepidoptera for identifying them. Check out their facebook page or website for some fantastic butterfly and moth photos and marvel at the biodiversity of the Philippines!

Ragadia luzonia negrosensisRagadia luzonia negrosensis

Koruthaialos rubecula luzonensisKoruthaialos rubecula luzonensis

Ypthima sempera semperaYpthima sempera sempera

Parantica luzonensis luzonensisParantica luzonensis luzonensis

Eurema sarilata aquiloEurema sarilata aquilo

Appias nephele nepheleAppias nephele nephele

Faunis phaon panFaunis phaon pan

Pithecops corvusPithecops corvus

Two butterflies that I managed to photograph in other locations in the Philippines:

Parthenos sylvia philippensisParthenos sylvia philippensis

Troides rhadamantus rhadamantusTroides rhadamantus rhadamantus