My Hometown
Whenever I go home to my town I always think of my life before in the 50's and through the 70's. There is always a heightened feeling of nostalgia as I arrived in my town. The moment I approached and passed the road from Carriedo and Payawin going down to a long stretch of a straight road of Naduyan in San Ignacio, passing St. Anthony Academy to the left with vast rice fields from left and right, my excitement quivers me. Straight ahead is our main road, Manook Street going directly to our poblacion.
Whenever I go home to my town I always think of my life before in the 50's and through the 70's. There is always a heightened feeling of nostalgia as I arrived in my town. The moment I approached and passed the road from Carriedo and Payawin going down to a long stretch of a straight road of Naduyan in San Ignacio, passing St. Anthony Academy to the left with vast rice fields from left and right, my excitement quivers me. Straight ahead is our main road, Manook Street going directly to our poblacion.
San Ignacio |
tGubat Plaza |
HOW OUR TOWN GOT ITS NAME
Gubat is a beautiful laid back town located at the southern most tip of the Bicol Peninsula in the province of Sorsogon. It has many fine beaches with white sands facing the Pacific Ocean. As narrated to me by my grandmother, Lola Nila in my younger days, Gubat is a word that derived from a bicol and visayan dialect which means "raid."
Let me add some facts of history of our town as I read from a source of reference in an old Fiesta Souvenir program. Gubat was actually a barrio of Bulusan which was famous because of its active volcano, the idyllic Mt. Bulusan. Gubat was declared town by the Spanish government in June 13, 1764 and became a part of the province of Albay. It became a parish in June 13, 1771 under the administration of Fr. Geronimo Cabello, our first Parish Priest, a religious Spanish Franciscan missionary. June 13, being the feast day honoring St. Anthony de Padua.
St Anthony de Padua |
ST. ANTHONY de PADUA, GUBAT, SORSOGON
Another story of my Lola Nila Acuna about the raids of moro pirates was a beautiful story which she heard from her parents. This narrative which she was always telling anyone many times of the miracle of St. Anthony de Padua, our Patron saint. In the story, as the Moros had just disembarked from their boats from the shores of our town in the place near our old town hall, when suddenly, out of the blue, a man dressed in a monk's cape appeared in front of them.
My Cousin Alberto Acuna with the statue of St Anthony at the entrance of the church |
The moros seeing this man, without any fear or distress at their sight, were filled with surprise. The man motioned his leg and started kicking the sand continuously towards them creating an awesome force of deluge of sand hitting the moros. By this account, the moros started to flee with great fright on their boats and never came back. St. Anthony de Padua was the man in monk's cape. The Gubatnons were great devotees of this Franciscan saint who protected our town through his miracles.
WHY IS ST. ANTHONY HOLDING THE CHILD JESUS?
Apparently, when I was a child everytime I entered our Parish Church to hear mass my eyes would definitely brought my attention and focus to the beautiful image of St. Anthony holding the Child Jesus. It was my favorite site located near the front door at the left area where the post of the second floor of the choir loft was located. I always stopped by for a few moments just to pray, meditate and admire his beautiful image and the goodness of this Franciscan saint carrying the Child Jesus. Until I grew up this was the question that I was trying to find out why is St. Anthony is always depicted to be holding the Child Jesus and why is this so? Artists who would portray St. Anthony and the Child in a friendly and likable manner that is so appealing and very sentimental for everyone to look at.
However, there is a very popular story I have read somewhere about Franciscan historians explaining the story of the custom but advised it to be some sort of a legend rather than a historical fact. According to the version, Count Tiso who had a Castle near Padua where he put up a chapel and a hermitage for the friars at the grounds of the castle. St. Anthony went there toward the end of his life and spent time in prayer in one of the hermit cells.
One night, suddenly his cell filled up with light. Jesus appeared in the form of a little child to Anthony. Passing by the hermitage, the Count saw the light shining from the room and Anthony, communicating with the infant. The Count fell to his knees upon seeing this wondrous sight and as soon as the vision ended, Anthony saw the Count at the door. He begged to the Count not to reveal what he had seen until after his death. Whether the story is true or a legend, it teaches us of the truth of St. Anthony, our patron saint
.
The St Anthony de Padua Parish Church Altar |
Our church was very near our ancestral home in Mabini street. Apparently, during the latter part of the 60's when I was in the elementary and in my first year high school at St Anthony Academy, I was practically involved in many church activities. I was a member of the Legion of Mary and then I became an acolyte for a number of years. My grandmother, Lola Nila Acuna was a CWL and was assigned by the parish to oversee the Miraculous Virgin Mary's "urnas" spreaded out through the town. I was her constant companion in all those sorties collecting the monthly offerings in all the barrios.
An undated procession of the feast of The Miraculous Medal at our church with Msgr. Ramen as the officiating priest. The little boy in front is me with my Lola Nila at my left. On her left was Lola Ines Esporlas. On my right was Oscar Peralta. On extreme right was Espot Escurel Encinas.
RUSTIC GASTRONOMY
I remember my childhood years in my town in Gubat, Sorsogon in the 50s and through the 60s. I was living with my grandmother with fond memories of the many foods that I have grown with and loved to eat. These are prepared from our bucolic kitchen in our home. My maternal grandmother, Lola Nila Acuna concocted her culinary skills handed down from her parents. She could have learned also from the traditional way of cooking that we Gubatnons followed for a long time. In my growing years, we followed simply a healthy living by eating a simple flair of daily meals on our antique narra table; it may consist mainly of fish, shellfish, pork, chicken and the many vegetables grown in our backyard or bought from "Maritatasan"(vegetable stalls) in the Public Market. Coconut was our primary delectable catalyst in preparing most of our dishes. Coconut is endemic to our place and one of the main livelihood of the Gubatnons. Expect a coconut concoction on every meal and dessert prepared on our table.
In those days pork and beef were only prepared on Saturdays and Sundays. It is a special treat of every family or on special occasions like fiestas or weddings. Everyone can reserve for a piece of meat to their meat vendor in the Market Plaza early in the morning. I usually ordered our beef for our "bistek," (a delicious beef recipe) from Tio Piping Esporlas who was a relative of my dear Lola. She used to make a delicious "Tapa," tied up to a rope at the post near the ceiling. When she liked to cook some, she just cut a piece of meat prepared for our meal. She also prepared an adobo recipe without the vinegar, packed in a bottle with lots of pork fats preserved for a long time. We also had a huge antique "tapayan" (chinese vase) that my Lola preserved her Santol jam or salted "Kuyog" (small Siganid or Danggit fish)
Shrimp Suaje |
Our kitchen's design was of a simple construction traditionally seen on every kitchen of Gubatnons in the olden days. It was made from a suspended wooden pit covered with soil plus the accumulated ashes from the countless burnings of firewood from the clay stove at the center. Above the kitchen pit, was a shelf connected to a wall stocked with clay pots and casseroles of different sizes. Underneath was a supply of firewood and dried coconut shells gathered from our farm brought by my cousins or bought from the market. A "bakay" (pandan basket) with half full of pili nuts taken from leftovers of "linanta na pili" placed near the corner of the kitchen. These Pili nuts were a treat on my afternoon snacks.
Above the stove was a rattan basket tied to a wooden beam at the extended kitchen ceiling where my Lola used to keep our leftovers at lunch or at dinner. It is interesting to note that this idea could be very efficient in those days when refs were still scarce. Food will not spoil for safekeeping that neither rats nor ants troubled us at all. Beside the kitchen, to the right, was our "banggerahan" (kitchen sink) with bamboo grills and water faucet. There was a bowl that we used for cleaning the dishes that we would discard the soiled water down below to the ground. This was also the place where we stored our cutlery, drinking glasses, kitchen accessories and the "Biso" (Water Vase) where we stored our cold fresh drinking water.
Santo Intiero Carrosa at Good Friday procession |
During Holy Week I would recall the procesion of the Santo Intiero and the Via Dolorosa at night and eventually the "Dagit" at dawn on Easter Sunday where the resurrection of Jesus was reenacted. I also remember how the swallows, birds that fly gracefully inside the church perched on the edges of the ceilings, It could be annoying and distracting to many but to me as a kid, it was a fascinating show of the marvel of flight. It was actually my first study of flight. I could not forget also the beautiful and realistic statue of St. Anthony holding the Child Jesus at the left side of the main door of the church.
The belfry Bells "The chime of the bells has the power to amaze, to charm, to warn, to frighten and to lift our spirit" |
We had the most beautiful and incomparable tones of the 3 big bells up in our belfry of our church that could be heard miles away. The timbre was right to the pitch with best quality of resonance of a bell sound. The chime of the bells have the power to amaze, to charm, to warn, to frighten and to lift our spirit. Our church being the center of our town as we focused our ears to hear the bells for our time, mass alarms, fire alarms etc . . The tones were beautiful to the ears with melancholic and joyous tones. With explicit timing of intervals of ringing it could define a particular function of tones on any occasion.
At Angelus, it sounded solemn yet heavenly. Every Gubatnon, whatever he or she was doing, as the bell rang at 6 pm at dusk, would stop and face the church with reverence and prayed
At the Consecration of the Mass, the ringing sounded to be divine. At the alarm for the invitation to Mass, the urgency of the sound forced us to rush or for any rite inside the church that was familiar to most us. Then, there were the joyous ringings of these bells such as in Gloria in Excelcis Deo, Wedding rite, Te Deum, and Fiesta. All the three bells were tolled with the rapid and sporadic interval of ringings of the two small bells together with the interval ringing of the big bell.
At the Consecration of the Mass, the ringing sounded to be divine. At the alarm for the invitation to Mass, the urgency of the sound forced us to rush or for any rite inside the church that was familiar to most us. Then, there were the joyous ringings of these bells such as in Gloria in Excelcis Deo, Wedding rite, Te Deum, and Fiesta. All the three bells were tolled with the rapid and sporadic interval of ringings of the two small bells together with the interval ringing of the big bell.
I have never heard any sound of bells anywhere better than our Church bells in all my life. When I was 13, with my buddies we learned to toll these 3 giant bells. We had the difficulty of climbing up the unstable and rickety wooden stairs up in the belfry risking our lives. However, I felt sad when I went home in the 70s when the tones of the bells in the belfry sounded very different and awful until I learned that it was sold and replaced by the parish priest.
LOLA NILA ACUNA
LOLA NILA ACUNA
I used to live in Mabini Street, near the center of our town. This is where I have stayed for 14 years of my life, living with my grandmother, Lola Nila Acuna.. Since my grandmother was the only survivor among her family, as all her parents and siblings have already been deceased; naturally, she became the matriarch or the surrogate of her clan. All the family's estates in Bulacao have already been divided among her siblings; and then passed on to their children as well. So she was living on the benevolence and charity of all her nephews and nieces, including my mother. But I could remember that she was well respected by her family as she was always obeyed and followed.
When she died in 1968 I was 16 and by that time, I was no longer with her. I left her in 1966 when I followed my mother in the city to study. There was this big issue of who should get the property because she died a spinster. There was no will written that was made before she died, So, in legal terms, all her nieces and nephews were all the legal heirs to the property in Mabini. Well, to make the story short, they have settled among themselves on the consensus that whoever supported, clothed and fed her while she was still living should get the property.
Dankalan Beach |
DANKALAN BEACH
Dankalan Beach, was my favorite beach when I was young, located at the south eastern cove of the town in the area between Pinontingan and Ariman facing the Pacific Ocean to the east. It was a walking distance to our ancestral house in Mabini street. The beach has white sand and particularly long as seen here in the photo. The water is shallow with rock formations at the bottom to step on it when the tide was beginning to rise. This is also the place where fishermen catch fish by the use of a long big net comprising of two large boats encircling an area of fish, we call it "Sensoro."
Further south, the Buenavista, the place before reaching the famous Rizal Beach, is a beach cove with particular note, big surfing waves that could thrill swimmers and especially surfers but this place is a killer as many perished at the undertow of big waves pulling swimmers to the deep. When I was in Grade One, the BSP National Jamboree was held in Buenavista, in Camp Estonanto, two boy scouts were drowned swimming in the area where undertow was particularly strong.
The Gubat Central Elementary School |
To the left of the town hall was our Arts and Trade building where we learned to make handicrafts, weaving some baskets or driftwood book stand, etc. .under Mr. Sanez and fronting the building was our garden where we learned to plant pechay, mongo and peanuts under Mr. Eugenio Bobiles, our neighbor in Mabini Street. Some of my mentors in my school were Mrs. Espaldon, who went to US when I was in Grade 2, Mrs. Totanez, Mrs Estayan, Mr. and Mrs. Ragos, Mrs. Peralta, Mrs. Villaroya, and Miss Estipona.
Rizal Beach |
RIZAL BEACH, GUBAT, SORSOGON
Whenever we compare Boracay and Rizal Beach with my townmates, they could never accede to the fact that Boracay is more beautiful in every respect than our Rizal Beach I would never support my townmates for their silly idea, anyway because I might predispose myself or a bias in their judgement but considering that we have a photo here. You could judge it for yourself. . . .You will surely pass my old town, Gubat before reaching the famous Rizal Beach going south. It was featured in international travel books and magazines. To the tourists, beach lovers and first timers, Rizal Beach is really a wonderful place to go and swim and enjoy for a family outing or just for fun specially in summer.
In my younger days, I always regularly swim with my friends and buddies. Unfortunately, I have not been to the place for a decade now. The place was transformed commercially where hotels, lodges and shops were built all around. The place is also a big area of beach cove linking Buenavista and Dankalan if you move north. It has white sand and the water is shallow that will allow the family and especially the children to wade and play and frolic.
With one particular caution, jelly fish, "salabay", as we locally call it abound and flourish on the northern portion of the beach. They can be fatal if it stings the swimmer. They mate in the afternoon and everyone is warned to avoid the place. If you wish to go to the place for assistance, please contact, Mrs. Elisa F. Marasigan of Gubat Pharmacy.
Coro Coro |
ON THE ROAD TO MANHOOD IN GUBAT, SORSOGON
I originally came from Gubat, Sorsogon. I spent my childhood there. I just love remembering the summers during school breaks. These were the times when I learned many things as I was growing up. It brought comforts of the simplicity of life in the province. Neither frills nor luxury and anything fancy in my everyday life. I enjoyed simply on anything I liked.
Unlike today in the age of ipods and mobile phones when kids carry these gadgets to enjoy going around. I grew up with my friends, buddies and classmates as normal boys growing up in the province. I always enjoy the company of my dear old cousin, Manoy Berting Acuna and Manay Nayda during Summers. I loved walking in rice paddies and the rice fields with my cousin, Manay Nene "Leonisa" Faune in Pangdan, Bulacao. We love collecting rice that were not gathered in the harvest and were left behind to be fed to the birds or any of us to gather and save for our extra money to buy candies or any stuff for our "baon" to attend "Flores de Mayo at the Chapel in Bulacao. I also loved to swim in "Palapay" - a shallow river with a small dam near the Bulacao Elementary School with Manoy Totoy Pura and with the many boys from the barrio who liked to learn how to swim. It was really an enjoyable experiences as I grew up bonding and interacting with all my cousins in the barrio as we enjoyed all summer. As I remember those times in my youth, I tried to reminisce to all my relatives what we did in those times.
Pangdan, Bulacao |
PANGDAN, BULACAO, GUBAT, SORSOGON
However, I always feared the presence of snakes everywhere. We always had long walks especially in those times when the road would not link directly to our farm. It was far away and tiring that we often passed some houses of relatives before reaching our farm. Being young, I always imagined snakes crawling or creeping on the ground ready to attack me. Cobra was the most feared snake in our place. Snakebites were common in those times and it killed many people every year.
Every time I passed these holes in the road sides and especially a hole on a mound of a hill. I knew that it was a snake pit. I was just as scared as hell and ready to run. So every time I passed a thick clump of bushes or even in an open area of a grassy field, I always prepared and carry a long bamboo stick hitting anything as I walked and moved around. As a result, I remained unscathed and and have not encountered any snake for the rest of my life. The bamboo stick was the most effective and the safest way in driving the snakes. It relieved my fear and saved my life, I guess. It was a memorable experience when I was young, an experience on the road to manhood.
Pusiw |
NOTE: This blogpost is a compilation of my stories of my town in my youth. I started on the last paragraph with the topic "On the road to manhood". Then I added every topic with many stories that suited my I interest especially my memories of my grandmother, Lola Nila Acuna, St Anthony, local foods, my activities in the church, school, the beaches of our town and so on. Thank you!
25 comments:
i was browsing our surname.. i saw the CAMP ESTONANTO.. can you possibly share me anything about the camp
you could email me at destonanto@yahoo.com..
good day sir..
Hello, Sir Alfonso. :) I'm also from Gubat. Your entry was a good read.
I was wondering if you know the English names of the birds (Coro-Coro, Pusiw) you included in this post. Can they really be found in our town? Are they endemic?
I'm planning to go birdwatching when I go home for the break.
Thanks!
-Najo
Thank you, Najo for the appreciation of my post. Pusiw and Coro-Coro are very popular birds in our town. They are a good memoirs of my town when I was growing up. I think they are endemic to our place or throughout our country. As I have read in the Birdwatch.ph, we have 600 species of birds, migratory or endemic, 400 of which are migratory. I am sorry I cannot tell you their english names. Birdwatch.ph has a series of gallery of the most common birds in the Phil. that could provide you of the nearest name to our Pusiw and Coro-Coro by clearly comparing our birds from Gubat. Thank you!
Nice story of your town. You are a religious person by the way how you have grown up in a laid back town with strong influence and impact on Catholic doctrine. I am a Fil-Am Catholic from San Francisco, USA, born in the northern Philippines and migrated to the US in my teens and I felt nostalgic of the festivities in the province especially in Holy Week. Nice experience you've got there, friend. Thanks a lot!
Dear Anonymous,
Thank you for dropping by my site. Please read also my post, "life's treat: Holy Week." Thanks!
alfonso ereve
Hello again, Sir Alfonso. :)
I only started birding when I left my first comment so I didn't immediately recognize the illustration of the 'pusiw.'
'Pusiw' is Sunbird in english. Subirds are one of the most colorful songbirds, and they are indeed endemic to the Philippines. And endemic to our town! I have seen only one species of Sunbird during our hike to Tigkiw-na-Saday in Brgy. Tigkiw to visit the soil erosion, this is the Crimson Sunbird. The endemnism is thanks to the abudance of palm trees. :D
However, I still am not sure about the Coro-Coro. I have not seen a blue bird in Gubat other than the White-throated Kingfisher in the same site.
I was also able to identify an Oriole, a Coucal and a pair of Malkohas. If I had more time and concentrated on birding alone, I'm positive I could've seen other species.
We should be proud of our birds. :) They could help boost the town's tourism. But, of course, the project must be properly implemented to also protect the birds and their habitat. :)
Thanks, Sir!
-Najo
What a nice personal interest you are in, Najo. Bird watching is really great especially if you have a camera to capture the many species in its natural habitat in our town. As for my illustrations of birds in my blog, they are only a figment of my imagination as I remember these birds in my youth. Nice of you to mention the place in Tigkiw which eroded as big as a crater.Many thanks. Keep in touch always!
Sir,
Nice post of your memoirs of our town. I heard versions of stories about how our town got its name. Which is the real story? Could you elaborate?
My email address, rwinfield91@yahoo.com
Thanks!
Hi!
I am also from Gubat, Sorsogon. I found your post so very interesting. As a Gubatnon the long Holy Week Processions were also part of my memories. We have just visited Gubat last week (May 9-15, 2009) for our family reunion. I have been to very many places so I could say that very few towns in the Philippines can match the beauty and diversity of Gubat. We have visited the places you have mentioned and in addition, we visited the great Handauan Island. Though the destructions brought about by the fishponds and overfishing practices really made me sad, I still feel so proud having born in such a beautiful town of Gubat and grown up to see the great mangrove forests of Handauan Island. They said the fishponds caused the cutting of centuries old trees that used to populate the coast line from Cogon to Paco. It was really sad to visit after some years and see that many of those huge miyapes, bantigues, bungalons and other trees are now gone. Also when we toured the rocky "hubasans" of Ugbos, Nalamesa and Nabat-an, I still saw the great beauty though there are now much fewer shells to gather. I imagine that vast rocky area that is exposed at low tide to be no less than 6 kilometers long. We have not visited "Binanderahan", which Gubatnons claim to be the most beautiful part of that place. We have walked underneath the great bakhaw forest in the northern part of handauan. I saw many of them have been cut, though a lot still remain. The forest used to be home to "punays" and "layagans". Handauan (I am not sure if this is the correct spelling)Island is truly a treasure that Gubatnons must help protect and preserve.
I enjoyed reading your post. Thank you.
Thank you Sir for finding interest in my blog post. I wish I know you because you are also from Gubat. Having spent my childhood in our place, my memories of the many activities and the many places seem to haunt me as the twilight of my life nears. However, the places of Handauan Island and the coastal line from Cogon to Paco which you have recently visited that were damaged brought about by over fishing, fishpond construction and human abuse saddened me. You are a nature lover with a wide spectrum of knowledge of the biodiversity of the ecosystem in our place; I salute you for that.
I wish I could go to Handauan Island one day.
Thank you.
Thanks sir. I am Val Enaje Gando. I was born in Gubat but left after high school for higher education. My original intention was to return back, serve Gubat and raise a family there. That never happened.
Handauan was part of my childhood, but not as a place to admire but a place to hate.... it used to be part of my work environment as a working son of a fisherman. Initially I thought it was not an Island. So intrigued why people called it an island, I went on a boat with my brother one day. We started our boat ride from Mualbual beach in Bagacay and Paco. We entered the river called "Salog" and I was so amazed with the huge mangrove trees that were crowding the banks. The river was long, we passed by Ogao and Tiris teretories, then I noticed the water seemed to flow in separate directions. I realized we were about to reach the "Laboy" or the exit point of the river that cuts through the mangrove forest, making Handauan indeed an island. Laboy was spectacular in beauty and in richness in life. We went fishing using our improvized bamboo fishing rods and there were lot of fishes that time there. There was a place near there where the sand was white but so soft that feet sink up to knee level when one walks through. Handauan is famous for "Engkanto".. and that's probably the reason for the lesser environmental destruction. The front of Handauan is the Nabat-an. It is a huge rocky area that is exposed during low tide. The area used to be very rich with shells of many kinds. What I could not forget was the "Liswa" or the eggs of soft black sea cucumber that used be very abundant in that place. It resembles the "misua" noodles. We would just cut the stomach of the sea cucumber to get the liswa then set the cucumber free. We would put some "santol" in the liswa and would eat it straight. Though wet and feeling cold, it could make us feel very warm instantly after eating. Amazingly, the sea cucumber's cut would heal in minutes.
I used to think of Handauan, Mual-bual, Ugbos and Nabat-an as places were we would, as children go with our parents to gather shells, crabs and fish to have our daily meal. It was hard and so I learned not to love the place during my younger days. But now that I have been to many places, I came to realize how beautiful these places and Gubat were.
If you're wondering how I got to visit your blog.... I was googling for the keyword "gubat, sorsogon" if it would point to my site valgando.com. It didn't. Instead I came to see your blog.
Have a nice day always!
Val, thank you for introducing yourself. Also, your most interesting perspective of Handauan Islanch which I have never set foot in all my life seems so fascinating as your familiarity of the place brought about by your experience in your youth.
Thanks for finding my site in the web. I will visit your site as well.
May God bless you and your family!
I am proud to be a Gubatnon!
I lived in Gubat when I was in the elementary but keep on coming back . . . .whenever my family has time for vacation specially in summer. Nice memories and experiences. Thanks!
My family origin was in Gubat,But i was born in Naga City. When i saw gubat i was amaze of a different views from the beaches,to the mountains. Im proud to say that my family was came from Gubat. And theres always a promise comes in to my mind that i keep coming back to Gubat.
VIVA to all Gubatnons!!
Hi Alfonso,
Found this blog while browsing the net, and I'm happy that there are other Gubatnons that are into blogging. Your posts and stories are great, especially about our hometown.
I myself just started to blog and was looking for ideas when I stumbled upon this site. Can I have the honor to follow this blog?
Thank you Sir and God Bless you always.
-JM
Wow lovely photos. Sorsogon is one the island in philippines. But for me boracay is the best place for relaxing.....
Tanya Gemarin
Hi, very interesting post, greetings from Greece!
i love the your narrative blog post of our town.. that's the way you tell the story .. it has that real life experiences of the author that takes our memories back to its place.. it flashes back to my mind every description of people and places that you have mentioned in your story.. the feelings and nostalgia.. the world of pure, innocence of our youth.Up to this present time of electronics our town remains its grandeur and beauty.
Thanks that whenever we decided to visit the place we all still feel that mixed emotions that you have mentioned and the smell of the air awakes those memories back to where we came from.
Thank you so much for sharing.. more power to you. great story.
Gemma Engay
Thanx for the memory.I studied in Saint Anthony Academy from 1978-80/I grew up in Tiris,Gubat Sor.I had so many memorable memories in Gubat until I went to Paris,France then now I'm residing in New York USA for the moment.Every time I arrived in Gubat during my vacation I cannot hold my tears of joy...excitement..I know in my heart I know one day...one day I'll be back to Gubat Sor and I'll reminish the happy moment again with my kababayan my family,relatives & friends that's for SURE!GOD BLESS GUBAT SORSOGON my family relatives,friends and my kababayan until next time....
Mao. Taga gubat man ako. Nano kay puro man english an nag popost. Mas dianis konta kon sa sadiri nato na surmaton. Aram an gubat kon wara mga NPA dagahanon an mabisita doon nan mauswag an ekonomiya nato.
kaya lang may salot na NPA mga hugakon yon gusto lang makalibre permi. habo mag padanga.
I visited Gubat as part of the project I joined in. I am glad I did, hope to be back soon: http://www.nomadicexperiences.com/2012/10/the-kids-of-gubat-sorsogon-decides-to.html
From brgy.tabi,gubat,sorsogon
I like your stories about Bulacao. My ancestors are from there. Im planning to visit this first week of May.
Pol Gonzaga
Hi,
I really love reading your blog. Very interesting and entertaining. I originally came from Gubat but we settled to Canada for over 20 years now and I hope that someday I could come back and visit my place. Maybe in the near future after I retire from my job. How sad to remember the days when I was young and carefree, enjoying everything that I really love - to be where I was and to come home to visit my roots. Thanks
I accidentally discovered your blog as I was browsing "Sorsogon" in the web. I am from Sorsogon and OFW in Dubai. You really wrote well and very interesting. Thanks.
Post a Comment