This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 4, February 27-March 5, 2005
The Swamp is not the site of simple production
force anymore. Against a backdrop of aging mountains, hills and a fair summer
sky, I was rather perplexed by the string (quite a length) of souvenir shops.
There is a makeshift corral at the entrance of the Swamp. A modest hotel waits
at the end of the string of shops for tourists who would like to wake up to a
fog-charmed morning. Indeed, the makings of a rural struggle, manifested by the
encroachment of tourism. BY ABI TAGUBA
BENGWAYAN BAGUIO CITY -- It was a dry February
morning, when it was at once suddenly hot and cold, when I was reminded of
strawberries. I was also reminded of a possible headache come nighttime, with
this undecided weather. That, for you is La Trinidad, in this
northern province of Benguet. Another writer called it the “valley of a thousand
strawberries and one people” in an essay on our grandmother Herminia some years
ago. Yes, we still see the red berries dotting the gardens at this time of the
year. Thousands, perhaps. But “one people”? Well, there still is something to
hope for. With strawberries still on my mind, I
trekked to the Swamp Area or simply Swamp to us valley dwellers (strawberry
fields for you, if you please). It was literally a swamp eons ago, with odds and
ends of swamp lifeforms about, which eventually made it suitable for planting.
There, the strawberries were not alone.
Patches of spring onions, lettuce, and broccoli created several shades of green.
Rows of mums – pink, golden yellow, maroon, and peach – broke the monotony of
green. And gardeners, men and women, young and old, worked the Swamp like a
natural appendage. But the Swamp is not the site of simple
production force anymore. Against a backdrop of aging mountains, hills and a
fair summer sky, I was rather perplexed by the string (quite a length) of
souvenir shops. There is a makeshift corral at the entrance of the Swamp. A
modest hotel waits at the end of the string of shops for tourists who would like
to wake up to a fog-charmed morning. Indeed, the makings of a rural struggle,
manifested by the encroachment of tourism. While panagbenga kicks off in
this acclaimed City of Pines, the Adivay Festival was also conjured here,
in the same spirit of promoting, enticing, and perhaps, generating income. Swamp business I wonder if all valley dwellers are keen on
buying strawberries for the sheer consumption of it. Not to make business out of
jams and jellies really. So I bought one kilo. Some tourists, meanwhile, prefer to buy
strawberries at the Swamp instead of the City Market, and pick them personally –
the feel of mud in your shoes and all. And usually, they look up at trees,
straining their eyes in search of strawberries. And they are more awe-stricken
when gardeners point to the ground at them runners.
“Ay, hindi pala puno!” This month, City Market strawberries are
sold at P35 a kilo. The Swamp people sell them at P40. I asked why. While unloading crates of fresh (I was
assured and I believed) berries, one manong (brother, out of respect to
an elderly male) said the price was precisely because of the “freshness.” A
younger woman packing the berries said that bulbs are even lit and placed close
to the palengke (market) berries to make them appear shiny. Business is
still good, she said, despite the meningococcemia occurrence. “Malako pay
lang met” (They still sell), she said. The Chrysanthemum Lady, however, did not
share the same situation. A tacky sign reading “flowers for sale” was perched
amid the flowers. A sight to behold, yes, but again our pages are not colored.
“Manu ngay ti maysa dozen?”
(How much does a dozen cost?), I asked. “Ochenta, ngem uray ited ko ti P70”
(Eighty pesos per dozen, but I will sell them to you at P70), she replied,
smiling. It appeared I was the first customer. At the City Market (my only
intention was to compare the prices, implications are inevitable), a dozen of
these mums were sold at P100 to P120, she told me while picking the flowers.
Bad business Business was not so good after the
meningococcemia scare, she said, quite upset with how the whole issue was
handled by concerned authorities. I knew I look good with a bundle of flowers
under either arm, so I took home a dozen. Strawberries in one hand and the mums in the
other, I walked back to the entrance. On the way, I met two elderly Bontoc
women, heaps of tapis atop their heads. They need not balance the goods
for these are relatively light, aside form the fact that they have carried
heavier things on their heads. This is a practical way of carrying load for
indigenous peoples, especially women, in the Cordillera countryside, for
carrying vegetables, rootcrops, ubbak (foliage for swine feed), firewood,
among others. This is practiced even among women workers in the urban areas,
such as the knitters with their sacks of yarn and by-products, the newspaper and
bottle buyers. It is not easy to balance a sack of empty bottles. Or heaps of
jaryo (old newspapers). Now, these beautiful old women were already
displaying their goods before I could say I was not buying. “Daytoy tres,
daytoy kwatro” (This one costs P300, this is P400), one said, pointing to
the sinakwit then the kolibangbang. Sinakwit and
kolibangbang are abel or designs woven into the Bontoc tapis.
The local hotel orders from them, and so do several of the shops. Business is
good, they say. Benguet cowboys The Adivay Festival poster shows Benguet
cowboys riding their horses, lassoing the cattle, dust all over the place. At
least this one I saw at the Benguet State University. Horses really abound
their, for practical use. The Ibalois (Benguet ethnic minorities) used to
have loads of cattle in their confines. If I am not mistaken, Dr. Patricia
Afable wrote a book, launched just last year, on Benguet history. I will
probably do a sequel once I find the book. Perhaps in the spirit of projecting this
image, several horses were tied to the makeshift corral near the entrance. A
driver nearby called out to the watchers on the state of the poor horses.
“Matay met a dayta kabalyo dita ti pudut.
Awan pay kanen da (Those horses could die in this heat. There’s no food to
keep them up),” he said. Indeed, there was no grass to graze or shade to cool
off. An hour’s ride costs P200, half of it for half an hour. In Pacdal, an
hour’s ride costs around P150. This one at the Swamp just opened last December.
Back home, I wondered what other things,
situations will take shape in this glen. I washed the strawberries in saline
solution and arranged the mums in several vases (which my mother later
rearranged, with my permission). Can tourism sustain the life of old La
Trinidad? I only hope that changes, in whatever expression, will sustain the
lives of the Swamp people and the rest of the valley dwellers in a good, simple
way. Nordis/Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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Northern Dispatch
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