Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Experience 'glamping' at Zambales' Summer Siren
MANILA - Looking to sleep under the stars and sing songs around a campfire, but the thought of having to pitch up a tent turns you off from the idea completely?
If you found yourself nodding to the paragraph above, then you may want to head on over to the first-ever glamping beach event in the country.
A portmanteau of "glamorous" and "camping," glamping is best suited for adventurers who want to explore the wonders of the outdoors without compromising comfort and style akin to a hotel.
Happening from April 17-19 at the yearly "Summer Siren Festival" in Zambales, Travel Factor promises guests tents complete with airbeds and pillows, butler services, and round-the-clock electricity.
There will also be other activities available such as yoga, beginner-friendly workout session by CrossFit Alpha Strike, poi, and hand drumming.
This is in addition to the concert performances from some of the country's best local acts, including Sandwich, Pedicab, Ace Ramos, Travis Monsod, Imago, Moonstar 88, Marc Marasigan, Brisom, and many more.
Aspiring festival goers will have a chance to win a trip to the festival along with three others by tuning in to Lifestyle Network -- Travel Factor's partner for the event.
For more details,visit the Lifestyle Network's official Facebook page.
soure: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, January 11, 2015
Magnitude 6 quake rattles Luzon
MANILA – A magnitude 6 earthquake hit San Antonio, Zambales before dawn on Sunday, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said.
Phivolcs located the quake's epicenter 43 kilometers southwest of San Antonio town. The quake struck at 3:31 a.m.
Phivolcs said the following intensities were felt:
Intensity IV (moderately strong) - Pasig City; Pasay City; Manila City; Quezon City; Hagonoy, Bulacan; Makati City; San Mateo, Rizal; Obando, Bulacan
Intensity III (weak) - Tagaytay City; San Miguel, Tarlac
Intensity II (slightly felt) - Baguio City; Batangas City
Phivolcs said Intensity IV is "felt generally by people indoors and by some people outdoors. Light sleepers are awakened. Vibration is felt like a passing of heavy truck. Hanging objectsswing considerably.
"Dinner, plates, glasses, windows and doors rattle. Floors and walls of wood framed buildings creak. Standing motor cars may rock slightly. Liquids in containers are slightly disturbed. Water in containers oscillate strongly. Rumbling sound may sometimes be heard."
The quake, which was tectonic in origin, struck at a depth of 85 kilometers.
Phivolcs said the quake will not cause damage but is expected to produce aftershocks.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
2 Aeta Lolas to undergo solar power training in India
MANILA - Two Filipina women are currently on a mission to learn solar power engineering in a school in India for indigenous people.
Sharon Flores and Evelyn Clemente are both Aeta grandmothers from Subic, Zambales, CBCP News reported.
The two are on a 6-month training to become solar power engineers at the Barefoot College in Rajasthan, according to Sr. Eva Fidela Maano of the Foundation of Our Lady of Peace Mission, Inc. (FOLPMI).
FOLPMI is supervising the Aeta Resettlement and Rehabilitation in Sitio Gala, Barangay Aningway Sacatihan in Subic, the tribal community where Flores and Clemente belong.
They two women are studying the assembly, maintenance and repair of solar units together with about 50 other women from 'poor and powerless' communities across the globe.
Project coordinator Japhet Miano Kariuki, senior consultant of OLLI Consulting Group, Inc, said all participants have no formal education since birth. But the education they will obtain at the school will make them specialists in solar power engineering.
Flores and Clemente will graduate in March and will be capable of helping their tribal community with electricity with the sun as the source.
When the solar equipment is installed, the tribe will only need to replace their solar cell battery every five years or so.
Kariuki said the program is tapping companies to raise P2.6 million needed to acquire solar equipment good for 100 houses in the Aeta community.
Currently, the resettlement area where the Aetas, who used to live at the foot of Mt. Pinatubo, were relocated after the volcano's eruption in 1991 has over 130 families.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
SC stops leveling of Zambales mountain

MANILA - The Supreme Court (SC) en banc on Tuesday issued a Writ of Kalikasan stopping the leveling of a mountain in Zambales and the building of a seaport to be used in shipping mountain soil rich in chromite and other minerals to China.
The residents earlier complained to Agham partylist Rep. Angelo Palmones and Laguna Rep. Danilo Fernandez, chairman of the committee on ecology of the House of Representatives, prompting the two congressmen to conduct an on-site inspection last April.
Upon arriving in the area, the two lawmakers, escorted by policemen armed only with pistols, were confronted by heavily armed men.
After inspecting the area, Fernandez’s panel recommended to Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Ramon Paje the issuance of a cease and desist order (CDO) against the “irresponsible mining firm.”
Palmones, for his part, went to the Supreme Court to seek the Writ of Kalikasan.
He submitted a 12-page petition to the High Court and also attached 60 pages of annexes containing photos of the site before and after the leveling of the mountain, with the soil pushed toward the sea destroying the corals and natural habitat of the fishes. He also submitted affidavits of complaining residents.
Worse, Palmones said, LNL Archipelago Minerals Inc. (LAMI) started to flatten a mountain in Barangay Bolitoc, Sta. Cruz, Zambales, which serve as natural protective barriers against typhoons and floods benefiting the residents of Sta. Cruz, Zambales and those of the adjacent towns of Pangasinan.
He said the residents signed a common affidavit, lamenting that they were never consulted before LAMI began its operations.
They demanded that the natural resources be preserved, restored to its original shape, and protected.
Instead of appeasing the angered residents, LAMI officials, with heavily armed men in tow, faced the residents and flaunted that they were authorized by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and PPA to flatten the mountain, the residents said in their affidavit.
Palmones said the permit to construct issued by PPA in favor of LAMI does not authorize it to cut mountain trees, much less flatten a mountain, for its port construction.
The DENR, for its part, issued an environmental compliance certificate (ECC) but it was only a “planning tool” and not a permit.
The ECC requires LAMI to “diligently secure pertinent permit and clearances from all concerned government agencies, which LAMI failed to comply with,” said Palmones.
The Agham party-list solon said he had included Paje and other government officials as respondents "because they failed to act on the complaint despite undisputed evidence presented to them and with no less than Fernandez, as chairman of the House committee on ecology, recommending that the DENR issued a cease and desist order, to no avail."
As of June 4, or more than a month after the two lawmakers raised the alarming environmental destruction to Paje, PPA and the police, LAMI’s backhoes were still doing earth-moving activities, Palmones said in his petition.
"Respondent LAMI is destroying and continues to destroy the environment by cutting mountain trees and leveling a mountain to the damage and detriment of the residents of Zambales and of the nearby towns of Pangasinan, without any of the concerned government agencies and officials stopping such illegal actions and or worse, condoning the same," he said.
Palmones said the residents wished the remaining mountains that were found to be rich in mineral resources would be left unharmed.
He said the raw soil mined from the mountains were being shipped to China for processing because the LAMI did not have the capacity to process the ores.
"The LAMI needed the seaport to cut on travel time and cost as ships could bring in more mountain soils and rocks for export than shipping them by land because trucks can only carry limited tons of raw soil and rocks," he said.
"The mountain trees and the mountain being destroyed by respondent LAMI serve as natural protective barriers of the residents of Zambales and of the residents of some nearby towns of Pangasinan from typhoon and floods. Once these natural resources are damaged, the residents of these two provinces will be defenseless against typhoons and floods and their life, health, and properties will be at the constant risk of being lost," he noted.
In a resolution, the SC en banc issued a Writ of Kalikasan against Paje, LAMI president Lawrence Lenio and general manager Philip Floria, Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) general manager Juan Sta. Ana, and Zambales Police provincial director Superintendent Francisco Santiago Jr.
source: interaksyon.com