Archive for Manila

Battling the Jeepneys

Posted in Travel with tags , , , , on June 26, 2013 by David McInerny

The business conducted for the day, it’s time for the drive back to Manila. This is an adventure, for several reasons: there are precious few highway miles in the Philippines, and the roads are shared not just by cars, but also scooters of all types, dogs, pedestrian mothers with toddlers, piglets, the occasional cow and, of course, Jeepneys.

These are the common man’s taxi, a throwback to the American jeep which McArthur left behind after WWII as a gift to the locals; a cheap, open air mode of transportation preferred by factory workers and school children alike.

What the Jeepney lacks in speed and maneuverability it makes up for in sheer numbers, paralyzing traffic and turning what should be a brief trip into an hours long endeavor. Luckily, the locals have taken the opportunity to relieve road rage by erecting hundreds of roadside eateries.

The sane traveler will pull over and break up the drive with a lunch of fish soup, deep fried pig’s knuckles and a plate of cold, juicy mango. As long as a pressing appointment isn’t in the offing, this is the only way to turn a frustrating commute into a culinary adventure. So when the Jeepneys converge, think lunch.

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Recovery Day

Posted in Travel with tags , , , on June 23, 2013 by David McInerny

Thirteen hours from Detroit to Nagoya. Two more hours sitting slightly comatose while the plane fuels. Three more hours to Manila. Customs. A taxi. Finally, the New World Hotel, a few hours of fitful sleep and suddenly, Sunday morning.

One day of respite before two weeks of business. I wake up in Makati City, which could be Palm Beach. The weather is sunny and steamy, and the pool beckons. After some lazy laps and a luncheon cigar, I attack one of three books I’ve brought for the trip.

The New World Hotel keeps meticulous records. It seems every employee has been informed that I’m a returning guest, and I’m treated with “Sir David” at every turn. It takes some getting used to, but not too much. Knighthood is good.

I wander the Greenbelt shopping mall, huge and impressive by any standards, NY, Singapore, HK, you name it.

All in all, it’s shameful. This is not Asia. I need to move south, toward the equator, the rain forest and the agricultural bounty I’m here to inspect and purchase.

And so I will early tomorrow morning.

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Harmonic Divergence

Posted in Food, Travel with tags , , , , on August 4, 2012 by David McInerny

July 20 – August 3, 2012:

KC->; Detroit ->; Nagoya ->; Manila ->; Davao City ->; Butuan ->; Manila ->; Kuala Lumpur ->; Manila ->; Nagoya ->; Detroit ->; KC

Kansas City, 3am. My mind is home, but my body is still in Asia. My mind is thinking of the household needs to be addressed since I’ve been away, but my body is reminding me that it’s already Saturday night, and it is requesting some baked whole fish, white rice, with some soy spiked with red chilies and garlic on the side. I’m thinking about the wonderful friends I made over the past weeks, but I’m also looking forward to my daughter coming home from Dublin this afternoon and having the whole family together. I loved all the wonderful dishes that were served to me in Manila and Kuala Lumpur, but I can’t wait to sharpen my knives and cook something French (about all I’ll be good for today). Harmonic divergence.

I’m asked often if I realize how fortunate I am to be able to travel widely. I am, of course, and I think it’s why I love this first night of jet lag, oddly. Right now, sitting in the dark, my thoughts sliding between two continents, for a few hours I’m neither here nor there, my affections spun over East and West, suspended between yin and yang.

My father instilled a love for travel in me at the age of eight. He took his whole family to Europe for a year – three times. As a working adult I cannot just sit in front of a computer and buy food commodities. I need to see to understand how they grow, how they’re processed, and I have a boss that encourages my approach. I am a very lucky man.

Such is my glorious plight – as I just begin to feel the swell of time zone fatigue, I’m also starting the feel the anxiety of knowing that there is no travel on my business or personal schedules. I will fix that as soon as is practicable.

Pepsi Rains on the Banana Boy

Posted in Food, Travel with tags , , , , on July 28, 2012 by David McInerny

I was rustled out of bed early, since the monsoon rains had intensified overnight and would make the drive from Medina to Cagayan de Oro much longer. I showered, and stepped out of the factory’s guesthouse to make my way for coffee on the deck overlooking the sea. On the way was a small chapel that the coconut factory management collected in each morning for devotions before work. On impulse I went in, kneeled for a few minutes and prayed.

I had the deck to myself for a time. I sipped coffee, watching the small fishing boats come in through the mist after a night of net-fishing, pulling their craft and catch onto the Medina beach. Breakfast was crab stir-fry, delicious sardines cooked in olive oil (olive oil being exotic in the Philippines), coconut water and, in an awkward nod to the Irish-American, corned beef. We ate hurriedly so we could climb into the van and get started.

The two-lane road is a major artery on the island of Mindanao, but it is in appalling shape and constantly under construction.  The road construction firm, in order to get the business, must return 30% of the awarded bid to the local congressman, and 30% to the mayor. Left with only 40% of what he expected to be paid, the contractor cuts corners by adding more water to the concrete, weakening the completed road. The typhoons and monsoons make quick work of the vulnerable concrete, and the process begins anew.

The left side of the road, on the interior side of the island, has homes on large tracts of land with steer grazing among geometrically cultivated groves of coconut, papaya and pineapple. The houses are built with cinderblock and plaster, walls painted in deep yellow and ochre, and wrought iron gates over concrete driveways. These are farmers that can afford to pay the tax that allows them to lease the land from the government for as long as they can continue to pay the tax. The sea-side of the road contain clusters of one-room huts made from dried and braided palm fronds and scraps of wood. These are families unable to pay the land tax, and who are squatting on public land. Nonetheless, the tiny domiciles are neat, with laughing children watching the traffic on the road, boys husking wild coconuts, and parents tending a few chickens, maybe a goat or pig, and a miniscule rice patty. They are completely self-sufficient.

The rain soaks the island unabated. Ahead, an open Pepsi truck has lost control and spilled its entire load of liter plastic bottles on the road. Locals from both sides scramble from their homes to collect the free Pepsi that litters the road and ditch. The driver can only pick up and stack the now empty blue cases on the side of the road so that traffic can pass. We sit without moving a long time, however, before that happens.

Waiting, I watch a boy about four years old emerge from a hut, wearing only a t-shirt. He stretches his little brown body and walks sleepily away from the hut. Stopping at the base of a young banana tree, he performs his morning constitution in the 10,000-year-old tradition. He squats, fertilizes the tree, and then stands to pull a banana leaf from the tree. After folding it lengthwise, he reaches back and pulls the leaf up through his crack like a violin bow. Then, placing the leaf dirty side down over his gift to the tree, he yawns, stretches again, and climbs back into the house of palm and wood for a likely breakfast of rice and coconut water.

We ultimately do make it to the diminutive airfield in Cagayan de Oro, in time for a makeshift lunch before climbing onto the plane for Manila. The 100-kilometer drive, which would take an hour on a Western highway, has required an entire morning. I wouldn’t have missed it for anything.

Filipinos & Foreigners

Posted in Travel with tags , , on July 22, 2012 by David McInerny

I’m fine with easing into the Asian experience, but the Makati district of Manila can be a little too easy. My hotel is across the street from the famous Greenbelt shopping mall, which is great if you need a souvenir from Gucci or Burberry, but it has all the Asian feel of Denver’s Colfax Avenue. I started my exploratory walk in the opposite direction.

The Landmark is a commercial area of mind-numbing width and breadth, with shops and restaurants sprawled and stacked in what must be deliberate labyrinths and mazes designed to insure the customer can never leave. On this Sunday, whole families were out in force for a little shopping and a meal, arriving in scores of Jeepneys, the colorful, mini school bus that is the most economical way to move around Manila.

The Filipinos are quick to make eye contact, atypical for most Asian cultures, and eye contact triggers an immediate smile, even from security guards, customs agents and other sundry government types, so you know this is a friendly people. As a result, a jet-lagged foreigner can be hopelessly lost in the midst of this bustling city and still feel quite comfortable and welcome.

I somehow emerged from the Landmark and wandered long enough without recognizing anything that I was ready to hail a cab to save me. Then I turned a corner and found myself at the entrance of my hotel. I celebrated by using the saved cab fare for a bowl of spicy shrimp. A good first day.

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