Monthly Archives: May 2015

Driving back home from the port. What a great sight

I was driving back from the port yesterday after having been to Surigao and I saw some Caribou/water buffalo really enjoying themselves.  They were in a muddy water hold which is shaded under a tree.  I has obviously been dug out by their kind owner, to give the animals maximum pleasure.

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Refugee Boat to the Mainland

I had to go to Surigao on the mainland a couple of days ago in order to visit the immigration office and extend my visa.  There are 3 boats a day each way between Siargao and Surigao and I happened to get the small and very crowded one .. LOL

It was an incredibly hot day and there wasn’t w wisp of wind and the boat was jam packed full.  With the number of people, hard wooden bench seats and heat, it was how I imagine a refugee boat to be.  I was fortunate in that the journey was only 3 hours and I stepped off at the other end and headed to an air conditioned hotel …. I feel sorry for this who aren’t as fortunate.

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Up to date in Siargao

I have been busy here today, as I had a surf at 6am and then put offers in on 2 lots of land I mentioned in the previous post.  One is a small piece next to the road and my offer has been accepted.  I want to open a laundry as there isn’t one here at the moment.  Everyone has their clothes hand washed and they do not always come up completely clean and hand washing can wear out clothes in a way that an industrial washing machine won’t.   Before I finalise the purchase, I need to check about the waste water and where it will go, as there are resorts right next to the lot and I will need to dig up the ground and lay a run off pipe.  I am not sure if there is sace to do this, so I have a meeting booked with a surveyor for Monday.  The other lot is slightly larger and I want to open a coffee shop and bakery, as there is also not one here.  It is also on the main road that tourists live on, but not on the same side as the beach.  I will have a landscaped garden with loads of flowers and plants, a few hammocks, nice shaded seating and tables, great wifi, coffee, cakes and chilled music.  I want to do BBQ ribs, chicken and fish in the evenings.    I hope it works out as I want to stay in the Philippines for 9 months a year from now on.
As I mentioned in my previous post, my sister Louise is also thinking of building a house here, even though she’s never visited Siargao.  She lives 6 months a year in Thailand and 6 months in England at the moment and I think she wants to move here for 6 months a year instead.  She arrived in Manila with my brother in law last night and they had a nightmare at the airport.  They took an hour and a half to get the bags off her plane and then another hour and a half to get from the international terminal to the domestic terminal.  The upshot was that she missed her connecting flight to Cebu, so she is still currently in Manila.   She will get here eventually and it will be good to see her.

Been lazy for 2 months

I have been lazy and busy for over 2 months since I left NZ and haven’t updated the blog.  I spent a couple of weeks in Bali when I left NZ and then came to the Philippines where I am now.  I had a few days in Manila and have also had a week in Cebu and a week in Palawan, but apart from that, I’ve been in Siargao.

It’s an island off the northern tip of Mindanao in the Philippines.  It is pretty remote and quite hard to get to but it has a lot of great surf spots and tourism is really expanding here.  The islanders and the Filipinos in general are really happy and friendly people.  They are way happier as a nation than any people in any country I have ever been to.  They all speak English and their English is like us or the Americans.  They use and understand the language in a  way that a French or German person who speaks English doesn’t.  Filipinos live in a developing country but have the same outlook and culture as we do in the UK.  They are unique in Asia as they are 95% catholic and their education system and culture is based on the same things as the west.  They have a growing middle class that has the same values as ours and aspire to the same things as in the UK.

I have a 1 bedroom house which is pretty chilled out with a hammock on the veranda and nice living room.  I am 40 metres from the beach and have coconut trees in the garden.  When I want a coconut, I ask someone to climb the tree and get one for me and pay them a little money.   I hire a motorbike with a surfboard rack on the side and get around on that.  There are just enough places to go out and eat at and just enough things to do and the amount of places opening is increasing fast at the moment.   I have verbally agreed to buy a small plot of land by the road and want to start a laundry, as there isn’t one. Everyone here gets their clothes hand washed by locals and they don’t always come up clean and because they rub the clothes together, they wear out.   I am also negotiating another plot for a coffee shop/bakery as there isn’t a proper one of these either.  Things are in the early stages, but hopefully they’ll proceed.  I was in the 2nd city of Cebu a couple of weeks ago and made contact with some coffee machine and coffee suppliers, so I am lining things up.

I’ve also been looking at land for my sister Louise, as she says she wants to build a house here and we might do it together.  We’ve been in touch a lot and she was arriving with m brother in law Ian today, but she’s been delayed in Manila because of business and will now arrived the the end of next week.  I’ll show her around the island and she can work out if she likes it.  I think it might be a bit too quiet for her full time, but the house would be an investment and somewhere she can come to.