Train rides to somewhere…to nowhere

One of my sources in Vietnam has been inviting me to visit them and their sites in Hanoi and I said Vietnam will be my first stop next year if the company travel ban is already lifted. I just don’t know when that will be but normally my travel-heavy months are February (after Lunar NY) until June.

I suddenly remembered that I used to travel heavily before for work and for holidays.

I miss riding trains to nowhere. I don’t like planes. If I would go to Hokkaido, I will take the shinkansen to Hakodate from Tokyo using JR Pass. Because the travel to your destination is half the fun. Although that will eat up 4.5 hrs of my life but that was not that so different when I traveled from Osaka to Kinosaki (with a stop at Amanohashidate). I get to see the countryside.

My train card. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The Hikari from Osaka to Himeji. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I recommend buying JR passes outside Japan since it gives you unlimited rides on the express and ordinary JR lines. Nationwide. This enabled me to travel to four prefectures in 8 days. It was exhausting but oh so worth it.

I went to Osaka in May 2018 and used it as my base when I traveled in different parts of Kansai region. I went to Hyogo Prefecture to visit Himeji Castle, the fortress of Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The ownership of it was transferred to an ally of Ieyasu Tokugawa after the Battle of Sekigahara.

Inside Himeji Castle. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Basically these castles are just fortresses and are just series of halls. The nightingale floorboards (they creak loudly when you step on them so that guards are alerted when ninjas are there to ambush the castle) are ever present. I first encountered these floorboards some years before in Nijo Castle in Kyoto–the base of Tokugawa’s reign until the restoration of the Meiji emperor. As far as Japanese castles go, Nijo is unimpressive since it’s not that high but its significance was huge during the Tokugawa shogunate.

The view from the top-most floor of Himeji Castle. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

This is the reason why they build high. You can see from a great distance if you’re going to be attacked by your rivals. It was exhausting climbing all the way to the top because the halls and stairs are made to confuse intruders/ninjas. It took me an hour to snoop around inside the castle but I spent three hours in the adjacent gardens where I contemplated about my life. Just because.

Himeji gardens. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Chado. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I tried to have a crash course in chado (tea ceremony) in one of the cottages within the Himeji gardens for JPY 500.

Tea ceremony in progress. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

And I enjoyed the gardens some more. I had lain on the floor of that shed in the bamboo “forest” of the garden and rested my weary soul. I decided that I can no longer take my situation back home and I should get out of that soul-destroying situation somehow.

Another section of the Himeji gardens. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Night travel. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I didn’t book accommodations anywhere in Himeji since it was just an hour or 1.5 hrs away by Hikari from Osaka so it was ok to take the train back even though it was already late. My food choices, however, were limited since my hotel was not in the center of Osaka like near Dotonburi and the nearest restaurant wasn’t that spectacular. But I loved my hotel in Osaka because it was just 70m away from the nearest train station, right across the street is a Life Supermarket where I can buy bento dinners or lunches. The hotel also has microwave ovens and common coin-operated washing machines and dryers so I never ran out of clothes. It also has an onsen at the basement which I loved.

Hotel Wing International Select, Higashi, Osaka. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I want to be somewhere right now. Ride the train to nowhere.

Good vibes

Fairy lights. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

The first batch of fairy lights I bought from Lazada arrived today and we installed it in our living room. It’s sending good vibes to all of us tonight. The led light bulbs are as small as rice grains and the wires are very delicate. I hope none overheats because my curtains may catch fire. So far my cats have not played with it…yet.

I love my cats to bits but they’re the reason why this is the second year I’m doing away with the Christmas tree. The tree may not survive my cats.

Gotcha, cat! Kimchi killing my toilet paper. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I’m waiting for the solar-powered fairy lights to arrive and will install those immediately in front of the house. Then some patio furniture so we can have barbecue outside. With lots of mosquito coils and anti-mosquito candles.

Thinking of alternative Christmas decor this year because I want the holidays to be as festive as I could make it because 2020 and this year have been challenging for everyone, especially me on a personal level. I’m still learning, I’m still growing. I’m still trying to heal. This is the first time in 21 years that I am making big and small decisions without having to consider the approval of another person. Or the welfare of another person (aside from my kids). It’s just me and it is somewhat liberating.

Other people have not been nice to me so I need to be extra nice to myself. Love myself more. Once the rate of infection is down and some businesses have opened up, I will see my chiropractor in Makati, check in I’M Hotel and book myself an overnight spa package. Onsen all I want, three hours of head to toe massage, buffet dinner and buffet breakfast. I did that before for my mom’s and my birthday a couple of years ago.

I’m nearing the one-year mark. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I’m going to train myself to be physically stronger so I can go hiking and camping again. Then on to Mt. Pulag. In between I will go to Moalboal in Cebu or Coron in Palawan to freedrive there. I don’t think travel abroad will be possible next year. Let’s say the chance is 50%. After experiencing Covid, I don’t want to be that sick again.

Let’s see what will happen…I need to post a job opening for correspondents in Bangkok and Singapore tomorrow. At some point next year I might need to fly to Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh, and Singapore because of the said requirement. I’m not looking forward to it. This is the same feeling I had after coming home from Shanghai-Xi’an-Shanghai with bronchopneumonia in 2014.

Drats, I need to renew my passport now! It’s expiring in March 2022.

Until then, I’ll just savor the time at home. Will soon be planting creeping roses that I will let grow on a trellis that I will construct between me and my neighbor so I don’t have to see their mess and I will just have the beautiful view of my roses, cosmos, petunias, and vegetables.

Of thunderstorms and mountain climbing

We spent Sunday morning until past noon cleaning our bikes. They were so dirty after our Caliraya Lake camping and it’s only now we were able to clean it and properly grease the bike chains and all hinges (since all of them are folding bikes). Then I folded them before storing properly since the southwest monsoon has started to rear its ugly head.

Towards the end our bike cleaning, we got drenched under heavy rain. We enjoyed the shower but the thunder started crashing and it was getting louder so we had to get inside and have hot showers in the bathroom.

It’s lovely staying in bed while the raindrops lull me to sleepiness. I didn’t get enough sleep last night as I was awake until past 5 am this morning for some inexplicable reason. My sleeping pattern has gone out of whack again. Anxiety about work and other work-related issues, I guess.

I just went to Lazada to search for camping cooking sets and then fell asleep (that’s how I make myself sleepy these days). Upon reflection now, it’s too bad that habagat (southwest monsoon) season is already here so I (or I and my girls) can’t go camping again.

The last time I went camping prior to our Caliraya trip was 21 years ago when my two college friends and I climbed Mt. Maculot in my parents’ hometown. The idiotic thing was we didn’t bring cooking gear since it was just a spur-of-the-moment decision. We survived on food sold by vendors along the way, like boiled eggs and cooked rice. Well you know, when you’re 20 yrs old, you’re bound to make idiotic mistakes because YOLO.

Then I went to climb Mt. Pinatubo a few years later, without practice, so I ended up collapsing near the crater lake due to sheer exhaustion. I ate lunch at 3 pm lying down. I don’t know how but I did. Thank God for the Aeta guide. The next trekking was in Morong, Bataan, when I visited the Aeta community there for my article on government’s neglect of indigenous peoples’ basic education. It was not a challenging climb but it was exhausting just the same. We had to cross hanging foot bridges. My guides were a National Scientist and a fulltime UP Pahinungod volunteer and they trekked like it was nothing. We didn’t have to camp though since we stayed in the former refugee center used during the Vietnam War. (Yes, aside from Palawan, the Vietnamese boat people were also brought to Morong and some other parts of Bataan since the American bases Subic and Clark were just near).

I need to get back into shape and climb and go camping regularly so I can do Mt. Pulag. But that would take a while. My short-term goal is to camp in Sagada, if Kiltepan Peak is already open for camping again. They closed it after a fire in 2018. We are populated with a lot of irresponsible campers that’s why Mt. Apo was on fire for days some years ago. The last home of wild Philippine Eagles, take note. If Kiltepan is closed, I can try Marlboro country also in Sagada.

Mt. Pulag. Photo from Wikipedia

That’s why when I bought my camping gear (tent and sleeping bag), I made sure it would be able to withstand the precipitation and cold in Mt. Pulag. The setup in Decathlon Masinag labeled the tent and sleeping bag (can keep me warm at 15 degrees) as Mt. Pulag-certified.

I will try to go around Rizal first since these are the easy climbs, like Daraitan and Batolusong. Then in Batangas would be Mt. Batulao and Pico de Loro (<< this one can terminate at the beach resort Pico de Loro… OMG now I remember, I trekked here in 1996!). Mt. Gulugod Baboy can be done alongside diving in Anilao (this needs a week-long leave of absence). Once I get the hang of it, I can try Pulag with some friends (and I will be hardpressed to find such friends now) before I become too old to climb mountains.

You know what’s funny? I grew up at the foot of Mt. Makiling. I had been climbing it casually when I was bored or if I wanted to get a away for a while. But I never ventured beyond Mudsprings because of the limatik (blood leeches). Makiling is notorious for those creatures. I was traumatized by the sight of my brother pulling out these leeches off his legs when I was a kid after one of his climbs. Bloody hell.

I don’t think I will ever reach Mt. Makiling’s Peak 2 because of that.

The world according to my cats

When I’m in my room, they meow to death and they let themselves in to be with mommy. How? I was able to video it recently.

My girls have this bad habit of not closing my bedroom door properly. J called them longtail because of this. So anyway, my cats take advantage of this and are able to push their paws/body against the door to open it.

My househelp told me that when I’m away, my cats wait for me by the window near the front door of the apartment. Sometimes majority of the day they wait for me there. And when I come home, they meow like crazy like I haven’t fed them for a week. Or scolding me for being away too long.

It’s cute. They’re like obnoxious dogs.

I am the only world that they have known. Except maybe for the short time they were with their birth mom cat and that traumatic time in the storm drain. This knowledge keeps me from being away for too long.

I wonder if I can bring them with me when we go camping 🤔

I plan to camp again in Mt. Purro Nature Reserve high up in Sierra Madre that is still part of Antipolo. J and I went there once with the girls to swim. There are cottages but there’s a camping site there and we can hike and go river trekking.

No, can not bring cats.

A nice break

Good morning. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I fell asleep at 8 pm last night despite some asshole campers on the other side of the campsite blasting their odious music (as I mentioned yesterday) but it was a restless night because my girls were equally restless and were tossing and turning. Plus my back hurts from sleeping on the ground (sleeping bag isn’t thick enough for my spine). It rained during the night, I think, but we were dry inside and nary a drop of water could be felt even from the air vents.

In the morning when I heard the birds chirping, I flung the flaps open to see this:

Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I walked to the water’s edge to savor the early morning light.

It’s around past 6 am. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

We went to my mom’s cabin to have breakfast and after that we rented a boat to take us around Lake Caliraya.

Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Our tent (and my car) viewed from the lake. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Our boatman said this belonged to actress Heart Evangelista’s family (Ongpauco). Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Rest house owned by actress Angel Locsin, according to our boatman. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
A private resort made of cabanas on stilts. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Abandoned rest house on an islet. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The lake is dotted with islets like this. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The lake sits on top of the Sierra Madre mountain range and straddles the towns of Cavinti, Lumban, and Kalayaan. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Washing their clothes. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

We went around for an hour, which only covered a small portion of the lake. After the boat ride, I went back to the tent to take a nap while the girls went with their grandma to her cabin.

We checked out at 12 noon. Such a shame that the noisy campers were still there and didn’t leave earlier before us.

We weren’t able to go kayaking because I don’t trust myself when I don’t have enough sleep. It would have been a nice place to kayak because of the placid waters though.

Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Ditto for jet skiing. Swimming in the lake is not recommended because of the silt and clay that makes everything turbid.

Rocky edge. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Lake Caliraya is a man-made lake that used to be 1) farmland, 2) Caliraya river, and 3) a barangay (our boatman said). The Americans (during their occupation of the Philippines) sunk all those 3 things to create a dam on top of Sierra Madre to generate electricity.

It has long been a playground for the rich, bringing their jetskis and speedboats every weekend to this mountain hideaway. Some windsurf, kite board, and wake board here as the water in the area is placid compared to Anilao where you constantly battle with choppy waters.

If you want leisurely camping i.e. just relaxing-under-the-stars type of camping, then Lake Caliraya is perfect for that. No need to trek or anything of that sort. If bass fishing(or tilapia) is also your thing, then this lake is for you. Other water sports except diving is ok too (if you have enough money to rent equipment). Swimming though is… Not for the faint of heart.

Another thing, if you hate packing for camping, forget about it. You need to provide for everything. This campsite though has grilling stations, picnic tables, and shower and toilet areas.

This wonder car was able to pack three folding bikes, a tent, sleeping bags, bags, cooking implements, food, etc.

My girls and I enjoyed our stay here even though my back hurts like hell now.

Where do broken hearts go?

To Lake Caliraya. To camp. And bike. And ride the jetski.

First thing we did after paying was to pitch the tent. The last time I did this was 21 years ago, when my friends and I climbed and camped in Mt. Maculot in Batangas.

Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I brought my Korean portable stove to cook rice. And the grill for tomorrow’s breakfast. But for today’s lunch, it’s grilled chicken that I cooked at the grilling station.

My mom cooking rice. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Chicken inasal. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

Of course my mom is not roughing it out. She rented a cabin, a tiny house made of container van.

PHP 4,000 a night. There’s a deck on top and a private bathroom. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Photo by CallMeCreation.com

We’re camping while my mom still has her creature comforts. Win-win. Good that I was able to bring her out of the house after a long house arrest.

And we were able to bike around. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Me, biking to the nearest sari-sari store to buy ice for our cooler. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Relishing the moment the girls are biking. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
And this is us now before going to bed. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

This would have been a good camping experience for the girls if not for the freakingly annoying campers who brought six huge concert speakers, their mixing tables and DJ equipment and had basically boom boomed the day and night away. 🤬

You can check out Kaliraya Surf Kamp and rates and amenities are here.