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IN TAAL’S SHADOW
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Sunday, February 2, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 115
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
An active volcano with a near-legendary history of eruptions suddenly jolts Filipinos on a recent Sunday, and in moments, life is never the same again for thousands who have lived in its shadow, benefiting from its bounty, inspired by a loveliness that only nature can carve out from so much violence. Here are some of these people. DEAD fish, damaged fish traps and boats weighed down by volcanic ash litter the shores of Buso-Buso in Laurel, Batangas.
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Text and photos by Bernard Testa
HIVOLCS announced earlier this week it had downgraded the alert level from 4 (“imminent hazardous eruption”) to 3, to the delight of residents who had been forced to flee their communities in haste after Taal Volcano’s January 12 phreatic eruption.
Many heeded the government advice to stay out of the 7-kilometer danger zone. They stayed in different evacuation centers within Batangas and Cavite; others, with relatives in nearby provinces. During their stay in evacuation centers, some brave souls made use of precious window hours to check out their homes, belongings, pets and livestock. Defying the 14-km danger zone lockdown just to see whatever was left in their possession by the eruption, they harvested tilapia, fed their feathered friends and four-legged animals, mounting rescues for near-starved dogs, cows and horses which had been their indispensable tourist cash cow for those fabled volcano trails before Taal’s tantrum.
Jockey Robert #1
JOCKEY Robert Sentiles with his family (from left) Alysa, wife Aileen, Harold, Robert Piolo and Rafael.
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RESIDENTS of San Isidro, Talisay, who escaped the January 12 phreatic eruption by boat were the first ones to react to an unmistakable restiveness and erratic behavior from Taal’s magma activity. They were living on Volcano Island, known as the horse guide community. Roberto Sentiles resides at the foot of the crater. He is originally
RESCUED horses from San Isidro, Talisay
from Lemery but was mesmerized by the volcano island’s beauty. Soon enough, he found his love and started a family. He decided to become a horse guide to showcase what attracted him to the volcano island, “makikita niyo ang kagandahan ng bulkan [you’ll see the beauty of the volcano].”
He has been ferrying tourists from San Isidro to the crater lake for the last 20 years. “Ay kaganda [Oh, how lovely!],” he sighed, both with sadness and affection for the loveliness created by such violence of nature. “I own one horse, and I ride three other horses owned by my
boss,” he says in Filipino. Tourists register at the local tourism office for P100; then pay a horse guide P500 to see the Taal island volcano crater. If the horse guide happens to be the horse owner, he gets P350 and gives P150 to the horse guide associaContinued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4672 n UK 66.6690 n HK 6.5546 n CHINA 7.3682 n SINGAPORE 37.3882 n AUSTRALIA 34.2024 n EU 56.1675 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5686
Source: BSP (January 31, 2020)