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Signature of time passing.

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 Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]


How time flies, we hear people say;
maybe, but it leaves something:
like first smile, first word, first step, ,
each a signature of time passing.

 Weaning leaves the infant behind. 

First birthday is full of love and affection.

From the confines of home to the open arms of Nature.

Bridging three generations in a row.

Youngest visitor suspends work momentarily.  
 Ate na si Mackie

Witty Humor - Key to Cheerful Disposition

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Researched and edited by Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]




1.  Authorship 

An English teacher, having read some of John Milton's poetry to her young class one day, mentioned to them that the great poet was blind.  One question asked on the examination the next  day was:

Milton
"What was Milton's great affliction?"


On one paper was scribbled, simply: "He was a poet."


2. Statistics

 "What are the chances of my recovering, doctor?"

"One hundred per cent.  Medical records show that nine out of ten die of the disease which you have, Yours in the tenth case I've treated. The others all died.  So you see, you're bound to get well.  Statistics are statistics."

3. Romance

A shapely young girl had just married a man of wealth who was more than twice her age.

"I don't believe in these May and December marriages," declared a critical friend.

"Why not?" asked the bride.

"Well, said the friend.  "December is going to find in May the youth, beauty and freshness of spring, but what is May going to find in December?"

The bride's logical answer was, "Santa Claus."

4. A Fisherman's Lament

A three-pound pull, and a five-pound bite; an eight-pound jump, and a ten-pound fight; a twelve-pound bend to your pole - but alas!  When you got him aboard he's a half-pound bass.  

FISHERMAN: "I tell you it was THAT long!  I never saw such a fish."
FRIEND: "I believe you."

5.  Age

The young co-ed brought a friend home from college, an extremely attractive curvaceous honey-blonde. 

Introducing her friend to her grandfather, the girl added: "And just think, Beverly, he's in his nineties.

"Early nineties, that is," the old gent added. 

-------------------------------

TOASTS

Drink! for you know not when you come, nor why;
Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where.
                                                                     - Omar Khayyam

Here is to Life! The first half is ruined by our parents and the second half by our children.
 

Acknowledgement: Speaker's Encyclopedia of Humor by Jacob M Baude; Philippine Literature Today, by Rotor AV and KM Doria

Dust in my Room - Two-liners for Everyday Living (Series 2)

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Nobly a life men can choose,
Yet prefer to live long and lose.


Dr Abe V Rotor


Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]



Now and then I jot ideas as they come spontaneously at work, leisure and even in the middle of the night.

Ideas are fleeting, they just disappear and are difficult to recall. Fortunately, with a notebook on hand, I was able to capture and transcribed them painstakingly into two-line verses. 


Here are some I wish to share in this blog and on Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-the-air) 


1. Take it from the ant or stork,
Patience is silence at work.
 

2. A full vessel holds water to the brim,
Unless it bears a crack on the rim.

3. Pleasance to the youth, care to the old;
Where do they belong, the meek and the bold?

4. She is coy who speaks soft, writes light;
Fire starts with smoke before it ignites.

5. Moth, master of camouflage, don’t be dumb;
When you lose your art, you lose your freedom.

6. He finds reason for living
Who sees a new beginning.

7. Every promise you can’t keep
Drags you into a deeper pit.

8. How do you know truth unspoken?
When the heart has spoken.

9. To the humble, a Genie rises from a great soul,
And I, a teacher, yet know not my goal.

10. Make believe growth and prosperity;
A vessel sounds louder when empty.

11. A child too soon behaves like man,
A good man, he means – on none.

12. The difference of being right and reasonable,
One is black or white, the other’s measurable
----------

Definition (From Jacob M Baude)

Gratitude: Memory of the heart.
Dreams: the free movies of sleep
Luck: good planning, carefully executed
Kindness: a language which the deaf can hear and the blind can read.

Sunset of "Gypsy Life"

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 About 11 million people worldwide, and about a million in the United States, belong to an ethnic group known as the Roma or Romani. They are more commonly called Gypsies or travelers.  The Roma people migrated to Europe from India about 1,500 years ago. 

 Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]




Mang Juan poses with his travelling cariton pulled by a bullock, 2015. 

Gypsy - that's the medieval term to describe the unique ethnic life of a  people, mainly the Romani, and other tribes as well that led a nomadic lifestyle, selling wares, entertaining people and "camping" in their carts along their indefinite route.

They had laws and rules of their own, keeping their unity and preserving their culture, which the outside world barely understood as to regard them integrated into the main stream of society.  But they were not, and in fact they were persecuted like the Jews.

If there is such a thing as "wandering Jews" who were deprived of their country and discriminated as Jews, the gypsies too were treated the same.  Many of them died under Nazi rule in WW II, and their number was decimated - yet they carried on.

In fact, any lifestyle in any country that is similar in some respects with the life of a gypsy is automatically given a name as such - gypsy, as if it is a universal connotation, although it may be a far cry from the true and original gypsy culture.

Yes, basically the gypsy is nomadic, but the later gypsies built homes and communities of their own, where they enjoyed a sense of belonging and loyalty to  their unique culture. Today all over the world they are being integrated into the mainstream of society. 

Beliefs that they can foretell the future with crystal balls and tarot cards remain as signature of gypsies, historically their main trade. Costumes speak at a glance the identity a gypsy lady like Esmeralda, the gypsy in Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame. 

In the novel, Esmeralda ignited clash beween rich and poor, exposed social ills of medieval France.  Her sensual physical attributes became the object of lust, greed and murder. On the other hand, she also gained sympathy and compassion - on behalf of her own people.  

There are no true gypsies in the Philippines, and if there is any, they are the like of Mang Juan who earns a living by ambulant selling of native crafts, from broom to hammock, native furniture to kitchen utensils. His trade route is Pangasinan to Manila, a distance of 300 km.     

Call it aculturation or cultural integration, globalization in the larger sense. Acceptance from the top and adaptation from below - and aggrupation.  How wide the gap exists, is a challenge to society.  While this is key to integration, there is equally a potential repercussion, and danger - the loss of diversity which is the biggest threat to mankind in our postmodern times.~        
 
        Gypsy families on the move prepared to camp for the night; Gypsy performing art is world renown.Their music, dance and costume are distinctly unique.

Behind Bars in the Mind - Two-liners for Everyday Living (Series 3)

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 A problem easily solved
Often returns unresolved.

Dr Abe V Rotor

Now and then I jot down ideas as they come spontaneously at work, leisure and even in the middle of the night. 

Ideas are fleeting, they just disappear and are difficult to recall.  Fortunately, with a notebook at hand, I was able to capture  and transcribed them painstakingly into two-line verses. 

Here are some I wish to share in this blog and on Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-the-air) 

1. A boy gets to be a man when a man is needed;
A man gets to be a boy in times unheeded.

2. Beauty seen once may break many hearts,
That heal soon enough as the image departs.

3. To endure the pain of hatred,
A leader’s wisdom often dared.
 

4. Only good wine grows mellow with age;
So does a good man into a sage.

5. Beauty builds upon beauty,
Ad infinitum to eternity.

6. The past may leave remnants to the future,
New to the young while dying bit by bit.



7. On some mountain top, one’s echo is clear and loud;
In the market place it dies, so in any crowd.

8. A clenched fist softens under a blue sky,
Like high waves, after tempest, die.

9. If a little in me dies if only someone must live,
Here then, Lord, here is my whole life to give.

10. The man that you see today
Was the child of yesterday.
------------------------------------------------------
The wind whistles a wild song through the trees
Before it settles into a breeze.
------------------------------------------------------

11. He who nods when old is wise and deep,
Save he by the fireside asleep.



12. How seldom, if at all, do we weigh our neighbors
The way we weigh ourselves with the same favors.

13. We say we do not have the time, is an alibi
To indolence and loafing, letting time pass by.



14. Ephemeral are the ways of our lives
Watching not the sun to set and rise.

15. Yield or refuse, a woman is delighted,
Silence her excuse to decide instead.

16. Virtues suddenly dawn upon him,
Who, behind bars, hears a mournful chime.

17. Passion and lust to a prodigal son,
After the desert blooms, it returns to sand.

18. If the world is going to end either in fire or ice,
Altogether we die once – not twice.

 
Atacama Desert in bloom

19. What is more mean than envy or indolence
But the two themselves riding on insolence?

20. The worst persecution is one of the mind;
That of the body it can undermine.
Acknowledgement: Internet photos

Riding on the Wind - Two Liners for Everyday Living (Series 1)

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You can't tell where a sailboat goes
without keel, more so as the wind blows.

Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]



 Sailboats pass the ruins of a lighthouse, detail of a mural by the author. 


Now and then I jot ideas as they come spontaneously at work, leisure and even in the middle of the night.

Ideas are fleeting, they just disappear and are difficult to recall. Fortunately, with a notebook on hand, I was able to capture and transcribed them painstakingly into two-line verses. 


Here are some I wish to share in this blog and on Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-the-air) 


1. Wind, current, keel make a trio. 
only if they have one direction to go.

2. Love is sweeter after pain,
and perhaps never sweeter again. 

 3. Truthfulness sans kindness is like a cold, cruel steel;
kindness sans truthfulness is like a forgotten window sill.

4. That others will learn to trust you,
first, be trustworthy, kind and true.  

5. The greatest crisis ambitious men and women face
is loss of privacy trying to win a nameless race. 

6. When reality dies, it may become a dream,
and dream is reality again foreseen.


7. Kindness, however small,
is never wasted at all.

8.Patience is a virtue in disguise,
the art of the smart and wise. 

9. He who always says, "Yes".
is seeker of convenience,

10. It is always the big fish that got away, 
is an old story.  Lo! to the innocent prey.  


11. Unless cut and polished, a stone is stone,
like a gene lying deep, unknown and alone.

12. Ah, but what good is a rock when it misses
the essence of a clay on which life itself rises? ~

Definitions (By Jacob M Braude)
Miracle: Something that someone does that cannot be done. 
Obstacles: those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off the goal.
Nervousness: when you feel in a hurry all over and can't get started. 
Old Maid: a woman in the prim of life.

Playground Limited

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 I cannot understand the reason of imitating the natural world cum attractions, in lieu of outdoor and on-the-spot experience that promotes reverence for life and the environment.

 Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]


 Artificial playground in a mall, 2015

I cannot smell the earth under my feet, neither the freshness of grass nor the fragrance of  flowers with bees and butterflies hovering, fluttering and alighting for brief rest;

I cannot see birds around; I mistake their songs for whistles and whirls of machines and toys; the singing of cicada, cooing of doves, fiddling of crickets are buried in noise;

I cannot feel the softness of grass, soothing to tired feet, the presence of plants, quivering of their leaves with the slightest touch, towering trees that lead my eyes to heaven;

I cannot hear water moving downstream among rocks, hissing of a waterfall, stream  settling down in peace and quiet, calming frayed nerves and tired muscles; 

I cannot imagine how grownups and children are united in an artificial ambiance, by time limited by toll, off limit signs, warnings and many rules that limit freedom and choice; 

I cannot imagine animals in their stuffed replicas being treated by kids in different ways, consciously or otherwise, if such attitude applies to growing up in a natural world;   

I cannot relate beautiful experiences with Nature, richness of imagination, logical thoughts and inferences where the playground is a patchwork lacking contiguity and goal;    

I cannot hear thunder in the distance that bring in life-givng rain that nourishes the forests, pastures and fields, that signals the kids playing to pack up and go home; 
 
I cannot understand the reason of imitating the natural world cum attractions, in lieu of  outdoor and on-the-spot experience that promotes reverence for life and the environment. 

 
Transforms  -  artificial replicas for study. Do these contribute 
to growing up in a natural world?  

June is Environment Month

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These are the international days currently observed by the United Nations for the month of June. with emphasis on the Environment
 


Dr Abe V Rotor

 Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday
 [www.pbs.gov.ph]

1 June




4 June




5 June





12 June




13 June




14 June




15 June




17 June







19 June

International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict



20 June




21 June




23 June




23 June




25 June




26 June




26 June




Sun in the Well

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Dr Abe V Rotor



 
I dug for water
and looked up above,
 clouds I found none
but heard a voice instead,
“Deeper”.

So I dug and dug,
without let up,
but to no avail.

This time I looked up to Heaven,
to ask, “How much deeper?”
And the voice came again.
“Until you see the sun, my son.”

I dug and dug and dug,
and a spring I soon struck,
reflected the sun above.~
 
Acknowledgement: Internet Photo

Forgotten Stairway

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Dr Abe V Rotor

                                                                                                                   Acknowlegement: Internet Photo


Bare are the steps,
save the weeds that grow,
bearing witness we had long
passed through;
once we climbed to the top
but never knew,
we would someday fall
and look up anew.~

Have you been kissed by an elephant?

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio

738 DZRB AM, 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]
First, befriend the elephant.


Look into his eyes.


And you get a warm kiss.


A long and firm kiss - you have to tell him to stop. 

Warning: Don't ever attempt this feat. There are very few people elephants really like. And it takes elephants a long time to trust people. They are unpredictable. Even if they are tame, they still carry their wild genes. Get a kiss from someone else.

Photography-at-large

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Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature School on Blog 
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday                                                



Hasselblad - state-of-the art camera

Point-and-shoot. That's how easy photography is today. 

And anyone can have access to this once exclusive instrument that captures scenes and actions. Because of easy manipulation and readiness to shoot, the digital camera is perhaps becoming abused. 


It is used indiscriminately. Sometimes it crosses the boundary of privacy. There is little analysis, if at all, before shooting a subject.  For what purpose or reason? Does it follow some basic rules like balance, contrast, lighting, distance?


The technology is in fact a total deviation from that of the conventional technology. Today it comes with the cell phone, tablet, digital notebook.  There are surveillance cameras, monitoring, miniaturized, space probe, UV, and thermal, cameras - name it and technology will find a way. Social media relies on digital camera and because it is linked with the computer, photographs can be freely edited, they can be made into e-book, they are materials for artists like painters and architects, they can be sent, millions and millions everyday, to all parts of the world. 


Even if I belong to the old school, I found myself joining the countless ardent photographers and enthusiasts. I'll try to link photography - the art and media tool, the  serious and leisurely, conventional and modern, ideal and down-to-earth.  Perhaps, professional and amateur, modern and abstract. To think of photography's 101 functions today, its seems there is no place on earth where the lens is not watching us. In fact, it is us who wish to picture the whole world.



Typical palm size digital camera, easy to 
operate and convenient to carry. 

Here are photographs I wish to share as lesson to our pageviewers, and participants to Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid. 




Light up your life, Matabungkay, Batagas: flowers girls, stag man, Fuerte, Vigan City 
Dimorphism, a rare find of 4- and 5-arm starfish, Matabungkay, Batangas
Who is afraid to enter a man-made cave? International Exhibit Center, MM
Leaning fire tree, 45 degrees. Regalado Ave., Fairview, QC (The tree was cut down to give way to drainage construction)
Agro-tourism. Try yur hands in picking cowpea pods. San Ildefonso, Ilocos Sur.


Goat bear the long summer, nibbling on dry bark, Fuerte, Vigan, Ilocos Sur
Golden Kuhol (Pomacea caniculata), No. 1 pest of rice on the field. San Vicente, I. Sur

 Lazy man's crop so-called "plant-forget-harvest" - okra (Abelmoschos esculentus), gabi (Colocasia esculenta)

Sargassum (S. crispifolium), brown seaweed - most plentiful of all seaweeds in tropical reefs.  Vigan I. Sur
Bark of siniguelas (Spongias purporea) for minor wounds. San Ildefonso, I.S.
Balimbing (Averrhoa balimbi), Family Oxylidaceae (contain oxalic acid, which when taken frequently in large amount may cause osteoporosis)

Let's not allow the tamaraw to become extinct

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Only 300 tamaraws are believed to survive, spread among three populations.
Dr Abe V Rotor

I am posting this article to appeal to viewers/readers to help in the campaign of conserving the tamaraw, so with other threatened and endangered species.


Skeleton of a Tamaraw, Museum of Natural History, UPLB Laguna

The Tamaraw (Bubalus mindorensis) or Mindoro Dwarf Buffalo is a small hoofed mammal belonging to the family Bovidae. It is endemic to the island of Mindoro in the Philippines and is the only endemic Philippine bovine.

Contrary to common belief and past classification, the tamaraw is not a subspecies of the local carabao, which is only slightly larger, or the common water buffalo. In contrast to the carabao, it has a number of distinguishing characteristics: it is slightly hairier, has light markings on its face, is not gregarious, and has shorter horns that are somewhat V-shaped. It is the largest native terrestrial mammal in the country.

This means that the carabao and tamaraw, though of different lineages, undoubtedly share a common ancestor, together with other buffaloes in Asia and some in different parts of the world. Generally, plant and animal species evolved from common stocks, sometimes called missing links, which scientists find them extremely difficult to find and conclude with concrete evidences.

When Charles Darwin found out that finches vary from island to island in the Galapagos group of islands on the equatorial eastern coast of South America, he was in effect telling to the scientific community of an evolutionary phenomenon called speciation - the formation of species. Because it is a very slow and indeterminate process at that, scientists were baffled by the question, "When is a new species truly a species, and not just a variety or breed of its parent species?"

What I learned from my professor, the famous Dr Deogracias Villadolid who introduced tilapia into the Philippines in the fifties, is that, when the species in question is capable of interbreeding to make a population, and on the other hand, it is no longer capable of breeding with its original stock or parent species - and those from parallel lines emanating from the same stock. Dr Villadolid emphasized that this criterion is reliable, particularly if supported by distinct morphological deviation, and change in ecological distribution.

The tamaraw is no doubt a product of speciation. The island of Mindoro is its original home and still its natural habitat today, the forested areas and near open-canopied glades. Since humans settled in the island and subsequent destruction of the forest they made, the tamaraw population has drastically declined with a few dozens left today in the wild. This is the same situation the wild buffaloes or bisons of the Prairies of North America faced until they were
saved from extinction in the last hour.

Tamaraws graze on grasses which include cogon (Imperata cylindrica) and talahib (Saccharum spontaneum), which abound on wastelands. They also feed on young bamboo shoots (labong). They live for 20 to 25 years. Only one offspring is produced a year after a gestation period of about 300 days, with birth interval of two years, although one female was once sighted with three juveniles. The calf stays for 2 to 4 years with its mother before becoming independent.

Let's help conserve the highly endangered tamaraw, proudly our own.
-------------------------------



Acknowledgement: Internet photos


Tamaraw
Bubalus mindorensis

Mindoro dwarf buffalo, Timaraw, Tamarao, Tamarau, Mindorobüffel, Búfalo de Mindoro
Tamaraw inhabit areas with mixed forest and grassland. The species is endemic to the Philippine island of Mindoro where they are currently found in Mount Iglit-Baco National Park, around Mount Aruyan/Sablayan, and in the Mount Calavite Tamaraw Preserve.

Conservation Status
Critically engangered
Threats: Habitat loss (due to farming, cattle ranching, and expanding urban areas), diseases from livestock, illegal hunting.

Only 300 tamaraw are believed to survive, spread among three populations.


Credit: Museum of Natural History UPLB, Marlo Rotor for first photo; Internet photos,Wikipedia

Nature and Fashion

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We see ourselves different, piece by piece, yet influenced
 in many ways by Nature, the greatest teacher and the best artist. 
Dr Abe Rotor
 CEO

Local VIP; Supervisor

Naval Officer; Band Master
 
Ninong

Could there be a better backldrop than Nature:
waterfall cascading down the river to the sea,
her sky bearing figures and faces of the cloud,
everchanging landscapes of the season and day?

Who wouldn't wear the colors of the rainbow
dewdrops at sunrise, glow of dawn and sunset.
varied, changing colors of creatures, big and small,
fashion after all is Nature's fashion everyday?  

Could we ever forget, each and every occasion
in our lives the imprimatur of the environment,
seeing ourselves differently, piece by piece,
from Nature the best teacher, the best artist? 
  
NOTE: I took these pictures of Alvin who amuses himself and his customers with different attires unusual for his pandesal business. He is liked for his fine manners and uniqueness. He would stop on his regular trade route before a wall mural of Nature I painted at home, an opportunity for me to record this study.

Major Concerns of Extension

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Extension is applied teaching, a means of transforming people capabilities, beliefs, ideas, and above all, infusing the faith that they can help themselves.
Dr Abe V Rotor
 The aim of extension is to narrow down the gap of potential and actual production - that obtained in research institutions and that on the farmers' fields.   

Your program: 
     If it is of high quality, people will respect you.
     If it is relevant, people will need you. 
     If it is measurable, people will trust you. 
     If it is innovative, people will follow you.
— From the desk of an extension worker

It is a great honor and pleasure to share with you my views and experiences on the concerns of extension in grassroots education and technology transfer. I will concentrate on agriculture since this is the universal thrust of extension. Besides, agriculture is the base of our economy and eighty percent of our population directly or indirectly depends on it. The following are the most important concerns of extension in the Philippines:

1. There is a wide gap between available technology and the level or degree of field application. This gap is traced to limited resources and opportunities as well as attitudinal problems. The ac­tual farm yield is only 40 percent of the potential yield, and 25 to 30 percent of experiment station yield. It means therefore that the problem lies not on the lack of technology but on the poor use of tech­nology at the farmers' fields. Based on economic farm yield, our annual production of palsy will increase from the present figure of 9 million MT to 14 million MT. We would then become a consistent net exporter office like Thailand, the world's top rice exporter today. The aim of extension in this case is the effective and prompt transfer of the technology that narrows down the yield gap.

2.  Adoption of technology on the farm should be tied closely with agricultural business. In a recent hearing on the present rice problem conducted by the Senate's committee on science and technol­ogy, the Philippine Rice Research Institute or PHILRICE testified that rice production in experimental fields has leveled up to 5 MT/ha while farmers are getting yields of only 3 MT/ ha or below. Favorable market conditions stimulate production and enhance the plowing back of income to pay for the technology and hired labor in farming. Farming should be therefore an enterprise rather than a mere means of livelihood. Most farms in the country are run by subsistent families. Extension should be able to design a balanced program that has the integrated technology and agribusi­ness components.

3. Appropriate technology in developing countries is more of innovation than modernization.Technology builds up an existing practice. We take the case of "payatak" rice farming in Samar, a very traditional practice, almost zero tillage. Here, the field is trampled by carabaos, planted with old rice seedlings, then left entirely to nature. The yield obtained is very low but there are certain favorable aspects of this practice.

·         The family food needs are supplemented by carabao milk and curds, fish, frog and snails. These edible species live naturally on the wetland and survive the short summer in the carabao wallows.
·         Ecology balance if contributed largely by minimal disturbance of biological and physical conditions.
·         Farm by-products and wastes, such as hay and ma­nure, are put to use.
·         Labor is entirely provided by the family.

Extension should be able to first identify these good points and preserve them. The introduced technology should look at both increased production and these benefits as its objectives.

4. Technology should be recognized in the context of both research and enterprise systems developed through intermediate stages.The research system bridges the laboratory and experimen­tal field, the enterprise system, the farm and the market. Both systems are linked by partnership and collaboration among scientists, engineers, agriculturists, farmers, etc. The idea is to provide channels and a network through which the product of research becomes ultimately useful by the consuming public.

Extension should likewise be aware that modern technology requires intensive, and too often, expensive.

(1) infrastructure which may later turn out as "white elephants",
(2) research with sophisticated facilities and too many consultants and assistants,
(3) mechanization combines get stuck in rice paddies and grains cake or germinate in silos and bins,
(4) hired labor disputes end in strikes and court cases,
(5) big invest­ment/capital which end up eating operational funds putting the project to a stop.

The once ultra modern Food Terminal Incorporated (FTI) attests to the fact that progress is not synonymous to modern technology. Even as it is being offered for privatization there are no apparent takers. FTI is not an isolated case of non-performing assets of the government worth billions of pesos. Extension should be aware of the necessity to undertake a very careful and accurate assessment of situations and projections, and put behind seemingly beautiful package deals offered by other countries, including grants and donations. Extension should be instrumental in pilot or module testing before embarking into full adoption of modern technology.

5. Productivity of shrinking farms can be increased through crop and product diversifications, and integrated land reform breaking up large estates, including sugarlands and coconut lands, and the subdivision of properties resulting in unecon­omic farm sizes, certain approaches may be adapted to increase pro­ductivity, such as multiple cropping, agro-processing and integra­tion-related projects. Another diversification model is for coconut lands.

The ordinary coconut farmer can indulge in the following activities, namely (a) copra making, (b) intercropping with cash crops such as grains and legumes, and (c) animal production (goat, carabao and cattle raised between coconut trees). To accomplish all this, extension will have to assist in bringing in the services of government agencies as well as those of the private sector. Farmers will be organized into cooperatives as a pre-condition of collective production and marketing.

Hypothetically, integration is of two kinds, horizontal and vertical, and the combination of both. This HV integration model applies in areas where the principal crop is rice, corn or sugarcane. It can also apply in non-traditional areas. Extension should be able to accomplish farm plans and programs based on integration concepts and models. But it is advisable that successful projects be used as models.

6. Holistic development considers the major division of the geographic profile and recognizes their ecological interrelationship.Twentieth century agriculture started with the opening of frontiers of production; pushing development towards marginal areas - up­lands, hillsides, swamps and sea coasts; and later, the manipulation of nature on the species level, creating desirable varieties of plants and breeds of animals at the same time improving their agronomy and husbandry. Very recently, we began to think on the chromo­somes and genes in what we term today as genetic engineering.

Today, with our high population rate of 2.8 percent, which is one of the highest in the world, marginal settlements mushroom in coastal areas, hillsides and suburbs of urban centers. Definitely these areas are productive and a large part is unsuitable for agriculture. Exten­sion should be able to identify the sectoral and ecological divisions of the geographic profile and design programs based on their peculiar physical and biological characteristics, and on their effects to the whole system. We are witnessing many cases where destructive upland and hillside farming has led to erosion, which in turn, cause siltation and low water supply on the plains. Low river flow and a low water table result in salt water intrusion through backflow and seepage destroying farm lands. Pangasinan, Pampanga, Bulacan and the Ilocos provinces have reported cases of salination. We are also aware that a reduced vegetative cover leads to changes in the micro-climate which in turn affect adversely the whole ecosystem.

Perhaps we can reduce the size of the profile under study into a model of a dam site. It maybe as small as a village catchment to a huge power and irrigation project. The model described in this example is found in Sta. Barbara, Iloilo, a water catchment for irrigation. The project consists of a watershed (forest and woodland) with an area of 200 hectares, a catchment which can hold water to irrigate effectively 50 hectares and generate electricity for one sitio. Freshwater fish is raised as part of the project's income. The main source of income is the irrigation fee. China, Japan and many European countries have advanced technology in water catchment that no drop of precious water is lost, so to speak.

Area development maybe initiated by nucleus projects. Later, if these projects become successful, similar or related projects can be put up, or the original projects expanded. Coalition of developed areas leads to integrated area development, a process that is community-led or government assisted, or both. There are communities that develop even without government support. One such case is found in Quezon, Palawan, a remote town. Many development programs start with a grand design and heavy infrastructure. The Australian project in Samar is infra­structure-oriented, not geared straight to the alleviation of the plight of the masses. The 8-inch thick road built from the A $50 million grant could have been in the form of village bodegas, school houses, informal education of farmers and fishermen, initial capital for small business, cooperative development, and such programs addressed to meet the felt needs of the poor community.

7. The success of the extension depends on linkage network and complementation with all sectors o society. The extension agent is at the center of many activities. He provides information about the market. He translates researches into primers and takes a hand in their field application, identifies sources of input and credit, and helps make them available. He is a technician, teacher, consultant, community worker, and above all, a catalyst. To show the nature and extent of networking and complementation in which extension is involve, we study the four sets of factors that affect the post-production system of the grain industry.

 This includes the marketing aspect. This example is being singled out because of its significance. Some 10 to 37 percent of our national rice production is than 1 percent, and the US with less than 5 percent in postharvest losses. Extension works on a cycle of activities, namely, (1) informa­tion, (2) determining needs and problems, (3) setting objectives, (4) program preparation, (5) making the work plan, (6) coordination, and (7) evaluation.
 
8. It is important to first knock down the false notions as well as fallacies of development before developing an extension program.

Among these are the following:
(1.) The felt needs of the poor revolve mainly on their survival motives and therefore non-material and aesthetic values are non­essential to them. This is not true. People deprived of material things equally seek approval, security, affection, self-esteem, recognition, and even power. The hierarchy of needs by Wilgard, adopted from Maslow is based on the priority principle and not on the principle of exclusion if one has not attained the motives of the lower level.
 
(2.) One root cause of low productivity is the lazy nature of people. Indolence, according to Jose Rizal is traced to a natural cause wherein the metabolic rate is slowed down by extreme weather conditions (heat and high humidity), while leisure is commonplace because of the endowed environment. We pointed out that colonial­ism and feudalism dampen the spirit to work and aim high. Today neo-colonialism and neo-feudalism still exist in our society. One other reason for low productivity is the prevalence of malnutrition and diseases which reduce body resistance and drive.

(3.) Foreign investment in the country stimulates economic growth. In certain ways this is true. The question arises when we equate the gains between the foreign investor and the host country which provides labor that is paid cheap and prime land not compensated well enough. Other issues that do not favor equitable distribu­tion of profits can be explained by the poor implementation of our policies and laws which sometimes result in the manipulation of profits favoring the foreign investors. This is not to mention the exploitative nature of joint ventures under the guise of natural agreements.
(4.) A progressive rural society naturally depends upon a strong agricultural economy which in turn is dependent on people who provide the much needed labor in the agricultural frontiers. But the frontiers have long been shrunk and vastly exploited, and the farms now reduced in size. 

UPLB, seat of Agricultural Extension in the Philippines and Southeast Asia 


Even intensive farming cannot absorb rural labor. That is why there is an exodus to urban areas. Today more than half of our population lives in cities and big towns. With 1.6 million new Filipinos added to our 95 million population, the hypothetical population structure looks like a squat or broad-based pyramid where the young people mainly children are at the base. These are highly dependent upon a narrow stratum of working popu­lation. The average Filipino today is an early teener. Such popula­tion structure and the attendant demography of a young population do not lend a healthy picture to our economic recovery unless drastic measures are adopted to arrest our runaway population growth.

(5.) The majority of people are concerned with matters that affect themselves, their family and close friends over a short period of time.Long term objectives are not very common to the ordinary person. It is true that marginal communities do not plan much ahead. Afflu­ence, on the other hand, propels people to plan for the future and the next generation. It enlarges the people's concern for other people and for larger community, and creates national and international consciousness.

(6) Stimuli to growth are distinct from the factors that limit it.In his book The Limits to Growth, Dr. Meadows explains that the very stimuli to growth could negate growth itself. Population can strip the economy of ecosystems. Industry spews wastes that destroy the environment. Exploitation of natural resources may lead to irreversible decline.

Conclusion 

Our Philippine society is not an isolated case. All nations, including the developed ones, suffer in varying degrees the same age-old problems of poverty, degeneration of the environment, unem­ployment, inflation, malnutrition, disease, alienation of the youth, the decline of the belief in the institutions and the rejection of traditional values. The endless search for their solutions is also man's unending dream. We draw much hope in extension, for extension is applied teaching, a means of transforming people beliefs, ideas, and above all, infusing the faith that they can help themselves.~
Presented to the UST Graduate School during a faculty development seminar on the Social Commitment of Education; reference paper HoChiMinh University of Technology Vietnam  2006, and Sokhothai Thammathirat Open University, Bangkok, 2010.  

10 Ways of Reclycling in Nature

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Naturally occurring cycles govern the physico-chemical interactions of the earth’s chemical elements and compounds, principally Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen (CHON), which are essential to life. Dr Abe V Rotor

. Lightning is Nature’s quickest and most efficient converter and recycler, instant manufacturer of nitrates, phosphates, sulfates; it burns anything on its path, recharges ions. Lightning sustains the needs of the biosphere, it is key to biodiversity.

2. Fire is the Nature’s second tool. While fire is indeed destructive, in the long run, fields, grasslands and forests are given new life by it. Fire is a test of survival of the fittest. It is the key to renewal and continuity of life.

3. Volcanoes 
erupt to recycle the elements from the bowels of the earth to replenish the spent landscape, so with submarine volcanoes that keep the balance of marine ecosystems.


4. Natural cycles prevail with the seasons, weather and climate. They govern the life cycle and alternation of generations of organisms; the food chain, food web, and food pyramid. The same applies to long term phenomena such as Continental Drift and Ice age.

5. Naturally occurring cycles govern the physico-chemical interactions of the earth’s chemical elements and compounds, principally Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen (CHON), which are essential to life.

6. Nature recycling of organic materials in through the action of microorganisms: bacteria, algae, protists (amoeba, diatoms), fungi, blue green algae. Fibrous materials are broken down by fungi. Other than roughage and fuel, rice hay is used as substrate for mushroom growing. The spent materials decompose easily into organic fertilizer.


Atoll - remnants of a submarine volcano,
Painting by AVR in acrylic 1997

7. Biological (e.g. Trichoderma, a fungus, to hasten composting; termites on wood); Enzymatic reaction (e.g., wild sunflower in composting, urea in hay}; Mechanical (shedding, grinding); Fermentation (silage, retting, biogas digester)

8. Recycling by animals also helps in controlling the destructive ones such as the mosquito, which is food of fish, spider and bat.

9. Nature’s nutrient converters. Simple life forms such as lichens, algae, mosses and ferns silently work on inert materials, convert them into nutrients for higher organisms.

10. Nature’s recycling with waterways Mekong river in Vietnam (below), Pasig River in the Philippines, Great Britain, Danube and Rhine in Europe, the Nile, Mississippi, Amazon, Yangtze, Tigris-Euphrates. Rivers, lakes, swamps, basins – they provide many basic needs of man. They are arteries of life, the ecological bridge between the living and the non-living world. It is said that no civilization exists without a river.

Snails and crustaceans are nature's aquatic janitors. 
Goats and pigs have tremendous appetite.   They eat a wide range of food not suitable to other organisms.
 Lake Tikob is a self-contained ecosystem,a natural sink.  
  
 Week long ecology camp participated by young ecologists from
 De La Salle University System
 Ultimate Nature's fury - force majeure  

Fragrant Limonsito (Triphasia trifolia)

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Berries are lemon-scented, white flowers have a scent of orange blossoms, while the leaves exude a resinous scent when bruised.
Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday
 [www.pbs.gov.ph]


 Harvesting ripe berries of limonsito at home in Lagro, QC

I like the refreshing lemon scent of limonsito, and what could be a better place to have it growing than next to the window?

The scent freely circulate into the bedroom or seeps through the aircon, and what could be a more natural scent in a heavily polluted air? 

There it grows like bonsai in a portable 5-gallon garden pot, trained and trimmed, and positioned to serve as natural window blind.   

It is fully armed with numerous sharp needles, so it is a natural barrier against trespassers, and unpalatable to browsing animals.

Its scent is repellant againstpest like house flies and mosquitoes, but host to a beautiful butterfly Danaus, that spends its immature life on the leaves, then metamorphosing into a fairy tale.

Its red berries contain a natural lacquer, environment and health friendly for natural nail polish. Pick a ripe berry, squeeze and train it on your finger nails. And if there is a minor wound apply it as well; limonsito has anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties.

For rare dessert, try fresh ripe berries, or make them into jam, pickle or candy, which by the way, also serve as remedy for sore throat and cough. 

Being a relative of lemon, orange, our own native calamansi, dayap and suha, limonsito carries common medicinal compounds useful as home remedies such as aroma therapy,  treatment of diarrhea and skin diseases.

The world of medicinal plants, more so those that likewise contribute to our food and nutrition, aesthetics and other values, continue to fascinate us in our postmodern era, as we search for alternatives in the natural world. ~

Here are facts about limonsito in an outline for ready reference. Thanks to Philippine Medicinal Plants (Internet)    

Limonsito (LIME BERRY)


Triphasia trifolia P. Wils.
Limonia trifolia Burm. f.    Kalamansito (Ilk., Ibn.)

Limonia trifoliata L.            Kamalitos (Tag.)

Triphasia aurantiola Lour.           Limonsitong-kastila (Bik.)

Triphasia trifolia (Burm.f.) P. Wilson      Sua-sua (Bik.)

Triphasia trifoliata (L.) DC.           Suang-kastila (Bik.)

            Tagimunau (Neg.)

            Lime berry (Engl.)

            Myrtle lime (Engl.)

            Trifoliate limeberry (Engl.)
Botany
Limonsito is a smooth shrub growing to a height of 2 meters. Leaf has two sharp and slender spines at the base. Leaves have three leaflets, ovate to oblong-ovate, the terminal one 2 to 4 centimeters long; the lateral ones, smaller. Margin is crenate, the petioles very short. Flowers are very short-stalked, white, fragrant, and about 1 centimeter long. Fruit is ovoid, fleshy and red, somewhat resinous, about 12 millimeters long.

Distribution
- Throughout the Philippines in thickets and settled areas, in some places gregarious and abundant.
- Introduced; probably Chinese in origin.
- Pantropic in cultivation.
- Naturalized in many countries.
- Cultivated for its ornamental fragrant flower and edible red fruit. Attractive as a garden hedge.

Parts utilized
Leaves and fruits.

Constituents
• Study yielded a new bicoumarin from the leaves and stems; the two coumarinic moieties are derivatives of mexoticin and meranzin hydrate.
• Oil yielded 81 compounds; the main constituent was germacrene B.
• Essential oil from aerial parts yielded main constituents, as follows: β-pinene (64.36%), (+)-sabinene (8.75%), hexadecanoic acid (6.03%), α-limonene (4.24%) and p-cymene (2.73%). (see study below) (8)

Properties
• Berries are lemon-scented.
• Fragrant white flowers have a scent of orange blossoms.
• Leaves exude a resinous scent when bruised.
• Considered antifungal and antibacterial.

Uses
Edibility / Nutrition
- Fruit is edible, eaten raw or cooked.
- Ripe fruit is pleasant and sweet tasting.
- Fruit can be pickled or made into jams.

Folkloric
- Leaves applied externally for colic, diarrhea, and skin afflictions.
- Fruits used for cough and sore throat.
- Preparation: Peel the fruits and soak overnight lime (apog) water. Rinse, and boil in 1 cup water with 1/2 cup sugar. Rinse and boil a second and third time as preferred, syrupy or candied, using as needed for cough or sore throat.
- Among islanders of the Indian Ocean, fresh crushed leaves applied to dandruff. Also, used for coughs.
- In the Dutch Indies, natives apply the leaves to the body for various complaints: diarrhea colic, and skin diseases.
- In Guyana, fruit is cooked in water and sugar, used as remedy for coughs to loosen phlegm.

Others
- Baths: Leaves used in making aromatic bath salts.
- Cosmetic: Leaves used in cosmetics.

Studies
• Phenolics / Anti-HSV: Study on the inhibitory effects of phenolic compounds on herpes simplex virus and HIV included 13 coumarins from Triphasia trifolia. The data suggests the bis-hydroxyphenyl structure as a potential target for anti-HSV and HIV drugs development.

• Bicoumarin: Study yielded a new bicoumarin from the leaves and stems of Triphasia trifolia. The two coumarinic moieties are derivatives of mexoticin and meranzin hydrate.

• Antioxidant / Repellent / Essential Oil : Study of essential oil from aerial parts showed high antioxidant potential (94.53%) comparable to ascorbic acid (96.40%). The oils also showed high repellent activity on the insect Tribolium castaneum Herbst.

Have you been kissed by an elephant?

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The Lighter side of celebrating UN Environment Day, June 5

 Warning!  Don't ever attempt this feat. There are very few people elephants really like.
Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday
 [www.pbs.gov.ph]

First, befriend the elephant.


Look into his eyes.


And you get a warm kiss.


A long and firm kiss - you have to tell him to stop. 

Warning: Don't ever attempt this feat. There are very few people elephants really like. And it takes elephants a long time to trust people. They are unpredictable. Even if they are tame, they still carry their wild genes. Get a kiss from someone else.

Have you been kissed by a black goat?

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Beware! This creature eats anything - almost.


The Lighter side of celebrating UN Environment Day, June 5


Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday
 [www.pbs.gov.ph]

Rather, has a black goat tasted you? Carlo at home, San Vicente, Ilocos Sur

The goat eats everything - almost:
leaf or skin, fabric or paper; 
by gene and birth, unscrupulous 
this creature eats anything - almost. 

And it tastes everything, too - almost:
the sweetest, bitterest, saltiest,
intoxicating, lapping to the end, 
until it topples dead - almost.

And if it has kissed and bitten you - almost,
you must be vegetarian, carnivore,
cuisine lover combined; this creature
sees you a friend perfect - almost. ~

Note; Carlo's favorite ringtone is a goat's crispy call.

Bromeliads form a unique aerial ecosystem

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Natue School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday 
Brightly colored false petals of bromeliad attract insects and other organisms to fertilize its shy, short-live flowers. The bright pseudo flowers serve as markers in the dense and vast forest high up in the trees. Here bromeliads form colonies with connecting rhizomes, and with other epiphytes - ferns, orchids and lianas - make a unique aerial ecosystem. 

Domesticated bromeliads are popular ornamental plants in gardens and around homes. One disadvantages though is that it becomes a breeding place of mosquitoes and other vermin. It is because we have detached them from their natural habitat where they are part of a complex food web. Here mosquito wrigglers are preyed upon by naiads of Odonatans (dragonflies and damselflies), while the adults are trapped in spider webs. Tree frogs have their fill of flies and other insects.  Fish live in the axil ponds and can even transfer to nearby bromeliads and even to the water below to hunt and to mate.  While reptiles occupy the top of the food pyramid, hawks and eagles come to prey on them. Like a chain, just one link broken, and the system fails. 

Bromeliads, which includes the pineapple (the only edible member in the family), are nature's reservoir of miniature ponds that provide abode to many organisms from insects to fish. The central receptacle collects water from dew and rain which spills over to the adjoining leaf axils, making a contiguous pond. The sequence, like a series of terraces, makes water collection and retention efficient, giving chance for the various resident organisms to complete - and repeat - their life cycles. And for transient organisms to have their regular visit.

In this pond system, detritus accumulates and fertilizes the bromeliad as well as other plants around and below it, including its host tree, in exchange for its foothold and other benefits. And being epiphytic and colonial in growing habit on trunks and limbs of trees, bromeliads  form a unique aerial ecosystem with other epiphytes, and the surrounding trees.~    

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