Thursday, August 21, 2014

Postcards from the village (1)

Barangay San Francisco, Bulusan


Weaving karagumoy hats is a major livelihood activity in Kapangihan also known as Barangay San Francisco in Bulusan. To supplement the harvests of coconut and pili nuts in the area, women make hats almost daily that can fetch at around 7.50pesos each. Weavers average to about 10 hats a day minimum.


Karagumoy hat weaving is a traditional craft that dates back in the early 1900. Early Chinese merchants of Bulusan were the first to trade the hats that continues up to the present.


As the karagumoy hats become an established commodity being traded in town, cultivation of karagumoy in farm patches became the norm. It is common to see karagumoy, an indigenous plant  from the pandan family, inter cropped between coconut and pili in almost all agricultural patches of land in Bulusan.

Photos: Alma P. Gamil
Bulusan, Sorsogon, Philippines

Friday, August 8, 2014

Bulusan Lake sans the colored boats


In my recent visit (August 8, 2014) to Bulusan Lake, I challenged myself to compose a shot of Bulusan Lake without the ubiquitous colored boats. This is to veer away from the too cliched photos coming out in various tourist promotions about the lake with the colored boats prominently displayed on its serene waters.

Focusing on the natural beauty of the lake and its surroundings without the artificial trappings -- this was my mental guide as I walk slowly along the trail around the lake to find the spot. 

The above photo is the resulting image. Bulusan Lake photographs itself literally. A beauty.

Photo: Alma P. Gamil
Location: Bulusan Volcano Natural Park, Bulusan, Sorsogon
               Philippines