Philippines Trip 2012 with Mercy in Action

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There are more journal entries and photos to come....

This blog is dedicated to explaining my journey into naturopathic medicine, and updating on my upcoming trip to the Philippines. This July 2012 I will be going with a group from my school on a 15 day trip to work in a free birthing clinic in the Philippines run by Mercy in Action.

Thank you for your thoughts, prayers, and donations as I work toward raising the $3400 needed for the trip!
Please see the blog posts for updates.

“Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.”
Mother Teresa

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Sunday, August 19, 2012

Journal Entry #2 - Sunday


Sunday
Good morning!  Guess what!  Today I kissed a dolphin!!!  J

Me, Jessica, and Nala (the dolphin)

We went to a marine wildlife park today called Ocean Adventures.
  It’s like a really small Sea World.  It’s set right on the ocean, so the pens the animals are in is ocean water.  You could get really close to the animals, and the trainers were playing with them.  There were a few different kinds of dolphins, and a false killer whale.  We got to go in small groups into a shallow area and meet a dolphin.  I got to meet Nala..  She’s a 8 year old female bottlenose dolphin.  The trainer gave her commands, like to wave, roll on her back, splash water.  We got to pet her and hug her.  He told me to try to lift her out of the water…..there’s no way!  When the dolphins take a breath, it’s a loud huffing or puffing sound.  Then when they make the clicks and squeaks, you can see their blowhole making different shapes.  It reminds me of how a parrot can make so many sounds by blowing air under their beak.

The dolphin skin feels hard and smooth, like hard rubber.  I even got to feel her tongue, which is hard too.  Her eyes were covered with mucous to protect them.  Her tail is thick and strong and heavy.

There was an educational show about animals that are native Philippines; afterward I got to hold a python and pet an owl.  They didn’t let us touch the bats though.  We saw the fruit bats hanging on trees in the jungle by the road.  They are big – about like a hawk, with brown fur and of course, hang upside down by their feet.  They move their wings in and out slightly as they hang to cool themselves off.  And they make a real high squeaking sound.  There was also a neat indoor aquarium with eels, sharks, jellyfish, and lots of fish.

The mosquito nets were a must!  This was
at the end of a looong day later in the week.
After Ocean Adventures, we went to where we’ll be staying for the rest of the week.  There is some land where Mercy in Action built “Waiting Huts” and we are staying in them.  They are built of bamboo, on stilts so they don’t flood, with grass roofs.  There are two windows with screens (no glass) and 2 sets of bunk beds.  There is a ceiling fan and a bare light bulb in the ceiling, but the electricity comes and goes.  On this same land, up the hill are 4 neepa huts, a larger hut they use as a classroom for the kids, and the house belonging to Jason and Teresa.  Teresa is a midwife with Mercy in Action, and they have 4 girls.

On the land there is also an outdoor “kitchen” (a gas 2-burner stove, and a hose) and 2 toilet rooms and a shower room.  Above the bathrooms and shower, there’s a little apartment where one of the other midives lives with her family.  There’s no hot water, but it’s so hot here the cool showers feel good.  Everywhere here in the Philippines, you don’t throw your used toilet paper into the toilet because the pipes are small and clog easily.  But Jason built these bathrooms with bigger pipes, so we can throw TP in the toilet.  Ahhh, it’s the little things  ;)

We stopped by the grocery store on the way to the land, because there aren’t restaurants around anymore, and we have to prepare our own food.  We bought eggs and potatoes, bread, PB&J, a salt & pepper shaker, bananas and mangos, spaghetti and sauce, and some nuts.  I am rooming with Michelle, and we shared food too. 

In our neepa hut, Jessica is staying too.  So there’s one bunk free and we keep our luggage there.  The mosquito nets are already up on our beds, so we just put our sheet “sleeping bags” on the thin mattresses and we’re set.  We have leave at 6am tomorrow, so we go to bed with the sun.  Tomorrow we are going to hike a couple hours up into the jungle to an Aeta village, to clear some land for a mulungai tree nursery.  

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