Showing posts with label Dr. Amce Marie Pinos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Amce Marie Pinos. Show all posts

Saturday, January 16, 2021

It's Ubi season again

It’s feel-good Sunday, January 17, 2021. Time out from nega sizzlers, time in for another inspiring story.

But first, some food for thought:

Hipolita Galgo Persigas

• From Steve Jobs: "Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people's thinking." 

• From Saint Mother Teresa: "Spread love everywhere you go. Let no one ever come to you without leaving happier."

• From Benjamin Franklin:  "Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn." 

• From Helen Keller: "The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched - they must be felt with the heart."

And.... 

• Hipolita Galgo Persigas, 84, of Ubay town was laid to rest on Saturday, Jan. 16. "Go, for Adonai sends you. Go and Adonai will be with you. Adonai will guard your coming and going, now and forever. Amen."

• The "Managkot sa Candelaria" Hike for a Cause in Garcia Hernandez town on February 2, 2021. The charity event is organized by Helping Hand Movement of Garcia Hernandez. for youth leader Iris Cuadra who was diagnosed with papillary thyroid cancer. For inquiries, call or text 09565028869. 

• The January 23, 2021 opening of The Buzzz Cafe- Jagna. 

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One beauty (and brains) contest sorely missed by beauty-watchers is the Miss Ubi Festival Queen, launched in 2000, and scrapped for good, much to the sadness of fans. 

Larry Pamugas, Ph. D. : The 30-day Ubi festival 2021 will be filled with activities and contests.

Miss Ubi usually picked candidates from the towns which are “ubi” country--Alburquerque, Antequera, Baclayon,  Corella, Dagohoy,  Dauis, Dimiao , Garcia-Hernandez, Jagna,  Loay, Loboc, Mabini, Maribojoc, Panglao, Sikatuna, Tagbilaran, Ubay and Valencia-- from whom the winner is chosen in a pageant, promoting, yes of course, ubi (yam). 

Here’s a fond lookback at the Miss Ubi Honor Roll:

• Pinky Gica Beldia was the first Miss Ubi Festival Queen in 2000. It was held in Dauis town.

• Rhiz Nova Tagsip Arenas of Inabanga  was declared Miss Ubi Festival Queen 2004 and subsequently became Miss Bohol Sandugo 2004.  She was famous for her “Basta ubi Bohol, basta Bohol ubi."

• Jade Nica Obedencio of Balilihan was declared Miss Ubi Festival Queen 2012 in a low-budgeted and less fanfare search. 

Unfortunately, there has been no search because of lack of funds. 

There was a collective heave of a call for a yearly Miss Ubi Festival Queen but the interest waned in the succeeding years.

Where are they now? Throwback Sunday: 17 years ago the Ubi Festival Queen 2004 crown was won by Rhiz Nova Aranas of Inabanga town. The committee members were Fiel Angeli Araoarao-Gabin, Rany Gespert, Rico Guigue, Regil Gucor, Ivan, Maymay Legaspi, Dr. Amce Marie Pinos and Roxanne Monton. 



Well, the Ubi Festival 2021 is on January 25 to February 24.  Ubi (Dioscorea alata) growers and supporters will gather once more to honor the crop as a major agricultural product in the ubilandia. 

If the coronavirus was not around, shortly after the new year, the festive vibe would have been evident.

But Larry Pamugas, assistant provincial agriculturist, said the 30-day festival will be filled with activities and contests such as highest value of Ubi display, Ubi eating contest, best new Ubi processed products, Pinaka, literary and musical contests; and nightly entertainment and food fair.
 
The late environmental activist Zenaida Darunday said ubi is a healthy energy source with important nutritional benefits. The kinampay, the queen of all ubi varieties, is a good source of anthocyanin, a strong anti-oxidant. 

We are looking foward to buy different varieties of ubi --- kabus-ok, kinlot, balagon-on, binanag, tam-isan, apale, iniling, lima-lima, kot, bot and kinampay (the most aromatic ubi in the world) --- at low prices for our ubi desserts!!! 

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Thanks for your letters, all will be answered. Comments welcome at leoudtohan@yahoo.com, follow leoudtohanINQ at Twitter /Facebook/Instagram.

Saturday, November 21, 2020

A plant for P300k?! Plant Gallery showcases most expensive plant

Certified plantitos and plantitas who visit  The Plant Gallery exhibit from Nov. 18-22, 2020 in Tagbilaran City include Tagbilaran City Mayor John Geesnell "Baba" Yap II and his wife Jane, Dr. Mimi Dumaluan, fashion designer EJ Relampagos, Rotarians Alex Bongawan and Louella Gulle-Bantol, educators Edison Gumapac and Butch Bernas, Elvie Bongosia, Joy Bonita Sevilla, Fiel Angeli Araorao-Gabin and Merlyn Diez-Bantugan. Some of the exhibitors are Dr. Amce Marie Pinos of The Green Box, Reichyl Dumaluan-Vallente of The Mayana Garden and Fr. Felix Hora. Photos: Anthony Ceniza and Helen Castano

Wake-uppers:
Scene: From Jeycelle Espejo-Inting of Dr. Cecilio Putong National High School: Pride can seep into a relationship when disagreements occur. The longer you sit and stew over your disagreement, the harder it is to reconcile. Pretty soon, days, weeks, and years pass by and you become accustomed to the way things have become in the relationship. Every passing moment without reconciliation makes it that much harder to turn around and say you are sorry. Don't let your pride get the better side of you. Make it a practice to hurry and settle your differences quickly.

Scene: Aniana "Anyang" Agunod celebrated her 83rd birthday last Nov. 18. Ma'am Anyang,  a retired teacher at Booy South Elem. School, involves herself in church activities. Family and close friends came out to wish her a Happy Birthday. Her grandkids also brought balloons and presents for her.

Scene: Rufino Palma Persigas, a former village councilor of Barangay Buenavista in Ubay town, turned 88 last Nov. 16. Family and friends said Rufino’s 88th birthday was definitely one to remember, and bigger plans have started for his 89th.
Aniana Agunod and Rufino Palma Persigas celebrate their birthdays this month with the love of their families. Contributed photos

 

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Even before the novel coronavirus pandemic hit, my Mama Inday was already a certified plantita. Back in 1990s, she was already showing how big and small plants can transform a home into a relaxing space. 

Gardening also appealed to nostalgia for the passing of a more relaxed life. Thus, only a few of her plants survived.  Of course, she can’t help but have favorites. One of her most precious plants is an Alocasia zebrina, which has been with her for four decades. 

The coronavirus pandemic has set off a global gardening boom.  


Since the lockdown began, I’ve watched my Mama and my sister transform our neglected backyard into a blooming sanctuary. My Mama turned to the soil in moments of upheaval to manage anxieties and imagine alternatives. Now, she has more than a 20 plant species in her collection. 

To look carefully at the mayana ornamental plant, one must look closely at the patterns and colors to appreciate the plant. 

Coleus blumei is the botanical name of the mayana, also known as the lampuyana, dafronaya, tampunaya, daponaya, painted nettle, among other nicknames.

While you might have childhood memories of the mayana plant traditionally used for folkloric medicine for pain, sore, swelling and cuts, the "The Plant Gallery" exhibit is meant to give you a new appreciation for that particular 100 varieties of its kind as well as other plants. 

“The Plant Gallery,”  is on view Wednesday through today, Nov. 22 at the 2nd floor of Alta Citta Mall in Tagbilaran City. It showcases local gardening enthusiasts’ passion for sprucing up the home with greens.

Jose Owen Quimson, one of the orgnanizers, says there are 23 exhibitors from different towns of Bohol who display and sell indoor and outdoor house plants. 

Jessa Mae Suarez sells mayana for P50-P70/pot at her "Mayana Garden" with 100 varities of mayana. Her assistant, Anthony Ceniza, has turned their booth into a magical mayana garden accentuated with giant alocasia plants. 

Fr. Felix Hora, a known horticulturist from Panglao town, showcases his collections of cacti and other plants such as philodendron and succulents at his "Foliage Garden." 

Other exhibitors showcase their alocasia,  anthurium hookeri, rubber plants, monstera, black cardinal, Chinese evergreen and orchids. 

The most expensive plant at The Plant Gallery is a variegated green congo worth P300,000. Yes, you read that right: three hundred thousand pesos!!! 

The most in demand types of plants now are anything that’s variegated—meaning they exhibit different colors, especially in the form of irregular patches or streaks.
Your VRS with the most expensive plant at The Plant Gallery, a variegated green congo worth Php300,000.

Another expensive plant is the Monstera borsigiana albo which is worth P180,000. 

Some of my friends who are  avid plant collectors even during the pre-pandemic period say they've noticed the huge price difference of the plants between now and before the March lockdown.

Elvie Bongosia has thrice visited the exhibit  to buy some succulents to add to her collections. As a means to destress, she started caring for succulents and cacti, until she eventually tended to variations ornamental plants.

In five months, Bongosia has amassed more than 200 potted plants in her home and has transformed her abode into a fresh green spot. 

Elvie has been dubbed a certified "plantita" - a portmanteau of plant and the Filipino word for aunt (tita) -- because of her love for plants.

Other plant enthusiasts, Merlyn Diez-Bantugan and Fiel Angeli Araoarao-Gabin, have said plants give them joy that money can't buy. 

And so if COVID-19 underscores an age of distancing, gardening arises as an antidote, extending the promise of contact with something real. 

Note: Being a plantito/plantita is not exactly a cheap hobby. 

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Thanks for your letters, all will be answered. Comments welcome at leoudtohan@yahoo.com, follow leoudtohanINQ at Twitter /Facebook/Instagram.