Sunday, December 16, 2012

Malagayang Pasko

 
Malagayang Pasko means "Merry Christmas."  It was the one phrase I remembered from living in the Philippines when I was a girl.  It's fun to see it in action now.
 
We found a dairy nearby that sells whole, pasteurized (not homogenized) milk.  Grandpa is enjoying it, but Grandma feels guilty.  The cows are a holstein/brama cross--interesting combination!

An elementary school.  It's a holiday so the kids aren't there.  They have lots of holidays. . .American kids would be jealous!  Notice there is no glass in the windows.
This fellow was dead outside our house.  When I was a girl and lived here, the cockroaches were inside our house and this big!  But I've only seen a few outside now.  In 50 years some things have changed.  Grandpa says thank goodness the beetles inside our peanuts weren't this big!
Zone Conference--after Pres. left we all relaxed!
 
Our girls--Sister Missionaries from Manaoag.  We love these girls, and they work hard to do a great job.

Getting ready for transfers to a different zone.
Off they go!  In a jeepney. . .
Neighborhood decorations for Christmas.  Many Christmas trees are made of palms.  Pines or firs are unheard of here, so they make do with what they have.

Mary and Joseph in their humble manger.
 

 Night scene of the Lady of Manaoag Church and tree near us.  Help, Marilyn, to turn the pictures!

 
 Day pictures of same tree by Our Lady of Manaoag Church.  Manaoag means, "Come."  The story is that hundreds of years ago the Virgin Mary appeared on a hill where the church is and told people to "Come".  Thus the town was named Manaoag.  You pronounce it Ma Now Og.  People make pilgrimages from all over the Philippines to see the church. 

Another colorful tree.  Notice the decorations are colored paper cups.  They don't have much money, so they use anything available for decorations.


Christmas tree outside the elementary school made from beer cans!  The star is from pop cans, though.
Two of Dola's daughters.  Liahona on the left is going on a mission this summer.  Tiami on the right is going to BYU Hawaii on a scholarship.


Our scone making class and finished product.  They loved scones!  Notice how big some of the scones were.  They got a bit carried away!  We didn't have a stove, just a burner that wouldn't get very hot, but we made them anyway.
 
"Malagayang Pasko" to all our Loved Ones this Christmas Season.   
 
 
 
 

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Scenes, Visits, and Activities

 
Toy trike outside kids' school--loaded with toys they can buy for a few pesos.
Man tilling rice paddy, getting it ready to plant.  Makes irrigating seem tame!
Washing hanging out to dry on the path to sister's home where we visited.  Washing is hanging  everywhere here--no dryers!
 
Faithful sisters beside older sister's house.  She had lovely flowers growing everywhere in pots.  Sister on left is Maribel--Relief Society President, Gospel Doctrine teacher, 2nd Counselor in District Young Women's, mother of 4, and corn farmer. . .and doing missionary work and still smiling!  Other sister is her Relief Society counselor and friend.  Maribel calls her Mother.
Sweet sister picking a guava off her tree for us.
 
Rice paddy behind sister's house.
 
It's so wet that even a chicken walked in the water.  Brad says that's unbelievable! Maybe she thinks she's a duck.

Neighbor children seeing what's going on.  Notice the path back to Mother's house.  No cars allowed, obviously!
Visiting less active sister with neighbor children.  The one on the left is a girl!
Elder Dinkel near cacao tree, the origin of cocoa.

Mapandan Branch teenagers and primary performing at Christmas party.  They really had fun!
 
 

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Our first anniversary here--one month!

One day this week we visited a missionary couple in Aringay about an hour and a half north of us.  They have mountains there, and this was a peaceful rural scene on the way.

They are also near the South China Sea and have beaches nearby.



They dry fish in one of the villages near there.  The stench is unbelievable!  We passed on the offer to sample.  Yum. . .
 

Just like at home, there is road construction!  But most of what they do is by manual labor--men and shovels.
 
 
Tire-hauling tricycle.  Have trike, will haul is their motto!  Doesn't matter what, they do it!
Even pigs!
 
Cemetery on hillside.  The people rent the vaults and "bury" their loved ones on top of the ground.  Some vaults are stacked several high.  Maybe rent's cheaper for high rise burials?
 
View from our friend's balcony.  How would you like to figure out that wire mess?
The Fullmers with their Christmas tree.  We don't have anything Christmas yet.  Can you believe that?!
Another day we did apartment checks--visited 11 sets of missionaries' apartments in Lingayen, north and east of us.  They, too, have mountains and beautiful farm fields.
This was near one of the apartments we visited--beautiful tropical vegetation.  Brad said he'd like to live there, and I said he'd be by himself!
 
Look closely in the left of the refrigerator door tray.  There is a tiny, live gecko in one of the Elder's refrigerators.  I won't divulge which Elders it is, but. . .their apartment checks were interesting, to say the least!
 
These are women working in the rice fields.  We're not sure if they're planting or bundling seedlings to plant elsewhere, but they were busy and seemed happy--waved at me and laughed as I took their picture.


 Calesa (horse-drawn carriage) with baskets and peddlar selling them .
 
Vehicles parked at church during meeting--ours is always the only car in the parking lot.  Many families come on tricycles or motorbikes--mom, dad, several children.  Baby is often standing up wedged between parents and kids hanging partly off all over the vehicle.  Scary!
A beautiful home with gorgeous flowers and shrubs near one of the churches we visit.

Rice drying on the road.  Today we also saw corn drying on the side of the road.
 
A Filipina lady near one of the Elder's apartments.  They are so friendly and gracious.
A caribou or water buffalo--beast of burden for the Philippines.  They use them to plow their fields or haul carts filled with stuff.
One of the sisters who is here with her husband as a missionary couple wanted a yellow cake mix and hasn't been able to find one.  So I decided to try my hand at making a yellow cake mix, then trying variations.  It was so easy and so successful!  I not only made yellow cake, but I also made coconut, lemon, spice, chocolate chip, and chocolate cakes out of the same mix.  Who needs cake mixes, anyway!    Here is the recipe I used, if you want to try it.
 2 1/3 c. flour
1 1/2 c. sugar
1 T. baking powder
3/4 t. salt
Mix these together and put in ziploc bag to store.  This is your basic cake mix.
When you're ready to bake, take mix and add 1/2 c. melted margarine, (or shortening, or butter).  I used margarine because that was what I had.
2 eggs
1 c. milk
1 t. vanilla.
Beat with mixer for 2-3 minutes.
This makes the yellow cake. 
Bake 350--9/13 25-30 minutes, cupcakes 15 min.  round layers 20 min.
 
Variations: Lemon: add lemon juice and lemon zest and frost with lemon frosting
Spice:  Add 1 t. cinnamon, 1/4 t. cloves, 1/4 t. allspice (I didn't have allspice so I added 1/4 t. nutmeg and 1/8 t. ginger)
Coconut:  Add coconut flavor and shredded coconut.
Chocolate chips:  Just add chocolate chips to yellow cake
Chocolate:  Add 1/4 c. cocoa before the milk
White cake:  Use 3 egg whites instead of whole eggs.  You can whip whites and fold in for a finer cake.
Pineapple upside down cake:  Milt 1/2 c. butter in bottom of 9/13 pan.  Add 2/3 c. brown sugar, stirring into butter.  Arrange pineapple slices in pan.  Top with yellow cake.  Bake 30-35 min. at 350.  Cool 5 minutes and invert.