SEA GAMES
Transcription
SEA GAMES
The Bay Clark & Subic Lifestyle, Leisure & Business Volume 1 Issue 3 October - November 2005 SEA CAREERS SEAPLANES SEAPORT SEABEES SEA GAMES PLUS: SPORTS / BUSINESS / HISTORY / CULTURE / ENVIRONMENT WELCOME Dear Readers, The Philippines will host the 23rd South East Asian (SEA) Games in November and December, 2005. In or near Clark and Subic is where Philippine athletes will almost certainly win armfuls of gold medals. The Bay tells you how. The past two months of research and interview has allowed us to explore the history of each sport and rub shoulders with the highly motivated men and women who will be straining muscle and brain to outperform and outwit athletes from around the Region. The results have been extraordinarily enlightening. Although ostensibly in search of medals, team members have surprised with their dedication in training and determination to fly the Philippine flag high above all others. The sacrifices already made, and those to come in the next eight weeks, stand testament to a growing enthusiasm amongst Philippine youth to take on the most talented sporting nations on Earth and identify with an alternative currency: pride in improved performance. However, the two youngest members of the Kayak and Canoe team, Danny Fijnelas (16) and Jonard Saren (17), recently returned from European competition, tell it their way, “out of seven events we are determined to win five gold and two silver”. Starting with the front cover (the “sea” plane) we have taken a little license with the “SEA” theme and used a broad brush to color The Bay with some other apparently watery subjects to create a compendium of the Clark and Subic, business and lifestyle that will hopefully surprise and inform. If you are intrigued and motivated by the content of this issue then visit us here for the SEA Games and drop by to our advertisers who can tell you better than we that this unique area of the Philippines is second to none when it comes to delivering golden opportunities. Sincerely, Martyn Willes, Editor THE COVER Mike O’Farrell, pilot, owner operator of Subic Seaplane, Inc. with his Cessna 180 float plane. Photo by Kevin Hamdorf © EDITORIAL Editor MARTYN WILLES Photo Editor KEVIN HAMDORF Tel # +63 47 252 7821 / 232 1332 Email: kevinhamdorf@photographer.net Advertising BERNADITH WILLES Design & Layout Hamdorf Photography & Design, Inc. Roselyn Tuazon-Castillo DECEMBER 2005 - JANUARY 2006 Women’s Business THE BAY magazine is published by DeBe Enterprise, 4474 Scarlet Street, Sun Valley Subd., Parañaque City 1700, Metro Manila, Philippines Telephone +63 2 823 0135 Facsimile +63 47 232 1332 Email: debe@pldtdsl.net All Rights Reserved. CONTENTS Happy Halloween !!! from Marlona Barbon 6 BUSINESS Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines By Bruce Curran 8 CAREERS Safer Ships... Safer Seas By Bob Couttie 10 CULTURAL Subic Bay’s Museums By Bob Couttie 14 ENVIRONMENT The Sea Beneath From an interview with Ma. Luisa Giron, Ocean Discovery Aquarium 16 HISTORICAL CB’s build at QB By Tomas de Makati 18 DEVELOPMENT Seaport: Minimum Impact Maximum Benefit By Martyn Willes 20 RECREATION Sea Defense: The San Quentin From an interview with Johan de Sadeleir 22 SOUTH EAST ASIAN GAMES A series of articles by Martyn Willes 31 THE BAY REGIONAL MAP 33 SUBIC BAY FREEPORT MAP 35 CLARK ECOZONE MAP DISCLAIMER OF LIABILITY Every effort is made to provide accurate and complete information. With respect to information contained herein, The Publisher makes no warranty, expressed or implied, including the warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose with respect to advertisements. The Publisher assumes no legal liability for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information disclosed herein and does not represent that use of such information would not infringe on privately owned rights. OCTOBER-NOVEMBER 2005 BUSINESS SEAPLANES: The Zen of the Philippine Egg Words by Bruce Curran The piercing beauty of the tropical bay lay silent within the magic of the islands. A black speck appeared in the blueness of an otherwise empty Philippine sky. The whining of a small engine interrupted feelings of timelessness and isolation. A fixed wing dipped to the West and glided onto the glassy ocean surface, as the seaplane arrived with three passengers into the tranquillity of a corralled hideaway. 7000 islands spread across a watery archipelago are the ideal stomping grounds for a fleet of seaplanes and one would not be surprised to see them coming and going throughout these islands. But this is the Philippines: a country that chooses its own unique ways to drift along paths of existence that are mysteriously unfathomable, well hidden within the black 6 holes of God’s vast universe. To see beyond agriculture and a fisherman’s dream requires a highly skilled Top: Mike O’Farrell’s Cessna 180 float plane lying off Capones Island, north of Subic Bay. Bottom: Emergency rescue of diver suffering from the Benz, and enormously flown from Boracay to the Subic Bay Recompression chamber for treatment. dedicated being Photos by Kevin Hamdorf to infiltrate the simplicity steeped in complexity of this Those who have eaten that most famous of tropical paradise, especially when it comes Philippine eggs, the balut (a 21-day old to setting up a business. Blessed be the feathered bony embryo), will have some man on a mission with a dream, limitless understanding of the difference when it determination and a clear vision. The comes to an American-breakfast egg, fatalism that washes through these lands sunny-side-up. swept by typhoons, cut by earthquakes and This brings us back to seaplanes, regularly washed by flooding, is a tough or the virtual lack of them in these islands. egg to crack. Everyone is put to the ultimate In a hanger close to the water on test when it comes to the Philippine egg. the southern shore of Subic Bay, sits the only registered ‘true’ seaplane in Philippine waters. ‘True’ in that it can only land on water and not double up for earth landings. Mike O’Farrell, ex-US Navy, has run his Cessna seaplane business, “Subic Seaplane”, for six years: flying passengers on trips to exotic resorts, over the eeriness of Mount Pinatubo and on convenience trips to Manila. He has been involved in rescues for those in peril from the sea: one diver, suffering from the benz was flown to the decompression facility in Subic from far away; four divers, separated from their dive boat, drifted overnight, right through to the next afternoon, before Mike spotted them, reported their GPS position, and they were picked up in rough seas by a rescue boat. Mike regularly takes people to the beauty of Pandan island (West Mindoro), Puerto Galera, Busuanga (northern Palawan) and, with a maximum four hour flying time without refuelling, can whisk you away as far as Puerto Princesa. Taking a seaplane is a perfect convenience when you realize that a road and boat trip to Puerto Galera from Subic Bay would take all of seven hours, but a quick flip in the seaplane will take but one hour. And, at a hundred miles an hour, and only a couple of thousand feet above the earth, the passenger gets a spectacular view of these tropical lands. For a magical mystery tour beyond imagination, take the early morning flight to check out the moonscape around the Pinatubo volcano (the world’s largest explosion of the last century, in 1991). If you ask, Mike will connect the wingtip video recorder for a permanent record of perhaps the most amazing moment in your life so far. There are only a couple of amphibian seaplanes (being at home on water or land) registered within the Philippines and one right now is far away making its mark on the world stage. Clark airfield is the home range of SEAIR (South East Asian Airlines), one of the most successful domestic airlines, who own a magnificent Dornier amphibian airplane: the vintage 24ATT. Conceived by the German grandfather of SEAIR Chairman, Iren Dornier, this mammoth plane has a wingspan greater than a Boeing Top: Iren Dornier, pilot and Chairman of South East Asian 737-200. It is a true Airlines. Photo by Tim Fischer beauty of the sky, looking Bottom: The Dornier 24ATT amphibian plane. Photo courtesy of South East Asian Airlines. not unlike like a gigantic dragonfly as it powers its way through the airways of these islands with its all-powerful row of three Pratt & Whitney turbo-prop engines. Currently, and for the past year and a half, it has been out on a global mission, promoting the Philippines as a tourist destination and raising funds for the work of UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Fund); during the first leg of the journey (to December 2004) funds totalling US$61,000 were raised. The project, “Mission: Dream”, has been similarly mammoth, with the plane being disassembled from a museum in Munich, brought to Clark, and painstakingly restored before embarking on its epic roundthe-world journey, inspired by the original designer and manufacturer, Iren’s grandfather, Claudius Dornier. When the Dornier finally returns to the Philippine islands next year, after its epic, two-year tour of the world, it will act as the exotic, continued... CAREERS Safer ships....... Safer Seas Words by Bob Couttie Photos by Kevin R. Hamdorf Few people give a thought to the importance of the international shipping industry as it relates to the economic development of the world. For the most part it is an industry that is out of sight and out of mind, unless you happen to live close to a port. Occasionally the industry grabs our attention, but usually for all the wrong reasons, such as the grounding of an oil tanker. The shipping industry should regularly make the headlines for its remarkable achievements: approximately 95 percent of world trade by weight and volume travels by sea and it is difficult to imagine any practical alternative. The volume of seaborne trade is directly linked to the growth of the world economy as a whole; global trade is dependent on the world’s merchant fleet, which currently numbers more than 29,000 ships of more than 1000 gross registered tonnes. Shipping is one of the most environmentally sustainable means of transport in the world today. It is less damaging to the environment than other modes of transport and subject to far fewer capacity limitations. No other means of transport comes close to the energy efficiency of a merchant ship. Today’s ships are marvels of design, technical innovation and advanced engineering. Of critical importance to their operation are the men and women that sail on them, for months at a time, having responsibility for loading and discharging cargoes, navigating safely from port to port, ensuring that the ship and all her systems function properly with very little external support once at sea should things go wrong. So seafarers need to be proficient in a diverse range of skills to be self sufficient in all respects. About 1.2 million seafarers, comprising of 820,000 ratings and 400,000 officers, man the world’s merchant fleet. 18.5 percent come from the Philippines, making the crewing industry the 4th largest earner of foreign exchange revenue for the country. It is not as easy today to become crew as it was (say) when Magellan first arrived in the Philippines – you can no longer stand outside a dockside inn and expect to be shanghaied into a swashbuckling life at sea. Modern ships need well trained and competent crews. Across the world, numerous maritime colleges and training centers of varying standards provide education and training for the world’s seafarers. Recognized as one of the best, the International Development and Environmental Shipping School was established in Subic Bay 10 years ago, during which time 50,000 seafarers have gone through the various training programs developed and run by IDESS. The first IDESS training center established in the Philippines was opened in Manila in 1991. By 1993 it was apparent that a new and larger location, free from the congestion of the city, was required. Subic Bay was considered to be the perfect location for the future development. A significant investment was made in the construction of a new purpose-built facility, equipped to the highest standards that has become the model which others in the region have tried to emulate. On Nabasan Pier IDESS established the first fast rescue boat training facility in the country, and the Top Left: The first freefall launched life boat training facility in Asia. Nabasan Pier, Subic Bay Freeport. Bottom: The Philippine’s only 3600 Full Mission Bridge Simulator Right: Search and Rescue exercise, Subic Bay. first freefall lifeboat facility in Asia, as well as a helicopter underwater escape trainor. I t s search and rescue resources have often been Downed helicopter underwater escape training - in the event of a ditching called upon by at sea during crew transfers to or from offshore oil & gas platforms. SBMA over the years, to which the response has always been positive, learning resources to seafarers while even in the most extreme weather on board ship. It made a further conditions. investment in Subic Bay establishing a IDESS Maritime Centre is an ISO new company called IDESS Interactive 9001-2000 company, and has achieved Technologies Inc. Their innovative recognition and accreditation from designs are attracting the attention national and international government of major corporations in the shipping, and private sector organisations around and oil and gas industries. the globe. With such facilities here, Subic In step with the rapid evolution Bay is making a valuable contribution of communication technologies, the to the global quest for safer shipping organisation researched ways to extend and cleaner seas. CULTURAL ...an impressive and worthwhile effort to keep the history of the area alive... SEA HISTORY: Subic Bay’s Museums OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2005 Words by Bob Couttie Photos by Kevin Hamdorf Japanese Zeros suddenly roar overhead; Olongapo is in flames torched by its residents as they flee the invaders. Nearby, Aeta families hunt and play as, steps away, a US airman learns the forest skills that will save his life in Vietnam. Just beyond is the 21st century vision of the country’s premier Freeport, built by 8,000 dedicated volunteers after the departure of the US Navy in 1992. The Subic Bay Historical Centre, 10 situated just behind the Arts Center, is not so much a museum as a travelogue through time of an area that has played an important role in the history of the Philippines since the late 19th century. It’s an excellent companion to the Maritime Museum, part of the Magellan’s Landing restaurant and hotel complex, the pride and joy of its colorful owner, Brian Homan. The Historical Center, on Aguinaldo Road, is a light and sound Top: Maritime Museum founder, Mr. Brian Homan, examines a Ming Dynasty cutlas recovered from an offshore Vietnam wreck. Right: The maritime museum at Vascos on Magellan’s Landing, has a fascinatinating collection of underwater artifacts, recovered in conjunction with the National Museum of the Philippines. museum. It’s a guided tour with narration through eight themed areas, with animatronics and actual artifacts ranging from a re-creation of the pre-Hispanic rain forest (where fearsome Zambal headhunters took the severed skulls of the nomadic Aeta people to impress future fathers-in-law) through to the decision of the Spanish to establish an arsenal in Subic and the bloody Philippine American War. It features (the Historical Center) is an impressive and worthwhile effort to keep the history of the area alive and record it for future generations.” From 9 to 5, Tuesday to Sunday, for just 50 pesos for adults or 40 pesos for students, it takes you on a fascinating journey through the past and provides Top: A life size diorama of a Spanish era scene at the old Spanish Gate, the original entrance to the Subic Bay Naval Station a glimpse into the Bottom: Subic Bay US Naval base’s founding personalities; President exciting Theodore Roosevelt (left) and Admiral George Dewey (right). potential The Subic Bay Historical Center. for the a reconstruction of a US Navy office, future. complete with early computers, P r i v a t e telephone switchboards, the tragedy enterprise allows of the Oryoku Maru and the surrender another piece of history of the Japanese at the end of WW2. to survive and be put to It concludes with the departure of the good use: The blackened, arches that US navy in 1992 and the creation of remain of the old Spanish-American the Freeport. coaling pier are now the physical Subic Bay historian Lt. Cmdr. backbone of the Maritime Museum at Gerald R. Anderson, whose book, Magellan’s Landing; it is the brainchild Subic Bay: Magellan to Pinatubo, is of Australian marine archaeologist the recognized authority on the US Brian Homan. Navy base’s history comments: “It Brian first arrived in the Philippines in the late 1970s, but became quickly disenchanted with Manila. “A crazy Mexican called ‘Big Willie’ suggested I visit Puerto Galera. Entering Muelle Bay was one of the most memorable experiences of my life . . . the other was my first ship wreck discovery.” On the day that Ninoy Aquino was assassinated at Manila Airport, in the sands beneath Muelle Bay Brian chanced upon a Chinese, Ming dynasty wreck loaded with beautiful dragon jars. “Removing sand from a 600 year old wreck and not knowing what lies just a few centimeters to the left or right is a heartstopping ...a collection of over 600 pieces of mainly Sung and Ming dynasty Chinese artifacts... experience”, recalls Brian. That discovery laid the foundations of a collection of over 600 pieces of mainly Sung and Ming dynasty Chinese artifacts, which are now on display at the Maritime Museum along with other exhibits. Working closely with the SEAPLANE ....... ten-seater seaplane delivering the wealthy to exotic locations off Palawan or, perhaps, to join a luxury Banka Safari. If the most spectacular way to view the Philippine archipelago is by air, the most impressive way to arrive Visitors to Vasco’s Maritime Museum have included such personalities as the late Fernando Poe Jr. and Eddie Garcia (right), being guided through the museum by Vasco’s propreitor, Brian Homan and son Connar. National Museum, Brian has explored Palawan, Marinduque, Catanduanes and Sulu: “In those days if I got a call from the museum, we were off.” In 1993 Brian came to Subic Bay Freeport aboard a replica Spanish galleon. Together with Jim Robertson he established the first dive shop on the newly opened Freeport, at what is now the ‘Scuba Shack Beach Bar & Grill’ on Waterfront Road. In March 2000 he began the process of building a museum-restaurant-hotel complex at the former coaling pier, putting the first exhibits on display three months later. The name ‘Magellan’s Landing’ is in recognition of the first Portuguese explorer to reach the archipelago and the restaurant, ‘Vasco’s’, is named after another explorer, Vasco de Gama, famous for pioneering the route around Africa to India via the Cape of Good Hope. Currently the museum features two themed exhibit spaces: one specializing in the southern islands from the pre-Hispanic through Hispanic periods; and, one covering more general eras, including fascinating Japanese artifacts from WWII. Backing the museum are facilities for treating and cleaning artifacts and for replicating old Spanish cannon. Replica canons, together with replica dragon jars, are being used to create a nearby reef to provide a dive location and habitat for rare fish, “One day someone’s going to report a new Spanish wreck here”. Entry to the museum is free although Brian would be happy if you stopped for a pie and a pint during your visit; chatting with Brian you may also hear of Philippine history that goes back to the stone and iron ages. at any given beach is at the head a creamy white trail of foam from the float wash of a seaplane. In the future, I can imagine a journey bonded by water and air, through the exquisite and unparalleled beauty of these magnificent Philippine Islands; all of us adventurers, tucked snugly into the Dornier’s on-board bar, gurgling down a cold San Miguel or two and slurping a couple of balut eggs that hold promises of unfulfilled dreams . . . after all, each balut is the undisputed Philippine aphrodisiac-par-excellence. The eggs will serve to tantalise those of us who are fortunate enough to take a peak from within the “love dome” -- the twoseater, glass-bubble observation area atop the Dornier’s main fuselage. Only the Philippines can bring it all on, thanks to a seaplane or two, unleashed by the unfathomable mysteries of a Philippine egg. Top and bottom: The Dornier 24ATT amphibian plane in its original late 1930’s configuration. Photos courtesy of South East Asian Airlines ENVIRONMENT The Sea Beneath From an interview with Ma. Luisa Giron, Ocean Discovery Aquarium OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2005 Photos by Kevin Hamdorf Look out over any expanse of water (a lake, river, bay or ocean) and it is easy to see the glistening surface, with or without waves, as a solid barrier that can only be penetrated by a jumping salmon or a breaching whale. Since the dawn of time, fishermen have cast their lines and nets onto this surface and miraculously, as the line or net falls, some unseen creature from the depths will be enticed or entrapped such that a family can later sit and watch a mouthwatering delicacy from another realm cook over a crackling fire with the knowledge that their stomachs will soon be full. Such was the abundance of the waterways and seas around the World that scant consideration was given to the interrelationships between the living components of this under-surface realm and its impact on the lives of those above . . . We now know that we need to know more if we are to continue to benefit from Mother Nature’s bounty. If anyone should be credited with giving pleasure to the study of what lies beneath it must be Jacque Cousteau who, during the latter part of the last century, almost single handedly inspired what has become a multimilliondollar industry centered on scuba diving. Through his work, and that of the enthusiasts that Top: The Ocean Adventure Discovery Aquarium. Right: The pristine mangroves at the mouth of the Boton River provide an important breeding ground for Subic Bay’s marine life. 14 followed, the World came to understand the dazzling brilliance of the myriad of aquatic organisms and life forms, and the importance of maintaining the balance between them. His documentaries brought dolphins and whales into our living rooms and children learned that the oceans were in fact their heritage. And, as they grew to adulthood, some took on the responsibility to preserve it so that something would be left to pass to their own children. Unfortunately, thanks to movies like ‘Jaws’ (and National Geographic to some extent), for some people the idea of swimming has a fear factor second to none. For those: Nature magazine recently reported that the number of people killed (excluding air/sea disaster victims) by these fearsome predators (Great White sharks) totals only seven individuals in the last century. By comparison, in the seven-year period to 1997 four times that number of children were killed by TV sets falling on them. In other words, watching ‘Jaws’ on TV is far more dangerous than swimming in the Pacific! For those who still can’t bear the thought of putting their face under the glistening surface to see what lies beneath there is hope . . . T h e Ocean Discovery Aquarium, part of Subic Bay’s Ocean Adventure complex, is actually a series of aquariums that provide an interactive experience for all ages. It describes the flow of water from the land to the sea and the different types of habitats that are found along the way. Starting at the terrestrial forest/watershed habitat, continuing down to the land/sea interface of the mangrove swamps, out past the man-made wharf structures, then on to the If we fail to preserve the base of the food chain then we can all expect to be eating a lot of toyo and rice sandy sea grass beds at the bottom of the bay and finally along a rich coral reef that slopes off into the deep open ocean. The entire system is a living world where even microorganisms and sunlight are employed to reprocess animal waste and clean the water. Each habitat along the discovery path is unique and full of weird and wonderful creatures that make these particular environments their home: Freshwater Stream, Mangrove Swamp, Wharf Piling, Sea Grass Beds, Coral Reef, Reef Slope and Rocky Cave. Through this experience it is hoped that even more children will come to understand the importance to Man of the unfathomable diversity of God’s creation, the interrelationship between ALL of the inhabitants of the rivers, seas and oceans and through direct involvement with their protection they will have something to pass on to generations to come. The oceans of the world are the foundation of the food chain upon which all other living things, including Man, rely. Understanding the importance, diversity and the interrelation of its millions of living components is essential to our own survival. If we fail to preserve the base of the food chain then we can all expect to be eating a lot of toyo and rice, with maybe only a drop of kalamasi for variety. If you want your grandchildren to enjoy oysters and mussels, lobster and prawn, dorado and salmon then you must become informed. If you are one of those who don’t fancy pulling on a wetsuit and flippers, loading up with regulator and tank, and swimming with your study subjects then keep your feet dry and visit the non-shark/ crocodile/ piranha/ giant squid/ prehistoric monster/ Hollywood infested Ocean Discovery Aquarium instead. Top: A member of JEST (Jungle Environmental Survival Training School), demonstrates a traditional Aeta trap used to capture fresh water shrimp, that thrive in the clear streams and rivers of Subic Bay’s rainforest. 2005 - FREEPORT CHAMBER BOARD OF DIRECTORS ELECTION SCHEDULE September 14-October 14 - NOMINATION PROCESS BEGINS: Corporate members in good standing may nominate their choice(s) for next year’s Board. October 14 – October 28 CANDIDATE SELECTION Those nominated are asked for their minimum 10 hours per month voluntary commitment to serve on the Board. If willing, they will be declared as official candidates in the voting process. November 1 – November 18 . VOTING PROCESS BEGINS Based on confirmed candidates who have verified they are willing to serve. Ballots are forwarded to all Corporate members who are asked to VOTE for the candidate(s) of their choice. November 21 – November 25 – TABULATION Votes are tabulated by the delegated Returning Officer and scrutinized by the Elections Committee. November 29 – ANNOUNCEMENT OF RESULTS Election Results with names of new Board members are announced. December 2 –OFFICER SELECTION Next year’s officers (President, Vice President, Treasurer and Corporate Secretary) are selected by the Board of Directors and announced at the Christmas party. January 2006 . the work continues.. HISTORICAL OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2005 QB CB’s build at Words By Tomas de Makati Reportedly while piling ice-cream atop his apple pie on Christmas day 1941, Rear Admiral Ben Moreell, Chief of the U.S. Navy’s Bureau of Yards and Docks, mused that the answer to his dilemma -the need to build advance bases in a war zone while being prevented from using civilian specialists -- was to form a specialized construction group within the Navy; three days later he penned a request to establish a Construction Battalion. On 5th January 1942, Bureau of Navigation Circular Letter No. 1-42 approved the request and RADM Ben Moreell became the “Father of the Seabees”. First assignment – on 17 February 1942, 296 men of the rapidly formed First Construction Battalion arrived at the dramatically picturesque, Pacific Island of Bora Bora to construct its first airfieldon-a-reef and ship refueling station. This detachment, being without an official name at that time, was named “Bobcat”, being the military 16 code name for the island. The name “Seabees” (from the acronym C.B., ”Construction Battalion”) was officially bestowed on 5th March along with the approval of the ‘fighting bee’ insignia. Between World War II and the Korean War the Seabees developed techniques that allowed them to turn and most of them were noticeably older than regular fighting conscript counterparts; most were apprenticed civilian construction specialists and engineers. With an average age of 37, the humor of the day warned, “Be kind to a Seabee, he might be your father”. But these men proudly established a tradition: they were ready and able to get the job done, no matter where or under what conditions. As the Marines and soldiers fought their way across the Pacific and Europe, the Seabees fought alongside, and completed their construction amidst the bullets and gore. Often chanting “We Build, We Fight”, the Seabees built airstrips, bridges, hospitals, roads and housing, warehousing and fuel storage facilities; quickly, as needed and where “Pta. Cubu” needed. The Seabees almost any size of reef / island into a performed their first key role in the serviceable airstrip and ship support Philippines when US forces invaded facility in as little as 16 days. Leyte and Samar in October 1944. Seabee recruits were Responsible not only for construction selected for quality, not quantity and repair of facilities on shore, their purview encompassed the hundreds of ships arriving in San Pedro Bay; the Seabees managed the supply line that unloaded thousands of tons of war materials in a timely manner while under constant aerial bombardment from fighter planes, bombers and kamikaze. By the time they left Samar for the big push north, they had also built a 3,000-bed hospital, an airstrip and a Chapel-By-The-Sea at Guiuan – the dedication at the Chapel read, “Jointly constructed in honor of their friendship and as a lasting gift to the people of Guiuan” (regrettably the Chapel was destroyed by killertyphoon Agnes in November 1984 and was not rebuilt). It was during the Korean War, the U.S. Navy recognized the need for a strategic Naval Air Station in the West Pacific. First choice: Subic Bay. Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Arthur W. Radford pictured the air station as the vital-link in the defense of the West and Southwest Pacific. In 1951 he obtained approval to build, by far the most impressive project ever undertaken by the Seabees: construction of Naval Air Station Cubi Point. At Cubi, Seabees cut a mountain in half, blasted coral and filled in a section of Subic Bay almost a mile wide and nearly two miles long. They moved the entire town of Banicain and all of its residents three miles east to Olongapo, to the area now known as New Banicain. The three thousand Seabees took nearly five years and expended 20 million manhours to construct the air station and its adjacent aircraft carrier pier, capable of docking the Navy’s biggest aircraft carriers. The movement of the coral and fill required for the job - some 20 million cubic yards – was equal to the task of building the Panama Canal. Commissioned on July 25, 1956, President Ramon Magsaysay attended the ceremony at NAS Cubi Point. Admiral Arthur Radford himself made the first landing on the Cubi airstrip, giving rise to its original name: Radford Field. Other famous people have been involved with the development of NAS Cubi Point and Subic Bay Naval Station. For example: January 1958, Lee Harvey Oswald (the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy) arrived, attached to MACS-1, to set up a temporary radar tracking and control unit. Throughout all of the wars, and in between, Seabees have also built infrastructure for the local civilian populations. These works earned them the deserved name of the “Navy’s Goodwill Ambassadors”. Separately and together the U.S. Navy Seabees and their Philippine Navy counterparts have undertaken a myriad of community development projects around the Philippines. They have built schools, roads, hospitals and clinics in an effort to bring some of the benefits of the 21st century to all corners Top Left: Construction of the Cubi Point Naval Air Station, as viewed from the location of today’s Boton Wharf. Bottom Left: Spanish era Map clearly marking “Pta. Cubu Point”; eventual site of the US Naval Air StationCubi Air Station. Above: A formation of de Haviland Sea Venom fighters, from the 1960 visit of the Royal Australian Navy Aircraft Carrier, HMAS MELBOURNE, (docked at Leyte Pier at left) fly over the newly completed Cubi Point Naval Air Station. Photos courtesy of the US Naval Archives. of the country. To this day they cooperate in joint military exercises around the country – most recently in 2004, in Nueva Ecija, where they have expanded infrastructure to enable more rapid deployment of troops and rescue teams in preparation for natural disasters. More than sixty years on, the Seabees first project in Bora Bora and its most impressive at Cubi Point are both still operational (although both are now run by civilians) and stand as testimony to Moreell’s vision and the determination of the hundreds of thousands who have proudly worn the fighting bee insignia. On 1st August, 1966, The Philippine Navy planted the seeds of its own Seabee unit when the Department of Public Works and Communications turned over half of its dredge fleet to the Waterfront and Dredge Company of the Philippine Navy. In 1973 President Marcos directed the activation of an additional engineer construction battalion to support all the major services of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). On 26 April 1980, in order to increase the operational capability and effectiveness of the unit to respond to expanding functions and tasks the Naval Construction Force was upgraded into the Naval Construction Brigade – the PN Seabees. SEA PORT: MINIMUM IMPACT MAXIMUM BENEFIT Words by Martyn Willes Photos by Kevin R. Hamdorf OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2005 Remember the lyric, “I read the news today oh boy, four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire” (from the Beatles’ song, “Day In The Life”)? As a relatively, innocent provincial teenager I found it difficult to comprehend the meaning, never having been to Blackburn Nor having anyone to explain to me that it originated from a British newspaper headline. Through the years a, sometimes strange, variety of images have floated into view whenever the song swirls around me in the dusty backwash of a passing jeepney or, more recently, thankfully, finds its way out of my in-car entertainment system. But none of those images was quite as expansive as the 18 middle of 2007, the storage areas, road infrastructure and handling systems capable of processing up to 600,000 TEUs (Twenty-foot container Equivalent Units) per year will be installed and ready for action. To put this into perspective, the Subic Bay Freeport Port will be approximately one third the capacity of the entire Manila Port. According to Robert Feliciano SBMA Head of PMOFAPO (Project Management Office - Foreign Assistance Project Office) Department, “when operational it will have far reaching benefits for industry, commerce and individuals throughout Region III and Metro Manila . . . the most important of which is that manufacturers in Zambales, Pampanga, Tarlac and Bataan will no longer need to transport their goods through Manila Port”. Now think about that for a moment: if you are unfortunate enough to be in Manila around the time the truck ban is lifted everyday you will know that for a hour or more the roads become overloaded. The capacity of Subic Bay Freeport Port will enable it to take one truck per minute off Manila’s roads on a 24/7 basis. That should lead to less congestion, less pollution, less operating expense, less wear and tear on the shiny smooth North Luzon Expressway, less hassle . . . provided the main road artery feeding Subic Bay from Clark and Tarlac is completed on time in 2007. In parallel, and under a private enterprise port development project, some of these benefits will start to be felt within this year. The gargantuan Subic Fertilizer silos, now dominating the skyline near the airport, allow for the bulk handling and repackaging of fertilizers for the rice growing plains and plateaus of central and northern Luzon. The project is divided into two phases, creating two adjacent cargo-handling areas capable of processing 300,000 TEUs per year. The operator of the first phase will That should lead to less congestion, less pollution, less operating expense, less wear and tear on the shiny smooth North Luzon Expressway, less hassle . . . vision of the seemingly thousands of holes now being installed at Cubi Point, Subic Bay. Row upon row of enormous steel tubes are being punched as deep as 60 meters into the ground to create the stable foundation for one of the largest, single port projects the country has ever undertaken. The goal is to expand Subic Bay’s ship handling capability to embrace the larger primary container vessels up to 280 meters long with a draft up to 13 meters. Under a US$185 million loan from the Japanese Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) the long awaited Subic Bay Freeport Port development is now marching towards its objective: by the continued next page DEVELOPMENT Top left: Birds eye view of the ongoing construction of the container port development site at Cubi Point. Bottom left: Steel foundation pilings for phase 1 & 2 of the container piers. Top right: Length of steel piling being barged into the construction site. Bottom right: Surveying placement of foundation piles. RECREATION Sea Defense: The San Quentin C hatting over a hearty breakfast at Johan’s Adventure and Wreck Dive Center, along Baloy Beach adjacent to Barrio Barretto, we discovered a veritable treasure trove of information about the San Quentin and all of the other Spanish wrecks of Subic Bay. This is Johan’s brief introduction to the boat that was deliberately sunk to create a sea defense: In 1572 Juan De Salcedo arrived in Subic Bay to collect tributes for the Spanish king, Philip II. Upon his return home to Spain, Salcedo reported to the King his observation and admiration for Subic’s deep water, sheltered anchorage as a militarily strategic location with a “healthy environment”. It was not until 1868 however, that the Spaniards conducted a military expedition to Subic Bay and rediscovered Salcedo’s vision. In 1884 King Alfonso II issued a Royal Decree officially declaring Subic Bay as a naval port; in 1885 the Spanish From an Interview with Johan de Sadeleir Photos courtesy of Johan’s Dive Shop naval Commission started the construction of an arsenal and ship repair facility. At the outbreak of the Spanish-American war (1898) plans where made to fortify Grande Island, which sits at the mouth of the bay. Four six inch guns where shipped from Cavite to Grande but where not installed because the necessary masonry was out of stock. To compensate for this frustration, mines where laid and the wooden cruiser Castilla was towed to the northeast point of Grande Island to protect the west, deep-water entrance. To block the shallower entrance to the east, between Grande and Chiquita islands, the gunboat San Quentin and two old merchant ships where scuttled, effectively preventing passage by all but the smallest of boats and certainly nothing that could threaten. However, before the Subic Bay defenses could be tested, Spain succumbed to the superior American fire power at the Battle of Manila Bay. The San Quentin lays in a shallow 16 meters of water, visibility is mostly clear the whole year round; on a good day up to 20 meters. Because she is nestled between two reefs the site is exciting and of great interest to both reef and wreck divers. What we know about the wreck we have gathered from pictures: she had sails and two huge boilers and was about 80 meters SEA PORT... from page19 long. She was built of steel and wood and, although after more than a century all the wood has all but rotted away, the steel spans, bow, stern and boilers are still intact. Marine life includes soft coral sponges, hydroids, clownfish, catfish, angelfish, butterfly fish, spotted sweetlips, fusiliers, coral trout, big puffer fish, blue spotted lagoon rays and the occasional black and white striped snake, turtle and white tip reef shark. Hard corals can also be found here in their entire splendor after 107 years of growth. The San Quentin is perhaps the best site in the bay for underwater photographers and, when the sun is shining on the wreck, even an amateur can take home a picture to be proud of. ...even an amateur can take home a picture to be proud of. Top left: Divers explore the 107 year old wreck of the “San Quentin” lying off Grande Island at the head of Subic Bay. Top right: A sister ship of the “San Quentin” illustrates the majesty of the original vessel, which now lies sixteen meters below the waters of Subic Bay. For dive inquiries: please contact Johan’s Dive Shop on Baloy Beach, Subic Bay. Telephone # (047) 224 8915 most likely be the experienced ICTSI, who already operate a smaller, existing facility in Subic Bay as well as in Manila port. The operator of the second phase is open at this stage but according to **Feliciano** a number of local and international terminal operators have expressed a strong interest in the project because, “unlike Batangas for example we will be providing all of the main infrastructure components as well as all of the container handling systems . . . so a terminal operator can virtually walk in and start loading or unloading a vessel the day the contract is signed”. Progress usually comes at a cost . . . frequently to the environment. Much planning has taken place and much expense incurred to ensure that this development of the port does not significantly impact the unique ecosystems of the bay and / or the rainforests behind; where there is impact it should be as short term as possible. Project consultants PACIFIC CONSULTANTS, and the main contractor PENTA OCEAN and SHIMIZU, TOA JOINT VENTURE, have implemented numerous measures to ensure environmental protection, perhaps the most visible of which is the row of silt screens around the reclamation area that prevent silt damage to nearby corals and other indigenous marine life; they even wash the rock used for reclamation before it is placed in the water to minimize silting. Additionally, the new facility will have its own selfcontained sewage treatment plant to ensure that no additional pollution is added to the bay. The Port will provide new “garbage skimmers” and “oil skimmers” to tackle any accidental discharge from cargo vessels and, these new boats will be equipped with fire fighting capabilities, which adds sorely needed extra capacity to the bay area. To ensure transparency and environmental compliance, external monitoring services perform regular inspections of the development from the ground level and using aerial surveys and photography. So next time you are finger-licking a BarB-Q at Gerry’s Grill or supping a cold San Miguel beer over at Vasco’s or the Scuba Shack and you see the silhouette of a Cessna airplane with floats slide across your field of view and a cameraman hanging out the open doorway, know this: you are looking at Kevin Hamdorf aboard the Subic Seaplane monitoring environmental compliance of the contractor, building the most significant seaport development this century that will impact the life, income and health of virtually everyone living in central and northern Luzon. SAILING: “ANY YACHT OWNED BY SPORTS A GENTLEMAN” (Historical research courtesy of Malcolm McKeag, Chief Sailing Officer, Royal Thames YC) Since the earliest times, Man has used boats to navigate the seas and waterways of the world; from almost the beginning, the use of a sail allowed him to harness the power of the wind for greater speed and distance. Whilst one can easily imagine the Vikings racing each other across North Sea in an effort to be first to pillage the ancient England villages, sailing of yachts as a competitive sport came into existence in the 1600s, in Holland. King Charles II of England is recognized as bringing it across the North Sea from where it continued across Ireland, to North America and eventually to The Colonies. The first recorded yacht race was organized at the behest of Charles II in 1662 on the River Thames, near London. The first recorded yacht club was founded in Cork, Ireland (part of Britain in those days), in 1720. The Duke of Cumberland, brother of King George III, is credited with sponsoring the first significant trophy race (the Cumberland Cup) when, in July of 1775, he offered a silver cup to the winner of a race on the River Thames. The first “open” trophy competition was the Vauxhall Cup, sailed on the Thames in 1786, where the notice of race stated, “for any yacht owned by a gentleman”. The internationally recognized word “yacht” derives from the Dutch word “jacht” meaning hunting or racing. In 1851, the New York Yacht Club sailed the schooner America across the Atlantic Ocean to compete against British racing yachts under the enthusiastic gaze of Queen Victoria. The OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 2005 The rules of the sport of sailing are relatively simple but with a little guile they can be used to great advantage 22 Racing dinghies, Subic Bay. Photo by Kevin Hamdorf race around the Isle of White in southern England was for the solid silver ‘One Hundred Guinea Cup’, offered first by Her Majesty in 1848. At the end of the race Queen Victoria is reported to have asked for confirmation of the result; upon hearing that America had won she requested to know who came second, “Your Majesty there is no second” was the reply. The victorious America team donated their trophy to the New York YC where it became known as the America’s Cup. The America’s Cup Race remains the longest running international trophy competition of any sport anywhere in the World. In the Philippines, yacht racing has offered spectacle in Manila Bay since January, 1927, when the Manila Yacht Club was formed. Increasingly the sport is finding favor with a new generation of Filipino youth who has discovered that you do not need to invest in your own boat in order to be part of a winning team . . . all you need is a cap, a pair of gloves and some sun-block. Not just a sport for men: the current record holder for sailing non-stop, round-the-world is Ms. Ellen MacArthur; the coach of the Philippine Sailing Team is Ms. Medy Fidel. Women can easily match the men as competitive sailors because to win is more about agility, concentration and determination than muscle power. It is a sport for all ages too. Children in grade school can learn to sail in many places around the country: the Philippine Sailing Association, located beside the Manila Yacht Club, has a continued on page 24 LAWN BOWLS – A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY Some sports come and go but few have achieved such global popularity over a period of more than 7,000 years as the simple yet absorbing game of Bowls (Lawn or otherwise). Artifacts found in ancient Egyptian tombs suggest the currently recognized game had its origins defined by the Pharaohs and (perhaps) Priests, as long ago as 5,000 BC. The Romans found the game somewhere while conquering the Middle East and brought it to Europe where, in addition to teaching the barbarian hordes the value of building straight roads, they brought along their bowls and taught the subjugated the value of recreation. After the Empire collapsed the Roman game underwent metamorphisms in rule, name and equipment, to the point where one may find a genealogist useful in determining the ancestry of any given derivative. What is absolutely certain is that the oldest, recognized, stillin-existence, bowling green is located in Southampton, England, dating back to 1299 AD. Lawn bowls differs from most other games with balls in that the bowls are not quite spherical. They feature a slightly flat side, which causes them to roll in a predictable, parabolic arc (relative to the speed) when rolled across a flat surface; this “bias”, or flatness, varies from bowl set to bowl set. Combined with a selection of different approved weights, the bowl set of choice on the day depends upon the length, moisture content and crispness of the grass on the playing surface. Bowls are frequently referred to a “woods”, being the material of the original English bowls. The “wood” was an exceptional hardwood from the British colonies in the Caribbean: Lignum Vitae – long life. No longer: lignum vitae is now so scarce that investment would require a Top & bottom: The Philippine South East Asian Games Lawn Bowl men and women’s teams in practice at Angeles City. Photos by Kevin Hamdorf mortgage; modern bowls are usually produced from man-made materials. The objective of the game is to roll the bowls with sufficient power that they arrive at the end of their parabolic route as close as possible to the “Jack” – a small white ball thrown to the opposite end of the green at the commencement of each “end” of the game. The game enjoyed such popularity in England that King Henry III felt compelled to ban the game altogether because his armies were more interested in playing than preparing for war. King Henry VIII, an avid Lawn Bowler, reconfirmed the ban in 1541 for those not “well to do” and especially for “artificers, laborers, apprentices, husbandmen, servants or serving-men, and other “low-born” people . . . except at Christmas and only then in the presence of their Masters”, because it had become a focus for excessive gambling. He also demanded that anyone who wished to own a bowling green, pay him a fee of £100 – an extraordinarily large sum in those days – and even then it could only be for private use. Shakespeare, in his play Richard II, made mockery of the ban but it stayed officially a law-of-the-land for 300 years, until Queen Victoria finally repealed it in 1845. Further historic evidence of the game’s intoxication, albeit anecdotal, shows Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Francis Drake playing bowls on Plymouth Hoe, ignoring requests from the Crown to urgently put to sea to engage an armada of Spanish ships, already visible in the English Channel, until the game was finished. True or not, they did go on to defeat the Spanish fleet and Drake is reported to have paid a game bet to Raleigh. Borrowing the best from the Scots, who had continued to play the game throughout the 300-year ban in order to show their disdain for the English Crown, the rules of the modern game have existed since 1903 when the English Bowling Association was established. Despite its pedigree, Lawn Bowls is a young sport in Olympic events and this will be the first time it has been played as part of the South East Asian Games. The Philippines features a very small but rapidly growing Lawn Bowls group who have so far been very successful around the Region. This is definitely a sport to watch if you want to see the Philippines win gold; three, we are reliably informed. Catch all the Lawn Bowls action at the Hidden Vale Sports Club near Clark Filed in Angeles City. SAILING...from page 22 long tradition of teaching youngsters, many of whom go on to careers as skippers and crew aboard some of the fastest and most expensive racing yachts in the World; at Puerto Galera, Taal Lake, Subic Bay and Puerto Princesa, relatively new yacht clubs offer sailing programs for all ages. In the SEA Games the boats used -- Optimists, Lasers, 420s, 470s, Hobie 16s and windsurfers -- are sailed by one or two crew. These are low cost racing machines that require skill and knowledge born of many hours of practice. “Learning the ropes” is an expression that comes from the sport and if you look inside a modern racing boat you can easily see why it is something to be learned (see photo [position]). Winning at sailing is not only about sailing fast: it is about understanding the rules; reading the prevailing wind and sea conditions; and, anticipating your opponent’s reaction to your maneuvers. The rules of the sport of sailing are relatively simple but with a little guile they can be used to great advantage. In past years the Philippine Sailing Team has performed well (with 207,749 miles (334,539km) of largely accessible coastline and 405,870 sq miles (1,055,124 sq km) of mostly clean water, it should do) and brought home a selection of gold, silver and bronze medals. This year the team expects to excel in the seasonally, foreverwindy Subic Bay where they have been training since June. Subic Bay is the perfect spectator location for the SEA Games sailing events because almost all of the action will happen within sight of the Boardwalk, between Gerry’s Grill and the Scuba Shack . . . sun, sea, sailing and a surfeit of delicious food and cool drinks, sufficient to tempt a mermaid from the depths. Come and support the Philippine Sailing Team in Subic Bay. FOR LOVE OF COUNTRY AND THE SPORT During the course of collecting information about each sport and the people who play them we asked how tough it was to train for an event like the SEA Games. One lady, who is attempting to qualify for a place on the sailing team, offered us a glimpse into the heart she has put into helping her country win gold in November. Since June she has given up her day job and six days a week she rigorously adheres to the following schedule: 5 am - jogging 7 am - weight training/ core strengthening 9 am - boat rigging/boat repair 10 am - 4 pm - sailing practice off Boardwalk area, near Alava Wharf 5 pm - derigging / boat repair 7 pm - swimming 8 pm - core strengthening/ stretching Unlike their cosseted compatriots playing professional sports such as basketball, these sports men and women have toiled for months with no reward except the possibility of placing their hand atop their heart as the Philippine flag is raised in triumph. They deserve our active participation as spectators in honor of their sacrifice and dedication. Could Bowls Be The Original Recreation? If one subscribes to Gavin Menzies’ extraordinary analysis in his book “1421: The Year China Discovered The World” then one can immediately dismiss his findings in favor of the plainly obvious: that the Egyptians discovered the World before anyone else knew that there was value in its discovery, which explains why they omitted it from their recorded exploits. The extraordinary evidence: ‘Ula Maika’ is a game played in the Polynesian, Sandwich Islands (a.k.a. Hawaii) using elliptical stone balls, virtually identical to the biased bowls used in today’s Lawn Bowls. The game was “discovered” when the first European explorers arrived and, noting that the Chinese have as yet laid no claim to having invented this game, its origin must therefore be pre-Euro and preSino. Such analysis leaves only two credible possibilities: that the Polynesian Gods defined the game and gave it to the Egyptian seafarers or, that the Egyptians gave it to the Polynesians – at the same time as they gave archery and pyramids to civilizations in Central and South America. The proof: According to one interpretation of the evidential research of the late Buckminster-Fuller, the Polynesians were the originators of Man’s “civilized society” and were responsible for disseminating all civilized behavioral characteristics that thinking wo/men aspire to today. Add to this the statement of Ronalyn Greenlees, President of the Philippine Lawn Bowls Association, that the game is the “friendliest” competitive game she has ever played, and the knowledge that throughout recorded history everyone has eulogized the “friendliness” of the Polynesians. It can thus be safely concluded that the Polynesian game of Ula Maika should be installed at the very top of the family tree of bowls as The Original Recreation. PETANQUE: A GAME FOR EVERYONE, EVERYWHERE Produced by Hamdorf Photography & Design, Inc. As the English took their lawn bowls and the Americans took baseball to their respective colonies, so the French took one of the many derivatives of “boule” (English = Balls): Petanque (pronounced almost but not quite exactly like “pay-TONK”). After the French departed Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, in the fallout of World War II, the game of Petanque remained as a definitive sports legacy in which these countries have since excelled. Having a common root with Lawn Bowls in ancient Egypt, Petanque is one of the simplest of games and can be played by almost anyone on almost any non-manmade surface. But, don’t be fooled by its casual straightforwardness, the game employs levels of skill that will surprise even the casual observer and, to become a champion requires determined practice and dedication, even though physical strength and endurance are not primary requirements. I first played Petanque at Shek O Beach on Hong Kong Island in 1992. It was an international affair that The Philippine Pentaque team. Photos by Kevin Hamdorf gave reason for Filipinos, Hongkies, Danes, Brits, French, Canadians and Spanish to get together on a Sunday afternoon to enjoy a Bar-B-Q and copious amounts Carlsberg. One of the Canadians owned the Petanque set and although we did not actually play strictly to the rules, everyone (the youngest player was 8 and the oldest was 62) had the chance to win a point or two. Played with steel balls that are launched from a downward facing palm, the objective of the game is to throw or roll your ball (“boule”) as close as possible to the ‘Jack’ (‘coche’, pronounced “cosh”) – a smaller wooden ball thrown across the playing area at the beginning of each game. The three main differences of this “game for everyone, everywhere” compared to Lawn Bowls are that the playing surface can be almost any material (e.g. sand, gravel, grass or lahar), the balls are perfect spheres and they can be thrown or rolled to the objective (but always from the downward facing palm). If there is another difference it is that, at the non-professional level, friendly intimidation is acceptable with comments and gestures intended to unsettle the player becoming part of the “sport”. The modern competitive game derives from rules established in 1910 in the town of La Ciotat, near Marseilles, France. The 1910 rules modified the previously popular game of “jeu provençal” insomuch as a player was no longer required to take two steps before releasing the boule, in fact the Petanque player is required to have both feet together on the ground when launching the projectile. This rule change opened the game to wheelchair bound players who now compete at all levels of the sport. In their first international competition in 2004, the Philippine Petanque team finished 13th out of 24 countries . . . not bad for a first time entry. Participation in the SEA Games this year will be the first real opportunity to demonstrate what can be achieved after a year of solid practice. If I were a betting man I would put money on one of each color medal from this young and enthusiastic team as they launch their boules at the Hidden Vale Sports Club just outside Clark Filed in Angeles City. SPORTS FANCY A GOOD WORKOUT? TRY A TRIATHLON Bottom: A cyclist training for the Triathlon. Photos by Martyn Willes New as an Olympic sport in the 2000 Sydney games, Triathlon combines the aerobic exercise of swimming followed by a lower body workout in the saddle and then on foot. Triathlon is not for the faith hearted. With the official Olympic distances of 1500m swimming followed by a 40km bike ride and a 10km run, it requires months of stamina training with attention to diet and health. But, if you really enjoy it, you can upgrade to the half-Ironman distances or even the full Ironman: 1900m, 89.6km, 21km and, 3,800m, 179.2km, 42km respectively. In the Philippines, triathlon events were first organized during the mid-1980s when a small group of homecoming college graduates decided they would try to continue the exercise régimes they had enjoyed while studying abroad. “In the first few events the transition area consisted of a couple of clothesbaskets through which you would have to rummage to find your own stuff”, recalls Lito Cinco, Promotions Manager for the Triathlon Association of the Philippines (“TRAP”). Today, events are staged around the country throughout the year, and receive a modest level of corporate sponsorship and venue support. Triathlon is really a sport for all ages and sexes. TRAP organizes a series of competitions known as “age group” events where participants frequently start together but someone can finish half way down the field and still win in their age group. A recent event at Clearwater in Clark, Pampanga, saw youngsters and oldies competing shoulder to shoulder with the fittest of the twenty and thirty year olds. The attraction of triathlon as a sport is that it is relatively low cost. You could spend up to Php 350,000 (US$ 6,000) for a top-ofthe-range competition bike and all the safety gear if you want, but you really don’t need to pay more than Php 25,000 (US$ 450) to enjoy the competitive side of life. If you want to win instead of just enjoying the exercise then forget the price of the bike -- the most important thing is to swim fast. According to Philippine triathlete entry at the SEAGames and national swimming champion, Ani De Leon, “if you are a strong swimmer you will be at the head of the field as you come out of the water . . . from there it is much easier to stay in a medal winning position”. This will be the first year that the Triathlon is run as part of the SEA Games and the Philippines has high hopes of success. And, because this is the first time, winning gold for the country will be so much sweeter. continue next page KAYAK: A MAN’S BOAT Kayaks are a product of the ingenuity of the “Inuit” -- the indigenous peoples of the Arctic regions of North America and Greenland. The word “kayak” means “man’s boat”, because the original craft were hand-made by the men who were to use them. Two things make a kayak different from other canoe type craft: the waterproof ‘spray skirt’ that is fixed around the cockpit and the paddler’s waist, effecting a watertight seal; and, the double-ended / bladed paddle. The skirt was specifically designed to keep water out of the kayak when moving through rough water or if momentarily capsized – in the frigid Arctic Ocean a wet kayaker would die of hypothermia very quickly; the double-ended paddle delivers maximum power from each body movement, making the craft a perfect sporting platform. Note: the spray skirt is frequently dispensed with in flat-water competition. Each Inuit boat was specifically proportioned exactly to the owner’s size by the use of his forearm as a ‘measuring stick’ when preparing whalebone or driftwood for the frame; sealskin would then be stretched over the frame to create a light, easily transportable vehicle for hunting. By contrast, a 21st century competition kayak, of fiberglass, carbon fiber or Kevlar, will have been popped out of a one-size-fits-all mold. This uniformity allows spectacular speeds and competition over the standard 500-meter Olympic course. Since being adopted for sport, kayaks have changed in size, shape and performance as well as in the materials used. Sports kayaks have been modified for use on flat water and open ocean, lakes and rivers; on rivers they can be frequently seen barreling down rapids and through cascading whitewater. As a sport, kayaking is on a roll. The Philippines kayaking team, training daily on the exit waters of Laguna de Bay, near Taytay, Rizal, includes some of the youngest athletes in the SEA Games. Some are still in High School and yet they have already competed successfully in far away Croatia and Hungary, where they recently paddled into the semifinals before narrowly losing to Germany. The Philippine team has competed in kayak and canoe in the SEA Games since 1997; there best performance so far was a bronze medal in Vietnam. But, in 2005, there is determination in their voices and a fire in their eyes . . . a brace of gold or more can be expected from the nation’s paddlers. Five classes will race with flashing paddle blades along the Malawaan River in Subic Bay: single, double and quadruple kayaks; and, single and double canoes. If a powerful physique turns you on then these athletes will turn your head; to capture the rippling muscles and the speed, power and rhythm of the kayak and canoe on camera then you must follow this sport in Subic. If a powerful physique turns you on then these athletes will turn your head TRIATHLON...from page 26 Canoeing on Laguna Lake. Photo by Martyn Willes The Philippine entries include an interior designer, a lifeguard, an accountant and a brace of students, some of whom will be training in Australia in advance of the event. Their collective objective this year is to perform so well that their sport receives more commercial and government assistance in the future, so that they can train with the best in the world. The SEA Games Triathlon will offer fantastic views for spectators who will be able to get up close to athletes at the staging area along Argonaught Highway, Subic Bay Freeport. Bring along your camera for great video and action shot opportunities. 27 ARCHERY: SHOOTING FOR GOLD At the age of twelve I was given my first bow as a gift from my uncle. It was a relatively short bow compared to the long bows of Middle-ages Europe but it could send an arrow to a target attached to a hay bale, more than one hundred meters away . . . something my friends and I enjoyed doing throughout the lazy hot summer holidays of ‘67 and ’68. Two things stopped me from continuing with the sport. It was our habit to let fly our arrows at increasing distances from the target until we could no longer achieve the required “pull” on the bow. One Sunday afternoon in late August 1968 we had reached the limit of pull and the arrows were falling just short. I was determined to show my prowess and made one last determined effort to hit the target. At the moment of re- an burial tomb in the San Teodoro Cave, Sicily, dated around 11,000 BC – an arrowhead lodged in the body’s pelvis is presumed to have been the cause of death; a second murder, recently defrosted from a receding glacier in the Italian / Austrian Alps, was found to date from 3,300 BC. By their fates it can be seen that these two gentlemen obviously did not have the right protection. Achilles (Akhilleus), of Greek mythology, is perhaps the most famous person killed by an arrow, albeit poisoned. It came from Paris’s bow and pierced the former’s heel – the only part of his body unprotected by divine armor afforded by a dunking at birth by his Sea Nymph mother, Thetis, in the River Styx (she had to hold on to some part of his body) – when he was lured to the Temple of Apollo supposedly to Left: Rochelle Anne Cabral, member of the Philippines Women’s Recurve Bow Team, retrieve arrows with Gil Gabriel, member of the Men’s Compound Bow Team. Bottom: Archer’s hone their shooting skills at the Subic Bay Freeport, event site of the South East Asian Games. Photos by Kevin Hamdorf lease someone shouted, “Mind you don’t hit farmer Pete” and the over tensioned bow snapped in half. Now it could be that farmer Pete, who had chosen that moment to collect the hay bales we were using to support our target, had (as some in the village asserted) the luck of the devil or, it could be that I was too strong for my own good. Whatever. The result was that my Father refused to replace the bow, claiming it to be too dangerous. If I had been up to speed on my history lessons then I could have argued that King Henry I had instituted a law in England that specifically absolved any archer of murder if it happened while practicing archery, and therefore replacement of the bow should be considered my Father’s noble duty. Alas, my Father’s decree caused trout fishing to take over as our preferred holiday sport; I subsequently failed history at school. Arrowheads (presumably attached to arrow shafts and fired from bows) have been unearthed in Africa dating back to before 25,000 BC; ancient arrowheads, shafts and bows have been unearthed in almost every segment of the Globe. Evidence of the first murder by archer was found in meet his compensation-for-giving-up-the-war-against-the-Trojans bride, Polyxena. Interestingly, Apollo was only “severely chastised” for allowing his temple to be used for such “cowardly behavior” . . . so maybe King Henry I was simply reinstating a precedent. Sebastian, the commander of Praetorian Guards for the Roman Emperor, Diocletian, was ordered to be “shot to death with arrows”, in 288 AD, when he refused to denounce his belief in Christianity. After the deed was done, he was found by a friend to still be alive and was secretly nursed back to health. He subsequently became the Patron Saint of Archers when Diocletian, having learned his lesson with arrows, had Sebastian clubbed to death and thrown in a sewer. Through to the 1600s in Europe, and the 1900s in parts of Asia, arrows, delivered from a (long, short or cross) bow became the deciding factor in many significant wars. The oldest continuously held archery tournament, known as the Ancient Scorton Arrow, was founded in Yorkshire, England, in 1673; and, about 1790 the Royal Toxophilite (Greek toxon, “bow”; philos, “loving”) Society was formed to advance the sport. The Prince of Wales (later King George IV), became the patron of this Society and set the Prince’s Lengths of 100 yards (91 m), 80 yards (73 m), and 60 yards (55 m). Archery became an Olympic sport in 1904 but was dropped after the 1920 games, not returning until 1972. However, the world record for distance is much older than the Olympics: in 1798 a 972-yard 2 and 2/3 inches longbow shot was performed by Sultan Selim III and has yet to be surpassed. The record for the most arrows shot in a 24-hour period is held by the 17th-century Japanese archer, Wada Daihachi, who fired 8,133 arrows down the 384’ Royal Hall. The Philippine Archery Team has one of the most successful records of any Asian country. In Subic Bay, on the lawns across from the Subic Bay Yacht Club and on nearby Remy Field, watch out especially for the Philippine women, who have been shooting gold medal performances around the Region for the past five years. Map Courtesy of Clark Development Corporation