How “Eco-walk”, the kids’ environmental program was hatched
>> Tuesday, October 6, 2015
BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- Metro-Manilans recently
reeling from the drying up of their taps suddenly looked beyond the faucet - to
the La Mesa and Angat dams and other reservoirs - for answers to the drought.
No one, it seemed, looked beyond the low and still ebbing water levels of these
man-made harnessing facilities to find out if their immediate problem
also had something to do with the impairment of the water holding and releasing
capacity of the watersheds feeding life’s blood into the dams.
Nature, in
the form of rainfall, saved them from further fighting over whose pail should
be filled first by fire trucks and other mobile tanks coming to their rescue.
The rains spawned by typhoon Kabayan should spare those in the lowlands
from the mounting temper of consumers and from having to repair more
pipes being broken up in the users’ frantic search for and diversion of
domestic water at the expense of neighbors.
Understandably,
kids in the second grade I met in 1992 sounded like the drought-stricken adult
denizens of the urban jungle down there. Not in terms of escalating blood
pressure but in terms of innocence that can only apply to kids, as ignorance is
only for adults like us. Asked to brief the kids at the now defunct
Maryknollschool on the state of Baguio’s environment, I asked where their water
comes from.
“Our water
comes from the faucet, sir,” a boy replied, almost matter-of-factly, to a
question asked unnecessarily. “And where does the faucet get its water?” “From
the pipes!,” another kid boomed. “And the pipes?”“From the tanks!”“And the tanks?”
A girl
replied: “From the Baguio Water District.” It elicited a challenge from another
kid. “No, sir, not from the water district. My mother said the water district
has no water. Our tank gets its water from the water delivery truck.”
“And where
do the water district and the delivery trucks get their water?” “From the
trees,” some said while others replied, “from the forests”. “And how many of
you have seen a forest?” One, two, three, up to 10 raised their hands. The
other 90 didn’t and were quiet.
“And how
many would like to go see a forest?” All raised their hands.
That
encounter with the Maryknoll kids led to the conceptualization of Eco-walk, the
childfren’s environmental awareness program that won for Baguio the “Global 500
“ award from the Unioted Nations Environment Programme and the 1995-96
“GalingPook” award from the Asian Institute of Management.
Soon, a team
of news reporters guided the first batch of kids in tracing where their water
comes from, starting from the faucet to the pipes, the tanks and to the Busol
watershed. The joint exploration proved quite emotional for the journalists
whose generation and those before them grew up roaming Baguio’s pine stands in
search of edible puffballs and mushrooms and even hunting and roasting snipes,
chickadees, shrikes and other birds. They groped on how to process the urban
kids’ rare diversion from the nooks and crannies of the malls, their cellphone
and computer games, to the nooks and crannies where morning glory still
thrives and where “singkamas bakes” and the Benguet lily are no longer found.
“How do you
feel?,” the late Baguio boy and feature writer Freddie Mayo asked the kids.
“It’s cooler and fresher here than in the city,” a boy admitted. “Why?,”
Freddie pursued. “Because there are many trees.”
“So what if
there are trees?” “Our science teacher
said trees and plants release oxygen into the air and absorb carbon dioxide.”
“So your science teacher is right?” “Yes, sir.”
The dialogue
went on to how trees harvest rainfall and slowly release water channeled into
the dams, then distributed to the tanks, then siphoned by the pipes and
released through the faucet. The kids then trace the course of the rest of the
water- to the gullies and rivulets, into the streams that form the rivers that
share the bounty to the lowland farmlands and homes as they flow down to the
seas and oceans.
“So what
shall we do?,” Freddie posed. “Let’s plant and care for trees!” In one of the
succeeding forest walks, I asked the kids: “How do fairy tales begin?” I
expected “Once upon a time” for an answer, a cue to start sharing them the
fairy tale about “The Giving Tree”.
A kid from
Brent, seemingly bored, replied: “Fairy tales begin with the letter ‘F’.” Since then, Busol has been serving as a
playground and an open laboratory for validating the vicarious learning
experience in the classroom. (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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