BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
SAGADA,
Mountain Province -- It is once again pinagpupuo or time of fires for folks of
this tourist town. Years ago, it was during this time that bush fires were set
off intentionally to clear areas for planting, to build a house, for lands to bear grass for
grazing or simplyto burn unwanted plants.
Starting
forest fires was supposed to be prohibited but for one reason or another, these
were tolerated in areas where lands were made into kaingin.
For
the locals here, trees had a purpose. These were used for firewood, to build
houses or to singe black pigs or chicken in times of death, marriage or pagan
rituals.
If
you cut a tree, you were supposed to choose trees according to their use. As a
kid who grew up in this place, we climbed trees to cut branches with bolos,
skinned the bark, bundled these with vines and brought home for firewood.
Oh
my, my grandmother was all praises for the piles of pine branches which
encircled our barn left to dry for the rainy days.
***
During
those years in the late 60’s when I was in elementary, LPG fuel tanks for
cooking were virtually not a fad. But later in high school, cooking with gas
caught up. By the time I went to Baguio for college, most were using LPGs which
we called Gasul then.
Times
have changed in this town. Years ago when trees were felled, those sandwiched
between other trees were the ones which were cut to enable others to grow
straight up which would be used to build a house later.
If
you cut a tree, it was your obligation to replace it by planting a
seedling.
But
then, there are some who don’t follow this norm. A few years back, someone cut
a lot of trees at our property at Pilao Mountain near Lake Danum and even had
the temerity to build a shack in the area. I hear he tore the cabin down when
told by some elders it was not his.
***
He
was never prosecuted despite the government’s total log ban since nobody filed
a case against him. Now people talk about him in whispered derision when the
issue is brought out.
Cutting
trees in Sagada had been tolerated by even Environment officials since they
understood the culture of the people in relation to cutting and since these
were put to good use like in building houses at this time of the year which
folks called pinagsasaad. It is also a fact that ancestors of locals here
planted the trees and for them, it was unfair for government to ban them from
cutting these when they were the ones who planted these in the first
place.
If
you look at pictures of Sagada taken by American missionaries early part of the
previous century, it was obvious there
were shrubs but not a lot of trees.
In earlier times, when somebody wanted to build a house,
folks would come over bayanihan style and help construct it without expecting
to get paid.
***
In
the 60’s, I remember people would come and provide food like camote or rice.
Cabbage was a favorite for lunch which was often mixed with sardines. It was an
unspoken expectation that if you helped build the house, then the house owner
was supposed to help you when you or your family would build one.
Times
have indeed changed in this once sleepy little town. Nowadays, when you
construct a house or building, you have to pay for people who work.I was
talking to my Auntie Alice Daupan who dropped by our abode in La Trinidad last
week and she was telling me the going rate for a day’s construction work was
P300.
The
Sagada that I knew as a kid – lush with trees -- is now a getting to be a thing
of the past.Then, at night during full moons,the road from Poblaciongoing to
Ambasing where Sumaguing Cave is locatedwasa ribbon of moonlight since roadside
trees contrasted to reflection of the thoroughfare. You see the road from the vantage point at
Danonoy these days at night and what you see are lights emanating from large
buildings.
The
trees which used to line the road have slowly been replaced by concrete
edifices. Baguio may have been like Sagada a century ago. Like the Summer
Capital, Sagada is not exempt from the ravages of time, tourism and population
growth.
***
One
time last year, out of sense of déjà vu, I went to Gedangan River where we used
to swim as kids and found the once mighty water artery dying. All around were
houses. The rice terraces were still there, but then the vantage point where we
sat as kids and did watercolor paintings to put on paper the beautiful scenery
of green rice stalks, blue skies with wisps of clouds with the towering Ampacao
Mountain as background was gone – replaced by a huge house.
It
was here where we could lie on the grass while waiting for the others to swim
and look mesmerized at a solitary eagle up high flying in circles looking for
an innocent chicken down below which it could swoop in its mighty claws in
seconds for food, then disappear somewhere to feast among the trees at Ampacao.
***
Trees
are still an attraction of the town. During cold months from October to
February when Siberian winds blow strong, the loud sound of trees swooshing
within the Anglican mission compound could be likened to sea waves.
At night one could still see locals and tourists having
bonfires underneath the trees. The air is still fresh and it is still a thrill
trecking the winding footland ways underneath the protective canopy of the
Pines. At this time of year, one could still see old men in g-strings walking
down the road beating a piece of wood called pakapak to signal an obaya (rest
day) or a tribal ceremony.
Trees are used for a variety of ways in this town.
These also provide protective cover to communist rebels lurking in the shadows
but that is another story.
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