February 2011

Lecture on Philippine medicinal plants

Farming and Gardening Sustainable Living

Sharing this invitation for interest:

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Greetings from the National Museum of the Philippines!

The National Museum has scheduled the next lectures for this year with the topics “Medicinal Plants of the Philippines” and “Economic Seaweeds of the Philippines”. We would like to invite you and your office to be part of this activity which will be held on March 3, 2011, (Thursday), at the Tambunting Hall, Museum of the Filipino People at 9:00 – 12:00 in the morning.

The lecturers, Dr. Wilfredo F. Vendivil, a senior researcher, ethnobotanist/taxonomist and ecologist specializing in medicinal plants; and Mr. Noe B. Gapas, a researcher and phycologist specializing in seaweeds and phytoplankton are both from the Botany Division of the National Museum. Lectures will focus on the identification, scientific documentation and uses of medicinal plants, and the economic importance of seaweeds, its benefits as food, and its industrial and experimental uses.

For confirmation of your attendance and other details, please contact Ms. Rizza S. Salterio of the Museum Education Division at telefax number (02) 5270278 or email us at museum.education.nm@gmail.com.

We look forward to welcoming you and your staff to the lecture.  Thank you.

on rivers and losing friends

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Oil on canvas, February 2009.

Losing a friend is difficult.   But sometimes an old friendship needs to be reviewed against the very same guidelines that created it.

I’ve found comfort and company in thinking of a relationship as a river.  It flows as two people flow, and gains strength as these two people share themselves with each other and begin to merge.    Imagine what happens when this river gets reigned in by a dam… It will hate that dam, and with all its might, try to break it down, find a way around it, over it, under it— any way to get through and flow like an invincible river again.

The dam can be anything that halts the friendship: a deep disagreement, harsh judgment, loss of trust.  With effort and love, though, even the biggest dams of this type can be torn down and order in the friendship restored.

Sometimes, a special halt happens in a relationship that no amount of effort can put right.   There’s nothing specific to resolve, nothing that needs a return, or a re-take.   The dam is there because it is part of us– we are both the river and the dam.   It becomes deeply frustrating, and also hurtful to be in this situation because ultimately we are fighting against ourselves.   We can keep on insisting on returning to our natural course as friends–or we can recognize that the dam is not meant to be overcome.  We are not meant to be anything but ourselves.

There is good news though:  the river never stops flowing.   Even in this state that now seems unnatural and stifling, the river is actually flowing just as invincibly, if not more so.  It is gathering speed, generating power.  Power for what, who knows…? But wherever it ends up, it will always be that river…

Friends come and go, and for those that go, we weep and reminisce.  But we must also remember to see goodbyes as gifts, and be thankful, and let them push us to where we’re supposed to go.

The goal of the river is to create a wide, flat valley where it can flow smoothly towards the ocean.

My first garden show

Farming and Gardening Sustainable Living

I visited the Manila Seedling Bank this afternoon and felt I was being inducted into a secret society of plant lovers in the Philippines!

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It was my first time to go to a plant/garden show and didn\’t know what to expect, but I should\’ve taken the cue from my friend, Lorie, who is a plant lover (and finishing her PhD in Botany this May), that any club of plant enthusiasts would be as gentle, welcoming and just over-all pleasant as she is. 🙂

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Got to attend the workshop on \”Indoor Gardening\” by Mr. Serapion Metilla, a sweet man who made many references to his days as a teacher at the Kamuning School while demonstrating how to make a dish garden.  It was the last of the lecture series at HORTICULTURE 2011, an exhibit on “Urban gardens featuring native plants” organized by the Philippine Native Plants Conservation Society Inc. (PNPCSI). Ongoing since Jan. 29, last day of the exhibit is tomorrow, February 7.

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