I’m turning a new leaf in my life as I bade goodbye to my
coleagues at the Department of Trade and Industry. I clocked out on February 29, my last working
day as one by one, my workmates for the past twenty years said their piece
about how I was, who I was, what I was as a co-worker. Yes a program was planned in my honor. Oh, wow, after listening to what my
workmates have to say about me, it seems, I already heard what people close to
me are going to say in the future as I lie on my coffin. To cap it off, I was awarded with a plaque-
“Highest Performing Employee” of the Department of Trade and Industry-
Cordillera Region. I bowed out with
honors-having led a team to work on a rapid economic survey on what ails and
holds off the economic growth of my hometown, Bontoc. The results will be seen in a few year’s time
but it will need the full cooperation of the community. The project has yet to be fully implemented
in other towns and cities nationwide.
Well, these things that we found out could be discussed in
the future as I want to take it easy before realizing that I am now one of the
“unemployed.” Ha, ha.
I resigned my day job because I wanted to do a lot of
things, things I could not do if I am tied up with a fixed schedule. Xijen College of Mountain Province, Inc. which I founded in 1992 is in good hands,
under the capable care of Dr. Edarlina A. Fakat and a smart, dedicated
staff.
This February I finally had my trainer’s training on natural
farming in barrio Tugbok, Davao City.
Andre Lim, scion of a prominent family in Davao was our trainer. A natural farming practicioner who trained
with Korean natural farming advocate, Master Cho, Mr. Lim, in his booming voice
carried out the training with so much passion.
His advocacy on the use of natural inputs to farming carried something
beyond just practicing natural farming.
It was farming that carried with it a spiritual side. It is farming that doesn’t destroy the earth,
it is farming that respects the one Who created it all. On our last day, I told my story. I was a weekend farmer and an Internet
farmer. We all laughed because we had
one thing in common, we spent endless online researches on the topic of natural
farming. My Davao experience solidified
what I have been doing for some years now.
Still there were some things, processes that are unwritten online or in
hard copies. I had my ups and downs in
natural farming but as always, I could find some help online. Our group of trainees was a gathering of
people from all walks of life. One, a
mechanical engineer, who spent most of his life working on his family’s
trucking business was suddenly thrust to take care of a piggery business his
father left behind. He wanted to shift
to natural farming on raising pigs considering that the profit margin for
convential swine fattening had severly decreased. A young couple, the husband, a seaman wanted
to do farming- “kasi ang hirap ng trabaho sa barko…” a retired nurse married to
a British national was a veteran farmer too, but she wanted to confirm if her
farming practices were right; an
engineer with an oil company in Nigeria wanted to work full time in his Davao
farm with the help of his lawyer wife- who trained with Mr. Lim a month
earler. Two young people, one a landscaper
and another an agricultural graduate who focused on ornamental plants were just
as enthusiastic on natural farming. One
mother, pitched in for his son, a young
man of 22 who already was into natural pig raising. His natural farming
practices was his town’s showcase as it was near a school (Polomoc, Cotabato)
and yet it did not have the odor, most
pig pens here in Bontoc, have. We were a
noisy bunch, sharing all of our experiences and eventually became close to each
other so that a social network account is planned and eventually a reunion set
after a year, with Cebu as the first gathering.
Another was an OFW who wanted to start pig raising, and one, a former
government executive who is now active in advocating natural farming to her
provincemates in Sorsogon.
Indeed, information on a particular interest can be had on
the World Wide Web. If something,
becomes your passion, you can quickly learn by doing keyword searches about
what interests you. This is something, I
want the young generation to use to the fullest. You can also join a group where you can share
your passion. In time, you can learn
from each other, you discover that people on the other side of your “fence” can
offer as much help as you can get, often times for free. Indeed the online information explosion has
contributed to a better planet. I thus
continue to learn the ways of natural farming
online and of course with much time now in my hands, I’m out in the sun
in communion with nature.