Computers here are acting strange - maybe the back-to-back typhoons, maybe the usual Third World tech prowess, or maybe China disrupting the net here as a show of strength in advance of Duterte meeting their PM to see if the PI gets to keep its sovereignty.

Great times in the South China sea.
Anyway, no way of knowing what I last posted or what the responses were, or whether, after my political post I'm still welcome here ... so . . . .
Before the photos, I spent some time last night, since BNut wants some travelogue info included with the bonsai, looking at several PI entries on Wikileaks .... no, no, NO - not Wikileaks ...
Wikipedia looking into various aspects of this strange country. For instance, I wanted to know who they were, where they came from and how and when - but no: it is all shrouded in mystery and controversy, so much so that even Wikipedia trips all over itself with dire disclaimers and cautions about the truth of anything published about such matters. People with apparently great minds have apparently looked at the question from almost every imaginable angle: historically, geologically and geographically, culturally, genetically, linguistically, according to artifacts and metallurgy and the rare ancient bone, and who knows what else. But I think, in my own cautious way, I have been able to achieve perhaps the only correctly-concluded summation currently extant about their origins: that the Filipinos are definitely NOT descended from Vikings. I'll just leave it at that.
I also found it surprising that the first known organized world religion to have taken hold on these islands was probably Vajrayana (Tantric/yogic) Buddhism, not the much older Hinayana or Mahayana varieties. This supposition apparently comes from artifacts found here. Since the Yajrayana had its origin in India and its surround, and was well established there long before it spread up to Tibet and China, it is surprising that there is very little evidence of a similar influx of Hindu Tantra, such as permeated the culture of Bali, and likely other contiguous areas before the Moslems invaded.
Anyway, back to the travelogue, about which I will say only a small amount today before moving on to bonsai photos, and that small amount is only to say that each minute here is so very rich in stimuli - sensory, like visual/auditory/kinetic/tactile/gustatory and olfactory, and so much even richer in internal impressions, thoughts, feelings, connections and insights, that I realized before we were a block away that nothing short of a multi-year weekly documentary by someone really talented in such could begin to convey anything complete enough to be anything but misleading. So, I'll give up on that today except to show below two photos of the landscape of life in the Central Plain, and then three photos of the Pines of Baguio, capturing a little of the inter-typhoon mist and the surrounding environs as well. Bonsai later! Enjoy.