reon
08-28-2005, 06:22 PM
There is nothing like just packing up, getting away in your car and pitching a tent somewhere without over-planning. We took out the freely available Guidemap Ibaraki, chose a nice spot to camp (on the map, you really have no idea what to expect, so you just have to take a first-hand look at the place), bought some supplies, and went ahead. (It turned out that this was a mistake, because we didn’t bring toys and books for my son; he got bored the next day so we had to pack up and return home a day earlier than we expected.)
The site we found (a small camping ground on the shores of Hinuma, a small lake in northern Ibaraki, near Ooarai Beach) was not bad, which is to say it wasn’t very good either. I say this because I was a bit disappointed when we saw the place; we brought enough water and food to last us for at least two days in the wilderness, and the place had a toilet, a place where you could wash your dishes, even an outdoor shower. There was a vending machine, and if I searched for it, maybe I would have found a nearby 7-Eleven.
(Maybe I should have known this all along. The very first mountain I climbed in Japan is Takao-san back in 1993 during my first year in Tokyo. Imagine my surprise when I saw vending machines on the peak!)
Japan has taken the guesswork and planning out of camping, which is really not that bad, now that I’ve thought about it. Practically everyone who knows how to read a map can go out camping during the weekend, which makes me wonder why there aren’t a lot more people doing it. Sure you have to deal with mosquitoes and bugs crawling inside your tent sometimes, and you may have to endure not taking a shower for a day or two but it isn’t like you have to hike for hours, hauling tons of supplies before you can get to a camping ground.
Maybe we should do this thing more often.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai06.jpg
Pitching the tent. It was late afternoon when we got to the camping site, and some people were already settling nicely in their tents and roasting their barbecues. We had to pay 2,000 yen per tent per night.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai05.jpg
Putting on the rain tarp. We bought this spaceous 4-person tent for around 7,000 yen, a reasonable amount I guess. We used the three sleeping bags that have been lying in the house for as long as I can remember.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai03.jpg
Vending machines. This is the office of the Ojiisan who manages the park (it is officially called Oyazawa Park (http://maps.google.com/maps?q=tokyo&ll=36.274414,140.482 510&spn=0.003920,0.00752 2&hl=en)) with restrooms for men and women. Near this, on the left, is a very tidy washing area, where people can wash their dishes and do their everyday sanitary routine. Not bad for a camping ground.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai04.jpg
Not too wild flora.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai09.jpg
Ants feasting on a fish. We wanted to try fishing, but had no fishing rods. This is as close as we got to catching fish.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai10.jpg
Here comes the night. When I look at the sky like this, I could pretend I was back home in my little hometown in the Philippines, walking on the ricefields and listening to crickets as the night falls.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai12.jpg
Children riding an inflatable raft. Our neighbours were a group of Japanese who brought tents, tarps, lanterns, chairs, tables and barbecue grills inside their 4WD vehicles. I wouldn’t know it but they probably had portable TVs inside their tents, too.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai08.jpg
Throwing pebbles. Man probably has been throwing rocks into bodies of water ever since he got his opposable thumbs.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai01.jpg
Our tent in the early morning. It is nice to sneak out in the morning when everyone’s asleep and explore the whole place by yourself.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai11.jpg
Hinuma Lake under a mist. There is something soothing in the calm surface of a lake, unlike the restless ocean, especially during the windless wee hours of the morning. There were people who came later in the day and took a dip on the lake; the water was warmer than the nearby Ooarai Beach.
http://www.timog.com/gallery/files/5/Ooarai13.jpg
The day after. The second day was rainy so we spent a lot of time inside the tent, reading books and telling stories to my son. When it looked like the rain wasn’t going away soon, we hurriedly packed up and left. Our neighbours had left earlier and we didn’t want to spend another night in this place all by ourselves.
Paul
08-28-2005, 10:04 PM
buti pa kayo nakapag-camping. kami hindi pa pwede e. siguro pag lumaki-laki na si bitoy.
adechan
09-02-2005, 05:16 PM
buti pa kayo nakapag-camping. kami hindi pa pwede e. siguro pag lumaki-laki na si bitoy.
paul ilang taon na ba si bitoy nyo?
when we started camping mga 3 years old pa lang panganay ko … walang patid every year, now my son is 4 years old … so ibig sabihin months old pa lang sabak na rin sa campjo
adeline here
adechan
09-02-2005, 05:21 PM
reon
camping din pala kayo …
naalala ko tuloy the first time we go on camping … wala ring plano plano … basta nung time na iyon feeling naming i challenge ang camping … sige sugod kami … nagkataon pang binagyo kami the first time, grabe … kaya lalong naging exciting:D
adechan
Paul
09-02-2005, 05:31 PM
paul ilang taon na ba si bitoy nyo?
hi adechan,
9 months pa lang si bitoy namin. pero naisasama na namin mag-hike ng konti dito sa tabi-tabi.
adechan
09-02-2005, 09:49 PM
hi adechan,
9 months pa lang si bitoy namin. pero naisasama na namin mag-hike ng konti dito sa tabi-tabi. :Dpaul ang cute nyo namn dyan sa pic … nasa gitna kayo nang garden of grass:D
na-alala ko tuloy nang mga todler pa lang itong mga chikitingz ko … ganyan din ang gamit ko
thanx 4 the pic
betong
09-02-2005, 11:03 PM
Hi Reon.
I really enjoy your peaceful and harmless posts. Maybe I should follow your example. Please keep it up. It really is inspiring, I wish I too can have the same calmness you seem to have that I sense in your posts. I also admire how you have integrated so well in this too foreign a land for me.
About camping, I did it once near the summit of Mount Mayon near my Dad’s birthplace. It was somehow less idyllic. Storm, nearby flash flood with huge boulders and strange animal noices outside of our tent at night, plus leaking tent and not to mention the volcano being on red alert (not mentioned to me and Swiss friend till we were on top). But the hike down towards the beach was worth everything. The view of the sea and the overlying islands was breathtaking.
reon
09-04-2005, 03:47 PM
hello betong, that’s one of the nicest comments i’ve ever got from a timog member. thanks.
hindi ko pa nakikita ang mayon (puro pictures lang). pero maganda nga ito at “mas perfect” pa ang cone kesa sa mount fuji. mas mataas nga lang ang fuji at may snow cap pag winter. gusto kong ring umakyat sa mayon pag nagkaroon ng time.
Storm, nearby flash flood with huge boulders and strange animal noices outside of our tent at night, plus leaking tent and not to mention the volcano being on red alert.hindi ba ganyan ang adventure?
@paul. cute nyang picture mo, a.
betong
09-05-2005, 01:25 PM
Hi Reon!
Really, I think I should be thanking you.
We went up mayon 6 years ago with a friend of mine from university with whom I have travelled as well to Mexico, Guatemala and Belize. She loves hiking, coming from the Jura mountains in the French speaking side of Switzerland. We went to the tourism bureau of Albay District to ask for a local guide. So we went up Mayon, us two and two guides who provided for the food as well. We left at 7 in the morning from the center of Legaspi, took a jeep to somewhere near the foot of the volcano and started hiking. First through rice fields, then through a depalidated golf course (apparently built with Marcos and Japanese money) then through fields of cogon and other sorts of grasses that cut through your skin and are probably hiding snakes and cobras (there are lots of cobras around that area, my grandfather’s poultry sometimes harbored one or two). Then we passed through what I should call a jungle (tropical rain forest…) till we reached the first camp site around noon at around a third of the way up, where we had lunch. Then after a rest we continued on our climb, this time the terrain changing to rock and the flora or vegetation changing accordingly as well. In some parts we had to be put on a harness to climb rock. It was very slippery and I was suprised (dumbfounded) at how the guides could manage with their tsinelas when I had so much trouble with my hiking boots (stupid tourists right…). The magnificence of the view was just astounding. And the stream we were following part of the way up had this sweetest water, very, very refreshing. So finally we reached our last camp site for the day before the final ascension to the crater(the last 200 meters, I think) at around 6 pm where we set up camp for the night. What immediately followed was a storm (the summit had its own micro-climate, so it could be sunny and fair at sea level and be hellish up there). So through the night under a tent near the summit of Mayon Volcano, under a storm, just after being informed that the volcano was on red alert and that they were advicing some people within a 1 km perimeter to evacuate, with these strange animal noises just outside our tent (sniffing and trotting around) and the wind howling outside our leaking tent, we hardly had a wink of sleep. This aggravated by stories from our guides about a German tourist who fell down a deep ravine a few months back while going down the volcano, who was rescued only a week after her fall, because the rescue team had trouble reaching her (helicopter had nowhere to land…). So at daybreak, the guides asked me if I still wanted to climb the last portion. Unfortunately, I was so tired and plain yellow to go through another storm, face strange animals, brave a possible eruption that I decided that we set forth going down. It was sunny and there was no trace of any storm coming (or appearing) when we started. We went down another side of the volcano, so this time we were heading towards a beach of pristine black volcanic sand and pebbles. So just after 1 or two in the afternoon we were back at the road, waiting for the not too available jeepneys to get back to the city.
At dinner with my lolo and lola we told them about what we did for the last two days and they said that we were totally nuts to go there what with all the NPA’s around there and all these people getting kidnapped. That’s when I decided to go, next time, cave exploring in the mountains nearby…
yes, that’s adventure. So I’ll tell you next time about swimming through linta infested bat caves with around 5 cm of breathing air between the level of the water and the ceiling of the cave…
mabatag
09-11-2005, 01:05 AM
reon,
cool itong family camping nyo. gusto ko rin itong gawin kapag may family na ko (matagal-matagal pa siguro yun).
balitaan mo ako kung kelan mo gustong umakyat ng Mayon, sama ako. Mas maganda ang Mayon at mas masarap umakyat dito kumpara sa Fuji (para sa akin). Wag lang anytime soon dahil nasa Alert Level 2 sya ngayon (medyo delikado)
hi betong,
ang ‘saya’ naman ng adventure nyo sa Mayon. meron pang roaming wild animals, baka wild boars.
exciting.
betong
09-11-2005, 01:28 AM
hi betong,
ang ‘saya’ naman ng adventure nyo sa Mayon. meron pang roaming wild animals, baka wild boars.
exciting.
Baboy damo o NPA. Hindi ko alam.
By the way. Hi!
puting tainga
09-11-2005, 05:07 AM
Baboy damo o NPA
:biglaugh:
Silly me.
At first, akala ko’y NPA satands for National Pet Association, which does not make sense.
(I believe no one here at TF is a member of NPA.)
Paul
09-11-2005, 09:23 AM
galing naman ng adventure nyo. buti na lang hindi kayo pinutukan ng mayon. gusto ko ring akyatin yang mayon. siguro pag malaki na si bitoy.
with regards to the NPA, they would be the least of your problems when you go up the mountains of southern luzon.
(I believe no one here at TF is a member of NPA.)
ah, but you’d never know that, would you?
kamikaze
08-06-2006, 12:35 AM
maganda naman yang camping site na napuntahan nyo me and my family do camps every year din.kaya lang malayo yang site nyo dito sa fukui ken.we usually camp sa biwako lake pero boring na kasi every year na kami dun.sa dagat naman masyadong mainit hindi mo maimulat ng husto ang mata mo sa init.im searching for a good site para sa obong yasumi.kaya lang yung hindi masyadong malayo dito sa amin.my daughter is 12 years old now and my wife is 4 months pregnant.hopefully apat na kami next year para mag camp…ill attache the pics when we came back from camp next week:)
reon
08-10-2006, 10:24 PM
Hi kamikaze, hintayin ko yang mga camping pictures ninyo. Nga pala, nasubukan na naming mag-camping sa Biwa-ko several years ago. Naalala ko yon dahil hindi namin mapaliyab yung dinala naming mga uling kahit anong ihip ang gawin namin.
Mainit ngang mag-camping sa beach lalo na kung ganitong summer. Mas maganda siguro sa gilid ng isang lake para may masisilungang puno. Kami sa autumn na lang siguro ulit magka-camping para medyo mas malamig.
proud me
08-10-2006, 10:54 PM
reon san…ang ganda naman camping site na yan…hindi pa ata kami nakapag-camping ng ganyan kaluwang…laging akala mo ba yong mga tent namin eh,mga nakahilerang mga Homeless.buti hindi karton at blue sheets …sobrang layo naman kasi talaga ng mga camping sites na mga ganyan kalaki dito sa amin.siguro winter palang ang hindi namin nagawang matulog sa tent…(walang balak) sana maka-pag camping din kami sa ganyang kalaki at kagandang place.
greatbarrier
08-11-2006, 12:34 PM
hi reon!
i like your pics! naiinggit ako sa gimik nyo kahit matagal na to! it’s a pretty nice one!
namiss ko na rin gawin to! yeah, camping has always be fun, especially if you’re with your loved ones! is he your son? he seem to be an adorable kid!
DaVinci
09-26-2006, 11:39 PM
galing naman nitong gimik na ito…naalala ko tuloy nung ako ay nasa bundok ng makiling…
fisher
09-27-2006, 12:24 AM
I bring my wife and my one and only daughter on camping every year.This year sa Futo in Izu kami nag-camping.The other naman sa Yamanashi ken and last year sa Tanzawa.Everytime we go,I drive while I search for the road that will lead us to our target destination because I myself have never been to those places.It’s really a bunch of fun.
hayaren
10-03-2006, 10:01 PM
i had tried weekend camping out here with my friends and family pero sa disyerto naman kami. We packed up and headed there at 4 in the afternoon. Along the road you’ll encounter 4x4 automobiles gearing up to our destination too and that shoved us a festive mood. We reached the camping site in the middle of nowhere, as we were just following road signs. It was in November last year, so the weather was friendly, not hot not so cold also. Upon reaching there, we stationed ourselves and started rolling our foldable mats. Building up a large camp fire, centering the large carpet ala Aladdin-theme, displaying our food stuffs and the arabian party kicked off along with those that camped nearby. We had our music blasting to the tune of the famous arabian belly-dancing. The sand in the middle of the desert was warm, colored reddish orange. The sky was filled with stars, but we were sneaky with the scorpions camping around us! It was so much fun. We stayed there till 7AM in the morning to watch the beautiful sunrise beaming from the neatly piled sand dunes. Wish you guys can experience camping out in a barren land stretched of Sahari Desert.
reon
10-03-2006, 10:45 PM
reon san…ang ganda naman camping site na yan…hindi pa ata kami nakapag-camping ng ganyan kaluwang…laging akala mo ba yong mga tent namin eh,mga nakahilerang mga Homeless.buti hindi karton at blue sheets …sobrang layo naman kasi talaga ng mga camping sites na mga ganyan kalaki dito sa amin.siguro winter palang ang hindi namin nagawang matulog sa tent…(walang balak) sana maka-pag camping din kami sa ganyang kalaki at kagandang place.:)Taga-Osaka ka pala, proud me, malayo ka ba sa Biwa-ko? Dati nag-camping din kami doon. Hindi pa rin ako nakapag-camping ng maraming tao, usually kami-kami lang.
hi reon!
i like your pics! naiinggit ako sa gimik nyo kahit matagal na to! it’s a pretty nice one!
namiss ko na rin gawin to! yeah, camping has always be fun, especially if you’re with your loved ones! is he your son? he seem to be an adorable kid! :)Matagal na rin kaming hindi nagka-camping, e. Minsan nalilimutan mo lang at wala na ang summer.
galing naman nitong gimik na ito…naalala ko tuloy nung ako ay nasa bundok ng makiling…:)Makilin g. Umakyat na yata kami doon pero hindi ko maalala kung umabot kami sa tuktok. Hindi yata.
I bring my wife and my one and only daughter on camping every year.This year sa Futo in Izu kami nag-camping.The other naman sa Yamanashi ken and last year sa Tanzawa.Everytime we go,I drive while I search for the road that will lead us to our target destination because I myself have never been to those places.It’s really a bunch of fun.:pMaganda ngang mag-explore lalo na kung may malaki kang sasakyan na makakaakyat ng bundok. Yung sa amin maliit lang kasi kaya dito-dito lang kami sa patag.
i had tried weekend camping out here with my friends and family pero sa disyerto naman kami. We packed up and headed there at 4 in the afternoon. Along the road you’ll encounter 4x4 automobiles gearing up to our destination too and that shoved us a festive mood. We reached the camping site in the middle of nowhere, as we were just following road signs. It was in November last year, so the weather was friendly, not hot not so cold also. Upon reaching there, we stationed ourselves and started rolling our foldable mats. Building up a large camp fire, centering the large carpet ala Aladdin-theme, displaying our food stuffs and the arabian party kicked off along with those that camped nearby. We had our music blasting to the tune of the famous arabian belly-dancing. The sand in the middle of the desert was warm, colored reddish orange. The sky was filled with stars, but we were sneaky with the scorpions camping around us! It was so much fun. We stayed there till 7AM in the morning to watch the beautiful sunrise beaming from the neatly piled sand dunes. Wish you guys can experience camping out in a barren land stretched of Sahari Desert.Eto ang hindi ko pa nasusubukan. Wala bang pictures?
Firipinjin
10-03-2006, 10:59 PM
When my kids are a bit older, I’d take them camping somewhere here in Chiba (if I can find a good camping site). Bonding with my boys while camping would definitely be on my agenda.
Very nice pictures Leon.
hayaren
10-04-2006, 07:18 PM
Eto ang hindi ko pa nasusubukan. Wala bang pictures? :)[/quote]
Hi Reon, we’ve got bundles of photos, let me check with my foster sister if she’s still having our pics in her computer. One thing din kasi, lahat ng photos nandun ako, parang am not at the comfort of displaying my self sa public, but let me check all over.
proud me
10-04-2006, 09:34 PM
@reon san…oo medyo malayo rin…dinadayo parin namin ang Biwa-ko.
crispee
10-04-2006, 09:40 PM
When my kids are a bit older, I’d take them camping somewhere here in Chiba (if I can find a good camping site). Bonding with my boys while camping would definitely be on my agenda.
Very nice pictures Leon.
I highly recommend this place because we’ve been there.
guy26
10-04-2006, 10:02 PM
sana ako rin makapag camp dito sa japan! :mad:
hayaren
10-12-2006, 01:49 AM
i had tried weekend camping out here with my friends and family pero sa disyerto naman kami. We packed up and headed there at 4 in the afternoon. Along the road you’ll encounter 4x4 automobiles gearing up to our destination too and that shoved us a festive mood. We reached the camping site in the middle of nowhere, as we were just following road signs. It was in November last year, so the weather was friendly, not hot not so cold also. Upon reaching there, we stationed ourselves and started rolling our foldable mats. Building up a large camp fire, centering the large carpet ala Aladdin-theme, displaying our food stuffs and the arabian party kicked off along with those that camped nearby. We had our music blasting to the tune of the famous arabian belly-dancing. The sand in the middle of the desert was warm, colored reddish orange. The sky was filled with stars, but we were sneaky with the scorpions camping around us! It was so much fun. We stayed there till 7AM in the morning to watch the beautiful sunrise beaming from the neatly piled sand dunes. Wish you guys can experience camping out in a barren land stretched of Sahari Desert.
@reon Eto ang hindi ko pa nasusubukan. Wala bang pictures? :)[/quote]
At last pumayag na ang aking foster sister magpost sa mga pics namin nung nag Desert Camping at nag Desert Safari kami dito sa UAE. Diyan mismo sa Desyerto na yan ang coverage ng movie “DUBAI”, starred by John Loyd, Claudine Barreto and Aga Muhlach.
Sequence of Photos
- Papuntang disyerto
- The UAE Flag waving, at the starting point of the Desert Safari and Desert Camping
- Entrance to the arabian adventure
- My Tito Ver posing with our designated 4x4 automobile before heading for Desert Safari then to the Camp Site. See all those 4x4 vehicle in the background, exhilirating!
- Sumadsad ang sinakyan namin, bumaon sa buhangin kaya hinto ang buong Caravan para hintayin lang kami, ang mga Driver din ng ibang sasakyan ang magtutulungan sa ganitong sitwasyon
- Bumaba muna kami, feel the warmth of the desert…that’s me with my foster sister and my Aunt in Orange kameez(lantang gulay na kami, nakakasuka ang Desert Safari!)
- Desyerto/The Open Quarters of Sahara Desert
- A Belly Dancer Entertaining Us For The Evening
- Camels
Firipinjin
10-12-2006, 01:48 PM
I highly recommend this place because we’ve been there.
Salamat kabayan!
I’ve bookmarked the website already.
When I get enough days off from work (3 days at least), I’m going to check that one out.
cosmicbblgum
10-14-2006, 06:32 PM
@hayaren: nice pics Camera-friendly talga ang face mo.
Di ata ako pwede mag camping sa disyerto, malikot ako matulog eh lalo na pag-gising bwahaha, baka pag gising ko pakiramdam ko busog nako, sa buhangin hihihi
mamimo
10-15-2006, 12:42 AM
@hayaren
mukhang di ako mag-eenjoy knowing na gulong ng sinasakyan ko nabaon sa buhangin baka kelangan ng ambulansyang naka-abang sa kin…takot ako:D
proud me
10-15-2006, 01:01 PM
@hayaren,Nice pic.~~kakaiba ang Experience mo sa camping.
hayaren
10-15-2006, 04:55 PM
@hayaren: nice pics Camera-friendly talga ang face mo.
Di ata ako pwede mag camping sa disyerto, malikot ako matulog eh lalo na pag-gising bwahaha, baka pag gising ko pakiramdam ko busog nako, sa buhangin hihihi
@cosmic, wala namang tulugan doon, parang may lamay gising ang lahat hanggang madaling araw. Di ka rin makakatulog sa kakainom ng black tea, bottomless yun!
@hayaren
mukhang di ako mag-eenjoy knowing na gulong ng sinasakyan ko nabaon sa buhangin baka kelangan ng ambulansyang naka-abang sa kin…takot ako:D
nakakatakot talaga ang Desert Safari, sana nga makakatry kayo…di naman kasi individual ang pag Desert Safari, by Caravan yan, pag may problema ang isang sasakyan, hihinto ang remaining ng Caravan para magtutulungan yung mga driver at ang highlight ng Desert Safari pag magsabay sabay ang buong Caravan sa pag akyat, pababa ala talon na nga sa mga sand dunes, akala mo babaliktad na ang sinasakyan mo. Iba ang capacity ng driving license sa mga nagoperate ng Desert Safari, am so proud may 4 na Pinoy ang nakakapag operate na rin sa Desert Safari.
@hayaren,Nice pic.~~kakaiba ang Experience mo sa camping.
ang camping lang naman dito na puwede kami ay primarily sa disyerto at sa tabi ng beach. We have done by the beach side most often, pero andito na nga kami sa disyerto we wouldn’t want to miss this experience of a lifetime:)
kamikaze
11-17-2006, 10:14 PM
Mainit ngang mag-camping sa beach lalo na kung ganitong summer. Mas maganda siguro sa gilid ng isang lake para may masisilungang puno. Kami sa autumn na lang siguro ulit magka-camping para medyo mas malamig.[/quote]
reon!sorry ha i got busy at work kase anyway highway eto yung pics na pangako ko nung summer…lol winter na …sowwyy:)
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic1.jpg
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic2.jpg
me and my daughter
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic3.jpg
thats me standing in the middle
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic4.jpg
who wants corn!
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic5.jpg
BBQ Time
http://www.siarez.net/files/pic6.jpg
adechan
11-17-2006, 10:45 PM
I highly recommend this place because we’ve been there.
highly recommended din po:D
we’ve been there too. every year:wavey: since 7 years ago
safety, CHEAP, kirei and tanoshii :king:
http://static.flickr.com/102/292993868_bc007f53d5 .jpg
OUR CAMPING TEAM
http://static.flickr.com/58/230899146_0856bf350b .jpg
adechan
11-17-2006, 10:47 PM
Mainit ngang mag-camping sa beach lalo na kung ganitong summer. Mas maganda siguro sa gilid ng isang lake para may masisilungang puno. Kami sa autumn na lang siguro ulit magka-camping para medyo mas malamig
looks you had real fun there
adechan
11-17-2006, 10:54 PM
ang camping lang naman dito na puwede kami ay primarily sa disyerto at sa tabi ng beach. We have done by the beach side most often, pero andito na nga kami sa disyerto we wouldn’t want to miss this experience of a lifetime:)
ok din ang experience mo hayaren,
and what makes more happy is to see you ~~~
ang ganda pala eh at very young pa:)
hayaren
12-27-2006, 07:53 AM
ok din ang experience mo hayaren,
and what makes more happy is to see you ~~~
ang ganda pala eh at very young pa:)
naaaaaa…geeeeee… …that’s a flattering comment adechan, I’ll take it as a compliment…
Firipinjin
05-20-2007, 10:58 PM
Bubuhayin ko lang itong thread na ito. Camping season has already started and I am looking forward to a nice camping activity before the hot summer weather comes. In fact, wala pa akong gears pero ang dami ko nang camping catalog sa bahay so I can choose which ones I will need. I’m also thinking whether to do a lakeside camping like Leon’s or to a Car Camp (オート キャンプ場)?
roi5f
04-28-2008, 03:27 PM
sarap po sigurong mag-camping. sana mapuntahan ko ang mga lugar na iyan
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