Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Friday, October 26

Tigers, Pythons & Co. @ Malabon Zoo


Malabon Zoo is a private sanctuary for animals located just off MacArthur Highway near Monumento, Caloocan. It has earned a reputation for having more animals than the much-larger Manila Zoo.



Having had my post-grad studies in Valenzuela, I've always been aware that there is a Malabon Zoo but it was only when my nieces and nephew was in town that I actually got to visit this zoo.



It's located close to Malabon Elementary School and the sign boards along the streets to the zoo were very helpful in pointing us in the right direction so we arrived at 10:00 am and paid the ₱100 entrance fee.



 Cute sayings and quotes about life, love, even lyrics of songs like Louis Armstrong's "What A Wonderful World" dotted the various animal cages. It was nice that we were just in time for the feeding of the animals like the orangutans. It was fascinating to see these huge primates running around, being awkwardly cute.



The zoo also allows you to hold pythons for photo ops and my nephew Jian, nieces Mariel & Kee, and my brother-in-law Manoy Lito eagerly paid the ₱200 to get their pictures taken with the snakes.



My sister Maris, my friend Joy and I were a bit more apprehensive but much persuading and taunting by the kids left Joy and I no choice but to try it. I've always been grossed out by snakes, but honor was at stake, so I held one Burmese python for posterity's sake and it was not so bad. It helped that the snake was docile and not slimy at all.



The zoo also has a tiger cub named "Dionisia", and she was incredibly cute and playful. She's like a big cat jumping around and swatting our hands playfully. She got too energetic at one point and jumped off the table that the handler pulled on her tongue to quiet her up.



That was weird to see and we felt very bad for the tiger cub. She was just a baby and just playing around. The incident somewhat tainted our enjoyment of petting a real honest-to-goodness tiger cub. Sorry your tongue got hurt, dear Dionisia!



There was a grizzly bear in this zoo too. Though it looked quiet demented, just bouncing around, moving its huge head up and down. Maybe it's the stifling summer heat that was making him do that or the cramped cage, or both? Poor thing.



There were many adult tigers and I've always been fascinated by how smoothly they move. The crocodiles were amply represented as well. This zoo do have more animals than the Manila Zoo but I wish there were more space for them to move around.

 
                                      

I hope the well-intentioned Malabon Zoo people can transfer some of their animals some place with more room. I appreciate that it's privately-owned and it must cost the owner a pretty penny to keep them fed and clean but the place is a bit small. Maybe they can donate or lend some of the animals to Manila Zoo, God knows that zoo has the space.





Malabon Zoo & Aquarium
1 Governor Pascual Avenue
Potrero, Malabon
Tel: 3613083

Tuesday, October 9

Horseback Riding @ Picnic Grove, Tagaytay


Tagaytay has always been a go-to place for me and was next on my nieces' list of places to visit after our beach-bumming Boracay adventure. Its proximity to my place in Manila is a big plus and it's where I usually take my visiting family, so we planned a day trip, but fate had other plans.


The original plan was our good friend Ate Alma was supposed to meet us at Gil Puyat (aka Buendia) LRT station and drive us to Tagaytay but some clueless guy at a Petron gas station pumped the wrong fuel into her car so it would not start anymore. Bummer.


Anyway, we were already there so decided to just commute to Tagaytay from Gil Puyat and since my numerous visits to the place have all been via private car, I was absolutely clueless. We saw a JAM Transit bus station, asked the dispatcher if it will get us to Tagaytay and hopped onto the first bus that was ready to leave.


Big mistake. The bus was bound for Batangas and just let us off at Balibago bus station in Sta. Rosa, Laguna so we had to take a jeepney ride to Tagaytay. But it was all good. People were nice enough to give us directions and reassure us that the jeep will surely drop us off to where we should be.



Long story short, we alighted at the city terminal and took a tricycle to the Picnic Grove. Whew! It was 5:30pm so I decided to do the horseback riding because having a picnic in the grass and kite flying like what I did with my sister's family the week before, was not an option anymore.



We were quickly losing daylight so we hurriedly paid off the  ₱50/person entrance fee and walked to the riding trail on the left side of the picnic grounds and haggled with the touts for the horse rental.


A ₱200/horse fee was agreed upon for an hour of galloping around the trail. Girlie was apprehensive at first, but rapidly gained confidence once her horse started cantering around.



Cousin Dit got a smaller horse more suited for a kid and we laughed at the size difference. Horseback riding is my favorite thing to do in Tagaytay so it was a nice feeling to share the fun with my nieces, nephews and siblings.



The view at the ridge atop the horse was breathtaking and the fact that it was sunset and we were the only ones left riding, made it seem more special somehow.



The guides took us way down the rocky hill and back to the main horseback riding trail. It was quite exhilarating (though a bit scary) riding a horse down a hilly slope! It was worth the 2-hour commute from Manila just for that.



Everyone had fun and swiftly gained a lot of confidence on horseback, that at the end of the hour-long ride, nobody needed the guides anymore. Alyssa, Girlie and Dit were riding and guiding their horses themselves! My sis-in-law Manay Ella wasn't as daring, though.



It was a thrilling few hours of commuting and riding... but as we got off our horses we realized we had nowhere to stay in for the night and no change of clothes!



We looked around the souvenir shops and found matching shirts for the next day. Walking down Aguinaldo Highway, we found an Andok's Lechon Manok restaurant and had dinner there. After which we proceeded to look for a hostel where we can rest for the full sightseeing day ahead. What fun!

Tagaytay Picnic Grove
Brgy. Sungay East, Tagaytay City


Entrance fee: ₱50/head for 4 years old and above
Parking fee: car: ₱35
                   van/coaster/jeep: ₱50
                   bus: ₱100
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