Puerto GaleraBlogs we like

  1. “Feel Good” Travel

    Blog: See Simi Travel Blog - 4 January 2011

    With 2010 now behind us, we have five years left to meet the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals to end extreme poverty.  In 2000, when the goals were set, 50% of the world’s population lived on only $1/day.  A decade later, these people are surviving on $1.25. Although $0.25 may not seem like much, it does give hope.  This is a huge undertaking, and it is encouraging that our leaders have come together to try to address this problem, together.

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  2. Bye, Bye G7

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 19 June 2010

    We would like to dedicate this posting to our wonderful little G7 which was tragically lost to the waves off the coast of Verde Island. Our little G7 traveled with us from the heights of the Himalayas to the depths of the oceans in the Philippines. From the dense jungles of Sri Lanka to the arid [...]

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  3. Puerta Galera Underwater

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 17 June 2010

    Sabang’s incompetent dive shops have caused us quite a bit of pain, but the underwater experience completely makes up for it. With over 40 spectacular dive sites close to shore and plenty of snorkeling off of Monkey Beach and Big La Laguna Beach, we have managed to look beyond the sloppy service and, instead, look [...]

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  4. Splish Splash

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 12 June 2010

    If you think evil sea creatures only live offshore, think again. Sometimes, the real danger lingers where the surf meets the turf. While snorkeling back to the beach, I noticed three pairs of little feet stirring up sand all around me. When I popped my head out of the water and removed my mask, I looked [...]

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  5. Watch Where You Step!

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 9 June 2010

    Watch out! There are some scary things a-lurkin’ in those rocks just offshore. And they blend in with their surroundings perfectly.  The scorpionfish above appears to have activated its cloaking device. Can you see it? Just in case you can’t quite make it out, we’ve added the highlighted picture below to help you find our little [...]

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  6. Hole in the Wall

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 7 June 2010

    Check out Tony as he swims through Sabang’s famous Hole in the Wall. It’s a beautiful dive site with schools of tiny fish, stunning coral, and ribbon-like banded sea snakes. Although sea snakes are one of the world’s most poisonous animals, the real threat proved to be the fire coral lining the swim-through. [...]

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  7. Lionfish Art

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 3 June 2010

    It looks like a piece of abstract art, but the picture above is a lionfish (viewed from above) hovering alongside the rusted hull of the Alma Jane. The flash really brought out the translucent coloring in the  feather-like fins of the fish. Underwater photography is a whole new art for us, but I think we [...]

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  8. The Alma Jane

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 1 June 2010

    I always used to say that I wasn’t a huge fan of wreck diving, but after diving the Alma Jane, I just may have to reconsider. Huge schools of bat fish, swirls of black trigger fish, eels, snakes, and enormous lion fish hovering like underwater mines along the way – what an adventure. Inspired by [...]

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  9. Sabang, Mindoro

    Blog: ContemporaryNomad - 29 May 2010

    From a distance, Sabang looks innocuous enough, even attractive. Up close, one of the Philippines’ preeminent diving destinations, located on the island of Mindoro, proves to be somewhat seedier. Those who come to explore the underwater wonders discover an overdeveloped cluster of geriatric watering holes full of delusional men with decorative money-hungry twenty-somethings on their [...]

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  10. Underwater Frisbee

    Blog: Travels with a Nine Year Old - 15 April 2010

    Z has had his first dive! In Puerto Galera, the Philippines, one of the world’s best diving spots. He’s become progressively more excited about diving since we met William Hudson in Kampot — a cave diver, who discovered a new system in the Philippines, and teaches dive masters the physiology of diving to dive masters. [...]

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