Welcome to The Minery

A blog that contains non-sense stuff delivered by a high school student to your browsers. This blog also contains his adventures, his photologs and other events around the world and in his mind.

Teapot ERROR!

Some guys just come up with this error. Maybe nonsense. One Mocha-Latte please! Sipping wirelessly.

President P-Noy's Action Group!

Haha! They made one! With a brilliant acronym!

New Look! New Posts! Starting May 1!

Within March 2011, we will be modifying the blog to "modern standards" and starting April 1, 2011, new posts will emerge! Stay tuned

Top 57 Comedy Ads

Nice pics, Nice Advertising. I hope this ones shows up in a billboard in EDSA

Archive for April 2011

Cereal Bomb!

So you wake up one morning. You went to the CR and finally into the kitchen. You grabbed a box of cereal and that cold milk on the fridge. And you say: "Ow, f*ck!" 


Ever wonder what's under the bowl of that cereal?




Cereal helped americans won the Battle of Iwo Jima.


Not the Serial Killer. Idiot.




December 7, 1941, early morning, when Japanese forces bombarded Pearl Harbor on Hawaii. Those american troops woke up from that alarm clock. Some others woke up on heaven, sadly.
The japanese made use all of their air force to shake that island up. USA responded to the request of Japan. 


Since US troops were outnumbered, the government chose not to payback immediately. In the course of 4 years, volunteers across USA went to Military settlements to enlist for the "great war" against Japan.


Where's the cereal?


Oh yeah, you are looking for the cereal. Uhm, you remember Quaker Oats? That's the one. 
Physicists and Chemists figured out that cereal have a high explosive power. Explosive power? 


Get a funnel with a hose attached to the narrow tube. Hose would be about 12-20 inches long. Stand two feet from a gas burner. Then blow the oats from the end of the hose. The funnel must be in line with the burner. Watch and see ze flame!


Any cereal, rich in carbohydrates, when finely divided (e.g. corn starch) and suspended in air (like a cloud of dust) is highly combustible and many flour mills have suffered serious damage as a result of stray sparks.


Quaker Oats company went from commercial-making oats to military-bomb-maker. All workers of Quaker company and some troops from the military joined forces to fill a mortar container with Quaker Oats! 




Then the rest of the story will be the victory of USA versus Japan.




See how that boy said "Ow, F*ck!" in the start of this entry.


Naw yu Know!


Posted in Manila


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Original Blog entry (c) 2011- All text above are from this blog. The topic and researches are done from the credit below


Topic from Discovery Channel's "how stuff works" Discover Channel (c)





100th Island of Hundred Islands

Technically, not the 100th.




This vacation, we went to our province in Alaminos City, Pangasinan. And yes, it is home to the National Park of the Philippines: Hundred Islands National Park. 


By the numbers, it is composed of 124 islands during low tide and 123 if on high tide.


Since we are just a local and we cannot call ourselves completely tourists, we only explored one island which is Quezon Island.


Departing Lucap Wharf


Arriving at Lucap Wharf from Brgy. Alos, Alaminos City (near Alaminos-Mabini Boundary) at exactly 10:30 am, we board a chartered "large banca" with a maximum capacity of 15 passengers plus 2 crew and load. Total fee for the private banca for back-and-forth travel is 2,500 pesos. 






En route to Quezon Island.


We chose to be privatized, so we are offered three choices of route  going to the island. First choice is the "Normal Route". This route is the most common used when going to one of the three developed islands. This route will give you roughly 3/4 sighting of all the islands. From Lucap wharf, you will be entering a inverted "c" shape route thru quezon Isalnd which will traverse thru most of the islands. It is best for value.


Second is the "Circle route". Simply, you will be toured practically all of the islands. We didn't choose this. We are scared of high waves that time.


Then finally the "direct route". From Lucap Wharf, Quezon island is just dead straight ahead. Unlike the usual 20 minutes if going there thru "Normal Route", we arrived at Quezon Is. for about 12 minutes thru the direct route. Cutting off travel time drastically for nearly half. But is is not recommended for first timers because en-route you will only see 3-10 islands and then a "circle-to dock" method to quezon Is. port.


Arriving Quezon Is.. Straight-ahead from Lucap. Quezon Is. is at 11  oclock from the tip of the banca. The one with a red roof.


Past vs Present


Way back when we last visited Hundred Is. in 2007, there's not too much to do on Quezon aside from swimming and eating on the cottages. Today, I was surprised when I compared the one in the past and the one I recently visited. There are Kayak boat rentals, parasailing, glass bottom boats to see the giant clams below and near Quezon Is., there is the new zipline adventure.


We can take all of this adventure Hundred Islands can give us if my Mom would let us. Sadly, it's a big NO.


On the kayak. Me on the violet with the shades on.




If there are many attractions, there are a lot of tourists going there. I remembered last 2007, eating at the beachfront is strictly imposed. Also the littering around cottages were prohibited. But this time, it's different. There are piles of waste on every corner of the cottages area. Despite the presence of Garbage bins, trashes are at the side of it. 


Useless bins.


On the way back


Yeah, I know you are excited to see the 100th island. I was excited to see that there too. Unfortunately, I can't show you the pic of the 100th island. Simply because it's too far.


But I've managed to snap the 124th island, the last island during low tide. At first I thought is was a shoal or an island with sands on it and a lagoon inside. But I was wrong when the driver of the banca ( I was told to call him driver instead of sailor or something, because he's steering on car wheels. Not boat wheel! ) told us that there is the last island.




The small bump near the center. Yes, that's it. The 124th island.


You only see this thing during low tide. Others don't see it because it's high tide or low tide but not this low. You only see the extreme tip when regular low tides. We are lucky this time. We've got  low-low tide!


Arriving at the Dock.


After a total of 16 minutes traveling going to the docks. We are on earth AGAIN. It was a lengthly trip because of "bow waves", waves that are coming towards the front of the banca. And also the wind. 


Arriving at the private dock. Steering thru 10 meter-high bamboo stick




After arriving Mom was headed to buy souvenirs. We are towards buying that can benefit our stomach. Ice Scramble and Kwek Kwek






And we love it! 











And that's it for the Hundred Islands adventure and the 124th island.


I realized, "why I included my whole trip when my title is only for the 124th island?"


Anyways, I hope you like it.


REMEMBER!


>Bring SUN BLOCK! And don't forget to USE it!
>Bring WATER
>also ICE BLOCK. We want ice cold drinks. Ice is available at the city proper. So buy one there before you go ahead. 50 pesos for 1/2 block.


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Posted in Manila


ORIGINAL TOPIC (c) 2011


ORIGINAL TOPIC (c) 2011 logo will be at the lowest part of the blog entry if that is an original text and picture from the author. Otherwise, if we copied a certain blog post from another blog, we will acknowledge the author of that post and post a direct link to the original one.