I HAVE BEEN CLIMBING MOUNTAINS and
hilly regions in the ‘80s here in my country but I do not consider myself a
mountaineer. I do not know then that mountaineering clubs were already existing
as early as 1970 and these guys have challenged and assaulted remote and
difficult mountain ranges. You only know of this from tidbits of information
from newspapers and from monthly leisure magazines, usually already so
outdated. News travel so slow on those long forgotten era. Pre-Cambrian times.
When mountaineering became popular
in the ‘90s, the University of the Philippines Mountaineers formulated the
creation of the Basic Mountaineering Course (BMC) as a prerequisite for
induction of members into their organization. Later on, it was adopted and
shared to the different mountaineering clubs and the National Mountaineering
Federation of the Philippines, the forerunner of the MFPI. Before or during
that time, I was now a member of the Cebu Mountaineering Society and I have not
heard of that. News does travel slow in that era. Jurassic times.
Fast forward to Facebook era.
People flock to the mountains because their friends posted their exploits in
social media and these places are now very accessible because it was pioneered
by earlier mountaineers. While it may be good for local tourism, practicing the
finer ways of engaging in leisure activities on the mountains are simply
lacking and needs proper guidance and education. You see this all the time in
social media: accidents, wrong attire, getting lost, rescued, retrieved, hiking
on the wrong time, grassfires, unpreparedness, ignorance, garbage here, garbage
there, garbage everywhere.
While the main purpose of the BMC
before was more on preparedness, health and safety but, this time, the
mountaineering community needed to protect the very playgrounds from these
hordes of uneducated individuals. And so it became mandatory – with greater
emphasis – to inculcate the Principles of the Leave No Trace to the new
mountaineers as a side dish to the BMC. No, make that both the main menu. You
would have to swallow both as a personal advocacy. It does not stop from there.
You will ride the social media phenomena and educate people through there. Not
by bashing but by intellect.
People, clubs, organizers and even
government agencies are working against time in the hope of reversing a
dangerous trend that social media unintentionally provided to a lot of people.
One of these organizations is the Climbers League for Ideal Mountaineering and
Balanced Environmental Responsiveness or simply known as CLIMBER. It is not a
mountaineering club but an advocacy of long-time friends who would like to make
the outdoors enjoyable and safe. They are based in the National Capital Region
but they could be requested to teach and share BMC and LNT to the rest of the
country.
Last July 22 and 23, 2017, CLIMBER
came down to Cebu City to bring their knowledge and their resource speakers to
educate members of a newly-established mountaineering club of Shearwater
Health, a business-process outsourcing company based in the Cebu Business Park.
CLIMBER, for most of the time, organize their own BMC in locations around NCR
but, sometimes, on a few occasions, conduct BMC and other training on request
just like they did in Romblon last 2016. Their instructors are some of the best
in their own fields. Let us name them one by one:
Regie Pablo. He needs no
introduction. Everybody knows who he is. For those who do not know it yet, he
is the fourth Filipino to scale Mount Everest. He did it on May 16, 2007 and
lost the endmost joint of a thumb for his effort, through frostbite. He is also
recognized as the one who inspired the mountaineering community to form the
Philippine Everest Expedition Team so it could place our country’s flag on top
of the highest peak on Earth, which we did in 2006. He will be handling
Introduction to High Altitude Mountaineering.
Erick Suliguin. A product of the
earliest BMC batch of CLIMBER, went on to seriously pursue advanced learning in
LNT at its Center of Education in the USA and came back to transform CLIMBER
into a very credible outdoors learning institution. He is a holder of the LNT
Master Educator, a distinction of being the only one among three Filipinos who
has this learning to teach LNT here, the two being US-based. His presentation
would touch on the Principles of LNT.
Ronald “Fabs” Fabon. One of the most
versatile resource speakers for CLIMBER. He could discuss anything relating to
mountaineering and the outdoors. His long experience and wide array of skills
made him very valuable to the mountaineering community. He had sharpened those
skills when he was then a member of the MFPI Educational Committee. He would
touch on many topics for this BMC and it is about Planning and Preparation, Gear
and Equipment, Map Reading, and Knot Tying.
Ramon “Jay Z” Jorge. With CLIMBER
from the very start of its inception. Currently is the administrator of their
social media pages and also handles their marketing thrusts. While he has
undergone many training, people here in Cebu remembered him only as a
participant of the Philippine Independence Bushcraft Camp in 2012. His pioneering
inclusion of survival as a subject in a BMC was revolutionary. He will be
discussing Introduction to Survival.
The Boy Scouts Camp in Kalunasan
was chosen as the venue. I happened to be there to support CLIMBER, along with
the Camp Red Bushcraft and Survival Guild. There were eleven participants from
Shearwater Health and they were augmented by people from Camp Red, to include
me. I have never sat in a BMC before and I have no certificate to show that I
have participated in one. Maybe this time I will have one to attach and show in
my curriculum vitae.
In case you might know, this is one
of the ironies of my life because I am often invited as a resource speaker in
many BMCs for topics which are not found in their regular lectures. By the way,
all the things my peers and I did during those Jurassic times were just common
sense and it found its way in the pages of the BMC. I heard it many times from
different resource speakers of many BMCs I have been in to. I learned these
rudiments informally, long before it was called a BMC, and the CLIMBER event
would just formally place an icing on my cake.
After singing the National Anthem
before the Philippine Flag, Jay Z opened the BMC to the participants on the
first day, July 22. For a whole day, Fabs began his topics from the pre-climb
meeting to choosing equipment to pacing to navigation. After dinner, Regie
talked about his experience with the Philippine Everest Expedition Team which
brought him to snowy regions, training and acclimatizing himself for the big
day in 2006. His success came in 2007 and he did it alone. So ended the first
day.
Giving Regie support is his closest
friend and fellow Everest expedition team member, Larry “Hillboy” Honoridez,
who came while he was in the middle of his topic. Regie and Hillboy talked
about old times. Joining him in their circle were Jay Z, Erick, Fabs, Billy
Anciro, Randy Salazar, Jonathaniel Apurado and me. The festive company ended
only after the first few hours of the next day. I stayed with the participants
in the BSP Camp and slept in my hammock.
The second day, July 23, started
after breakfast. Fabs began the part about knot-tying and ropework and
culminated with the part about the post-climb meeting. After lunch, Erick took
up the cudgels and discussed LNT for a whole afternoon. After dinner, and not
part of the program, I found myself talking about the Cebu Highlands Trail so
as to inspire the participants. Then Jay Z gets his turn exposing the
participants to a survival mindset.
The BMC that CLIMBER introduced to
Cebu was the 19th one ever since they existed in 2015 and the first one that I
attended as a participant. CLIMBER has taken the right advocacy: Outdoors
Education. With their effort, they were able to educate a lot of people
relating to the different outdoor hobbies, most notably, of mountaineering. The
mountains possess a different environment and unpredictable weather patterns.
The BMC guides you to enjoy and cherish these places safely and help in the conservation efforts thru LNT.
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2 comments:
Funny, Sheila and I have never undergone any formal BMC. Hehehe!
There will be betting on which club BMC you would join. Hahaha...
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