Archive for the ‘Living’ Category

Garden of interesting shapes and sizes

Garden of interesting shapes and sizes

Posted by Wired Philippines filed under Living with No Comments

Bobby Gopiao’s landscaped space explodes with herbaceous tropical plants and lush bonsais TO LANDSCAPE ARTIST Roberto Panlilio Gopiao, a garden possesses style if it expresses the personality of the owner, otherwise, it’s just a flourish.

Inheriting his being a plantsman from his mother, Gopiao has done exquisite effects in the many landscapes, both public and private. He has an eye for mixing contrasting textures and proportions, the result of his passion for art collecting and long kinship with plants.

Herbaceous tropical plants explode out of beds around his Quezon City house, as do lush bonsais bursting from their trays. Planting giant bromeliads between golden palms and ferns produce a stylish effect.

A variety of towering palms—10-foot high travelers’ palms, 20-foot high Madagascars, Washingtonia and 10-foot high rhapis grow against the perimeter of the lot.

A giant calathea with lush foliate, 10-tree ferns, plumerias with white flowers and imported cycads line up against the back wall to catch the morning sun. These tall trees preserve the ambiance by blocking neighboring eyesores. A variety of ferns and cycads frame a natural waterfall whose sounds produce a calming effect.

The plantings along the garden are arranged according to the various growing conditions they thrive in. For instance, miagos, peacock ferns and slim bamboos are cultivated on the sides since they don’t need as much sunlight. Gopiao explains that aside from the plants’ varying needs for sunlight, they are composed in terms of color, shape and texture.

Tall plants provide shade for the shorter plants which serve as shrubs or ground cover.

“These kinds of massing create layers of interest, resulting in a depth of space,” says Gopiao. “There’s really no particular pattern. I put a dash of color.”

He cites the example of the sculptural bromeliads, juxtaposed with the flowering pink medinilla magnificas, set against background of threading red vines.

Eclectic

Although the garden is tropical, its accent pieces, culled from his collection, suggest eclecticism. Since Asian gardens are mostly green, one is awakened by a red, pagoda-like gazebo.

“The inside is a tropical themed seating area made interesting by the mix of heirloom rice containers, a dapilan (molave sugar grinder), Maranao brass gadurs and a T’boli belt,” he says.

Groupings of plams, bird’s nest ferns, bromeliads and wide-leafed alocasias blend with Gopiao’s collection of stone implements such as sugar grinders, stone mortars, antique piedra china and Chinese martaban jars.

In fact, the roughness and massiveness of the grinding stone from Pampanga, seven feet in diameter, provides a striking contrast against the fine lines of the brightly-painted gazebo. Lusong from Laguna are unique to his place. Water plants and ficuses float on these terra cotta water vessels. Oriental stone sculptures enhance the Asian feel to his place.

True to his fondness for interesting shapes, Gopiao created a corner furnished with vintage Eero Saarinen Tulip chairs which adds a modern but quirky touch to the garden.

A pocket garden in front of the house serves as a living artwork on which one gaze upon. Japanese in feel, it is lined with grey kodo stones and Chinese limestones that lead to a granite Japanese pagoda. Podocarpuses, kamuning, and miagos cover the boundary of the garden.

Gopiao’s cherished collection of tropical bonsai trees are set on massive piedra china blocks atop a carpet of Kyoto grass. In Japan he won awards for his best bonsai, among them the pemphis acidula or bantigue done in a cascading style back in 2006.

“The feeling is more Zen-like because it houses the all-important trees such as an 80-year-old fruiting crab apple, a 40-year-old bignay and a bougainville done in a cascading style, with salmon-colored flowers,” he says.

In keeping his garden lush, Gopiao merely follows the natural discipline of constant pruning, fertilization and watering. Ultimately he says, “I want things to look very natural, nothing contrived.”

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Living as if they had only one day left

Living as if they had only one day left

Posted by Wired Philippines filed under Living with No Comments

Christopher Gamez, 25, and a master skydiver floated thousands of feet above South Padre Island’s Coca Cola

(CNN) — “Don’t close your eyes, don’t close your eyes,” a terrified Christopher Gamez chanted as he coasted 7,000 feet above South Padre Island, Texas, his heart racing.

One by one, Gamez watched as three people were “sucked” out of the plane and whipped violently into the thrashing winds and mist. “Just put your head back and breathe,” he told himself, seconds before joining the others.

But why would someone with a severe fear of heights willingly plummet from the sky? To cross “skydiving” off his mental bucket list, of course.

Gamez was inspired to dream up his list of goals after watching MTV’s “The Buried Life”, a reality TV show about four friends who set out to accomplish the tasks on their joint bucket list.

The show, which wrapped its first season in March, has motivated many young adults to create such lists right now, rather than waiting until they’re about to “kick the bucket” like Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman’s terminally ill characters in “The Bucket List” or Queen Latifah’s supposedly terminally ill character in “Last Holiday.”

Gamez said he tuned in every week, but he knew he wanted to live his own version of “The Buried Life” five minutes in to the first episode.

“If you had one day to live, what would you do?” a voice asks viewers during the show’s opening credits. “Would you climb a mountain? Would you kiss the girl of your dreams? Would you tell someone how you feel? Now, if you had a whole lifetime to live, would you lose that drive, or would your list just keep getting longer?”

“[The guys on the show] inspired me and they pushed me to [go skydiving],” he said. “To see them go out with no fear and do the things they wanted to do — it made me want to do those things, too.”

The show’s title was inspired by a 19th century Matthew Arnold poem by the same name.

The stars on the show — Ben, Dave, Duncan and Jonnie — decided “The Buried Life” summed up their concerns about getting bogged down with daily routine and losing their passion for life.

“What do you want to do before you die?” became the premise for their new lifestyle and, eventually, the MTV series that allowed them to cross Number 53 off their bucket list: “Make a badass TV show.”

That list is under their control.

“What they do and how they do it and who they contact and help — that’s their decision,” said Brent Haynes, a senior vice president at MTV, who first realized the project’s potential when he saw footage of the guys sneaking into the Video Music Awards to walk the red carpet.

Rather than arresting them, we gave them a TV show, Haynes joked.

Others like the guys’ ideas.

“The more I watch ‘The Buried Life’ and the more I’ve seen them experience things, the more I’ve wanted to do it,” Megan Fulton said.

The 18-year-old Emory University student said she appreciates what the guys stand for.

In 2008, Fulton’s friend died about three days after being diagnosed with an infection. The loss prompted Fulton and her friends to create a bucket list made up of kind gestures, long-term goals, personal achievements and travel destinations.

Some of the items, like pay for someone’s groceries and adopt a dog from a shelter, were crossed off rather quickly, she said. But goals like start a flash mob, travel to Lebanon — from where Fulton and her sister were adopted — and overcome her crippling stage fright, will be more difficult to accomplish.

“If they can take part in a Krump [dance] competition, I think I can get up and say a few lines in front of people,” she said. “They’ve really helped me and they don’t even know it.”

One of Fulton’s favorite aspects of the show is that every time the cast members cross something off their bucket list, they help a stranger accomplish one of his or her own goals. For example, in the series finale, the guys help a young man who was adopted at birth find his biological father. Because Fulton was adopted, the episode meant a lot to her, she said.

“You can actually care about people and still be cool,” Fulton said. “[It's] a good trend to have caught on.”

Just one bucket list wasn’t enough for 21-year-old Kevin Cheaney. The Michigan State University student wrote two — one for specific goals he wanted to accomplish during 2010 and one for long-term goals.

Like Fulton, Cheaney was inspired to write a bucket list after his friend died suddenly in a motorcycle accident last summer.

“It opened up my eyes,” he said. “Life is kind of short.”

Though Cheaney hasn’t yet found the time to be someone’s hero, save someone’s life or race Germany’s legendary Nürburgring track, just writing the lists is an accomplishment, he said.

“A lot of these things, like taking more pictures and visiting old friends, aren’t going to be difficult,” Cheaney said. “They’re just going to improve me as a person and make me appreciate life more and really enjoy it to the max.”

Celestine Chua, who has never seen the TV series, came across the bucket list concept while surfing the Internet in 2009.

The 25-year-old from Singapore eventually decided to write her own bucket list, which she shares with the public on her Web site as a reminder to “live every moment to the fullest when you’re in good health.”

Despite already opening her own school for personal development in Singapore and starting an online talk show, Chua said she thinks No. 14, “experience true love,” will be the most challenging goal to accomplish.

“You might think [a bucket list is] just a list of goals, but if you’re really thinking about things you want to see, experience and feel before you die, then the whole concept of setting goals is totally different,” Chua said. “When we start thinking about what we want to do before we die, our goals become totally different. Fall in love, see the Empire State building. That’s the magic of the bucket list — it removes limits.”

Gamez agrees. That’s why he’s not ending his “buried life” with skydiving, which he said he would do again in a heartbeat, by the way.

Bungee jumping and riding a bull are next.

“I’m hooked,” he said.

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