From Taongbato's fieldnotes: Images from 2006 Luzon GPS Fieldwork
Southern Luzon
Nov. 30, 2006 at 3 pm. CASIFMAS (Camarines Sur Institute of Fisheries and Marine Sciences) dormitory in Pasacao. Second day of their GPS fieldwork. It was still 3 pm yet it was already pitch dark outside as it was at the height of the typhoon Reming. At 9 am earlier that day the super typhoon, which had sustained winds of 190 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 225 kph, made a landfall in Virac, Catanduanes. It was expected to move north-northwest, towards Quezon Province, then to Metro Manila. It changed its course however and moved towards west, sparing Metro Manila, but placing Camarines Sur, including Pasacao, on its path.
Taongbato and his two colleagues started to feel the onslaught of the typhoon at around 12 noon, but it was not until 2 pm that they experienced the brunt of its force as it pummeled Pasacao and nearby places. At around 4 pm, there was a brief lull for about thirty minutes, when the "eye" passed over them. Shortly after, it regained its strength, stronger than before. The pressure was so strong that their ears got blocked, as if they were in a plane moments after its takeoff. They could hear the howling of the winds and the sounds of crashing trees and branches outside. This lasted until midnight.
Dec. 1, 2006. The Day After. Uprooted trees everywhere.
Dec. 01, 2006. The Day After. Electric posts were thrown all over, some houses crumbled like deck of cards. A NAPOCOR transmission tower along the national highway 'wilted' like dying plant.
Northern LuzonDec. 6, 2006. On their way to Pangasinan, Taongbato and his colleagues witnessed a road accident. A tricycle driver from the opposite of their lane made a sudden U-turn, and was bumped by the car ahead of them. They actually saw the driver on air as he was being thrown out a few meters away from the tricyle he was driving. They thought that was the end of him.
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