Masskara Day, and we went away - to Silay!
Ah, we just took a jeep going Silay. I told the group that I’d been there once before and it was just a few kilometers away. Some 10 to 15 kms, I imagined. There were too many jeeps plying the route anyway, so everyone was jolly willing to hop on a jeep. Mind you, near as it is, Silay is not the next city north of Bacolod. There is Talisay City in between. And we enjoyed the ride to Silay. Jeeps were going fast amidst sugarcane fields without much traffic. And voila, off the jeep we were awe struck at the sights. Where we got off wre a neighborhood of old houses, and across them, a park and Silay’s big lovely church. Picturesque. The façade looks enormously better than Bacolod’s cathedral, I must insist. The side entrance to this church that leads to the highway even has a covered walkway. Yes, roofed! Could have easily been an eyesore, but this walkway is amidst the parking lot and a lovely crowd of kalachuchi trees. So, still beautiful!
From the city hall, our next target was the Balay Negrense. Yep, the Victor Gaston Ancestral House and that was my suggestion hehe. I said we could walk to it as I remembered it was just about 2 corners from the city hall but our friend from Bago City said we better take a trike. On arrival at the ancestral house’s gate, most of our companions were wearing a half-smile half-smirk asking “we’re here? ang lapit nun ah”?! And I said “ganyan talaga mga Ilongga, maaarte, ayaw maglakad”! As we laughed, our dear little sistah from Bago tried to justify that saying we should not walk under a very hot noontime sun. We looked and it was already 1:31PM. Point taken hehe! And we roamed the Balay Negrense. Next time we looked, it was already 3:02PM? Why did we take that long in that house? Because there are too many things to see and the “curator” gladly answered every question we had and explained everything about the house and its displays. Like what? Am not telling. Go there and see for yourself hehe!We hurried out to the street for a trike to get us to our next stop, the bakery. But one of us shrieked asking “are we going home now? how about the other ancestral houses?”. Well, one companion explained that we were out of time but I had a better idea… I requested the manong trike driver to cruise along the streets were those ancestral houses were before finally dropping us at the bakery. Thus, though we never had a chance to visit each one, we were a chorus of oohs and aahs inside the tricycle as we passed by them houses like the Hofilena House, Green House, Pink House, Montelibano and finally El Ideal Bakery.
Then we rushed back to Bacolod. The Masskara parade, yes, OMG, the Masskara Parade! Argh!
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