You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Here’s How to Charge your Electric Vehicle ‘E-nywhere’ in the Philippines at SM Supermalls



Above: SM rolls out
the biggest chain of E-Vehicle Charging Stations in the Philippines with over
27 malls nationwide. (Photo taken at SM
Mall of Asia, with a Porsche Taycan plugged in)





The shift from petrol to fully-electric vehicles is already beginning as more and more brands start to offer fully EVs in their lineups. The perks have never been better, too, as these cars are now exempted from number coding.

For those early adopters who are already enjoying the perks of owning an electric vehicle, SM Supermalls has an added treat. The mall chain has already rolled Electric Vehicle (EV) charging stations in multiple locations nationwide.

032423SMEVCharging2.jpg*The roll-out of* the mall’s EV Charging Stations is in line with SM’s Green Movement to reduce carbon footprint in the Philippines. SM encourages its mall goers to use an E-Vehicle when visiting its malls. (Photo taken at SM Southmall, with an Audi e-tron SUV plugged in.)

As the first mall brand to introduce the EV Charging Stations in parking areas, SM has expanded to 27 locations in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, offering the largest distribution of E-Vehicle Charging Stations in the Philippines. This is hoped to give shoppers and travelers an easy and convenient way to recharge their vehicles in an SM mall.

032423SMEVCharging8.jpg*SM City Baguio launches the fast charging station that could power up your vehicle in under an hour. Present in the launch were (from left): Michael Jason* Pena, and Engr. Marc Janssen Pe from SM City Baguio; Mr. Mike De Joya, President of Emicor Inc.; Dr. Pepita S. Picpican, Asst. Regional Director of the DOST; Engr. Doy Tabilog from the Baguio City Mayor’s Office; Domingo Gomez, Rona Vida Correa, and Jed Reyes of SM.

In line with SM’s Green Movement to help limit the carbon footprint in the Philippines, these charging stations encourage even more people to make the shift to sustainable mobility. By deploying charging stations in more SM malls throughout the country, owners of these vehicles will no longer have to contend with range anxiety or the fear of running out of battery before arriving at your destination.

032423SMEVCharging6.jpg*Car owners can* charge all the way in Visayas and Mindanao, with stations present in Cebu, Seaside City, CDO Updtown, CDO Downtown, and Lanang. (Photo taken at SM City Cebu with an Audi e-tron GT plugged in.)

When taking your electric vehicle around the city or even out of town, simply plan your trips around SM malls to be sure you’ll have a place to charge. Being available in South Luzon, North Luzon, Metro Manila, customers can enjoy a leisurely lunch in Sky Ranch Tagaytay and dessert all the way in SM City Baguio. The charging stations are also present in Cebu, Davao, CDO, and other convenient locations.

032423SMEVCharging5.jpg*Car drifter, Ashley Sison, happily tries out the EV Charging Station in SM City Clark.*

Each SM mall will have at least one Wallbox Pulsar Plus AC charger with a charging power of up to 7.4kW and a 5-meter integrated charging cable. These charging stations are compatible with all CCS Type 2 electrified cars currently being sold such as Audi e-tron sedan and SUV, all BYD EVs, BMW  iX and iX3, Chery Tiggo 8 PHEV, Hyundai Ioniq 5, Honqi E-HS9, Jaguar iPace, Kia EV6, Mercedes Benz EQC and EQS, Porsche Taycan, Volvo Twin Power (T8) models, Weltmeister W5, and Japanese vehicles like the Nissan Leaf and Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV. Car owners with other e-vehicles can also bring their Type 1 adaptors to plug into the Type 2 charger.

Charging is as easy as 1, 2, 3!
032423SMEVCharging4.jpg
Step 1: Remove the charger from the charging station. Most malls use the
Wallbox Type 2 Charger, but customers may also bring an adaptor for a Type 1
Charger. (Photo from SM City Sta. Rosa)

032423SMEVCharging7.jpg
Step 2: Plug the charger into the car
and wait for the indicator in the E-Vehicle to turn green. (Photo from SM Megamall)

032423SMEVCharging3.jpg*Step 3: Leave your car to charge for* FREE and enjoy the mall amenities, restaurants and leisure activities! (Photo from SM City BF)

The charging stations open when the mall opens, meaning they are operational from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Best of all, charging your electric-vehicle at SM is FREE. So plug in your vehicles and spend time at SM malls catching a movie, eating at a restaurant or shopping while your vehicle is charging. When you return, you can rest assured that you’ve added many more kilometers of driving to your battery.

032423SMEVCharging9.jpg*To encourage* more customers to change to E-Vehicles, SM gives dedicated parking at their EV Charging Stations and special deals for EV Owners through SMDeals.com. (Photo taken from SM City North EDSA with an Audi e-tron plugged in.)

To entice more car owners to join the green movement by switching to E-Vehicles, SM is also rewarding EV drivers with exclusive perks and discounts to enjoy while in the mall via SMDeals.com. Eager to start planning your next road trip with your electric vehicle? These are the SM malls where you can already charge your
electric vehicles.

Metro ManilaLuzonVisayasMindanao
SM North EdsaSM City BaguioSM City CebuSM City CDO Uptown
SM Mall of AsiaSM Center Tuguegarao DowntownSM Seaside City CebuSM CDO Downtown Premier
SM SouthmallSM City ClarkSM Lanang Premier
SM MegamallSM City Trece Martires
SM Aura PremierSM City Sta. Rosa
The PodiumSky Ranch Tagaytay
SM City ValenzuelaSM City Naga
SM City Grand Central
SM Fairview
SM Manila
SM City San Lazaro
SM Bicutan
SM BF
SM Marikina
SM Sta. Mesa

Thanks to SM’s initiative of deploying electric vehicle charging stations, car owners can charge e-nywhere and help save the earth! For more information, visit www.SMSupermalls.com or follow @SMSupermalls on Facebook, Instagram and Tiktok.

A call to serve on Araw ng Kagitingan

BY MANILA BULLETIN



E CARTOON APR 10, 2023 (1).jpg

What used to be commemorated as the Fall of Bataan is now observed as Araw ng Kagitingan or Day of Valor to honor the heroism of Filipinos who fought and died for their country and people. This year’s celebration was moved to Monday, April 10, as part of the government’s holiday economics program to incentivize Filipinos to help promote domestic tourism.

Last month, a unique image trended on Facebook and other social media platforms: Mt. Samat Cross in Bataan silhouetted by the setting sun as seen from Manila Bay.The snapshot of this natural phenomenon underlines the significance of Filipino heroism in the fields of battle.

Before its commemoration was modified, Day of Valor used to be observed as the Fall of Bataan. On April 9, 1942, the Japanese Imperial Army forced more than 76,000 soldiers (64,000 Filipinos, and 12,000 Americans) into the infamous Death march to Capas, Tarlac. According to historical accounts: “En route, thousands died from dehydration, heat prostration, untreated wounds, and wanton execution while walking in deep dust over vehicle-broken macadam roads, and crammed into rail cars for transport to captivity.”

The Mt. Samat Shrine, also known as Dambana ng Kagitingan or Shrine of Valor, is visible from across Manila Bay, because of its main feature, a 92-meter high cross that sits atop the 555-meter mountain in Pilar, Bataan. The cross was designed by National Artist for Sculpture Napoleon Abueva. On its bottom portion is Abueva’s Nabiag na Bato (literally, broken rocks) sculpture depicting Filipino heroes’ exploits dating back to Lapu-Lapu’s resistance to Magellan’s invasion, and the numerous revolts and insurrections during the Spanish and American colonial eras, and finally, the gallant stand of Filipino soldiers and guerillas in Bataan.

During the muted observance of the Philippine Quincentennial in 2021 that was dampened by the rampant coronavirus pandemic, a theme song entitled Bagani composed by Roel Rostata and performed by Anthony Castillo with the a capella group Pinopela, was chosen as the celebration’s official theme song.

‘Bagani’ is an indigenous word that refers to the peace-keeping force of native tribal warriors who defend their community, and protect the people’s lives as well as their properties. In the song’s lyrics, the Filipinos are branded as Bagani, not to engage in wars but to inspire them to be always of service to the community and country, even in small ways. Here are key excerpts:

“Tulungan ang kapwa’t bigyang halaga. Huwag hatakin nang pababa. Huwag sanang isipin ang sarili lamang/Pakisama’t bayanihan. Bagani ating lahi…Bayaning Filipino: Sa makabagong panahon, halina’t hawakan ang aking kamay. Sabay abutin natin ang tagumpay. Patuloy lang tayo sa pagpapanday. Tiwala sa Diyos ang sandata’t gabay.”

“Help and respect others. Don’t pull them down.  Look beyond yourself. Serve in the spirit of bayanihan. We are brave and we are peace-loving. Noble and heroic is our heritage. Now let’s join hands to reach the summit. We shall forge ahead with faith in God as our strength and guide.”

DEPARTING FOREIGN NATIONALS & FORMER FILIPINOS REGISTER HERE: E-TRAVEL


The ultimate purpose of our freedom




By Fr. Roy Cimagala *


MARY Magdalene, a big-sinner-turned-saint, teaches us a great lesson about freedom. And that is for us to realize that the ultimate purpose of our freedom is to look for Christ, for God, in everything we do and have in this world. In this life, we are always confronted with a choice—whether we want to be with God and or simply to be by ourselves. We have to make the proper choice. And that’s what our freedom is all about.


As the gospel narrates, (Jn 20,11-18) Mary Magdalene, despite the heavy load of her past, went early to the tomb of Christ and when she found it empty, chose to sit there weeping. She was bent in looking for Christ who gave her the greatest liberation from her dark past. And she was richly rewarded. She became one of the first, if not the very first, to see the resurrected Christ.


Many people, of course, have their own ideas of freedom. But if we really want to know what it is, where it can be found, how it should be exercised, etc., we have nothing to do other than to look at God who is the source and end of freedom. He is the one who gives the law proper to our use of freedom.


And what can we see in God with respect to freedom? The direct answer is that God did everything for us completely free, without any special reason, without any pressure. We can say that he did all those wonderful things for us because he just wants to. In our local lingo, he did them because “trip ko lang!”


What he did and continues to do to us can only be characterized as being completely free. It was pure grace, unadulterated gratuitousness. That in the end is what freedom is all about.


He created us freely. There was no necessity on his part to create us. But he did it just the same. He endowed us with the best things, such that we became his image and likeness, adopted children of his. There was no need for him to do that to us. But again, he did it just the same.


And even if we spoiled his original design for us by falling into sin, by going against his will which can only be good for us, he did not leave us and, instead, promised to redeem us. He would have lost nothing nor gained anything if he would have just allowed us to get lost. But, no, he preferred to save us.


There was no necessity for him to send his son who became man to redeem us. But he did it—completely freely. The son, Christ, did not have to offer his life on the cross to save us. There are many other ways to do that. But he chose it freely because it was the best way to save us, respecting our human nature that needs also to be responsible for our salvation.


He is willing to assume all our sins without committing sin. He offers us boundless mercy for the taking. He did all these completely freely, completely gratuitously. He actually gains nothing, but we gain everything if we follow him in living that kind of freedom.


We need to process these considerations of freedom slowly so as to reflect them little by little in our lives. It will take time and a lot of effort to imbibe this kind of freedom which can only be the genuine one. Outside of this, our idea of freedom can never be right. It can have some aspects of freedom, but not the whole, true one.


Again, the ultimate purpose of our freedom is to be with God! Let’s not waste it on other things which are meant only to bring us to God in the end.


* Chaplain Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City

Saturday, April 8, 2023

P5/kilo increase in rice price seen


By Janine Alexis Miguel

April 8, 2023 


THE retail price of rice could go up by P5 a kilo in the next few weeks because of a lower import volume and high farm production costs, the Department of Agriculture (DA) has projected.


DA deputy spokesman Rex Estoperez said in a briefing Thursday he is hoping the price increase will not be as high as forecast since the government has stepped in.


The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) has reported that a kilo of well-milled rice was selling at between 19 centavos and P2.13 higher in six trading centers toward the end of last March.


Last year, rice imports reached 3.7 million metric tons (MMT), almost 1 MMT higher than the 2.77 MMT last year, making the Philippines the world's second biggest rice importer.


But according to the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI), the volume of imported rice fell 16.20 percent year on year, translating to 3.6 MMT as of last March.


Estoperez is puzzled why rice inventories have dropped despite the increase in rice imports from the previous year.


"We are also wondering why, because we had imports of 3.8 million metric tons last year. What happened to those stocks?" Estoperez said.


Chief economist of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Michael Ricafort attributed the lower inventory to the rising price of the staple in the world market.


Ricafort predicts that "for the coming months, better weather conditions into the dry or summer season would help increase planting, harvests, and supplies of rice."


He also said the one-year extension of lower tariffs for rice, corn, and other agricultural products could help boost local supplies and help bring down prices.


Last month, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said his campaign promise of rice sold at P20 per kilo will soon become a reality.


He said that rice was already down to P25 a kilo.

Red tide warning up in 5 coastal areas


By Janine Alexis Miguel

April 8, 2023 


SHELLFISH and acetes shrimp or "alamang" collected from the coastal areas in Bohol, Samar, Surigao del Sur and Zamboanga del Sur have tested positive for red tide toxins.


The Department of Agriculture-Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (DA-BFAR) released a bulletin which showed that samples gathered from Daquis and Tagbilaran City in Bohol, San Pedro Bay in Samar, Dumanquillas Bay in Zamboanga del Sur, and Lianga Bay in Surigao del Sur are positive for paralytic shellfish poison (PSP) and are not safe for human consumption.


Based on the BFAR's administrative order on safety and quality control standards for PSP, the maximum regulatory limit of toxins is 60 micrograms for every 100 grams of shellfish meat for both domestic and foreign markets.


According to BFAR, shellfish are particularly prone to toxin contamination as they feed by filtering microscopic food out of the water.


"Eating distressed or dead fish and other aquatic animals in areas affected by red tide is discouraged because the reason for the animal's strange behavior or death cannot be absolutely known," the fisheries bureau said.


DA-BFAR, meanwhile, noted that fishes, squids, shrimps, and crabs from the mentioned areas are safe to consume, "provided that they are fresh and washed thoroughly, and internal organs such as gills and intestines are removed before cooking."


The red tide phenomenon is caused by a bloom of algae that produce toxins that make shellfish dangerous to eat and make the water red.


The bureau also released a warning against buying, selling, catching, and eating of shellfish from the said areas as red tide could cause headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, tingling sensation on lips and tongue, and in extreme cases, could lead to death.


Shellfish that are unsafe to eat from red tide-affected coastal areas include clams, cockles, oyster, mussels and scallops.

Foreigners 1st Holy Week In The Philippines UNBELIEVABLE!




AIRLINE ADVISORIES & 5 NEW FEATURES of E-TRAVEL for DEPARTING PAX | PHILIPPINEN




Rebirth of music and culture: Manila Cathedral to host historical Easter concert


Facade of the Manila Cathedral in this photo posted on its Facebook page on Feb. 7, 2023 (themanilacathedral/Facebook)

Catholics can experience a historical moment at the Premier Church of the Philippines as it is set to host the first youth orchestra endorsed to perform a concert on its site.

The Philippine Suzuki Youth Orchestra (PSYO) will take center stage on April 13, 6:30 p.m. inside one of Manila’s most iconic and blessed locations — the Minor Basilica of the Immaculate Concepcion Manila Metropolitan Cathedral.

They will perform a special Easter concert called “Risen” on the eve of the installation of Msgr. Rolando R. dela Cruz as Manila Cathedral’s new Rector. 

The installation ceremony will be presided over by Manila Archbishop Jose Cardinal Advincula. 

PSYO is a training orchestra for young string instrumentalists aged nine and above. It has a wide repertoire that includes favorite pieces from the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic periods, as well as hits from contemporary music.

The Easter concert will bring together some of the most talented young musicians in the country to perform a selection of timeless classics and create their versions of “old” sounds, from pipe organ music to vocals and string orchestral music.

Concertmaster Theodore Julius Tan, the first-prize winner of the National Music Competitions for Young Artists Foundation in 2022, will lead them as they perform Mozart pieces and other familiar staples of the classical repertoire by Bach and Handel.

The concert will also feature special performances by PSYO’s principal musicians, the Spectrum Cello Quartet, and young vocalist Jamie Rose Ong.

Early concertgoers will additionally have the privilege to be serenaded by the orchestra’s pianists through pipe organ music as they enter the Manila Cathedral.

The upcoming concert seeks to honor dela Cruz’s vision for the premier basilica — that it would become not only a place of worship, but a center of music and culture as it brings more people into its walls with beautiful melodies and inspirational performances from world-class musicians.

“Music has always been an integral part of our faith,” he said.

“It is my vision to create a vibrant cultural atmosphere in our church where young minds can come together to appreciate music and faith,” dela Cruz added.

The upcoming Rector said that the music of the young talented musicians will take the public “on a journey of hope, renewal, and joy.”

Those interested to watch the youth orchestra perform may inquire about tickets by messaging 0906-431-1407 on Viber.

They can also read the following guidelines on this website link or scan the event QR code found at the bottom of the Facebook post of the Manila Cathedral below.

The PSYO was launched in 2011 and has evolved from a small children’s ensemble into a training string orchestra with an eclectic repertoire that includes favorite pieces from different musical periods.

Under the baton of Herrick Ortiz of the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra, the group provides a platform for violinists, violists, and cellists as young as nine to develop musical brilliance through group instruction.