The Philippines as a Water Country: Implications for Physical Planning
--> In a country of thousand islands, you’ll have water: tons and tons of it. If all this water isn’t stocked, used, harnessed and conserved, you’ll have problems: more tons and tons of it, as in floods, or so few tons of it, as in drought. The recent history of the Philippines is an exciting tale of the power and terror of water. My ancestral home stands next to a creek, which during heavy rains overflows its banks and floods a “delta” that it forms with the Danio branch of the San Francisco River. This delta, which is actually a flood plain for both creek and river, was once a lush greenland of wild fruits and trees, and nesting ground for wild birds and reptiles (it was near the water, after all). Fortunately for our home, it stands on the left bank of the creek, which from its channel bed slopes steeply upwards, so that the rising floodwaters are pushed back to the delta, which results in its annual flooding and submergence. That there is no limit to the rapacity