q-adventures

View all posts

26 comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • 5 million small tribes actually makes sense in a country of 110 million people.
    When I learned how tribal roots run deeper than all the nonsense brought to them by foreign religion, it all made sense how they live.
    Michael Jordan is a knowledgeable guy!

    • Not make sense, a tribe with about 20 persons is very small it’s more a complete family and several of these families are a tribe.
      There are One hundred Ten (110) major Indigenous groups in the Philippines. Most of the Indigenous Peoples depend on traditional swidden agriculture utilizing available upland areas.

  • Interesting video. An accurate census has never been done, but from surveys done, generous estimates put somewhere from 10-20% of the population belong to the different tribes of the Phillipines (110 different ethno linguistic tribes). Between 14-17 million people. That’s pretty high.
    If they can prove they can sustainably fish their river, I’m pretty sure they would qualify for free water use permits to build a fish wheel. Besides the wait time, the hardest thing is to make sure you don’t overfish. They are banned here in all but Alaska because they work too well. It’s not hard to not overfish, just throw back the juveniles or make mesh big enough to only collect larger sizes. If you get an engineer or two involved, you can make all sorts of use out of a waterwheel. Pretty much free energy besides initial cost and upkeep. With the energy instability over there the government might actually.jump at the chance to let them build a hydro electric generator.

    • That’s a great perspective for someone limited like myself. Maybe that’s the way I can get involved. The Tribal people (from my observation only) is consumed with their own survival and probably don’t have the funds to hire engineers or even crossed their mind.

    • @qadventures  The wheel itself is fairly simple and can be replicated with no previous knowledge just from watching one in action. I’ve seen a Scandinavian guy use one as his clothes washer, and he eventually turned it into a power hammer. Sky’s the limit. It’s ancient technology, lost to time. I only ran across it watching perpetual machines videos, but the stream near me isn’t big enough to tap into. I do have to stress how well they work, though. It can easily overfish a river, so an effort has to be made to keep the spawning population up. Don’t be greedy and it’s free fish and more

  • It’s amazing to learn how we are all connected to the earth and each other as a human race.👍🙏😀😇

  • Again a lovely video. Are you ever planing to go back to Vietnam and visit the place you where born? Have seen video about other refugees from Laos and Vietnam who have stay in USA but went back to there home town. Have Aeta tribe connection with Papua or Aborigines people? because they look the same at some point

    • I’ve been many times before covid, but I only started to document things this time around. I will take Ai there and around Adia shortly

  • There are One hundred Ten (110) major Indigenous groups in the Philippines. Most of the Indigenous Peoples depend on traditional swidden agriculture utilizing available upland areas….not 5 million

  • W0W, WHERE DID YOU FIND THESE AMAZING PEOPLE,, ISLAND AND PROVINCE.
    I HAVE FRIENDS OF THE T’BOLI TRIBE IN MINDANAO MOUNTAINS. I THINK THESE GUYS LIKE AMERICA

    • This specific group is in the Subic Bay and Olongapo, Luzon area. I also see many of these tribes towards the foothills of Mt Pinatobu

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel
Christian Filipina

July 2024 | @Wise

Miss Filipina Beauty Miss Filipina Beauty
Book Your Flight
Things to do in the Philippines
Book Your Hotel
Book Your Adventure
Book Your Travel Insurance
Your Adventure Gear
Record Your Adventure
Christian Filipina

Want Flight, Hotel, and Restaurant Discounts for Your Philippines Trip? Join Below!

Things to do in the Philippines
Donate