La Golondrina, the Grandest Kite of All
By Dr. Abe V. Rotor
Kites always
fascinate me, thanks to Manong Bansiong, nephew of Basang my auntie-yaya. He made the most beautiful, often the biggest
kite in town. His name was very popular,
especially to us kids in our time.
Remote and small a town San Vicente is, we had the reputation in the
neighboring towns for our best kites, best pieces of furniture and wooden
saints.
Manong Bansiong made different kites: sinang
gola, agila, kayyang, golondrina –
in the likes of bull, bird with outstretched wings, maiden in colorful, flowing
dress, and many other designs. His kites
were known for their strength, stability, beauty, and height in the sky. In competitions he would always bring home
the trophy, so to speak.
“Can you make me a La Golondrina?” I
found myself asking Manong Bansiong one afternoon.
As a child, I love to watch swallows in flight. And there is something special about them because I discovered their nesting ground in Caniao, the source of water for our faucet. Caniao is a spring on the edge of Cordillera facing the
Actually La Golondrina is a difficult
design of a kite to make. But Manang Basiong was a real expert. He won’t back out at any kind of kite
especially if it is for a kite flying contest. He always wanted his kite to
win.
“When will the contest be?” He asked in
our dialect.
With that statement and a kindly smile I
knew Manong Bansiong would make me one. “Yehay!” I could not help keep it a
secret, especially to my classmates.
The day of the contest came. There were
many kites from our town and nearby
towns. Vigan, the capital of the province had the most entries and the biggest
kites at that. When I saw kites with designs of castle, airplane, and dragon,
my confidence sagged a little. These kites were huge and colorful, and they
dominated the sky.
Manong Bansiong and I were the next to
fly our kite. La Golondrina indeed was
unique. She was not really very big. I
asked my brother Eugene to help me carry her across the field while Manong
Bansiong held the string at the other end.
“Farther … some more,” he signaled.
“Stop.” He paused and whistled with
friendly notes calling for the wind to come.
It is a technique in kite flying.
Release the kite at the moment a strong breeze comes. We waited for the precious wind.
Then it came. It was a gust that came from the North. It is called Siberian High, the wind that
brings in the chills in October, lasting until the end of the Christmas
Season. It is the wind of Amihan, the
season we harvest our ricefields, when the grains have turned to gold in the
sun. It is the season farmers build
haystacks (mandala) that look like giant mushrooms. But to us kids, Amihan is
the season of kite flying. It is a
season of games and laughter in the field.
“Steady now,” Manong Bansiong shouted,
and Eugene and I raised La Golondrina up and waited for the signal. “Now!”
We tossed her up and there she soared above our heads, above the nearby
trees, above the church steeple. Our town mates and my classmates rallied. They
followed her ascent, and clapped, coaching her to the top of their voices. “Up, up. Go up some more! More! More!” She mingled with the other kites, bowing here
and there, and sometimes flying close to the castle or dragon, and to the
airplane kite in some kind of courteous greeting.
Manong Bansiong let the string glide on
his hand. It made a crispy whistling
sound as the kite continued to rise. Now
it was higher than any of the kites. It
appeared as if it were the smallest of them, and one won’t recognize her if he did not see
her first on the ground Beyond lies the blue Cordillera the home where this beautiful
bird. I could see Caniao in the back of
my mind. There in the blue sky she
hovered steadily, like the lord of the sky.
I wondered at how she looked at us down below. I had not flown on an airplane yet. I just imagined we were also just specks on
the ground, and if my T-shirt were not red, she would most likely mistake me for
any spectator.
Then the unexpected happened. The string broke! La Golondrina was adrift.
She was flying free, and she was not coming down. Instead she went farther up riding on some
wind current. Everyone was silent. All
eyes were focused on the ill-fated kite. Soon it was but a dot in the sky. No one could tell what was going to happen to
her.
Manong
Bansiong rolled the remaining string back into its cage. “She didn’t get much string.” He
muttered. My first impulse was to run to
where she would most likely land. “No,”
he said, catching me on the shoulder, even if most of the children had gone for
the chase.
I remained dumbfounded, staring agape at
the wide, wide sky. Time stood still.
There was a deafening silence. Nothing seemed to move. Not even the kites.
La
Golondrina was swallowed up by a dark cloud and the cloud was heading for the
mountains, as it often does, momentarily becoming part of its top like a veil
or a blanket. In the Amihan season the cloud is thin and high because the wind
is cool and dry. It is also time for birds in the North to go down South, and
return in the dry season, but for birds of
La Golondrina’s kind, it is time to go home to nest and rear their
young.
With that thought, I said, “She’s going
home.” Manong Bansiong nodded in
submission to the fate of his masterpiece. Eugene had just come back panting, brushing
away weeds and dusts. He had given up
the chase together with our town mates. Everyone talked about how they crossed
the fields, climbed over fences, forge streams and even climbed trees to get
better view of the route of the lost kite.
No one reached where La Golondrina
landed.
We soon forgot all about the contest as
we sadly prepared to go home. The plaza was empty now. It was already dark.
That night I dreamt I found La Golondrina
in Caniao, hanging on a branch where I once saw her as a bird. How different
she was as the once beautiful La
Golondrina.
Manong Bansiong did not make kites
anymore since then. But because of him I became a kite maker, too.
But time has changed. Kite flying has
become an endangered art. Kids are more interested with other playthings. They
would rather stay indoor in front of the TV and the Computer. And they seem to
be more serious in their studies than we were then. They seldom go out to the
fields. Rivers and forests to them are
full of danger. No, their parents won’t
allow them to go to these places. In fact many of them have moved to the city.
And flying kites in open spaces, is very dangerous, what if the string touches
a live wire!
It
consoles me to see a kite flying around, whether it is made of simple T-frame
or plastic. Or one made in China .
How different kites are today from the kites we had before - skillfully crafted
bamboo frame covered with colorful delicate papel de Japon, and bearing
the imprimatur of the expert maker.
When
I had grown old as Manong Bansiong was then, I made kites for children. Of
course, I am not as good as him. When
Leo Carlo, my youngest son, took part in kite flying at the University of Santo Tomas ,
I helped him re-create La Golondrina. It was turning back the hands of time. He
carried her across the football field with Marlo, his brother helping him, and
I, at the other end, held the string. We waited for the old friendly wind.
Then it came, it came all the way from the
North, and La Golondrina rode on it, flew above our heads, above the trees,
above the grandstand and the chapel and the tall buildings, and up into the
blue sky.
La Golondrina is the grandest kite of
all. x x x
Kite-Flying Free
By Dr. Abe V. Rotor
If freedom were kites flying
And clouds in summer free;
Lilting sounds across the
fields,
Rolling on the hills like
sea;
If freedom were the empty
fields,
The harvest now stacked
asleep,
To wake up little by little
To satiate a craving deep;
If freedom were a wooden
bridge
In the idleness of time,
A little bird perched
singing
The song of a distant chime;
If freedom were the
carefree,
Let the sky clap and the
rain to fall;
For summer is for boys
designed,
To men they’ll grow after
all.
No comments:
Post a Comment