The Phnom Penh Post

Risking lives to rescue horses as Taal volcano rumbles

-

THE horses were still caked in grey ash as they stepped off the boat, lucky beneficiar­ies of a risky rescue mission to ground zero of the Philippine­s’ Taal volcano eruption.

Their owners are among many small operators who rely on the modest money generated by the beasts ferrying tourists up the volcano, a popular attraction ringed by a sweeping lake.

But when Taal exploded to life on Sunday the community, who own hundreds of steeds on volcano island, had to flee without their prized livestock and most of their possession­s.

“Our lives are in our horses, they’re how we make our living,” said owner Alfredo Daet, 62, on Tuesday after bringing three of his four animals to the mainland.

“We love our horses. That’s why we wanted to save them,” he added.

The creatures can generate $7 each per trip up to the stunning panoramic views above the volcano’s main crater, a significan­t sum in a nation where millions survive on less than $2 a day.

Scores of other farm animals on the island, like cows and goats, were killed in the eruption.

In returning to the island, now blanketed in a deep layer of fine volcanic ash, the men defied a mandatory evacuation order and risked their lives.

Authoritie­s have warned a stronger, potentiall­y catastroph­ic eruption could come at any time, yet that has not stopped multiple groups of desperate locals from making the trip.

“If we let the horses die (on the island), we will be the ones that lose in the end,” said another owner, Pejay Magpantay, Tuesday after 11 of his family’s 14 beasts were saved.

Despite being home to one of the most active volcanoes in a nation plagued by earthquake­s and eruptions, people are allowed to visit and live there.

Taal is classified a “permanent danger zone”, according to government volcanolog­ists.

It is a 23-sq-km (14-sq-mi) volcano island that lies inside a bigger lake formed from previous volcanic activity.

Together, they are among the most spectacula­r sights and popular tourist destinatio­ns in the Philippine­s.

Yet Taal has a deadly past. It has erupted dozens of times since 1572, the most destructiv­e of which was in 1911 when it killed some 1,300 people and sent ash falling on to Manila. Its last major eruption came in 1977.

Recently, Taal has been putting on a stunning and terrifying display, including an ash cloud illuminate­d with lightning bolts.

It shot dark-grey columns 800m in the sky.

Since the latest bout of activity there have been calls to keep people, once and for all, from living on the island.

“I strongly recommend that we implement the suggestion that... Taal [volcano] will be declared ‘no man’s land’,” defence secretary Delfin Lorenzana told reporters Tuesday.

 ?? AFP ?? An injured koala waits to be treated for burns at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park on Kangaroo Island.
AFP An injured koala waits to be treated for burns at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park on Kangaroo Island.
 ?? AFP ?? Residents living at the foot of Taal volcano unload their horses from a wooden boat after rescuing them from their homes.
AFP Residents living at the foot of Taal volcano unload their horses from a wooden boat after rescuing them from their homes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia