Playlab.net || Mark Rochefort

My name is Mark Rochefort and this is my website - a place where I like to play and learn. Are you still searching? I doubt you'll find it here but you might find some other guff - sometimes with photos.
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Displaying posts created in April2006

Harbour seals on the Isle of Skye in Scotland 21Apr06

Filed under: Photos, Travel


seal turns placidly and stares.

What a life these fat fellows have! Lazying about all day, just soaking up the sun and going for the occasional dip, maybe catching a fish if they can be bothered…

There’s more photos of Skye here (needs password - just ask me).

an essential cargo in the Philippines 11Apr06

Filed under: Photos, Travel

an essential cargo - the ubiquitous san miguel beer shares a ride with us on a banka
(see the rest of the Philippines photo set on Flickr ยป )

Wow - that felt longer than two weeks. We’ve just returned from a different world and a very beautiful one at that. A world full of idyllic islands straight out of James Bond, with incredible diving and friendly people. The Philippines has such a bad press here in the UK and I’m almost tempted not to dispell the myths so I can keep the place all for myself… but how could I do that? Island hopping around the remote islands to the north of Palawan by banka revealed some of the most breathtaking scenery I have ever seen. Thousands of deserted islands with sheer limestone cliffs, hidden lagoons, secret beaches and turquoise blue waters.

However, it seems tourism “eco-development” and land title disputes are endemic in this area and corruption, at all levels, is rife. It’s a fine balance between tourism alleviating poverty in a place perceived by Westerners as “paradise on earth” and maintaining a pristine environment for future generations. As tourism encroaches on these small islands in this fragile ecology, I really hope this balance can be met.


Some of the people we met along the way (like the folk at Kudugman) were trying to do things the right way- pushing forward low-scale, low-impact and sustainable developments of two or three huts on islands that draw minimal resources and offer a very basic yet completely serene break from it all. However, the terms “sustainable” and “eco-tourism” are used all too rashly and I hope that recent measures to develop these small islands do not lead to their destruction.


Anyway - here’s some more photos. Not that I need to convince you of the beauty of the place!