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First Trip To The Philippines - Will You Find What You're Looking For?

πŸ“… 2025-04-22⏱ 19:29
πŸ“… 2025-04-22 Β |Β  ⏱️ 19:29 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 66.9K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 5.8K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1.2K comments

Pea interviews Bobby, a 55-year-old from British Columbia who just returned from his first trip to the Philippines. Bobby went with no romantic agenda and a compression bag the size of a shoebox, and came back with a phone full of new contacts, a bag full of Ding Dongs, and some hard-earned practical wisdom for first-time visitors.

Bobby's background and why he went ​

  • 55 years old, lives in British Columbia, Canada
  • Divorced in 2011, hasn't dated anyone since β€” learned to live alone and values his freedom
  • Got interested in the Philippines because of the many Filipinos living and working in Canada, all of whom he found to be "fantastic people"
  • Discovered Pea's channel in summer 2024 and joined her Patreon, which he credits as the single most valuable thing he did to prepare β€” the community gave practical advice on hotels, cash, transportation, and more
  • Went with zero agenda: no plan to find a partner, just wanted to backpack and explore

Packing and practical prep ​

  • Brought everything in an 8x8x15-inch compression bag β€” carried on only, no checked luggage
  • Brought suntan lotion and a UV water purification pen but didn't need either
  • Brought one roll of toilet paper and brought it back unused β€” all hotels and most restaurants had it despite the bidet-style toilets

Money and costs ​

  • Brought four $100 Canadian bills and 15,000 pesos (fifteen 1,000-peso bills) β€” says he should have brought more
  • Recommends having at least 5,000-6,000 pesos on you for a night out
  • Total trip cost including flights: a few thousand dollars Canadian
  • Flight was about $1,000 CAD round trip, maybe $1,000 in food
  • His assessment: food is "super cheap and good," and a conservative two-week vacation could be done for a couple thousand dollars

Phone and SIM card ​

  • Bought a SIM card immediately at the airport β€” cost about $12-13 CAD for two weeks of data
  • Complained about the Philippine SIM registration process requiring excessive personal information (birthdate, hometown, etc.) β€” felt like they were "collecting data" or building a dossier on foreigners
  • The Grab app was "essential" β€” you tap the app, a car shows up in two minutes with a fixed price, no negotiation, and they find you anywhere

The trike price standoff ​

  • Getting off a ferry near Siquijor, Bobby flagged a trike and asked for 20 pesos
  • Driver agreed, then changed to 50 once Bobby was getting in
  • Bobby refused on principle β€” "not because I didn't want to pay" (it was about 75 cents) but because he didn't want to get ripped off
  • The next trike driver had overheard and also wanted 50
  • Bobby and his two friends stubbornly walked the couple of miles back to the hotel

Culture shock β€” what surprised Bobby most ​

  • The open sewer smell throughout much of the city β€” "a sweet, fermented sewer smell" running under the sidewalks that's inescapable in many areas
  • A cheap hotel ($25/night, no hot water) where he came down early in the morning and found a pile of people β€” friends and family of the security guard β€” sleeping in the lobby
  • Filipino men his age approaching him on the street repeatedly calling him "very nice man, very handsome man" β€” Bobby jokes he hasn't been handsome "since 10,000 cheeseburgers ago" but found it genuinely uplifting

The rock star treatment foreigners get ​

  • At the Lapu-Lapu Festival (thousand-plus attendees), an organizer immediately singled Bobby out, got off his chair, and gave him a personal tour β€” explaining the history of Magellan's death on that spot
  • People took pictures with him like he was a celebrity
  • Pea's bar (possibly "The Club" in Dumaguete) β€” Bobby stayed for one drink, 15 minutes total; two days later everyone remembered his name and what he drank
  • He got marriage proposals while walking around β€” customs officials on a ferry tried to set him up with a female colleague who said "Yeah, yeah, marry me"
  • Bobby's assessment: the myth that it's hard to meet people in the Philippines is "debunked" β€” if he'd had an agenda to find someone, "I would have had no problem finding anybody"
  • He warns that the attention could give a foreigner "a big head"

Pea asks: is it realistic for a 55-year-old to attract a 26-year-old Filipina? ​

  • Bobby acknowledges he got constant attention from young women
  • After 45 minutes to an hour of conversation, women would "drop hints that maybe they found the right person"
  • He'd tell them he's not the right person β€” "I'm the wrong guy"
  • He's aware that a foreigner gets automatic bonus points just for showing up, as Pea has discussed
  • He cautions: you have to ask the right questions about any woman who approaches you, because otherwise "you're going to be in a situation you don't want to be in"

The underage warning ​

  • At a giant festival in Dumaguete, a couple of girls approached Bobby who were "clearly underage" β€” not immediately obvious, but clear enough that he asked
  • After some chitchat, they confirmed they were underage β€” Bobby walked away immediately
  • He suspects it could have been a trap
  • His take: "Poverty creates desperation which creates any kind of option" β€” he understands the dynamics but says you have to keep your head on a swivel

Bobby's friend and the bar girls β€” a cautionary tale ​

  • Bobby didn't fully understand the bar girl system at first β€” their job is to get customers to buy them drinks, working as hostesses to promote bar sales with inflated drink prices
  • Bobby just wanted to have drinks and chat with friends, but realized the bill kept climbing as more people joined their group
  • His buddy stayed until 3 AM, dropped 18,000 pesos in about an hour and a half on bar girls, took two of them home, and got an STD
  • Bobby describes the bar girls as "kind of chunky" β€” reasoning that if your job is drinking liquor every night, you're not going to be in great shape
  • Bobby wouldn't do the same β€” his priorities are different at his age

Aggressive beggars β€” what doesn't get talked about ​

  • In Lapu-Lapu City near the courthouse, a child literally chased Bobby until he had to turn around and firmly tell the kid to stop
  • Adult panhandlers in Dumaguete would ask for specific amounts β€” "give me a 50"
  • Bobby knew that giving to beggars is technically illegal in the Philippines and didn't want to break any laws
  • He feels this topic doesn't get enough coverage β€” most vlogs just say "people are great, nice beaches"

The volcano scare ​

  • A volcano went off while Bobby was there, which shocked him
  • Pea reassured him via Patreon that volcanic alerts are common and usually not a big deal

Bobby's Patreon endorsement ​

  • He credits the community for improving his trip significantly β€” specific members mentioned: JG, Igata, Robert, Fox
  • He emphasizes it's not much money and is "by far and away the most valuable thing" for trip preparation
  • The safety angle: because he was posting updates on Patreon, the community would know his whereabouts if anything happened

Will Bobby go back? ​

  • Originally planned to rotate destinations every six months (Guatemala, then Europe)
  • Now plans to return to the Philippines every year in the spring
  • On whether he'd look for a partner next time: "I'll be more open to it" β€” but he's not actively looking unless he runs into his "soulmate"
  • His mom asked when he got back: "How come you're not married yet? What happened?"

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