Visitors on mountain bikes exploring the trails of the La Mesa watershed, a thicket about a fifth the size of Paris wrapped around a dam that stores drinking water for the metropolis of 14mn people in Manila. Right: Gina Lopez (right), an environmental campaigner who had launched the
reforestation programme of La Mesa watershed, talking to project manager Dave Azurin as they inspect the forest.

AFP
Manila



A tropical rainforest has regrown against all odds on the edge of the Philippine capital’s biggest open-air dump, and is now a patch of green paradise in a sprawling metropolis blighted by giant slums.
The only nature park in Manila, the La Mesa watershed, a thicket about a fifth the size of Paris, wraps around a dam that stores drinking water for the metropolis of 14mn people.
“It’s as if you’ve left Manila,” Anton Haltland, manager of a car dealership, said after he and his friends spent half a day riding mountain bikes under thick canopies and knee-deep river crossings.
“As if you’ve slipped into a different time zone of a bygone era... it ticks all the boxes for challenge and beauty.”
About 300,000 people visit the watershed and its more than 50 kilometres  of nature trails each year, according to park officials.
The tropical rainforest within a city is the product of a 15-year partnership involving the national government, water companies and environmental groups. Earlier, the forest surrounding the reservoir had been largely burnt off, replaced with a patchwork of farms and shanties that had been expanding in parallel with the nation’s fast-growing population.
“Most of these informal settlers depended on the watershed’s resources to make a living, so they cut trees for lumber, charcoal or firewood. The cleared areas were turned into vegetable plots,” project manager Dave Azurin said.
To understand what would have happened to the area if not for the conservation efforts requires simply looking from a ridge across to the massive slums that border the watershed and are home to about 350,000 people.
One of the city’s biggest open-air dump sites is also next to it.
But since the re-greening efforts started, more than 750,000 trees have been planted and are now home to 125 bird species, according to Azurin.
He said 99 of the tree species were endemic to the Philippines, and many of them were endangered.
More than 7,000 illegal settlers who were living in the watershed were also gradually relocated to nearby areas, thanks to free housing provided by the state water utility, the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System.
Nevertheless, the programme has not been a complete success, nor without its dangers.
Unknown to many visitors, the park remains besieged by intruders who cut and steal trees, and at times even build shanties inside.
The park’s first line of defence is a perimeter wall about the height of two adults, but trespassers easily use crowbars and hammers to make holes, according to forest ranger Exequiel Lobres. “We’d plug a hole today and they’d be back to punch another one through when no one is looking,” Lobres said.
“It’s a dangerous job. We’re always fighting fires set off by outsiders. Some of them are armed.”
In the most infamous incident, armed settlers raided the rangers’ bunkhouse in 2002 and beheaded its caretaker.
The assailants also set fire to the building and several watchtowers along the watershed, according to Azurin, who was among a group of rangers and project officials threatened at gunpoint during the raid.
He said four suspects were later arrested, tried and convicted of the murder, while another remained at large.
Between three and five people are still charged in court each year for cutting and stealing trees or burning the forest, while many more minor violators are sent away on a reprimand, according to Azurin.
The park has 59 forest rangers, but they are armed only with machetes and chemical sprays with which to fight fires.
However he said the problem of interference by people in neighbouring areas was starting to improve.
“We believe the worst is behind us. These incidents are on a downtrend,” he said, crediting an educational campaign in the surrounding communities as key to preventing further violence.
Nevertheless, Azurin said informal settlers still remained on about 555 acres, just over 10% of the forest, in an ownership dispute with the state water utility, he added.
The case has been tied up in the courts for years, holding up the reforestation effort.
And the watershed’s future is by no means secure, according to Gina Lopez, the head of the reforestation programme.
She said the programme is due to end next year and the national government had yet to decide whether to extend the partnership with the green groups and various state agencies involved.
She warned that, without proper funding to guard the watershed, trespassers would easily come in and cut down the trees, which would become increasingly valuable as they matured.
“In a few years’ time this forest is going to be worth zillions of pesos (dollars),” Lopez said.