View allAll Photos Tagged Olongapo
Two young girls ang a boy look into my camera with confident eyes as I snap their photo while they are siting on a pavement alongside each other.
Their dark skin tones and the girls' kinky hairs indicate that these children are all Aetas, the indigenous people of Zambales.
Captured in 2006 in Olongapo City, in the aforesaid province, Philippines.
Magsaysay Drive looking toward the intersection with Rizal Avenue--Note the Rocket Room sign at right.
This is a re-scanned, re-processed version of an existing photo. The earlier photo has not been deleted because it has comments.
Head-and-shoulder shot of a grinning street performer taken in Olongapo City, Zambales, Philippines.
I am traveling in a Philippine bus (Victory Liner) from US Naval Communication Station San Miguel, where I was stationed.
Detail of a 1974-75 era map showing San Antonio, the Communication Station, and Olongapo in relation to Manila.
This is what Olongapo looks like after too much San Miguel beer. :-) Magsaysay Street, looking toward the Main Gate.
This is a re-scanned, re-processed version of an existing photo. The earlier photo has not been deleted because it has comments.
A jeepney plying the route of Olongapo City and the municipalities of Subic, Castillejos and San Marcelino, Zambales, stops as it picks up a male passenger near the corner of the national road and a village street.
The most popular means of public transportation in the Philippines that can be seen nearly everywhere in the country which is composed of 7,100 islands, jeepney has a long history that dated back to the end of the Second World War. It's earlier plain version was just a modified US military jeeps left over from the war.
At present the traditionally designed jeepneys with refurbished diesel engines have various sitting capacities. Those that service long routes have a usual capacity up to 20 passengers, just like the one pictured here.
Taken in the town of Subic, in the aforesaid province and Southeast Asian country.
A young lady in mid-noon spends several long minutes reading and typing messages on her smartphone as she presumably waits for someone with whom to have a lunch at one of several fast-food eateries situated on the fourth and top floor of a new mall in Olongapo City.
The new shopping, dining and entertainment mall was opened just three weeks ago. It is the second and much larger mall opened in the first-class highly urbanized city by a prominent property giant owned by a Filipino-Chinese family. To date, it has a total of 73 malls scattered throughout the Philippines.
The new four-story complex in Olongapo - which is in Zambales province - has a floor area of 72,000 square meters, according to published reports.
Magsaysay Drive looking toward the intersection with Rizal Avenue. The sailor in uniform is probably from a ship. Sailors stationed on shore were allowed to wear civilian clothes on liberty. Olongapo was the Philippine city just outside (to the north) of the former US Naval base at Subic Bay.
A visibly happy lady visitor from a foreign country takes her and her young daughter's photo with her smartphone camera at the beach in Olongapo City, Zambales, Philippines.
This deer kept following us around the park. Really friendly animal. Mahal ko na sya.
Photo shot by one of my officemates.
The house wreck of the Arizona Dive shop is the home of many of these banded cleaner shrimp.
This week Kent at Arizona Dive Shop in Subic and I did something different - photograph macro in the wreck heaven of Subic Bay. A lot of small animals thrive on Subic's wrecks.