This was the situation that confronted the Witches of Port Area heading for Binondo Friday before last. Traffic going towards Jones was backed up past City Hall, almost to the National Museum. Undaunted, we decided to take the Del Pan Bridge and find our way back to Rosario and Carvajal, our favorite haunts.
It turned out to be a most pleasant and enlightening experience.That section of Binondo between Del Pan and Juan Luna is full of old houses and buildings - some of them historic, as we saw a plaque outside one house proclaiming that the revolutionary paper Ang Kalayaan was printed there - the little shops. Although mostly in despair, the houses were from a different era, with details and features highlighted in cofee table books and architectural journals. We wanted to stop at a stall that sold all sorts of brooms; I remember my mother ordering special hopia from one of these houses in Sto. Cristo. And where was the old Chinese herbalist's house?
We got quite lost, but we didn't mind, so engrossed were we in discovering this part of the city so close to us yet so unfamiliar. It was easy to ask for directions: the barangay traffic guy on the job outside a school and the volunteer at the intersection were most friendly in pointing us through the maze to Juan Luan, from where we knew our way to dimsum, pata tim and seafood noodles.