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Birding in paradise with ballpoint pens
Patricia L. Adversario
DING LI sketches nature with colored ballpens.
Photo by Orly Punzalan
Drawing by Dong Li ( Singaporean visiting Philippine )

SINGAPOREANS love to travel, but very rarely would they even consider spending three weeks in the
land of kidnappings and the Abu Sayyaf. Not Yong Ding Li, a 21 year old Singaporean
birder-illustrator, who did just that. Two days before going back to Singapore, he was hoping to
stay another day more.

"There's so much to see here," he enthused as he sat on his foldable chair with a sketchpad on his
knees. He had been sketching Manila Cathedral and San Agustin church with his fine ballpoint pens
and wanted to spend his last day, sketching the walls of Intramuros on a hot humid afternoon.

Weeks before, Ding Li who's an enthusiastic birdwatcher, spent time birding in Bohol, Benguet and
Palawan, racking up an impressive 84 lifers for this Philippine trip alone. (Lifers in
birdwatchers jargon refer to an avian species one has seen for the first time.)

Beginnings

Ding Li, a first-year life science student from the National University of Singapore, has been
birding since he was 12. Home is Bukit Batok, Singapore, which is near a nature park.

When he was in Primary 6, an audacious bird with bright yellow plumage, black nape and wing tips
and red bill, flew in during class. He was quite keen to find out what it was -- it turned out to
be a black-naped oriole, a common garden bird with a melodious fluty whistle. That started his
interest in birds.

At aged 12, he joined the Nature Society of Singapore to be among kindred souls who shared his
passion and interest in birds.

His first birding trip outside Singapore was in Malaysia when a friend took him for a day trip to
Panti Forest in Johor Bahru. That was the start of his birding adventure overseas which has taken
him to other parts of Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, India, and now the Philippines.


His trip to the Philippines has been his longest time away from home. "My parents and my sister
think I'm mad. Why the Philippines? Why not go to Japan or Hong Kong?"

Ding Li has a fascination for European architecture and he wanted to sketch Philippine churches
built during the Spanish times.

"I like Spanish culture very much. In the Philippines, it's like I've gone to Spain without going
too far away from home. Things are different here -- the people, culture, scenery, biodiversity --
but not too different from home."

Ding Li also thought there was a good chance he could see at least 50 more lifers to add to his
lifers list of over a thousand bird species, mostly Oriental birds.

But during his first week here, he wanted to advance his departure date because he thought he'd
get homesick. He soon changed his mind when he visited Mount Makiling, Laguna, which he birded for
three days with Mark Villa, a fellow birder from the Wild Bird Club of the Philippines. At Mt
Makiling, he already racked up 34 lifers, more than half of his original target.

Next stop was Rajah Sikatuna National Park, in Tagbilaran Bohol, to see the rare Steere's Pitta
which can be found only in Bohol. For four days, he stayed at the park with a cook who prepared
him fried water buffalo meat and boiled rice for lunch and dinner. On his last day, he had egg and
canned! sardines as a treat. He missed red chillis with his meals as it would have spiced up the
bland buffalo.


But birders' luck was with him -- the rare pitta was the first bird he saw on the trail shortly
after he had just arrived.

"The Steere's Pitta is the bird of my dreams," he says unabashedly. "It's a gem because of its
rarity and its beauty."

The rare bird is also called Azure Pitta because of its unnaturally bright azure and red wings.
"When I saw it, my hands shivered while I was holding my binoculars. I felt an adrenalin rush and
held my breath for some time."

Apart from pittas, pheasants also give him the shivers. Next on his Philippine bird list was the
endemic Palawan Peacock Pheasant. And not even reported cases of Cerebral malaria will stop him
from going to Palawan.

Vicious mosquitoes which didn't know OFF lotion devoured him and Villa while they were birding at
Sabang's forest in Palawan, but the trip yielded a record 75 species including, of course, the
Palawan Peacock Pheasant.

Showing his sketch journal, he says he has run out of pages to sketch the birds he has seen in the
Philippines. Ding Li sketches his birds with colored ballpens and highlighters.

Why ballpens? First of all, they're very economical, he says with a grin.

"They're also exceptionally versatile. When you're sketching a bird, its shape is made up of
feathers which are made up of thin fine lines. A ballpen can give you a very accurate depiction of
a bird's shape," he explains.

Ding Li, who has been sketching since he was 6, says he started with colored pencils until a
friend introduced him to ballpens at 12. Most of his sketches have structured lines. "I think my
style is closer to Realism which emphasizes accurate form and shape in drawing."

Art and conservation

Ding Li doesn't want to be called an artist, but a drawer. He says artists have their own
imagination, and they inject their thoughts into their work. "But I translate what I see into a
visual image. Because I just draw what I see, I'm an illustrator, not an artist."

"I'm still searching for my own style and interpretative method, but more or less, I've found my
preferred medium in ballpens and pencils," he adds.

Apart from personal expression, his drawings are also meant to promote conservation. By sketching
what he sees in the forest, he hopes people will realize what they're killing with each tree they
destroy.




VISAYAN Wattled Broadbill. YONG DING LI

PALAWAN Peacock Pheasant. YONG DING LI

Frankly speaking, he says, "people here know very little about conservation. In Sikatuna Park, I
thought the park rangers didn't feel for what they were doing. Things were done as a job, as a
routine chore."

He relates: a pond was built at the park, but halfway through it seemed there wasn't enough funds
to finish it. So, it was left a mess.

"There's not enough strong will to get things done. I think an important thing for the
conservation movement is the will to have it progress," he says.

STEERE'S Pitta. YONG DING LI
He strongly advocates that "all politicians should go through an environmental course before they
become politicians because in general, in Southeast Asia, politicians are corrupt. In Indonesia,
there's no respect for boundaries. People plant vegetables at national parks.

"Understandably, people are poor because they need to use the land. But they need to have some
punishment even in little things. People think it's an insignificant thing to chop off a tree, and
another and another… anyway there'll be another tree. Before you know it, there's a landslide and
people die. These things are happening too often," he says.

"We're not learning from our past whether in the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia and even
Singapore."

If governments and politicians can't preserve natural resources, he hopes to preserve the birds
and the treasures that he has seen here through his sketches. He wants to see more and vows to
come back, perhaps, next year.

He rattles his wish list: he'd like to visit Mount Kitanglad in Bukidnon, Mount Apo in Davao,
PICOP Resources Corp's logging concession at Bislig, Surigao del Sur, and of course, birding sites
in the Visayas like the Tabunan Forest in Central Cebu and Mount Kanlaon National Park in Negros
Occidental.

What will he tell his friends and family when he goes back home? A prompt reply: "I will tell them
I've been to paradise - PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. Go there before it's lost."
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