BALETE, Batangas –– Residents here had gone back to the volcano island on Tuesday to rescue whatever animal, like horses, cows, and pigs, that may have survived the thick ashfall that has now enveloped the entire island.

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Aside from fishing, residents on the volcano island made a living from raising livestock and offering horse rides to tourists ascending the Taal Volcano’s crater.

But all was lost following Sunday’s eruption. The Taal Volcano has since stayed under an alert level 4.

Resident Ronnie Barrion said they did not have enough time to bring the animals when they evacuated the island on Sunday.

Pig carcasses trapped in bamboo pig pens have begun to rot and stink.

Dead cows were seen buried in thick ash.

The Inquirer saw a few more cows and one horse alive on the island in Barangay Calauit on Tuesday.

On the mainland, a boat of residents just rescued four horses off the volcano island. The horses were all covered in mud.

Also Tuesday, a 20-member team from the Metro Manila Development Authority was deployed on a boat to conduct the first government ocular visit on the island.

“We are here to conduct a rescue of the animals and if there were still people, we’d take them too of course,” said the team’s leader Chris Palcis.

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Barrion saw one of his pigs still alive but said he would have to leave it there as animals may not be allowed in evacuation centers.

Palcis said the local government of Balete had just designated an area on the mainland for the animal survivors.

Another resident, Aldrin Malapi, said rescue teams would need bigger boats and shovels to dig a meter-thick ash fall.

“Those animals are the main source of living of the people here,” Palcis said.

Edited by Lzb

Inquirer calls for support for the victims of Taal volcano eruption Responding to appeals for help, the Inquirer is extending its relief to the families affected by the recent eruption of Taal volcano. Cash donations may be deposited in the Inquirer Foundation Corp. Banco De Oro (BDO) Current Account No: 007960018860. [email protected] Inquiries may be addressed and emailed to Inquirer’s Corporate Affairs office through

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