Filipina Trike | Patrol 48 //free\\

During Typhoon Karding last year, Patrol 48 evacuated 48 families (the number appears again) in under three hours. Their trikes navigated flooded streets where trucks couldn’t go. They carried pregnant women, dialysis patients, and crying toddlers wrapped in garbage bags to keep them dry.

Clad in high-visibility vests over floral summer shirts, helmets painted in neon pink and bright yellow, a squad of five Filipina riders circles the neighborhood. Their sidecars carry not passengers, but emergency kits, a megaphone, and an unshakable sense of purpose. The number “48” isn’t random. It’s the barangay’s emergency code for “women and children first.” filipina trike patrol 48

They aren’t superheroes. They’re just 48 women—no, wait. Now it’s 60. Because every week, someone new asks to join. During Typhoon Karding last year, Patrol 48 evacuated

They aren’t vigilantes. They aren’t police. They are kapitbahay —neighbors—who decided that waiting for someone else to fix a problem wasn’t an option. Clad in high-visibility vests over floral summer shirts,