Posts archived in Home & Family

Banol Beach, Coron Island, Palawan

October 23, 2010. After spending almost an hour basking and swimming in Kayangan Lake, we proceeded to Banol Beach in another cove within Coron Island. It took us around fifteen to twenty minutes by boat to get to Banol Beach from the cove where we docked for Kayangan Lake.

Banol Beach is a small beach, but no less stunning and awesome as the many white sand beaches in Palawan, or in the Philippines for that matter. The beach is made up of a short stretch of white sand (no, not powdery, as some travel blogs exaggerate) interrupted by limestone boulders jutting out from the cliffs that wall out the beach from the rest of the island.

Banol Beach, Coron Island, Palawan

Kayangan Lake, Coron Island, Palawan

October 23, 2010. There was some saltiness in the clear waters, but Kayangan Lake is said to be one of the cleanest bodies of waters in the Philippines. It is located inside Coron Island itself and can be reached after hiking up and down steep limestone hills covered in lush foliage. It is one of Coron’s main attractions.

After Siete Pecados, our boatman brought us to a cove, one of many, in Coron Island. After out boat docked, we walked towards a steep makeshift staircase up a limestone hill.

Coron Island, Palawan

Maquinit Hot Springs, Coron, Palawan

October 22, 2010. The afternoon our family arrived in Coron, Palawan, we were taken to Maquinit Hot Spring a few kilometers from the center of town. Tourist brochures and guides claim it is the only saltwater hot spring in the Philippines, where the water temperature can be as hot as 40 degrees celcius.

(The hot spring is apparently within the private property of some company, so they charge an exorbitant entrace fee of P100 per person for the natural wonder of no one’s making.)

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September 28, 2010

We had a fastfood chain host a kiddie birthday party for Tisay's fifth birthday last Tuesday at her afternoon kindergarten class

In one of the alleys of Dapitan Arcade. Stalls were selling colorful household ornaments and since it's a few months before December, Christmas decors. The alleys were too narrow, and it wasn't even that crowded yet.

Mama asked me to drive her to “Dapitan Arcade” where, supposedly, bargain household ornaments (and other aesthetically-pleasing but otherwise utility-less) items can be had. It was a lazy Sunday and I didn’t want to do my law books that afternoon, so it was fine.

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Best Leader

Tisay in her kindergarten uniform, at her school auditorium

I went to her school to accompany her in receiving some kindergarten awards last week, among them “Best Leader”. I wonder what that means in the context of four year-olds.

A standard landscape snapshot of the Chocolate Hills in Carmen, Bohol, taken from the viewdeck where all the other thousands of tourists take their snapshots

Our second day in Bohol was spent going around the usual tourist spots in the province. With just a day, we could only cover so much.

Our first destination was the world-famous Chocolate Hills, a two hour drive from Panglao Island. It started to drizzle while we were on the way to Carmen, Bohol where many of the hills are located. The hills, numbering more than a thousand, are actually spread over two other municipalities in the center of the island province. Named Chocolate Hills because of their Kisses-like shape and their brown color during the summer, they were apparently formed through thousands of years of tidal and land movements.

Thankfully, the skies cleared up a bit just as we arrived at the hill with the tourist view deck, just in time for a few snapshots. There were hundreds of local and foreign tourists, too. The hike up the hill can be very tiring. There is a zig-zag concrete ramp up the hill for those who can’t take hiking up a hundred or more steps straight up.

Along the highway from Tagbilaran to the Chocolate Hills in Carmen, Bohol, a few hectares of tall mahogany trees make for a beautiful and serene route. Located in the town of Bilar, the trees were artificially planted as part of an environmental project in the 60's of then-President Carlos Garcia, himself a son of Bohol

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Sinulog 2010

Held annually on January in Cebu City, the Sinulog Festival is one of Cebu’s claim-to-fame fiestas, which attracts tens of thousands of tourists from across the country and overseas.

Sinulog is traditionally Cebu’s version of the national day of celebration for pilgrims and devotees of the child Jesus or the Santo Nino which is on the third Sunday of January. As they do in many other parts of the Philippines that celebrate the fiesta, devotees hold religious processions to the church and hold feasts in households and various establishments. In Cebu, they do the “sinulog” dance, characterized by a two-step forward one-step backward dance, that is said to originate from some historical event. In 1980 the city government of Cebu initiated the now famous street dancing parade that attracts participants and tourists from all over.

November 8, 2009. We were booked on a half-day city tour of Seoul. I used to say I’m not a fan of packaged group tour itineraries. I still do. I dislike the feeling of being limited by a schedule or a route prepared by some other person. To make things a little more unpleasant, it was raining the entire morning in Seoul.

Our first destination was a Buddhist temple in the center of Seoul called Chogyesa. The temple, although relatively new compared to other temples having been built only in 1910, plays a major role in Korean Buddhism. It was the headquarters of Korean Buddhism during the Japanese occupation. Because it is within the city center of Seoul, the temple is more accessible to tourists and devotees than other temples in Korea, although that would also mean it doesn’t offer as serene an atmosphere for genuine meditation perhaps.

Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul

Geongbokgung is like the Forbidden City of Beijing, only smaller, but large nonetheless. It’s the grandest among the “five palaces” complex built by Korea’s Joseon Dynasty. It used to house the royal family of Korea. One of Seoul’s most famous tourist destinations, hordes of tourists were still present despite the rain. Visitors are supposed to witness an hourly changing-of-the-guards ceremony but since it was drizzling, the show was canceled. Our trip to Geongbokgung was capped by a visit to the National Folk Museum within the same complex.

Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul
Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul Geongbokgung, Seoul
One of the things I really dislike about packaged tour itineraries is that they always include a trip to a commercial tourist trap. In places my family has visited like Hong Kong, Beijing and Singapore and I’m sure in many other East Asian cities, these commercial tourist traps are either jewelry stores or herbal medicine shops (which includes tea stores). In Seoul, we were herded to a ginseng complex. And like all other tourist traps like it, the trip was complete with sales people talking you into buying expensive “exclusive” merchandise.

The group tour incuded lunch at a restaurant in Itaewon, still in Seoul. After having another Korean meal, we broke off from the group tour and went to another tour, this time to a Korean folk village theme park around an hour away from the city.

Tisay celebrated her fourth birthday last Monday. We had planned to spend Sunday in a theme park, but since the metro was still reeling from the aftermath of tropical storm Ondoy, we decided to have a simple feast of Chinese food at home. We had a small sansrival cake for Tisay but we even forgot to buy proper birthday cake candles, so we made do with a medium-sized wax candle.

Tisay’s understanding of “birthday” unfortunately, is of a party, so all along up until today she doesn’t believe it was her birthday. She insists that she still has to celebrate her “birthday” distinct from the simple celebration we had last weekend. If the weather permits, we will push through with our trip to the theme park this weekend. I think she even expects to give a blow-out bash to her kindergarten classmates.