It was December 2010
when I visited the Province of Southern Leyte to cover a wedding of one of my
friends (Bangas) from Sta. Cruz who now permanently resides there in Macrohon
town. It was actually the first major trip I made just month after my own
wedding. My last-minute decision to pursue with the trip was worth it, as I
witnessed some promising sites of the Eastern Visayas and eventually collected
yet another memorable experience.
|
Traveling by land is exhausting but at the same time rewarding |
Together with my
in-laws, we took the Davao-Southern Leyte trip through the famous Bachelor
Express Bus via the Tagum-Butuan-Surigao City route. The ferry boat travel from
Surigao’s Lipata port to Lilo-an port took us four hours to reach the gateway
of Eastern Visayas region from the island of Mindanao. Our base town where we
stayed for three days was the municipality of Macrohon, approximately 2 hours
travel from Liloan. It is a 3rd class municipality in Southern Leyte with varied
geographic characteristics. It sits beside a huge coastal area facing the
Mindanao sea and is just 13 kilometers from Maasim City, the province’s capital
city.
|
Ferry boat from Lipata Port to Liloan Port, connecting Easterm Visayas from Mindanao |
On our way to Lilo-an,
we spotted the historic Limasawa Island where the sunset rays emanate, beaming directly
towards us in a fine afternoon. How could we forget Limasawa Island? This place
has been consigned as the sight of the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines
way back 1521.
|
Limasawa Sunset |
My friend’s wedding was
scheduled 3:00 PM the next day, so we still had enough time to room around the
entire town of Macrohon. Early in the morning, we visited an adjacent place in Padre
Burgos and experienced the beautiful Tangka-an Beach Resort. There we saw the
replica of Padre Burgos who were erected in memory of the priest Padre Jose
Burgos (one of the 3 priests of GOMBURZA), who were executed to death by Spanish
colonial authorities on charges of rebellion in Cavite on year 1872.
|
Pader Burgos Replica, Tangka-an Beach Resort |
Some 5 kilometers south
from where we stayed was Kuting Beach Resort, one of the few commercial resorts
in Macrohon. It boosts of its infinity pool which according to them seamlessly
blends with the sea. The verdant green landscape of the resort is remarkable
and has added to its already-comfortable amenities.
|
Kuting Beach Resort |
The town of Macrohon
also takes pride of its fine white-sand beaches. Resorts in the Barangays of
Buscayan, Aguinaldo and Asuncion are destinations favored by local and foreign
tourists alike. Aside from the white sands, mangrove forests also abound as
part of the local government’s initiative to conserve its marine environment. I
took a personal tour to all these sites particularly the scenic Buscayan Beach
and Manaya Resort where I tasted the delicious wiri-wiri – a native
delicacy similar to that of Mindanao’s budbud.
|
Buscayan White Sand Beach |
|
Manaya Beach Resort |
|
Mangrove Reserves of Barangay Aguinaldo |
|
Wiri-Wiri, a native Southern Leyte Delicacy |
Over at Barangay
Molopolo, we headed to their Fish Sanctuary Project. It is a community-based
project featuring a 25-hectare marine park and fish sanctuary shared by two Barangays
– Sta. Cruz and Molopolo. Assorted
fishes and sea birds both inhabit in this part of Macrohon which formed part of
Southern Leyte’s Reef Conservation Project.
|
Molopolo Fish Sanctuary |
Our trip back to Davao
was scheduled in an early dawn and as we got back to Liloan port, I saw the
beautiful sunrise while waiting for the boat to take its jaunt to the sea. The
peso-divers in Liloan also caught my attention, which marveled my mind about
how those kids survive by just merely picking the coins being intentionally thrown
to the deep sea by well-off persons. Life, indeed is a survival of the fittest.
|
Sunrise at Liloan Port |
|
Liloan Peso Divers |
I never regretted visiting Southern Leyte last
2010 although that was just one month after my wedding. The warmth of the
people there was addicting. The lovely places I have stepped into and photographed
were all extraordinary. And maybe it would take another unexpected scene before
I can go back to Southern Leyte. It is therefore my pleasure to retrieve all my
photo files and share to my readers all the great things happening in this
beautiful part of the Philippines.
No comments:
Post a Comment