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Mayon Volcano, Legaspi City, Bicol Region

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

As one of the Philippines’ most photographed sights, Mt. Mayon (2,462m) rises dramatically from the flat Albay province terrain and can be seen as far away as Naga and Catanduanes to the north.  The volcano’s name derives from the Bicol word magayon, meaning Beauty and the volcano certainly deserves that name.

However beautiful, this volcana is no sleeping beauty.  There is a constant plume of smoke and is carefully monitored by volcanologists stationed near the airport.

Last yr. the volcano gushed lava down it slopes by stopped short of hitting the big city.  Evidence of where the lava flowed can be seen on the pictures by the burned, charred, black shades.

I took a Taxi to my hotel (2-star, less than $20 per night, but adequate) Legazpi Tourist Inn.  Best feature about the room is it’s very efficient air conditioner.  

I then hired the taxi driver to take me around the area for a tour of the Volcano, Cagsawa Ruins, Hoyop-Hoyopan Caves and the Legaspi City Outlook.

Nesthor, my taxi turned guide, first stopped at the Mayon Skyline Hotel at 810m on the northwest side of Mt. Mayon.  The view of the Pacific from this vantage point is spectacular especially on this clear day.  You can find guide to take you to the top from here, but it’s a two day hike.

Then it was to the Hoyop-Hoyopan Caves.  Artifacts of more than 2000 yrs old have been found in these caves and evidence of early “settlers” are found in the walls of the caves in the form of preserved human bones.  The name means “blow-blow” which is a reference to the wind that rushes thru the caves.  It was actually pleasant and cool in the tour.  It had the natural air-conditioning feeling in there.   Also, the locals hid in these caves from the Japanese during WWII.  The Locals also poured a concrete platform to designate as a disco floor.  They regularly met here during the curfew days of Ferdinand Marcos reign.

Then on to Cagsawa Ruins.  About 8km northwest of Legaspi, the remains (basically the bellfry) of the sunken Cagsawa Church.  This site is popular because it gives the tourists a beautifull view of Mt. Mayon.  In 1814, the 1200 people who took refuge in the church during Mt. Mayon’s violent eruption were buried alive.  It gives you an eerie feeling knowing the story, but this is no memorial as there are vendors hawking anything and everything.  So, there is quite a bit of hustle and bustle going around.  There were only about two-hand full of tourists this day, but I could see it during the peak season how loud this place could be.  Also, the typoon Remming’s flood of legaspi river just missed this site by less than 100meters of wiping this site out.

Which reminds me.  This area is recovering from the devastation caused by typhoon Remming of last yr.  December I believe.  A few thousand of people died especially those that settled near the river.  The towns around this area has evidence still of how hide the flood was and how thick the mud were after the water receded.  Schools still missing some of their sheet metal roofs.  The river flowage way is being expanded and construction to do so are ongiong.  Lots of construction equipment around.  Bridge construction are everywhere.  Human remains are still being discovered while debris and mud are cleared.  Utter devastation, but the people here have somewhat recovered and moved on.  There are alot of UN agencies around to help the people. 

The last part of the tour was the Lookout point.  Here you can see the pacific ocean and the city of Legaspi as wall as the Albay province.  You can see how the airport runway and Mt. Mayon dominate the city view and the landscape respectively.

The tour took about 6 hrs and cost about $50 including the ride from the airport. 

I had originally planned to stay here two days, but the whale sharks in Donsol are not around and this being the low season, I did not want to waste my time sitting in a bangka.  So, I left for Cebu the next day.

I glad I had the chance to see this area.  I think this area will see an upsurge of tourism in the near future which bodes well for the local economy.

until next time, bahala na……………………………………  

See My Links E Mayon Volcano for pics

Mall of Asia, Manila, Philippines

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

There are malls and there is the Mall of Asia.  We all know how fond Filipino’s are of fond of shopping, especially for shoes, just google search Imelda Marcos here, but this mall takes it up another notch.  BAM! BAM! BAM! (emiril legase imitation here) 

The SM Mall of Asia is the largest shopping mall in the Phillipines and the 7th largest shopping mall in the world in terms of gross floor size.  It opened on May 21, 2006 with an amazing display of fireworks which you can check out in YOU TUBE.

The Mall of Asia was constructed within the reclamation area, west of Roxas Boulevard in Pasay City, aptly nicknamed “Bay City.”  It is built on 19.5 hectares of reclaimed land and has a gross floor are of 386,224 square metes.  The mall is located at the southmost tip of EDSA.  A roundabout was constructed in the front of the mall with a huge bronze globe simialar Universal Studio globe design.

The SM Mall of Asia mall grounds consists of four buildings interconnected by walkways; the Main Mall, the Entertainment Mall, and the North and South Carpark Buildings.

The Main Mall includes shopping and dining establishments and the food court. The Entertainment Mall is a two-story complex, a majority of which is open-air, facing Manila Bay.

The mall’s 5,000 parking spaces are divided across two, six-story parking buildings conveniently designated the North and South parking buildings. The South Parking building houses the mall’s official SM Department Store, while the mall’s supermarket, the SM Hypermart (don’t laugh at the name, because it surely describes the ongoings in a busy day, which is everyday) is located within the North Parking building.

One of the mall’s somewhat-unique features is a 20-seater tram traveling around the mall grounds to ferry shoppers around.  Also, the ice skating rink in the middle of the mall is interesting.  It was fun to see kids and adults alike skate and fall on their bum!

One can spend a day and not go thru all the stores.  But I did everything here from getting toiletries supplies to booking airline tickets.  Shopping at the SM Mall of Asia is a good way to spend your day because the air condition is set to the ultimate lowest here.  If you’re sweating shopping it’s because you just went thru hypermart.

 Had a relaxing time in Manila.  Got to meet some relatives and went out for fresh seafood.  Went to the Dumpa Seafood Market near the Mall of Asia on Diosdado Macapagal Road.  Pick you seafood tell them how you want it cooked and whala, fresh seafood dinner.  Excellent!!! night to end my stay in Manila.

 Until next time, bahala na………………………….

See My Links D mall of asia for pics.

As the Time Zones go by!

Saturday, July 21st, 2007
Hello eveyone! Well I got to Manila safe and not so sound.  Travel time took around 33 hrs.  I got in safe but was vey tired.  Did not get much sleep on the bus nor the terminals nor the plane rides.   I ... [Continue reading this entry]

2007 PI Trip Itinerary

Friday, July 13th, 2007
"Just the facts ma'am."  - Sgt. Joe Holiday (Dragnet) PI Trip 2007 When:  July 19 to Aug. 16 Flights: Northwest Airline Outbound:  Chicago-Minneapolis-Tokyo(Narita)-Manila Homebound: Manila-Tokyo(Narita)-Seattle-Chicago Planned stops that is subject to change: July 20-23    Manila July 23-25    Legaspi, Donsol July 25-28    Cebu July 28- Aug. 11   Bohol, ... [Continue reading this entry]

Fireworks Clip

Friday, July 13th, 2007
Well, becoming more adventurous as I try to link a clip to the blog. There's probably an easier way, but hopefully the Photebucket way works. My Links: C 4th 2006 Firework Clip Write a comment either way. I want to know ... [Continue reading this entry]