Sunday, March 15, 2015

Catanduanes Province, Philippines


Tourist Attractions
Maribina Falls
Maribina Falls. The tourist destination nearest the capital town of Virac, it is the most popular and widely publicised of the Water falls in Catanduanes. With its 3-tiered crystal clear cascades surrounded by lush greenery, the visitor will sure be well satisfied. It is an ideal place for picnics and daytime bonding with family and friends. So, let’s go Marinawa Bato, Catanduanes.


Nahulugan Falls
Nahulugan Falls. A 3-tiered cascade in a backdrop of lush vegetation, the Nahulugan falls is a secret hideaway of Gigmoto, Catanduanes. It is surrounded by natural picnics grounds with a rich collection of flora and fauna to behold.

Sto. Domingo River
Sto. Domingo River. Cited as the Cleanest Inland Water in the Bicol Region in 1999, it never loses its charms to excursionists wishing to plunge into its crystal and clean water during week-ends. So, visit at Sto. Domingo, Virac Catanduanes.

Bato River
Bato River. Bato River is the biggest and longest, following a course that gently meanders from the interiors of the municipalities of Caramoran and Gigmoto and along the entire length of the municipality of San Miguel then widens perceptibly as it approaches the municipality of Bato before draining into Cabugao Bay.

Catanduanes is an island province of the Philippines located in the Bicol Region in Luzon. It is subdivided into 11 municipalities and Virac is the provincial capital. Several islands composed the province, but majority of these are physically small to be of relative significance. The province is bounded in the west by the Maqueda Channel, in the south by Lagonoy Gulf, and in the north and east by the Philippine Sea.

The topography of Catanduanes is rugged and mountainous, becoming more pronounced towards the central portion of the island. The highest mountain peak is in Boctot, located between the municipalities of Virac and San Miguel with an elevation of 803 meters above sea level.

“Isla de Cobos” was Catanduanes’ first adopted name because Spanish conquistadores came upon several tribes living in thatched huts called cobos. Catanduanes is a hispanized term derived from the word tandu, a native beetle and the samdong tree, which were both found in abundance throughout the island. Common reference to "katanduan" or "kasamdongan", meaning a place where the tandu or the samdong tree thrives in abundance, led to the coining of the word Catanduanes.

Without a pronounced dry season, rain is distributed fairly well throughout the year becoming wetter in the last quarter and the early months of the first quarter, when tropical disturbances and monsoon wind bring in heavy rains. Other months are characterized by short periods of dryer days and fine weather except in July and August, when the dry and gusty northwest monsoon winds intensify.

The conventional Bicol dialect is widely used in the province. Tagalong is the second most common dialect and the most easily understood by people from all walks of life. English is the medium of instruction in school and primary communications.

Catanduanes is home to many folk festivals which are celebrated as part of the local religious rituals. The Kalbaryo or Calvary, which is commonly staged during Holy Week, is a re-enactment of Christ’s way of the cross. The Kagharong is a native depiction of the nativity scene and is held every year during the yuletide season. Pantomina is purely a dance interpretation of a rooster courting a hen and is mostly practice in rural areas. The Padadyao sa Tinampo is a native cultural presentation of street dancing held every 24th of October to commemorate the province’s founding anniversary. The recent addition to Catanduanes’ festivals is the Sugbo Festival. It is celebrated by 7 barangays of Hitoma in Caramoan that produces sugbo or tiger grass – a bamboo like perennial grass used to make brooms.


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