| Start: | Feb 20, '10 |
| End: | Feb 22, '10 |
| Location: | Mindoro, Philippines |
Known tourism facilities are beach resorts, hotels and restaurants.
The major attractions of the industrial town of San Jose are its three offshore islands - Ambulong, Ilin, and White Island. San Jose is also a favorite jump-off point to the world-class diving site - Apo Reef Marine Park.
Ambulong Island
Ambulong Island is a 30 km² island with fine beaches, cliffs and abundant coral formations. It is characterized by white sand beaches, cliffs along pillars jutting out of the water, and underwater caves. Coral gardens and tropical fish are abundant in several coves. The coral gardens and the white sand beaches are fantastic. A fisherman's village is located at the sheltered side of the island. Ambulong Island is also a jump-off point to some of the dive spots in the area, such as the Iling Point, Baniaga Reef, Ambulong Bank, Dungan Reef, Sardines Reef, Apo Reef, and Manadi Island. These dive sites are about an hour away by pumpboat from the Caminawit Port.
Ilin Island
Ilin Island has a village of shell divers, being abundant in shells and coral reefs. Mina de Oro Beach Resort (Barangay Inasakan, Ilin Island; an hour by boat from surrounding islands). This resort serves as a jump-off point to other attractions of the island of Ilin. There are ancient burial caves of early Chinese traders, ethnic fishing villages, and numerous dive sites from which to view many tropical fishes. Lush foliage encircle the clear blue waters of the South China Sea. There are scuba diving facilities, a 6.8 CTM compressor, seaport facilities, diveboats, and PADI and NAUI-certified instructors.
White Island (Manadi, Barrio Ilin, San Jose; 15 minutes by pumpboat from Caminawit Port)
White Island has a long powdery beach where buried turtle eggs are occasionally found. It has an almost mile-long beach with smooth and powdery white sand. The tranquil and peaceful island is an ideal place for swimming, scuba diving and fishing. Turtle eggs are occasionally found buried in the sand, and visitors are cautioned to keep them undisturbed.
Apo Reef
Apo Reef is located in the territorial waters of the municipality of Sablayan, but San Jose is one of the points of entry of those who wish to get there. The Apo Reef Marine Park includes the fascinating bird-populated islands of Binangaan and Cajos del Bajo, which are surrounded by waters with over 500 species of marine life and luxuriant coral growth represented by approximately 400 to 500 kaleidoscopic coral species.
Mt. Iglit National Park
It is located in an area shared by the municipalities of Sablayan and Calintaan, but San Jose is also the main gateway there. It is a sanctuary for the 'tamaraw (Anoa Mindorensis), an endemic specie of buffalo found only in Mindoro. It provides a nice eco-tourism, trekking, or mountaineering alternative to beach/dive resorts.
looks like the beaches are nice...
ReplyDeletealso, we would like to see the Tamaraw
ReplyDeletefrom wiki -
The Tamaraw (Bubalus mindorensis) or Mindoro Dwarf Buffalo is a small hoofed mammal belonging to the family Bovidae. It is endemic to the island of Mindoro in the Philippines and is the only endemic Philippine bovine. It is believed, however, to have once also thrived on the greater island of Luzon. The tamaraw was originally found all over Mindoro, from sea level up to the mountains (2000 meters above sea level), but because of human habitation, hunting, and logging, it is now restricted to only a few remote grassy plains and is now an endangered species.
Contrary to common belief and past classification, the tamaraw is not a subspecies of the local carabao, which is only slightly larger, or the common water buffalo. In contrast to the carabao, it has a number of distinguishing characteristics: it is slightly hairier, has light markings on its face, is not gregarious, and has shorter horns that are somewhat V-shaped.It is the largest native terrestrial mammal in the country.
SARAP naman !
ReplyDeleteWhat with the fixation with the Tamaraw, Cat?
ReplyDeleteeh? do I sound as if I have one with the tamaraw then?
ReplyDeleteits the first creature I can associate with Mindoro when I hear about the place...
Ako rin. At saka, Mangyans.
ReplyDeleteEndangered species na pala ang Tamaraw.
ReplyDeleteOy, day, di ka pa nagpunta sa Bantayan Island! Holy week would be the perfect time to go. If anyone wants to go with me magsabi na this week or forever hold your peace.
ReplyDeletereally? cge! sama ako sa Bantayan Island! April 1-2 perfect!
ReplyDeletemaghahanap ako ng ticket ngayon for Holy Week at saka for May..nakup...di na yata ako makapunta sa Australia muna at ubos na ang aking travel funds :-)
its been a long time I heard na endangered sila...am not even sure how many are left...
ReplyDeleteKuya Nel...
ReplyDeleteare you saying masarap kainin ang tamaraw? *wink*
Tama ka Joey. Tamaraw is indeed one of the endangered specie. Dito lang naman pati yan sa atin sa Pilipinas mayroon. Kaya Cat, baka wala ka rin makita.
ReplyDeletePati nga yung mga Mangyan minorities, di na rin madaling makita. And those you might see/encounter, baka ma-disappoint ka kasi many of them now are city nomads (beggars in the streets) because they've been driven away from their home in the mountains by land-grabbers and illegal loggers.
now am feeling sad...though I think in one article I had passed by..parang there's a place there na may 2 tamaraws pa...
ReplyDeleteyeah. kaya kelangan makita yan! hehe
ReplyDeletebut its not as if its really only 2 left of the whole population of tamaraws in the whole of Mindoro right? *gulp*
ReplyDeleteIt is so sad to hear about their plight. Could the government do something about them?
ReplyDeleteCat, i-try mong pumunta sa Mindoro Zoo, if there is one.
ReplyDeleteCat, pumunta ka rin sa Far Eastern University. Maraming Tamaraws doon...LOL
ReplyDeleteI want to go....
ReplyDeleteIt's so lovely...I miss home..
Hehehe....nice one Joey. Dagdag ko lang: sa streets of Manila marami ka pa rin makikitang Tamaraw...Toyota Tamaraw, hahaha...
ReplyDeleterare na ba ang tamaraws? ginawa na yatang carabeef. meron akong sister sa mindoro at walang kinukwentong magandang mapasyalan sa place nila. ayaw i promote. pero weve been there a couple of times na. di ko type mga beaches.
ReplyDeletejo, marami ka yatang nakain na corniks and corn flakes. hihihi!!!
ReplyDeleteI wonder....though am not optimistic...election blues yata..
ReplyDeletethat is an idea..though honestly speaking and no offense to the mga taga-Mindoro....even the people I know who used to live or stay there are not enthusiastic about promoting their place...so its doubtful may ganyan...
ReplyDelete..so I've decided I want to see for myself more of the lesser-known places here in the Philippines
hehehe..honga...
ReplyDeleteGrace, from there ka pala?
ReplyDeleteanong say mo sa lugar mo :-)
you and Joey are tamaraws of the same horn (thinking the same thing) ehehe
ReplyDeleteOh chito, I used to ride that Tamaraw Jeeps long time ago. Matibay yun!
ReplyDeleteHa ha ha ha... heap corny gag:-)
ReplyDeletecan you elucidate about the part na di mo type ang beaches? what about the other areas? parang its unbelievable that an island of the Philippines will not have natural resource to boast about...
ReplyDeleteCat, Chito and I, we are just old horny farts?...LOL
ReplyDeleteehehe...I think its safer to say...no comment..*runs to the hills*
ReplyDeleteOK, deleted. Do the same to the one before this.
ReplyDeleteone nice link about Mindoro travels:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ironwulf.net/2009/07/23/mindoro-san-jose-chronicles-summary/
Ganda ng site. Ang dami rin palang pwedeng gawin sa Mindoro specially if you love nature. I like the white sands of Inasakan Beach and the site of the rare Tamaraw. Last time I saw one was at Manila Zoo back in 1981 during our visit there.
ReplyDeletehere's one more Joey...
ReplyDeleteohttp://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Philippines/Mindoro/blog-390183.html
yeah, I wanted to give it a chance, because some people who have been there or who haven't were telling me not much daw to see...
ReplyDeletewhich I think is not fair naman...with so many islands in the Philippines na maganda...baka spoiled lang mga tao hehehe...
Kailangan lang mag explore ng konti sila. You'll never know what you will discover.
ReplyDeleteso true about our 7107 islas...
ReplyDeleteHigh tide pa yan ha. Can you imagine pag low tide:-)
ReplyDeletehmm..isn't it just one ang difference? or mali si Charlene Gonzalez?
ReplyDeleteIt is more of a joke. It is like buying a beach front property during low tide and it disappears when the tide rises:-)
ReplyDeleteWho is Charlene Gonzalez?
I see. Well Charlene was the Ms. Philippines contestant natin sa Ms. Universe..wherein I think si Sushmita Sen ang winner...
ReplyDeleteDuring the Q&A portion, she was asked how many islands ang Pinas (kc nga archipelago). Without batting an eyelash and with a smile, she asked instead "High tide or low tide"? and then she answered after the applause.