Sunday, March 30, 2014

Marcos Country

Our northern tour took us to Luzon province known for the Marcos family, and a mountainous region renowned for its world heritage  rice fields.  These rice fields may have taken the people two thousand years to construct and perfect. The rice fields remind us of the Inca trail in Peru. The construction is similar.  David feels that as  this is an island nation, the people may have traveled from the Philippines across  the Pacific to far distant lands such as Peru.  Members of the famed Marcos family still live in this area.  In fact, some of them are still politicians for this area--one of the daughters is the governor for the province.

Vigan has retained the charm and elegance of its old Spanish ancestry.  The city has kept many of the old Spanish buildings and homes.  After a day of touring through museums, churches, a market, etc., the city fountain in the city square came alive--water sprites dancing to an array of music lit by coloured globes.  Children and adults at one end waited in eager anticipation for the spray park to start its magic--drenching them with spurts of water while they danced on a lit platform.


Our travels take us into the mountains. We twist and turn our way up to Sagada, and stay one night at St. Joseph's Resthouse.  Our guides visit the local tourist office to get permits and local guides as you cannot visit the sites without permits and the local guides.  They showed us the hanging coffins--sitting at the mouth of a cave, or hanging from the walls of the canyons.  The people use scaffolding to hang the coffins.  Only the people who are old now can be buried this way as the government has passed a law that future burials must be done in the cemeteries.  The coffins are small as the people are placed in the fetal position in the coffin.


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