Tuesday, September 29, 2015

What's a visit to Baguio without a horse-ride at Wright Park?





Pony boys with horse-riding tourists in Baguio City. Photographed by Arthur Allad-iw, InterAksyon.com
InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

Baguio City - Tourists riding horses around Wright Park and its environs is a classic sight in this city of Pines, dubbed the Summer Capital of the country. The "business" of offering horse rides to visitors started in the 1950s by an Ibaloi-Kankanaey and has flourished up to this day.

The lush pine-covered areas and the nippy weather make horse-riding a not-to-be-missed experience, especially for tourists and out-of-towners who've come to Baguio to enjoy a cool respite.

Much of the pleasant experience has to do with the friendly pony boys, who care for these animals and try their best to cater to the enjoyment of tourists. There's a fairly wide mix of these pony boys – from sprightly boys to veterans, many if whom, unbeknownst to outsiders, actually belong to prominent indigenous families here, as this writer has learned.

The practice of offering horse rides to visitors started at the Wright Park area after World War II. It was introduced by Scott Madon Sr., who hails from a prominent Ibaloi and Kankanaey clan. Scott is no longer around today, but his son, Scott Jr. was kind enough to share stories with InterAksyon.com and March Fianza, also an Ibaloi and a fellow journalist, relaxing one afternoon near the Wright Park corral.

"When my father was starting out, there were plenty of horses, to feed and take care of, as Wright Park is very near Camp John Hay, which was an American rest-and-recreation military facility – it actually evolved into an air base: Camp John Hay Air Base – because the Loakan air field was practically adjacent to the property," Scott Jr. began.

The horse-riding treats were offered initially around Wright Park, which was adjacent to members and guests of the high-heeled Baguio Country Club, where a well-maintained golf course and recreation complex surrounded by lush pine stands had been established right next to Camp John Hay.

The "business" at Wright Park gradually became so well-known that, at one time, it maintained in its outlying stables and corrals as many as 200 horses for the enjoyment of riders, As business grew, more and more enterprising individuals joined up without Scott Madon posing objections. The more, the merrier, as they say.

George Lim, who does business in the area, pointed out that, nowadays, there are about 60 horses offered for the Camp John Hay area, and another 20 horses at the Country Club.

The pony boys at Wright Park say the among most frequented "routes" are the trails around the Beckel-Ambuclao Road, popularly dubbed as Marlboro Country, for obvious reasons, alluding to the evocative cowboy scenery associated with the cigarette commercial. Other routes include Mines View, Country Club and nearby Pacdal.

These areas are all within a two-hour leisurely ride from Wright Park, where tall and old pine trees and the cool weather help to impart the feeling of not being in hot and tropical Philippines,particularly during the "ber" months.

For equally enjoyable but longer jaunts, Madon Jr. pointed out, trips may be arranged to reach as far as Loakan Airport (two-hour itinerary) and the so-called Japanese Trail (three hours), Green Valley (four hours), and Mount Santo Tomas in Cabuyao, Tuba (five hours).

Other destinations, like Mount Pulag, may be discussed or negotiated by special arrangement.

Most neophyte riders, however, tend to confine their riding within the vicinity of Wright Park and the well-known Mansion House – the so-called Summer MalacaƱang where the President customarily spends a few days each summer away from the hustle and bustle of Manila.

The going charge per hour at Wright Park presently averages PhP 300, which is also the same rate at the Country Club area. It can be higher by P70 at the Camp John Hay area.

A so-called "double-ride," or, say, a kid with a companion on the same horse, fetches an additional payment of P50 per hour at Camp John Hay, but there is no additional payment at Wright Park.

A guide may be arranged for at least five riders, also to be paid P300 per hour, at Wright Park. Depending on negotiation, riders can have more guides who will each be paid P300 per hour.

With as many as 200 horses at Wright Park, prospective riders can choose their horses.

The horse-riding business contributes more than a modest level of revenue to the city coffers, through taxes paid, mainly, not just from the rides but also from ancillary business activity of the souvenir shops and eateries.

An officer of the Wright Park Pony Boys Association, George Lim disclosed that they pay for business permits to the city government and a horse owner pays P500 per horse a year. So, with the 200 horses, an amount of P100,000 is generated from the business permits for horses alone at Wright Park.

"Dayta ti contribution me iti local a gobyerno (This the revenue contribution to the local government)," explained Lim. They also pay for other fees like veterinarian fee and barangay fee, among others.

Some horses can be hired for as long as eight hours a day, depending on the wishes or request of tourists.

The tourism being seasonal in nature, business slackens during the non-peak spells, and it would be good if the local government can find solutions to the fluctuation in the livelihood prospects of those directly affected and also their dependent families.

"It's not sunshine all the time," Scott Madon smiled and shrugged.



The pony boys


 Tourists enjoy horse-riding. 

Some of the 200 horses for hire are presented at the stable.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Benguet environmental group hits DENR for allowing mining tenements inside watersheds



InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5

BAGUIO CITY – While the regional office of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) eyes seven sites as protected areas, an environment group in Benguet scores the said office for allowing mining tenements on watersheds which are protected areas.

In an interview, Pastor Vergel Aniceto, chairman of KAIABANG, said that the situation showed the double-bladed policy of the state which declared watershed and protected areas but allowed mining in the said areas. KAIABANG is a provincial alliance of community and sectoral organizations in Benguet where it (KAIABANG) is also the provincial chapter of the Cordillera People’s Alliance.

Based on DENR-CAR documents, the mining tenements within the watershed or protected areas total to 817,380.0186 hectares or 44.68 percent from the region’s total area of 1,829,370 hectares.

The tenements are as follows: Mineral Production Sharing Agreement (MPSA) is 13,167.12 hectares or 1.6 percent of 817,380.0186 hectares tenement; Application for Financial and Technical Agreement Areas is 729,996.3086 or 89.30 percent of the total tenement; Exploration Permit Areas is 10,522.02 hectares or 1.287 percent of the tenement; and Application for Mineral Production Sharing Agreement Areas is 63,694.57 hectares or 7.79 percent of the tenement.

Earlier, DENR-CAR Director Ralph Pablo shared to media that they are eyeing seven sites to be added to the proclaimed and initial protected areas. He claimed that the declaration is part of their biodiversity conservation programs.

Pablo said the region is endowed with beautiful areas that need to be protected, adding that biodiversity conservation plays an important role in the protection of forestland and watersheds.  

The seven sites have a total land area of 188,693.866 hectares, which are as follows:
• Aran Cave in Twin Peaks, Tuba, Benguet with 107 hectares;
• Marag Valley in Luna, Apayao with 10,786 hectares;
• Agora Wildlife Sanctuary in Pudtol, Apayao with 2,816 hectares;
• Nagan-Maton River in Barangay Lydia, Pudtol, Apayao with 3,533 hectares;
• Quilling Cave with 50.866 hectares;
• Mt. Kalawitan in Sabangan, Mountain Province with 12,143 hectares; and,
• Mt. Poswey in Tubo, Abra with 3,168 hectares.

Those proclaimed earlier as protected area is the Upper Agno River Basin Resource Center with 77,698 hectares. The initial automatic protected areas, based on the National Integrated Protected Areas System (NIPAS) Act, are the following:
• Mount Pulag National Park with 11,550 hectares;
• Cassamata Hill National Park in Abra with 57 hectares;
• Balbalasang-Balbalan National Park in Kalinga with 20,864 hectares;
• Mt. Data National Park in Benguet and Mountain Province with 5,512 hectares;
• Marcos Highway Watershed Forest Reservation with 6,105 hectares; and
• Lower Agno Watershed Forest Reserve with 34,304 hectares.

Aniceto criticized the DENR program as superficial as they claimed to protect the biodiversity areas on one hand but allow mining in the protected areas.

He cited documents that showed that present mining applications are done inside and outside the protected areas which totals to almost 70 percent of the total land area of the region.

He urged the government agency to instead seriously adopt the indigenous systems in the management of forests and other resources in the region which have been proven effective for sustainable environment.

“The participation of indigenous communities is important as they are the real stewards of the environment,” pointed Aniceto, who is an Ibaloi from Itogon, Benguet. interaksyon.com

Monday, September 7, 2015

Igorots role during World War II

Many believed that World War II ended in the Cordillera when Igorot-led forces cornered Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita in Ifugao which led to his signing of his surrender paper. To manifest the bravery of the Igorots during the war, here is an excerpt no other than from Gen. Mac Arthur himself.    
Excerpts on the Igorot warriors’ role in World War II:

After the Japanese invasion, a military unit from the Cordillera played a crucial role in the defense of Bataan, and in the desperate fighting there, won high praise and commendation from General Mac Arthur for valor in battle. After stopping an attack by the Japanese 20th Infantry in hand-to-hand combat, the Igorot soldiers counterattacked riding atop tanks in jungle so thick the soldiers guided the drivers by banging on the turrets. Mac Arthur recounted the exploit, saying:

“Many desperate acts of heroism have fallen under my observation of many fields of battle in many parts of the world. But for sheer, breathtaking and heart-stopping desperation, I have never known the equal of these Igorots riding the tanks. Gentlemen, when you tell the story stand tribute to these galiant Igorots.”