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	<title>Worldwalker Destinations</title>
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		<title>3rd PERSON STAY FOR FREE PROMO!! ONLY AT EL NIDO!!</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/videos/2074</link>
		<comments>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/videos/2074#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Aug 2010 09:30:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[El Nido]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Palawan Special Packages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video Gallery]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/?p=2074</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[EL NIDO RESORTS PROMO!!! 2 + 1(3RD PERSON STAY FOR FREE) INCLUSIVE OF: * Overnight accommodation in an air-conditioned room * Roundtrip boat transfers (El Nido Airport – Miniloc / Lagen – El Nido Airport) on the regular airport shuttle for guests with Island Transvoyager (ITI) flights * One buri bag in the room * [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><span style="color: #ff0000;">EL NIDO RESORTS PROMO!!!</span></h1>
<p><strong>2 + 1(3RD PERSON STAY FOR FREE)</strong></p>
<p><strong>INCLUSIVE OF:</strong><br />
* Overnight accommodation in an air-conditioned room</p>
<p>* Roundtrip boat transfers (El Nido Airport – Miniloc /<br />
Lagen – El Nido Airport) on the regular airport shuttle for guests with Island Transvoyager (ITI) flights</p>
<p>* One buri bag in the room</p>
<p>* A pair of native slippers per adult</p>
<p>* Drinking water in the room</p>
<p>* Services of our Guest Activity Coordinators from 7am to 9pm daily</p>
<p>* Services of a Marine Sports Guide during day tours and activities</p>
<p>* Use of all water sports equipment (hobie cat, windsurf, pedal boat and kayak)</p>
<p>* Complimentary use of mask, snorkel, and full foot fins for duration of stay * Exciting land and water activities you can enjoy during your stay</p>
<p>*<strong>MEALS</strong>:</p>
<ul>
<li>Full Board Buffet = Php 2,500 nett / person (Adults 12 y/o &amp; above)</li>
<li> Full Board Buffet = Php 1, 500 nett / person (Child 7-11 y/o)</li>
<li> Full Board Buffet = FREE (Child 6 y/o and below)</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>ROUNDTRIP AIRFARES</strong>:</p>
<ul>
<li>Php 10,500 nett / person (Adults 12 y/o &amp; above)</li>
<li> Php 7,500 nett / person (Children 2-11 y/o)</li>
<li> Php 2,000 nett / person (Infants / below 2 y/o)</li>
</ul>
<p>(Direct Access to El Nido is from Manila via Island Transvoyager Inc. (ITI). The Regular aircraft used is a<br />
19-seater Dornier with a flight time of approximately 75 minutes with the following daily departures:</p>
<ul>
<li>Manila – El Nido ETD 7:30am, 11:30am and 3:00pm</li>
<li> El Nido – Manila ETD 9:30am, 1:00pm and 5:00pm</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>OTHER CHARGES</strong>:</p>
<ul>
<li>All visitors to El Nido, 12 years old and above are required to pay Conservation Fee of Php 200.00 per person per visit.</li>
<li>Fees collected will be used for the management, maintenance and administration of the El Nido – Taytay Protected Area and may be settled at the resort.</li>
<li>Booking period is from AUGUST 18-31, 2010. Travel Period is from SEPT. 1-30, 2010<br />
<strong> </strong></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>MINILOC ISLAND RESORT</strong></p>
<ul>
<li> Garden Cottage/ Cliff Cottage Php 4,880</li>
<li> Sea view Room/ Beachside Room Php 7,320</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>LAGEN ISLAND RESORT</strong></p>
<ul>
<li> Forest Room Php 7,320</li>
<li> Water Cottage/ Beachfront Cottage Php 9,760</li>
<li> Forest Suite Php 12,200</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="color: #0000ff;"><strong>FOR RESERVATIONS &amp; INQUIRIES, PLEASE CONTACT:<br />
ABBY or MAXINE<br />
Tel nos: (632) 470.8591 / 470.8596<br />
Email: maxine.delapaz@worldwalkerdestinations.com abby.santos@worldwalkerdestinations.com<br />
Website: www.worldwalkerdestinations.com</strong></span></p>
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		<title>CLUB PARADISE</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/photos/club-paradise</link>
		<comments>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/photos/club-paradise#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Aug 2010 05:48:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Palawan Special Packages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photo Gallery]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[SARILING ATIN PACKAGE April 1, 2009 to October 31,2010 except peak season BEACHFRONT OR SEA VIEW COTTAGES Php 13,000 net per person/2 nights Additional night= Php 6,000 per person HILLSIDE COTTAGES,GARDEN VIEW COTTAGES,ISLAND VIEW ROOMS Php 12,000 net per person/2 nights Additional night= Php 5,500/person KIDS (3 yrs. to 12yrs old); SHARING ROOM WITH ADULTS [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><span style="color: #ff0000;">SARILING ATIN PACKAGE</span></h1>
<p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><br />
</span></p>
<p><strong>April 1, 2009 to October 31,2010 <span style="text-decoration: underline;">except peak season</span><br />
</strong></p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>BEACHFRONT OR SEA VIEW COTTAGES</strong></span></p>
<ul>
<li>Php 13,000 net per person/2 nights</li>
<li><strong>Additional night</strong>= Php 6,000 per person</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>HILLSIDE COTTAGES,GARDEN VIEW COTTAGES,ISLAND VIEW ROOMS</strong></span></p>
<ul>
<li>Php 12,000 net per person/2 nights</li>
<li><strong>Additional night</strong>= Php 5,500/person</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>KIDS (3 yrs. to 12yrs old); <span style="text-decoration: underline;">SHARING ROOM WITH ADULTS</span></strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Php 7,400 net per person/ 2 nights</li>
<li><strong>Additional night=</strong> Php 3,200/ /person</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>INCLUSIONS:</strong></p>
<p>&#8211;Two nights accommodation in an air-conditioned cottage or room</p>
<p>&#8211; Roundtrip Palawan Tranfers</p>
<p>&#8211;Welcome Drinks</p>
<p>&#8211;6 sumptuous meals ( 2 breakfast,2 lunch and 2, dinner) excluding drinks for lunch and dinner</p>
<p>&#8211;Resort programmed * activities such as snorkeling at the house reef, picnic lunch, poolside and beachfront dinner, mini Olympic tournaments, island hiking tour, and sunset cruise</p>
<p>&#8211;Free use of selected resort facilities such as swimming pool, jacuzzi,mini-library,video room,videoke room,conference room,satellite TV room,beach volleyball,tennis court,badminton,table tennis,billiards,darts,card and boardgames, and snorkeling equipments (mask,fins,snorkels)</p>
<p>&#8211;Taxes and service charge</p>
<p>&#8211;Full-time service charge</p>
<p>&#8211;Full-time services of Activity Officers</p>
<p><strong>*Subject to availability and weather conditions</strong></p>
<p><strong>Single occupancy</strong>: add Php 2,500 per night</p>
<pre>Rates are valid to Filipinos and expatriates.
Accommodation to be confirmed is based on availability
Above rates are subject to change without prior notice..
</pre>
<h1><span style="color: #ff0000;">ROMANCING PARADISE</span></h1>
<p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>April 1, 2009 to October 31, 2010 <span style="text-decoration: underline;">except peak season</span></strong></span></span></p>
<p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="color: #000000;"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">BEACHFRONT OR SEA VIEW COTTAGES</span></strong></span></span></p>
<ul>
<li><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="color: #000000;">Php 29,000 net/couple 2 nights</span></span></li>
<li><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Additional night</strong>= 13,500 net couple/night</span></span></li>
</ul>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>HILLSIDE COTTAGES, GARDEN VIEW COTTAGES, ISLAND VIEW ROOMS<br />
</strong></span></p>
<ul>
<li>Php 26,000 net/ couple 2 nights</li>
<li>Additional night= Php 12,000/ couple/night</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>INCLUSIONS:</strong></p>
<p>&#8211;Two nights accommodation in an air-conditioned cottage or room</p>
<p>&#8211; Roundtrip Palawan Tranfers</p>
<p>&#8211;Welcome Drinks</p>
<p>&#8211;6 sumptuous meals ( 2 breakfast,2 lunch and 2, dinner) excluding drinks for lunch and dinner</p>
<p>&#8211;Resort programmed * activities such as snorkeling at the house  reef, picnic lunch, poolside and beachfront dinner, mini Olympic  tournaments, island hiking tour, and sunset cruise</p>
<p>&#8211;Free use of selected resort facilities such as swimming pool,  jacuzzi,mini-library,video room,videoke room,conference room,satellite  TV room,beach volleyball,tennis court,badminton,table  tennis,billiards,darts,card and boardgames, and snorkeling equipments  (mask,fins,snorkels)</p>
<p>&#8211;Taxes and service charge</p>
<p>&#8211;Full-time service charge</p>
<p>&#8211;Full-time services of Activity Officers</p>
<p><strong>*Subject to availability and weather conditions</strong></p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">PLUS!!! ROMANTIC DINNER SETUP,COMPLIMENTARY BOTTLE OF WINE,SOUVENIR ITEM AND ISLAND ESCAPADE ( depends on sea and weather conditions)</span></strong></p>
<pre>Rates are valid to Filipinos and expatriates.
Accommodation to be confirmed is based on availability
Above rates are subject to change without prior notice..
</pre>
<p><strong><span style="color: #0000ff;">For Reservations:</span></strong></p>
<p><strong>Call us:<span style="text-decoration: underline;"> </span></strong><span style="color: #0000ff;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>+63 2 470.85.91 or 470.85.21</strong></span></span></p>
<p><strong>Email us: <span style="color: #0000ff;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">info@worldwalkerdestinations.com </span></span></strong></p>
<p><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;"><br />
</span></strong></p>
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		</item>
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		<title>VISAYAS</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/directory/historical-landmarks/visayas</link>
		<comments>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/directory/historical-landmarks/visayas#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jul 2010 03:28:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Historical Landmarks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Visayas]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/?p=637</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[VISAYAN LANDMARKS Boracay is an island of the Philippines located approximately 315 km (200 miles) south of Manila and 2 km off the northwest tip of the island of Panay in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines. In 1990, it was voted by the BMW Tropical Beach Handbook as one of the best beaches in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>VISAYAN LANDMARKS</strong></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Boracay</strong> is an island of the Philippines located approximately 315 km (200 miles) south of Manila and 2 km off the northwest tip of the island of Panay in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines.    In 1990, it was voted by the BMW Tropical Beach Handbook as one of  the   best beaches in the world and again in 1996 by British publication  TV   Quick as the world&#8217;s number one tropical beach.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>The island comprises the barangays of Manoc-Manoc, Balabag, and Yapak (3 of the 17 barangays which make up the municipality of Malay),    and is under the administrative control of the Philippine Tourism    Authority in coordination with the Provincial Government of Aklan.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>The <strong>Carbon Market</strong> is the oldest and largest farmer&#8217;s market in Cebu City, Central Visayas state, the Philippines, and is a major tourist attraction in that city of over two million people. It is wheelchair accessible<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><sup>]</sup></span>It is located in downtown Cebu City, on MC Briones Street, Ermita barangay, and it can be reached by most buses or jeepneys in that area. Wares sold include clothing and kalamansi, baskets from Bohol, fish, chickens, and tripe, as well as souvenirsand handicrafts.</li>
</ul>
<p>Although   there is significant crime in the downtown area around the  Carbon   Market, the crimes are controlled by police, the vendors, and  nearby   residents.</p>
<p><strong> The Cathedral Museum of Cebu</strong> is a museum in Downtown Cebu City in the Philippines, (re)opened in November 2006. It is the ecclesiastical museum of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cebu.</p>
<p>The focus of  the museum is regional Church architecture and  artifacts. Many of the  items on display are from the Spanish colonial  times.</p>
<p>The <strong>Chocolate Hills</strong> are an unusual geological formation in Bohol, Philippines.   According to the latest accurate survey done there are 1,776 hills   spread over an area of more than 50 square kilometres (20 sq mi). They   are covered in green grass that turns brown during the dry season, hence   the name.</p>
<p>The Chocolate Hills are a famous tourist attraction of Bohol. They are featured in the provincial flag and seal to symbolize the abundance of natural attractions in the   province .They are in the Philippine Tourism Authority&#8217;s list of tourist   destinations in the Philippines; they have been declared the country&#8217;s   3rd National Geological Monument and proposed for inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage List.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Alburquerque</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Alburquerque, Bohol</p>
<p>Sta. Monica Parish</p>
<p>Boholanos  call the town &#8220;Albur.&#8221; Located along the highway is the  church complex  built on a low knoll. The Albur parish was established  in 1869 after  being separated from Baclayon, Bohol. An 1886 reports indicates that the church was built of light materials, however, the <em>convento</em> described as &#8220;de grandes dimensiones&#8221; was already standing. This way made of rubble, wood and <em>tabique</em>.   The date of the construction of the church is uncertain, although, the   generous use of reinforced concrete for the façade and the bell tower   (which is integrated into the façade) indicates that the church was   either being built or renovated in the 20th century. The church interior   has been renovated. The large <em>convento</em> to the side of the  church  is connected by a bridge to the church. The whole complex is  harmonized  by a series of arches that link church, bridge and <em>convento</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Alicia</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Alicia, Bohol</p>
<p><strong>Anda</strong></p>
<p>Anda is located in a peninsula that juts southwest. In this peninsula   prehistoric sites have been discovered, one intriguing site yielded   countless jawbones of pigs, carefully arranged. It was probably a ritual   site, considered by the National Museum of the Philippines as an   important archaeological site. The town was formerly called Quinale.   Renamed Anda in honor of Simón de Anda y Salazar who resisted British occupation in 1762-64, becoming governor general   in 1769, the town was created in 1876 and the parish in 1885. The Recollects were in charge of Anda until 1898, and by special request of the people   returned in 1902 until finally leaving in 1937. The town was burnt by   American after revolutionaries but the church was spared because of the   pleas of the parish priest.</p>
<p>Heritage  site: The church faces the beach, separated from it by a  wide-open  field. An older tabique church, probably the same one  reported by  Redondo (1886, 183) is said to have stood slightly across  the <em>convento</em>.  The change in colonial government in 1898 stopped  the collection of  material for a new church, begun as early as 1886,  however in 1926 the  church was completed under the direction of Fr.  Carlos Ortuoste. The  church is cruciform with a plain and austere  façade enlivened by doors  and windows. The interior however is a  pleasant surprise with the  colorful ceiling paintings by Ray Francia,  the retablos the use Greco-Roman motifs, and the Art Deco confessionals. The   adjoining convento was built in the 1880s and completed a decade later.</p>
<p><strong>Antequera</strong></p>
<p>The Nuestra Señora del Rosario parish of Antequera was founded in 1880. The church by this date was of <em>tabique pampango</em> and other light material. The present church at Antequera is new and   unremarkable but people go to Antequera to experience a different kind   of heritage: traditional basketry. Basketry is an ancient art form,   archaeologists theorize that basket making preceded weaving. Most   exquisite baskets found in the Visayas and even in Luzon, come from   Bohol. Every conceivable forest material is made into baskets which are   available wholesale or retail at the Sunday morning market at  Antequera.</p>
<p><strong>Baclayon</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Baclayon, Bohol</p>
<p>The Church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception in Baclayon is considered to be one of the oldest churches in the Philippines. It is one of the best presevered Jesuit build churches in the region, although in the 19th century, the Augustinian Recollects added a modern facade and a number of stone buildings that now surround   the church. The first Spanish missionaries or doctrineros in the   region, Fr. Juan de Torres and Fr. Gabriel Sanchez, first settled in   Baclayon in 1595. Shortly after their arrival, a visita was erected on   the spot. Although Baclayon was the first seat of the Spanish Jesuit missionaries, fear of Moro mauraders soon forced them to move their headquarters more inland, to Loboc.   Only in 1717, Baclayon became a parish, and construction of a new   church commenced. Some 200 native forced laborers constructed the church   from coral stones, which they took from the sea, cut into square   blocks, and piled on to each other. They used bamboo to move and lift   the stones in position, and used the white of a million eggs as to   cement them together. The current building was completed in 1727. The   church obtained a large bell in 1835. In the Baclayon church is a   dungeon, which was used to punish natives who violated the rules of the   Roman Catholic Church.</p>
<p>Next to the  church is the old convent, which also houses a small  museum with  centuries-old religious relics, artifacts and other  antiquities, dating  back to the 16th century. Included in the  collection are an ivory statue  of the crucified Christ looking towards  heaven; a statue of the Blessed  Virgin, said to be presented by Queen  Catherine of Aragon; relics of  St. Ignatius of Loyola, old gold  embroidered ecclesiastical vestments,  books with carabao skin covers,  and librettos of church music written in  Latin on sheep skins. Here you  can also find the cuadro paintings made  by the Filipino painter  Liberato Gatchalian in 1859.</p>
<p>Baclayon is some 6 km east of Tagbilaran City.   Catch a bus or jeepney in Tagbilaran, going into the direction of   Baclayon. You may also find a tricycle willing to bring you there.   Inmaculada Concepción Parish</p>
<p>The mission  of Baclayon was established by two Jesuits Juan de  Torres and Gabriel  Sanchez who arrived in Bohol on 17 November 1596.  They came from Cebu.  Torres reports that he could not find a decent  place to celebrate Mass,  there wasn&#8217;t even a serviceable table in the  dwelling they stayed in.  The Jesuit convinced the inhabitants to build a  church, which they  accomplished in no time. This was most likely a  bamboo and thatch  church. Baclayon served at one time as the residentia  or center of the  Bohol missions, where the superior resided. Baclayon  was one of two  towns that did not join the Diwata revolt (1621),  remaining steadfast in  the Christian faith.</p>
<p>Despite  claims that the present stone church in Baclayon is the  oldest in the  Philippines, evidence places the construction of the  church to 1727. The  belief that the church was built in 1595 may have  come because of a  19th century report by the Recollects that the  mission was founded in  1595; but the same report lists two other dates  1593 and 1594. The date  1595 inscribed on the church façade is a later  addition.</p>
<p>The adjoining  but separate tower may have been started by the  Jesuits, but it was  completed during the administration of the  Recollects, ca. 1777 as a  stone inscription on the tower indicates. The  inscription was recently  defaced. The church complex was fortified  with a wall built by the  Jesuits. The walls&#8217; coral stones were used by  the Recollects when they  built a new wing of the convento in 1872.</p>
<p>Heritage  Features: The church has two facades: an inner one which is  Classical in  inspiration, and outer one built in the 19th century by  the Recollects  is a portico decorated by three arches. The addition of  porticoes to the  façade seems to have been a style prevalent in Bohol  and Cebu during  the 19th century. Porticoes are found in Loay, Loboc,  Cortes churches in  Bohol, and Talisay, Recolletos, in Cebu.</p>
<p>The green and  gilded altars are the focal point of the interior.  They are exuberant  versions of Baroque popular during the 18th century.  Although the main  retablo displays saints of Recollect devotion, the  retablo itself traces  to the Jesuits whose emblem and motto &#8220;Ad majorem  Dei gloriam&#8221;  surmounts the main altar. In the nave are found two  benches carved in  low relief. One features genre scenes: a goat tied to  a tree, a coconut,  nipa grove, and a man in stocks. A painting of the  Ascension, Church  Fathers and San Vicente Ferrer are found in the nave.  These date to the  19th century.</p>
<p>The church  had a pipe organ installed in the 1800s but now in  disrepair. The choir  and organ loft are decorated with cut out designs.  The painting on the  stucco finish of the church is of recent vintage  (1996) and does not  conform to the style and period of the interior.</p>
<p>Behind the  church and convento are remnants of a fortification. Oral  lore  identifies some structures as horse stables, a kitchen, and a  jail.</p>
<p>Baclayon  started the trend in Bohol of establishing parish museums.  The amount of  liturgical material preserved in Baclayon is impressive.  The church  inventory books have helped in dating some pieces. In  Baclayon cantorals  (large handwritten music books) was found the Misa  Baclayana, a musical  setting for the Mass which has been revived and is  part of the  repertoire of the Loboc Children&#8217;s choir. Permission from  the parish is  needed to see the museum, which is generally locked for  security  reasons.</p>
<p><strong>Balilihan</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Balilihan, Bohol</p>
<p>The town and parish of Balilihan were from Baclayon in 1829, to make room for Dagohoy’s followers after the revolt, which   lasted eight decades, were put to an end by a massive assault by Spanish   troops from Cebu. The Recollects administered the parish until 1898.   Although Redondo (1886, 177) reports the presence of a tabique church,   the present church was probably completed in the early 20th century. The   church mentioned by Redondo and renovated in 1889 was razed to the   ground by American troops.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The church of poured concrete has a nave divided into  three  aisles, a portico in front of the façade and a bell tower in  front of  the portico. The cruciform church dedicated to Nuestra Señora  del Carmen  has a squat octagonal cupola. The interior is embellished  with  paintings by Ray Francia, and has altars that combine Corinthian   columns, neogothic spires and crockets, Baroque volutes and Art Deco   open work. A veritable summary of 200 years of style.</p>
<p>On a hill  overlooking the plaza is a much older structure.  Constructed in 1840 of  cut coral the Balilihan bell tower stands at  strategic position, which  made it a useful sentinel of the Abatan  River. Thus it may have function  both as a watchtower and as a bell  tower.</p>
<p>Balilihan Watchtower</p>
<p>Nuestra Señora del Carmen Parish</p>
<p>Built in 1840  and located on a hill beside the church, the tower  located about 20  kilometers upstream of the Abatan river also serves a  watchtower against  marauding bands. The church located at the foot of  the hill is new,  although the parish was founded in 1829.</p>
<p>Heritage  features: Rising to four stories, with no clear divisions  between  floors, the quadrilateral bell tower used to be sheathed with  cut coral.  Its fenestrations are few concentrated mostly on the  uppermost floor,  where the arched opening are decorated by scroll work  and floral  designs. The whole structure has a hip roof with wide  overhangs,  supported by carved corbels. The structure had a tile roof  but like the  rest of the tower is in disrepair. The bells of the tower  have been  removed and are in a new bell tower beside the church at the  foot of the  hill.</p>
<p><strong>Buenavista</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Buenavista, Bohol</p>
<p><strong>] Calape</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Calape, Bohol</p>
<p>The Calape church is gothic-inspired.</p>
<p>The town is  named after type of rattan, called locally kapi or  kalapi. Both town and  parish dedicated to San Vicente Ferrer were  founded in 1802. However,  the settlement was already being served by  priests from neighboring town  of Loon before this date. In 1829,  remnants of Dagohoy’s followers,  some 1500 were coxed to settle in the  area. The Recollects took charge of the parish until 1898 when it was turned over to the   seculars. An old tabique and wooden church was replaced by one in the   neogothic style commenced in 1933 and completed two decades later in   1954.</p>
<p>Heritage  Sites: Calape church is a good example how colonial styles  persisted  even if the Spaniards who promoted them had already left.  Jose (2001,  34) describes the church as the “epitome of Bohol Gothic.”  All of the  structure is basically a lintel and post type, gothic  features like  lancet arches, rose window, spires and crockets are  merely decorative.  The pediment has a rose window although it functions  as an ornament  rather than a real opening to the church interior. A  typical Bohol  feature, but definitely not gothic, is the portico built  in front of the  façade, an extension of the choir loft. Gothicizing  elements are found  in the interior on the altars and event the  confessionals. The transept  is an addition to the original plan and is  rather narrow. The church is  attributed to two builders, Eliseo Josol y  Villamayor and Rosalio Real y  Oppus, were said to have been shown a  picture of the Santo Domingo  church in Intramuros, which they used as a  model.</p>
<p>A historic  bell dated 1690 and dedicated to St. John the Baptist by  Bachiller Juan  Alfonso Ruiz, is found in the bell tower. This bell came  from the  defunct Parian parish in Cebu, ordered dissolved, resulting in the demolition of the church in 1878-79.</p>
<p><strong>Candijay</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Candijay, Bohol</p>
<p><strong>Clarin</strong></p>
<p>Originally named Can-ogong, Clarin was established as a parish in honor of St. Michael the Archangel in 1924, after being a visita of Inabanga in 1852, and of Tubigon in 1881. Clarin was established a town in 1921 and named after Aniceto   Clarin, Bohol’s first civil governor. The Recollects administered the   parish from 1927-37 and were succeeded by the seculars. The church   traces to the 1920s when Recollects built over a provisional church   raised in 1924. In 1952, the roof and walls were raised and in 1955   another register was added to the bell tower. This was damaged in an   earthquake of 1996 and had to be torn down and replaced with a more   stable structure.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The church made of poured concrete continues the  neogothic style  prevalent in Bohol with a central tower in front of the  façade, which  serves both a bell tower and portico. Lancet windows,  finials, and other  Gothic motifs are expressed in cement.</p>
<p><strong>Corella</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Corella, Bohol</p>
<p><strong>Cortes</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Cortes, Bohol</p>
<p>Known by the ancient name Malabago, Cortes was already being served by priests from Maribojoc.   Established as an independent parish in 1793 or 94, it was renamed   Paminguitan. The town was established later, probably in 1862. The town   was renamed after the Spanish conquistador, Hernan Cortes. The parish   was dedicated to the Santo Niño. Although the Recollects who served the parish from its inception until 1898 had begun to build a   church in 1880, the bell towers upper register was not completed until   the 20th century.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: Perched on the slope of a low hill, the town of  Cortes gives its  church a dramatic setting. Shaped as a cruciform, this  sedate building  is of cut coral has an octagonal crossing tower.  Floral carving frame  the doorway, and a light pink plaster can still be  seen suggesting that  the façade was more colorful than it is now. The  interior is dominated  by the painted ceiling done by Ray Francia. The  main retablo has twisted  Solomonic columns and profusely carved flanges  in the Baroque idiom, a  contrast to the otherwise revivalist line of  the church.</p>
<p>Cortes Church</p>
<p>Santo Niño Parish</p>
<p>The Cortes church is located on top of a hill. Like most Bohol churches, the Cortes church has a <em>portico</em> in front of an older façade.</p>
<p><strong>Dauis Church</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Dauis, Bohol</p>
<p>Another beautiful church in Bohol is the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption in Dauis, Bohol, on the Island ofPanglao. It is located not far from the bridge that connects Panglao with Bohol. The church was founded by the Jesuits Fr. Diego de Ayala and Joseph Gregorio. The church is built in a   mixture of styles, influenced by both Byzantine and Romanesque   architecture. Inside, on the ceiling, are some impressive frescoes   painted Ray Francia in 1916. Lito Arraya renovated the building in 1970.   The church&#8217;s patron saint, the Virgin of the Assumption, is said to   possess miraculous powers. An old legend relates that once, when the   town was invaded by pirates, the people of Dauis locked themselves into   the church. However, they soon ran out of provisions and water. Then a   miracle occurred: a well appeared at the foot of the altar. This same   well is still the main source of water for the people living close to   the church, and, although the well is only a few meters from the sea,   the water is absolutely fresh. The water is said to have healing powers,   so, if you&#8217;re visiting here, don&#8217;t forget to bring a bottle and take   some home.</p>
<p>This is one of Bohol’s   beautiful churches, which has retained its Spanish architecture   although it has a semi-modern façade. The church is a nice three   kilometer walk from Tagbilaran City. Alternatively, you may catch a tricycle or jeepney to bring you across.</p>
<p><strong>Dimiao</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Dimiao, Bohol</p>
<p>The San Nicolas Tolentino parish is in Dimiao, Bohol.   The date of the parish&#8217;s foundation is uncertain, although by 1750   there are records of baptism in the parish. The church may have been   built toward the later half of the 19th century. The structure of cut   stone is cruciform, though its transept is short. The façade can be   described as Neobaroque. Although classical overall, shallow reliefs of   flowers arranged as vertical bands decorate the façade. The façade is   flanked by twin octagonal towers.</p>
<p>Its heritage  features are described as follows: The church interior  is simple, coming  to a focus at the Neoclassical altars. One of the  side altars is  missing. The convento is located behind the church and  is now a school.  Beside the church are the ruins of what appears to be  cemetery and two  mortuary chapels. Archaeological excavations in the  area have uncovered  very little remains, probably the site was never  used.</p>
<p><strong>Duero</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Duero, Bohol</p>
<p>Named after a mighty river that traverses northern Spain and Portugal, Duero was created a town in 1862, from barrios of Guindulman and Jagna.   It became a parish in 1863 with the advocacy of Santa Filomena,   however, it is present patron is the Immaculate Conception. The   Recollects administered the parish until 1898, returning in 1902 and   finally leaving in 1937. Construction of the church began under the   first Recollect pastor Fray Lorenzo Hernandez (1863-70) who collected   wood necessary for construction. The church was completed in 1874 and   the convento around the same era during the term of Fray Francisco   Castellano (1871-86). The church’s cogon roof was replaced with zinc   sheets in the late 19th century. The church and adjoining convento were   the only structures saved from destruction when American troops set the   town on fire in October 1901.</p>
<p>Heritage  site: Designed in the “Greek temple” revival style it one  of the few  churches in such style (Anda, Dumaguete, and Malabon  designed by Luciano  Oliver in 1861 among them). But what sets Duero  apart is the generous  use of wood. Indeed, it is one of the few  surviving “gems of Philippine  architecture in wood” (Jose 2001, 50).  Although Fray Isidoro Musitu  (1891-97) had the mortar covered with  cement, the tabique walls enclosed  in zinc sheets and the interior  embellished, much of the original  structure still exists. Originally,  the walls were made of double walls  of wood planks, with planks set  vertically in the inner wall and  horizontally in the outer.</p>
<p>Like the  church, the bell tower a separate structure joined by a  bridge has a  lower story of mortar and an upper story of wood and zinc  sheets. The  1920s zinc sheets inscribed “Wolverhampton” are still in  place. The  interior is a symphony in wood: wooden floors, wooden  ceiling originally  painted with an artesonado design (coffered ceiling)  with alternating  rosettes and concentric circles. The crossing’s  ceiling is quite shallow  with a carved pineapple dangling from its  center whence a chandelier  hangs. The wooden retablos are in  neoclassical style.</p>
<p><strong>Garcia Hernandez</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Garcia Hernandez, Bohol</p>
<p>Originally known as Sinugbuan because it was populated by Cebuanos, the town was established a visita of Jagna in 1841 and in 1844 a chapel was built. Jagna, the mother parish, had a <em>retablo</em> and a painting of St. John the Baptist, the patron installed in 1848.   In 1857 a more substantial church was built, and in 1858 the town was   established and a year later the parish. During this time the town was   renamed to honor two Recollect priests who were instrumental in securing the necessary authorization   for this development: Fray Jose Garcia of Loon and Narciso Hernandez of   Guidulman. In 1870, the town site was transferred to the neighboring   barrio Manaba, and the former site came to be known as Lungsod-daan. The   Recollects remained until 1898. Americans burned the town in 1901.</p>
<p>A heritage  site, the present church was commenced in 1880 and  completed in 1896,  replacing an earlier church. However, an earthquake  in 1990 damaged the  façade. The rebuilt façade is in a completely new  style unsympathetic to  the older church. The interior has a main nave  flanked by side aisles. A  Doric frieze runs across the church. The  device of the frieze and  fluted columns are used in the retablo mayor.</p>
<p><strong>Guindulman</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Guindulman, Bohol</p>
<p>Dedicated to the Nuestra Señora de la Consolacion, Guindulman located on the banks of the Tabajan River was organized as a town to receive the returning bands of Dagohoy’s followers who had fled to the mountains after his revolt. The Recollects inaugurated the parish in 1798 remaining there until 1898, and   returning in the early 20th century to remain until 1937. The town was   put to the torch by Americans during the Fil-American War and by the Japanese during World War II, the church and <em>convento</em>, however, were spared.</p>
<p>Fray Antonio Fernandez, the first Recollect parish priest (1798-1807) built the first church but it was burnt   during a raid by Dagohoy’s followers in 1829. A new church was built in   its place and is mentioned in Redondo (1886, 184) as of modern   construction. This neoclassical church survived to the 20th century but   now stands in ruin behind the present church. Another church was begun   in 1881, a decade after a new convento was completed (1877). The church   took more than half a century to finish culminating in 1950.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The present church is of mixed material, the lower  register of  coral stone and the upper of concrete, reflecting the long  time it took  to complete it. A portico was built in front of the façade  and supports a  balcony. The church interior is relatively bare, with  ornaments from  the 1950s and 60s. The 1877 <em>convento</em> beside the church is separated by a road and is now used as a school.</p>
<p><strong>Inabanga</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Inabanga, Bohol</p>
<p>Located on an elevated area beside the banks of the Inabanga River, a mission was founded in the place by the Jesuits in 1596. Like Talibon, it was administered in Jesuit times from the Colegio de San Ildefonso in Cebu.   The parish was founded in 1722, with the advocacy of San Pablo  Apostol,  passed on to the Recollects in 1768 and they remained its  pastors until  1898.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The church is ideally situated on an elevated area,  the highest  point in town. Stone embankments protect the site. An  earlier church of  stone was built during Jesuit times but it was burnt  probably during the  Dagohoy revolt. Redondo (1886, 181) reports that the church was in bad   condition and so was the adjoining convento. A new stone church was   completed in 1899 but this was burnt by Americans in 1902 in retaliation   for the attack on the garrison at Tubigon.   The church is composed of various materials, the last being concrete,   introduced by the secular priest Fr. Quiterio Sarigumba in 1931. The   church uses gothic elements in the façade and has a portico in front of   the entrance. The interior is disappointingly modern, except for an   exquisite wooden tabernacle probably from Jesuit times and the murals of   the Garces brothers, done in the style of Canuto Avila and Ray  Francia.</p>
<p><strong>Jagna</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Jagna, Bohol</p>
<p>San Miguel Arcángel Parish</p>
<p>According to Cavada, the parish of Jagna was established in 1631. The Jesuit priest, José Sanchez (Josef Zanzini [1616-92]) built a church and convento in Jagna. Fr. Sanchez was an Austrian who arrived in the Philippines in 1643 and was assigned to the Visayas where he worked in Bohol and Leyte.   He became vice-provincial for the Visayas. He was a well-known builder   and is reported by Jesuit historian Pedro Murillo Velarde to have also   been responsible for building churches in Loboc, Dauis and Maribojoc.  He  embellished the churches with gilded retablos and for Jagna built a   three-story structure in honor of St. Michael. Unfortunately, the  church  at Jagna (probably the one built by Sanchez) was destroyed by an 1808 fire which   also damaged the parish records. By 1886, Redondo documents a rubble   church 125 varas (yards) long, 25 wide and 16 tall until the moldings.   He notes that the church had a nipa roof. Adjacent to the church was the   convento which was built of rubble with a metal roof. Both church and   convento must have been built by the Recollects who assumed   administration of Bohol with the departure of the Jesuits in 1768. Jagna   was a convenient take off point for Camiguin Island, in colonial times the gateway to northern Mindanao. Ships coming from the north would island hop, stopping by Jagna on the way to Mindanao. On a clear day the volcanoes of Camiguin can be clearly seen.</p>
<p>Heritage  Features: The present church of Jagna is greatly renovated.  After  suffering damage from a typhoon in the 1980s, its façade was  heavily  plastered with cement. The façade is embellished with a pointed  arch  reminiscent of Gothic. The church interior is also renovated.</p>
<p><strong>Jetafe</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Getafe, Bohol</p>
<p>Originally named Ambacon, Jetafe is near Pangpang, a lair of Dagohoy’s followers. Named after Getafe (Boholanos use “J”) after a town near Madrid, it was a barrio of Inabanga until 1835 when it was constituted as a town. It became a parish in   1876, with the patron as the Santo Niño, and was under the Recollects   until 1898. The first church was constructed in 1883, it was made of   tabique on mortar base. It had a stone pavement for the nave and a   wooden floor for the sanctuary. A church of poured concrete replaced   this earlier church in 1926.</p>
<p>Heritage  site: The Jetafe church façade resembles that of Tubigon,  where a  central tower houses the bells on the upper story and the lower  story  forms a portico before the main entrance. It resembles early  Florentine  Renaissance churches. The church follows the basilica plan  with a <strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Lila</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Lila, Bohol</p>
<p>A parish named in honor the Virgin of the Holy Rosary, Lila, Bohol was under Dimiao, Bohol until it became an independent parish. Originally located at Macahugan   where a church and convento had been built, the town was transferred to   its present site in 1871. A church of tabique and wood was destroyed   when American troops burnt Lila to the ground in 1901. The town was   re-established in 1915.</p>
<p>A heritage  site, the present church was built during the term of Fr.  Francisco  Maglasang (1918-360). Completed in 1925, it is of poured  concrete.  Typical of Bohol churches it has a <em>portico</em>, which is  flanked by  bell towers. The interior is divided by a colonnade into a  central nave  with flanking aisles. The altars, inspired by neoclassic  lines, and the  ceiling paintings demonstrate the persistence of the  colonial idiom into  the 20th century. A number of old stone bridges  traversing the  provincial road can be found.</p>
<p><strong>Loay</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Loay, Bohol</p>
<p>Santissima Trinidad Parish In 1795 the Loay was separated from Loboc to which it belonged as a <em>visita</em>.   Other authorities give 1815 as the foundation date. The church complex   is built on a plateau facing the sea and near the mouth of the Loboc   River. A flight of stairs connects the church complex to the rest of the   town located below the hill. The vehicular entrance to the complex is   via the road to Loboc.</p>
<p>Heritage  Features: The church is cruciform, has two facades: the  older is  decorated with low relief and the newer was apparently  completed in the  20th century as its upper register is in reinforced  concrete. The whole  is surmounted by cement statues depicting the  virtues. The bell tower is  a separate structure built at a short  distance from the church. Like  many Bohol churches the interior is  painted with trompe o&#8217;eil and with  Biblical scenes. The altars are in  the Neoclassical style.</p>
<p><strong>Loboc</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Loboc, Bohol</p>
<p>The Church of San Pedro in Loboc, Bohol is the second oldest church in Bohol. It was originally built in 1602,   but soon reduced to ashes. In 1638, a stronger one was build. Located   near the river, it has survived a number of floods. Inside the church,   you can admire some remarkable naive paintings on the ceiling. A Spanish   coat of arms can be found in the stone wall near the entrance of the   convent. The bell tower of Loboc is about 100 meters from the church.   Attached to the building is a three storey convent, which today houses   the <em>Museo de Loboc</em> on the third floor. This museum houses a few   old statues of saints, and some other antique religious artifacts. In   Loboc, you can also admire a shameful witness of wasteful planning.   Exactly next to the church is a partly finished bridge across the river.   Hopefully, this bridge will never be completed, as, to do that, the   Church will have to be destroyed.</p>
<p>Loboc is  21 km east of Tagbilaran. Catch a bus to Loboc, or one in  the direction  of Carmen, and ask the driver to drop you off at the  church. Loboc</p>
<p>San Pedro y San Pablo Parish</p>
<p>In 1596, the  Jesuit Gabriel Sanchez gathered together 12 separate  settlements to form  one town in the interior of Bohol at a site where  villagers from the  mountains met to trade with those from the coast.  Sanchez convinced the  villagers to build a church of wood and thatch  and to win their goodwill  gave them trinkets, needles, beads and other  small gifts he had  brought. In 1602, Loboc was apparently constituted  as a pueblo. During  the early 17th century, Loboc became well known as a  pilgrimage site,  because the saintly priest Alonso de Humanes was  buried in the church. A  stone church was built ca. 1632 but was damaged  by fire. A newer and  bigger church was completed in 1734. It was  apparently in the process of  being decorated with carvings when the  Jesuits were expelled from the  Philippines. Loboc became the residentia  or center of the Jesuit  missions because it was deemed safer from  slave raids than the coastal  towns of Baclayon and Dauis where at one  time the residentia was  located.</p>
<p>The Recollects succeeded Jesuits in their ministry to Loboc in 1768. Fr. Aquilino Bon built a hexagonal   bell tower located at a distance from the church. He added a portico  and  in effect covered the Baroque façade of the Jesuit church. The   Recollects installed a pipe organ in the church in the 1820s. Parts of   the L-shaped convento behind the church may trace to the Jesuits,   although an 1886 document credits them with building the convento which   is described as &#8220;de mucho solidez y capacidad.&#8221; The convento is unusual   for being three stories rather than two as is more common.</p>
<p>Heritage Features: The Loboc church is decorated with carvings of cherubs, the Papal tiara and emblems of the Jesuit.   It has two facades: the Jesuit-built Baroque façade decorated with   unfinished medallions depicting saints and the Neoclassical portico   added by the Recollects. Although main altar is Neoclassical, two side   altars are Baroque and two at the transept ends are put together from   several parts, creating a syncretic style. Many of the saints of Jesuit   devotion have been replaced by saints of Recollect devotion except for   the image of San Francisco Xavier found at the side altar to the right   of the main altar. Hidden by the main altar, is a bas relief of San   Ignacio and San Francisco Xavier done in stucco (reminders that this was   once a Jesuit church).</p>
<p>The sacristy  behind the main altar is also decorated with relief. A  greatly  deteriorated bas relief over the door show a scene with a  number of  persons: probably Jesus and the apostles or Jesus with Jesuit  saints.  Part of a retablo whose pediment is embellished with  Veronica&#8217;s veil and  a crucifix decorate the interior. Stone stairs lead  to upper story,  which the Jesuits probably used as a residence.</p>
<p>The rear wall  of the church, just outside the sacristy entrance  displays a relief of  San Ignacio flanked by women with feather  headdress, a motif found in  Latin American colonial art. Loboc is known  for music.</p>
<p>The <em>convento</em> built behind the church, though needing much  conservation, has a number  of pleasing features, namely, a large sala  with decorated walls and a  stamped tin ceiling, a dining hall with  large armoire and a connecting  hall whose covered balcony is decorated  with colored glass panes and a  gilded ceiling. Loboc has a small museum  on the third floor. On the way  to the museum are gargoyle heads one  painted a deep blue.</p>
<p><strong>Loon</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Loon, Bohol</p>
<p>The Church of Our Lady of Light in Loon, Bohol is the biggest church in Bohol.   At the spot of the current church, a chapel was constructed during the   term of Fray Manuel de Elizalde in 1753. Some fifty years later, the Augustinian Recollects replaced the current church in Ionic and Corinthian styles. The   building has two octagonal bell towers, and is fully symmetric. From   Loon Church leads of long four-flight stairway of 174 stone steps, which   connects to Napo, the former seat of the town. Wood to build the  church  was carried from the forest of Maitum by forced laborers, who  had to  beat their way through uncharted trails and across rivers.</p>
<p><strong>Nuestra Señora de la Luz Parish</strong></p>
<p>The present  town of Loon is located on a plateau about fifty meters  or more above  the shore level. The older town, located at the shore,  was established  by the Jesuits in 1753. The Recollects who took charge  of the town in  1768 transferred it to its present site. In 1853, they  began building  what is easily the most beautiful of the 19th century  churches in Bohol.  Designed by Domingo Escondrillas, a government  engineer, the church is a  triple-naved structure made of finely cut  coral. The central nave is  separated from the laterals by stout pillars  of cut coral.</p>
<p>Heritage  features: The central portion of the church facade surges  forward giving  it a dynamism more akin to Baroque than the Neoclassical  style  prevalent during this period. Delicately though inaccurately  carved  acanthus decorate the capitals of the twined columns of the  facade.  Between the twined columns are plaques incised with Biblical  texts and  dedicatory phrases. The facade&#8217;s balanced composition is  completed by  twin towers that flank it.</p>
<p>The church&#8217;s  Neoclassical main altar fills the whole breadth of the  sanctuary. Relief  roundels portraying the life of the Virgin Mary flank  the main niche  where an image of the patroness is displayed. Devotion  to the Virgin  under the title Our Lady of Light or Kasilak in Visayan  traces to 18th  century Palermo where a vision of the Virgin rescuing  souls from the  maws of hell was reported. The church of Cainta in Rizal province serves as its counterpart on the north when it was   founded in 1760. The convento built at the same time as the church is   now a school.</p>
<p>To connect  the older town site with the newer one, the Recollects  built a wide  flight of stairs, protected near the topmost landing by a  watchtower,  now in disrepair.</p>
<p>Loon is some 27.5 km north-west of Tagbilaran City, along the route to Tubigon. Catch a bus to Tubigon from the Integrated Bus Terminal and ask the driver to let you out in Loon.</p>
<p><strong>Maribojoc Church</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Maribojoc, Bohol</p>
<p>The parish of Maribojoc, Bohol was founded in 1768, and construction of a church started 1798 and   lasted 18 years. The church is located in Maribojoc town, 14 kilometers   from the Tagbilaran. The place can be reached by bus of jeepney.   Maribojoc</p>
<p>Santa Cruz Parish</p>
<p>Maribojoc began as a Jesuit mission in the 18th century. The Jesuits built a temporary church which the Recollects replaced with the present structure by 1886.</p>
<p>Heritage  Features: Unlike other churches, the convento of Maribojoc  is located  behind the church rather than at its side. This gives the  convento an  unobstructed view of the sea, especially from the balcony  that runs the  length of the convento. The convento is approached  through the sacristy  and is a continuation of it. Above the sacristy is  a room which has been  converted to the Maribojoc museum.</p>
<p>The church is  planned as cruciform. Its façade is plain, decorated  by thin pilasters  and niches with images of saints. The interior comes  as a surprise  because of the three Neogothic altars in the church. The  traceries and  finials of gilded hardwood are delicately carved. The  main altar has an  image of the Blessed Trinity and bas relieves of the  life of Mary  Magdalene. The church ceiling is made of metal and painted  with  catechetical and liturgical motifs</p>
<p><strong>Panglao Church</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Panglao, Bohol</p>
<p>The church of Panglao, Bohol is located on the south-western side of Panglao Island, 18 kilometers from Tagbilaran City.   The church is noteworthy because of its twin antique confessionals   carved with grape and dove patterns. Its ceiling murals depict the   sacraments.</p>
<p>San Agustin Parish</p>
<p>According to one authority, Panglao, Bohol was established a parish 1782, although the Recollects record that they took charge of the town in 1803. A 20th-century church   stands beside the ruins of an older church, probably one built by the Jesuits.   Whatever remains of the older façade indicate that it may have been   Baroque in design. This church was ruined before in 1886, when it is   reported that a provisional church of wood and tabique was constructed.   To the rear of the ruins and at some distance, stands a five story bell   tower/ watch tower built 1851. Octagonal in plan and covered by  pitched  roof, the tower is said to be the tallest of its kind in the  country.  The tower is in bad state and needs immediate intervention for  its  conservation.</p>
<p><strong>Tagbilaran City</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Tagbilaran City, Bohol</p>
<p>Cathedral of San José</p>
<p>The present cathedral of Tagbilaran City traces to a church built by Fr. Valero de San Pascual, OAR (1839-55),   the bell tower to Fr. Jose Sanchez, OAR (1884-88). The church was   improved by Fr. Escolastico Enciso from 1888-94. It replaced a smaller   church built by the Jesuits which burnt on 23 December 1798. The convento was built by Fr. Lucas Corominas in 1872.</p>
<p>Tagbilaran started as <em>visita</em> of Baclayon becoming an independent parish in 1767. Then under the Jesuits, administration transferred to the Recollects the following year when the Jesuits were expelled from the Philippines.</p>
<p>Both exterior  and interior of the church have been greatly  renovated, the façade has  been given a Neoromanesque look, and the  lateral walls have been opened  to accommodate a growing population.  Boholanos are very religious and  one of the highest percentage of  church attendance is recorded in Bohol.  Churches are always full. Part  of recent renovation involved building a  Blessed Sacrament chapel which  is open 24 hours a day. This devotion  has spurred the construction of  other chapels in different parishes.  Some are attached to the walls of  historic structures, others are built  in former baptisteries. Others  are independent structures apart from the  church.</p>
<p>Heritage  Features: Despite frequent renovations, some historic  pieces still  remain. Apparently, side altars from an older church were  saved, because  the two remaining in the church are in the 18th century  Baroque style.  The central altar, decorated with symbols from the Old  Testament is in  the 19th century Neoclassical style. The statue of San  Jose, the patron  of the church is apparently of 18th century vintage.  The church has a  good collection of ancient church documents, including  a fragment of an  18th century Visayan dictionary.</p>
<p><strong>Talibon</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Talibon, Bohol</p>
<p>A gold-mining town in colonial days, Talibon had attracted a sizable community of enterprising Spaniards. The Jesuit   Gabriel Sanchez went to Talibon in 1596 after he and Juan Torres had   organized the <em>reducciones</em> of Loboc and Baclayon. The Jesuits administered the mission from Loboc but because of the distance it took traveling along the coast, decided that it and Inabanga were more conveniently administered from the Colegio de San Ildefonso   in Cebu. Recollect historian Cavada claims that the parish was founded   in 1722. Talibon remained attached to Inabanga until 1831. Church   construction began in 1852 with the gathering of material. A document in   the National Archives dated 1858 request for authorization to build  the  church and with is attached the plans drawn by Domingo  Escondrillas,  director-inspector of public works in Cebu. He was  responsible for a  number of churches in Cebu and Bohol, Loon being his best-known work.</p>
<p>Heritage  site: The church of Talibon as built hews closely to the  Escondrillas’  plan. However, the architect’s sedate plan for the  façade’s was  overtaken by a virtuoso display of the stone carvers art.  Columns are  sheathed in garlands of leaves. The façade’s rich  ornamentation is  unfortunately not carried into the plain interior.</p>
<p>Talibon with the advocacy of the Most Holy Trinity is the cathedral of the diocese of Talibon, erected in 9 January 1986.</p>
<p><strong>Tubigon</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Tubigon, Bohol</p>
<p>Tubigon, meaning watering hole, is a jump off point to Cebu. It was the customary docking place for boats coming from southern Cebu. The Jesuits had already arrived in Tubigon and in 1613 was made a <em>visita</em> of Tubigon.   This is probably the same “Tobigu” mention by Pedro Chirino (1600)   where he mentions that the people in anticipation of the Jesuits’   arrival built a church. Tubigon no longer appears in a 1779 inventory of   churches, suggesting that the town may have been abandoned. It was   formally constituted a town in 1819 from barrios ofCalape and Inabanga, and became a parish under the Recollects in 1854. All through the intervening years, priests visited the town   for Sunday Mass. No clear dates are available for the construction of   the church.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The church is follows the basilical plan of a central  nave with  aisles, however, it has a transept, and crossing is covered  by an  octagonal cupola. The church fabric shows a mixture of materials,  the  upper part of the wall and most of the façade is concrete,  however, the  lower part is of rubble bound by lime mortar. Metal sheet  are also used  in the upper section of the nave. Jose (2001, 100) opines  that these  modern material were applied between 1928 and 1934, when  the bell tower  was made.</p>
<p>The nave is  covered with metal ceiling decorated by Ray Francia from  Cebu, his  signature is found over the gospel or left transept. With  Canuto Avila,  Francia was commissioned by the Cebu bishops to paint the  churches of  Bohol in the 1920s and 30s. These paintings were mostly  derived from  holy pictures and illustrations from catechism and Bible  histories.</p>
<p>At the  exterior of the gospel flank, the mortar has been exposed to  reveal the  presence of stout posts or haligi that support the church’s  roof. These  posts are embedded in the mortar of the church fabric.</p>
<p><strong>Trinidad</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Trinidad,Bohol</p>
<p><strong>Ubay</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Ubay, Bohol</p>
<p>Ubay was under the jurisdiction of Talibon both ecclesiastically and civilly for many decades until it became an   independent municipality in 1840 and a parish in 1877. Followers of Dagohoy were resettled in the town as early as 1810. Although Redondo (1886,   182) describes the Ubay church as provisional and made of wood, it was   rebuilt soon after by Fray Buenaventura Marrodan (1891-97); he was   assisted greatly by the Reyes family who donated one of the bells dated   1872, and inscribed with the name Toribio Reyes, who was the first   gobernadorcillo of Ubay.</p>
<p>The present  church is of new construction. While parts of the apse,  narthex and  entrances to the transept belong to a 1920’s church, the  rest were  rebuilt when a typhoon damaged the church in 1968.</p>
<p><strong>Valencia</strong></p>
<p>Roman Catholic Church, Valencia, Bohol</p>
<p>The parish of the Santo Niño and the town of Valencia began as Barrio Panangatan of Dimiao, Bohol.   Conjoined with adjacent barrios, it was constituted a town in 1869 and  a  parish in 1871 and named after a city on Spain’s southern coast. The   church building commenced during the term of Fray Mariano Cornago   (1870-77) and was completed in 1882 by Fray Francisco Arraya, who laid   the church’s wooden floor. The church walls were of <em>tabique</em> but were later replaced by cement.</p>
<p>Heritage  Site: The church is cruciform with a steep roof and a  pyramidal crossing  tower. Cut stone is used in parts of the church like  the façade,  however, concrete is found elsewhere. The real treasure of  the church is  its wooden floor of alternating dark (<em>tindalo</em> or <em>balayong</em>) and light (<em>molave</em> or <em>tugas</em>)   wood planks. At the transept crossing an eight pointed flower design  is  used for the floor while, a herringbone pattern is used elsewhere.  The  interior is unpainted, unlike most Bohol churches and has altars in the neoclassical idiom. The <em>convento</em> is located not beside the church as customary but across the street. This structure was renovated in the 19th century.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Fabrica</strong> is the name of several barrios (or barangay) in the Philippines,<sup>[1]</sup> including in the province of Negros Occidental,<sup>[</sup><em><sup>citation needed</sup></em><sup>]</sup> in the Republic of the Philippines. It was formerly the biggest barrio in the Philippines, and one of the most cosmopolitan area in the Visayas.<sup>[</sup><em><sup>citation needed</sup></em><sup>]</sup></li>
</ul>
<p>Fabrica was internationally famous since the early 1900s up to the year 1976, as the site of the largest lumber company and sawmill in the world, the Insular Lumber Company (ILCO), owned by the Americans. ILCO produced hardwood lumber which was well-known the world over, and was exported to the   United States, Australia, and to many other countries in the world,   bringing in dollars to the Philippine economy.</p>
<p>Fabrica was also the generic name of the barrios of Fabrica, Paraiso, and Central Lopez, where a sugarmill was located, making the area the most industrialized in Negros.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Fuerza de San Pedro</strong> is a military defence structure, built by Spanish and indigenous Cebuano labourers under the command of Spanish conquistador, Miguel López de Legazpi and the Spanish Government in Cebu. It is located in the area now called Plaza Indepedencia, in the Pier Area of Cebu City, Philippines.</li>
</ul>
<p>The smallest, oldest triangular bastion fort in the country was built in 1738 to repel Muslim raiders. In turn, it served as a stronghold for Filipino revolutionaries near the end of the 19&#8242;th Century. This served as the nucleus of the first Spanish settlement in the Philippines.</p>
<p>The fort is  triangular in shape, with two sides facing the sea and  the third side  fronting the land. The two sides facing the sea were  defended with  artillery and the front with a strong palisade made of  wood. The three  bastions were named La Concepción (SW); Ignacio de Loyola (SE), and San Miguel (NE). It has a total inside area of 2,025 sq. meters. The walls are   20 feet (6.1 m) high, 8 feet (2.4 m) thick and the towers are 30 feet   (9.1 m) high from the ground level. The circumference is 1,248 feet   (380 m). The sides are of unequal lengths and the one fronting the city   is where one may find entry into the Fort. Fourteen cannons were  mounted  in their emplacements most of which are still there today. Work  first  started on May 8, 1565 with Miguel Lopéz de Legazpi breaking ground.</p>
<p>Little was  known about the activity of the fort from the time it was  built until  two centuries later in 1739 when the King of Spain, Philip  II desired  information regarding the island of Cebu, Governor General  Tanon, who  was the Spanish ruler of the Islands at the time made the  following  reports:</p>
<p><em>Fuerza San  Pedro, the fort is described as built of stone mortar  with a terraplein  where guns are mounted. The fort contains the  necessary buildings. The  largest of these buildings was the &#8220;Cuerpo de  Guardia&#8221; where the  personnel that manned the fort lived. Adjacent to it  was the &#8220;Vivende  del Teniente&#8221; which was the living quarters of the  lieutenant of the  Fort. In between the aforementioned buildings is a  well. At one corner  attached to the walls of the bastion San Miguel  (NE) was the &#8220;Alamazaros  del Rivera&#8221; (powder magazine where the fort&#8217;s  supply or arms and  gunpowder from Manila were stored).</em></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Lakawon</strong>, also called <strong>Llacaon</strong>, is a 13-hectare, banana-shaped island off the coast of Cadiz City in the northern portion of Negros Occidental, a province in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines. A white sand beach resort on the island, a family-run business, is a popular destination for both local and foreign tourists.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<ul>
<li>The <strong>Lapu-Lapu shrine</strong> is a 20-meter bronze statue in Punta Engaño, Mactan Island, Cebu, Philippines, erected in honor of Datu Lapu-Lapu, a native chieftain who defeated Spanish soldiers, and Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan in the Battle of Mactan on 1521.</li>
<li><strong>Mactan Air Base</strong> was a facility of the United States Air Force located on Mactan Island in Cebu, Philippines</li>
</ul>
<p>Mactan Air Base is located on Mactan Island, off Cebu City in the province Cebu in the south central Philippines. Mactan Island is best known as being the location where the Spanish explorer, Ferdinand Magellan, lost his life during his circumnavigation of the earth.</p>
<ul>
<li>The <strong>Magellan shrine</strong> is a large memorial tower erected in honor of the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan. The spot is believed to be the area were Magellan was killed in the Battle of Mactan on 1521, Philippines. The monument measures 30 metres high and it is located in the place of Punta Engaño, Mactan Island, Cebu.</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="color: #0000ff;"><strong> Source: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Visayan_landmarks">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Visayan_landmarks</a></strong></span></p>
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		<title>HERITAGE TOURS</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/tours/heritage-tours</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 09:38:29 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Heritage Tour]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[History The Philippines has a rich history beginning from its earliest days as one of the busiest trading posts in South East Asia and later, in the trans-Pacific galleon trade. A vivid past has left its mark all over the archipelago in many different forms that present-day visitors to the country are now discovering. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1><span style="color: #ff0000;">History</span></h1>
<p><img src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_-fGx2wDrdVc/SddckyZKgTI/AAAAAAAAEzI/5IZaisaq5yg/s400/ultimate-ilocos.jpg" alt="" width="447" height="300" /></p>
<p>The Philippines has a rich history beginning from its earliest days as one of the busiest trading posts in South East Asia and later, in the trans-Pacific galleon trade. A vivid past has left its mark all over the archipelago in many different forms that present-day visitors to the country are now discovering.</p>
<p>The rich Philippine heritage can be experienced, not only in textbooks and museums, but also in beautifully preserved historical sites across the country. Isla ng Corregidor, or simply, Corregidor, is now a tranquil island where the epic dramatic Battle of Corregidor took place during the last world war. In a country like the Philippines, where history is kept alive, one doesn&#8217;t need to go far to travel back in time.</p>
<h3>Heritage</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>Tubbataha Reef National Marine Park</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>Location: Middle of the Sulu Sea, 181 kilometers southeast of Puerto Princesa, Palawan</em><em><br />
</em><em>Inscribe in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1993</em></p>
<p>The Tubbataha Reef Marine Park covers 33,200 hectares including the north and south reefs. It is a marvelous marine wilderness and a special ecosystem much appreciated for its beauty as well as its scientific value.</p>
<p>It is a unique example of an atoll reef with a very high density of marine species, with 80% coral cover of 46 coral genres and 376 fish species. The site is an excellent example of a pristine coral reef with a spectacular 100-meter perpendicular wall, extensive lagoons and two-coral islands.</p>
<p>Tubbataha’s north islet is a nesting site for sea birds of all kinds and endangered hawksbill sea turtles; a diver’s paradise with gorgonian seafans, soft corals, and gigantic sea sponges serving as home to turkey fish, anemone crab, banded seasnakes, nudibranchs, starfish, catsharks, surgeon fish, batfish, and butterfly fish. The rare, unusual looking fox-faced rabbit fish can also be found in the marine park. Marine turtles, including the critically endangered hawksbill and green turtle, nest on some of the beaches.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>Location: Saint Paul Mountain Range on the northern coast of Palawan</em><em><br />
</em><em>Inscribe in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1999</em><em><br />
</em><br />
The Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park features a spectacular limestone karst landscape with its underground river. The river is unique because it flows directly into the sea, and its lower portion is subject to tidal influences. The area also represents a significant habitat for biodiversity conservation. The site contains a whole ecosystem &#8212; from mountain to the sea; and protects forests, which are among the most significant in Asia.</p>
<p>A highlight of each visit is a ride through its 8 km-long underground river which runs through a dome of stalactites complemented by stalagmites running the entire length of the cave.</p>
<p>The park is a popular destination for bird watching and is known for regular sightings of threatened bird species of Palawan peacock-peasant and Philippine cockatoo and the endemic birds Palawan scopsowl, swiftlet, hornbill, flyeater and blue flycatcher, tit and flowerpecker. It is blessed to have the Palawan flying fox, Oriental small-clawed otter, stinkbadger, binturong, flying squirrel, mountain tree squirrel and porcupine.</p>
<p>The park also features an exciting Monkey Trail with its series of wooden paths to the forest.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>Location: Ifugao</em><em><br />
</em><em>Inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1995</em></p>
<p>The 2,000-year old Banaue Rice Terraces – the most extensive anywhere in the world – were carved into the mountains of Ifugao by ancestors of the Batad indigenous people. The terraces are located approximately 1,500 meters (5,000 feet) above sea level and cover 10,360 square kilometers (about 4,000 square miles) of the mountainside.</p>
<p>Known as the “eight wonder of the world,” the terraces were carved with only simple tools and bare hands. They are fed by an ancient irrigation system, an ingenious complex of bamboo pipes and canals, drawing water from streams created by bubbling springs located in the mountain rainforests.</p>
<p>Considered as a monument to man’s genius in turning a rugged and forbidding terrain into a source of sustenance, the rice terraces stand to be the most awe-inspiring man-made landscape in the Cordilleras. They are also invariably called “The Stairway to the Sky.”</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Historic Town of Vigan</strong></li>
</ul>
<p>Location: Vigan, Ilocos Sur<br />
Inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1999</p>
<p>The 16th century town of Vigan is “an exceptionally intact and well-preserved example of a European trading town in East and East Asia.” Its architecture reflects the fusion of cultural elements from the Philippines, China and Europe, resulting in a culture and townscape that has no parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.</p>
<p>Seemingly impervious to time, spared from rebellion and the ravages of war, Vigan has remained unchanged and its many preserved historic sites – more than 180 edifices – make it look like “a piece of Spain.” With its grand cathedral, massive mansions with red-tile roofs and spacious balconies, narrow cobblestone streets, horse drawn carriages, and friendly faces peering out of large windows, Vigan is a place where “time stood still.”</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Baroque Churches</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>Inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1993</em></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>San Agustin Church in Intramuros, Manila</strong></li>
</ul>
<p>Built in 1587, the San Agustin Church is the oldest stone church in the Philippines, the only one that remains as the original evidence of the 16th century Spanish architecture. It has defied several earthquakes and the heavy shelling of both Japanese and American forces in 1945 and now stands as a reminder of the grandeur of the past.</p>
<p>The structural design of the church is extraordinary. It boasts of the only example in the country of a barrel vault, dome and arched vestibules, supporting its choir loft, all made of stone. Its façade is notable for its two pairs of columns – the lowest pair in Doric style, the upper pair in Corinthian topped by a pediment surmounted by a Cross. The main door, carved out of Philippine molave, has a bas-relief of St. Augustine and his mother, Santa Monica. San Agustin Church represents the art and technology of Spanish, Chinese, and native cultures fused together “to suit human sentiments and faiths that found expression in customs and traditions that were evolved through the centuries.”</p>
<p>As the best-preserved example of an urban ecclesiastical complex in the Philippines, the compound serves not only as a historical document of the Spanish colonial heritage but also as a repository of the most important works of art and literature of the period.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Miag-ao Church in Iloilo</strong></li>
</ul>
<p>Built in yellow-orange sandstone, the large fortress-church of Miag-ao was completed in 1797. It served as a fortress against raids of marauding Moro pirates.</p>
<p>The church is amazingly beautiful because of its two asymmetric pyramidal towers and its finely sculptured, yellow sandstone façade. Its façade’s carving is the pinnacle of Filipino naïve art, in which craftsmen abandon all restraints to interpret Western decorative styles in the local folk idiom. The central element in the façade is Saint Christopher, clad like a Filipino farmer with rolled-up trousers. He carries the Christ Child on his back while holding on to a lush coconut tree for support. Beside him are guava and papaya trees, flanked by ornamental urns. The scene merges Western Catholic iconography with a folk interpretation of coastal Iloilo countryside.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>San Agustin Church in Paoay, Ilocos Norte</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>Photo by Anna Buenaventura.</em></p>
<p>Paoay’s San Agustin Church, built in 1604, is one of the most outstanding variants of “earthquake baroque” in the Philippines, where the primary consideration was to design the structure for earthquake protection.</p>
<p>The façade of San Agustin Church is astounding but its most prominent feature is the phalanx of buttresses that juts out perpendicularly from the sidewalls, purposely to strengthen the walls – and the entire structure – against earthquake damage. Fourteen massive S-shaped buttresses rise in rhythmic cadence from the ground to the roofline.</p>
<p>The church is an eye-catcher as it emerges from a beautiful open space, unlike many other churches located within urban settings.<br />
<strong><br />
</strong></p>
<ul>
<li><strong><strong>Nuestra Señora de la Asuncion in Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur</strong></strong></li>
</ul>
<p>The Church of Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion in Santa Maria is unique for its utter disregard for the traditional Spanish urban plan of constructing the church to face the plaza, and less imposing religious and official buildings grouped around. It also has a citadel appearance as the church, with its convent and bell tower, stands alone on the crown of a solitary hill encircled by a stonewall, with stone stairways leading to the church.</p>
<p>It is the only church in the Philippines exuding the ambience of a Mediterranean hill town with its convent built parallel to the church façade and its bell tower detached from the main church. Evoking a Chinese pagoda, the bell tower of octagonal shapes of decreasing diameter is crowned by a small dome, tapering to the sky with an oriental grace.</p>
<p><span style="color: #0000ff;">info by: experiencephilippines</span><span style="color: #0000ff;">.com </span></p>
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		<title>DIVING</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/tours/diving</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 08:12:29 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Diving]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Diving/Scuba The Philippines is to scuba divers what Switzerland is to skiers, Hawaii to surfers and Nepal to mountaineers. This is a place you must visit at least once, to get the real heart of sport. The country is a veritable smorgasbord of world-class dive sites set in a lush tropical environment with all the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Diving/Scuba</h2>
<p><img src="http://www.johnsonoutdoors.com/images/diving/diving_main.jpg" alt="" width="448" height="248" /></p>
<p>The Philippines is to scuba divers what Switzerland is to skiers, Hawaii to surfers and Nepal to mountaineers. This is a place you must visit at least once, to get the real heart of sport. The country is a veritable smorgasbord of world-class dive sites set in a lush tropical environment with all the trappings you could ever wish for.</p>
<p>The Philippines is a scuba diver’s dream come true. The warm waters surrounding the Philippines 7,107 islands present an underwater wildlife extravaganza, so spectacular that divers return for an average of 10 trips each.</p>
<p>Dive into crystal clear waters underwater visibility of up to 60 meters, discover shipwrecks, cliffs covered with sponges, colorful corals, gorgonians, turtles, sharks, rays, and even the very rarely seen exotic fishes like Spanish Dancer, harlequin ghost-pipefish, camouflaged frogfish and fire gobies. Thanks to the convergence of the nutrient rich waters of the Pacific Ocean, South China Sea and Celebes Sea, you will be a spectator to an aquatic symphony of over 2,000 species of marine fish as well as more than 400 out of the 500 known coral species in the world.</p>
<p>The Philippines is divided into 3 geographical areas: Luzon, Visayas &amp; Mindanao. All regions offer premier destinations for divers amidst lush tropical environment with excellent underwater views.</p>
<p>So whether you’re just after a relaxing dive with spectacular views or a chance to perfect your macro photography skills, take on these dive spots for the best of all worlds. So whether you&#8217;re just after a relaxing dive with spectacular views or a chance to perfect your macro photography skills, take on these dive spots for the best of all worlds.</p>
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		<title>WEDDING VIDEOS</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/weddings/wedding-videos</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 07:43:02 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[WEDDINGS]]></category>
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		<title>7 REASONS TO SAY &#8220;I DO&#8221; IN THE PHILIPPINES</title>
		<link>http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/weddings/7-reasons-to-say-i-do-in-the-philippines</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 07:39:08 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[7 Reason to Say “I DO” in the Philippines]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Seven Reasons To Say &#8220;I Do&#8221; in the Philippines If the global trend in weddings and honeymoons is to go “Destination,” then North American couples should go to the Philippines&#8211; an emerging hub for romantic and extraordinary dream weddings and honeymoons. There are as many reasons to go for a wedding or a honeymoon as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_1636" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 461px"><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Amar-and-Reina-by-Peach-Blossoms.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1636" title="Amar and Reina by Peach Blossoms" src="http://www.worldwalkerdestinations.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Amar-and-Reina-by-Peach-Blossoms.jpg" alt="" width="451" height="480" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">http://www.dreamweddingsphilippines.com/</p></div>
<p><strong>Seven Reasons To Say &#8220;I Do&#8221; in the Philippines</strong></p>
<p><span style="color: #0000ff;"><em>If the global trend in weddings and honeymoons is to go “Destination,” then North American couples should go to the Philippines&#8211; an emerging hub for romantic and extraordinary dream weddings and honeymoons. </em></span></p>
<p>There are as many reasons to go for a wedding or a honeymoon as there are islands in the Philippines. With 7,107 islands, a culture that is a blend of the best of the East and West, and a wedding industry that has been recognized and has received numerous accolades from different parts of the globe, the Philippines is the perfect place to start a lifetime of wedded bliss.</p>
<p>Here is a checklist of the reasons why the Philippines is one of the best places in the world to say “I Do.”</p>
<p><strong>1. FILIPINO CUSTOMIZED SERVICE</strong></p>
<p>With the Filipinos&#8217; attention to details, impeccable work ethic, and professionalism, a couple can rest assured that their wedding preparations are well taken care of. Couples need not lose precious time and effort worrying about wedding minutiae as Filipino wedding and events planners boast of top-of-the-line service which oftentimes is customized to cater to particular needs and requests.</p>
<p><strong>2. FILIPINO JOIE DE VIVRE AND HOSPITALITY</strong></p>
<p>With the Filipinos&#8217; well-known culturally-imbedded trait of openness, warmth and goodwill, plus the inherent Filipino “joy of life” as seen in gatherings and celebrations, a foreign couple&#8217;s wedding in the Philippines will feel like a celebration with their friends and loved ones in their own home.</p>
<p><strong>3. VALUE FOR MONEY</strong></p>
<p>A couple can have their dream wedding in the Philippines without going broke after exchanging their vows. With the favorable peso-dollar exchange rate, a dream wedding and honeymoon in the Philippines is probably one of the most affordable in the world. Done without sacrificing quality, the Philippines offers wedding and honeymoon packages to some of the most unique and romantic locations in the world, at a fraction of the cost to have it elsewhere.</p>
<p><strong>4. EASE OF COMMUNICATION</strong></p>
<p>As the world&#8217;s third largest English-speaking nation, couples will have an easy time communicating with Philippine wedding suppliers. The Filipinos&#8217; proficiency and good command of the English language facilitate worry and problem-free coordination and implementation of even the most elaborate wedding and the most extraordinary honeymoon experience.</p>
<p><strong>5. FILIPINO ARTISTRY</strong></p>
<p>Filipino bridal and wedding artistry has tickled the interest of many international clients. From wedding gowns to theme music; from wedding cakes to floral arrangements; and from catering to photography, there is an abundance of talent in the Philippines that can be harnessed to make a dream wedding a reality.</p>
<p><strong><br />
6. VARIETY OF DREAM WEDDING LOCATIONS</strong></p>
<p>There is a dream wedding location in the Philippines for every type of couple. Centuries-old Spanish churches, pristine white sand beaches, beautiful gardens, lush plantations and haciendas, and cool mountain locations can provide the perfect background for couples who prefer the most special and breathtaking place to hold their wedding.</p>
<p><strong>7. EXOTIC HONEYMOON DESTINATIONS</strong></p>
<p>There is no better place in the world to spend a honeymoon than in the beautiful, relaxing, and enchanting tropical locales offered by any of the Philippines&#8217; 7,107 islands. Some of the most popular destinations in the Philippines are the islands of Bohol, Boracay, Cebu and Palawan—which have beautiful exotic locations, world class five star hotels, and boutique resorts that can serve as a venue for an unforgettable romantic honeymoon experience.</p>
<p>Source: www.experiencephilippines.ph</p>
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