Looking for a quick out-of-town day tour for our balikbayan relatives, we opted to go to one of the Philippine's neglected historical site - the Biak na Bato National Shrine in San Miguel, Bulacan. You may do your own homework on what about this place that played a vital role in our past.
Leaving from Makati City, it took us about 3-4 hours in order to reach the place. There are no visible signboards along the way so make sure you do your research eagerly. I forgot the exact amount of per head entrance fees and tour guide fee but on my rough estimate it is about Php50 per head and Php200 per tour guide. I'm not sure if they allow visitor to explore on their own since the path is pretty straight-forward. I've read some blogs before that you can swim in the river here but during our time, the river is splashing with mud from the mountain since it just rained the night before. The over-all tour of the area is approximately 1.5-2hrs with not all the sites are allowed for tourists.
Here are the scenic and the not-so-scenic views of the place...
The walk path has been cemented so trekking shoes are not that necessary. There were steeps encounters but even our senior citizens able to reach the end with just some hesitations; but there is just one place that is not paved that scared them not to continue.
the biggest and grandest caves of them all..the final stop |
I just felt so bad seeing all the vandalisms in the area and the area is not properly conserved anymore and maintained. I hope sites like this would be preserved by the government for the generations to come.
Philippines is really beautifull island rich in cultures and amazing natural wonders but the problem the goverment of the phil.is one of the shit goverment in a whole world! Fuck im very proud to be a filipino but im too ashamed about the goverment.
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