WHEN I POSTED AN ARTICLE about
the seldom-taken reverse route to Osmeña Peak which I hiked last August 2013 (Reversing
the Trend), three mountaineers from the Mountain Climbers Alliance of the
Philippines, Inc. (MCAP) took this as a challenge and contacted me to engage in
it. I then requested Maria Mahinay to
create an itinerary for this so as to accommodate the wishes of the trio from
Team TAMAD: Kris Shiela Mingi, Gene
Arceno and Julius Roman.
Osmeña Peak is named after from
the most illustrious son of Cebu – President Sergio Osmeña Sr. - because of its
lofty location, being the highest point of the island province at 1,015
meters. It is located within the
Southern Cebu Mountain Range and, contrary to the common perception, is really
part of the Municipality of Badian.
Local mountaineers used to approach it from Mantalongon, which is on the
Dalaguete side, and is just a stroll in the park. The peak is, thus, relegated as just another
leisurely picnic area which I do not like.
Almost everyone thought that it
is unthinkable to hike Osmeña Peak from Basak, Badian and all would rather take
the easy route from Mantalongon and then take their chances downhill to
Badian. Daunting as it may seem, a few
intrepid hikers had successfully tackled this reverse route and had given
meaning to the climbing of O-Peak and of the totality of their journey. It is best to start the climb early morning
during warm days and, if it could not be avoided, is totally safe during rainy
days as there are no streams to cross to.
Today, January 11, 2014, I will
again return to the Southern Cebu Mountain Range to accompany my guests from
Luzon. Local MCAP members Maria and
Barry Paracuelles are also coming in.
Barry is with his wife, Eva Marie.
We start at 4:00 AM from the Cebu South Bus Terminal on board a Ceres
Bus bound for Badian. It had been
raining since last night caused by a Low Pressure Area approaching Mindanao and
a lull had been experienced during travel until we reach Barili when it rained
again.
After taking a light breakfast
at the public market in Badian, Sien Alfanta, Ed Dablo and Neil Mabini arrive
to boost our number. Then comes Jodel
Seville and Charito Matollama and that makes us twelve. Although this is a dayhike, most of the
participants will spend a night in Oslob and so have brought with them bulkier
gears like tents and sleeping bags and some extra cargo. We leave the market for the trailhead in
Basak and start our hike at exactly 8:00 AM.
I travel light today and just brought my EDC
kit, a trauma kit, a dry shirt, a rather heavy LED torch, a Cignus V85
UHF-VHF radio and a liter of water.
Going along is my Nessmuk trio: a William Rodgers bushcraft
knife, an AJF Gahum heavy-duty knife and a Victorinox SAK Trailmaster. I do not open carry a knife today because
this is an entirely different activity.
My Kodak EasyShare digital camera is in the pocket of my Silangan
Outdoors hiking pants. A Buck 112
folding knife is kept in the beltline behind a Victorinox operator
belt.
Sien, Ed and Neil will
spearhead the trek while I backstop the rear.
That relieves me of pressure and would extricate me of possible
accidents as I chose the wrong pair of shoes for this occasion. Anyway, as last man, I could take it easy on
my pace and I could focus more on documentation and taking pictures freely,
although sparingly, as I would not want to ruin my camera under the threat of
this light downpour.
Neil and company started from
the Basak communal well and climbed up a steep snaky route that pass by small
plots of spring onions, corn and cabbages gouged out of rocky terrain. The rain kept up a steady torrent but all
burst with a high spirit of excitement and adventure and shut away the
discomforts of cold and muddy trails.
Walking in foul weather are for the stoutest of hearts only and the
people I am with did not waver from this hardship and that satisfies my
expectations.
When you would want to develop
your stamina and your resistance to the elements, you would need to keep only
the bare comforts and become used to it.
Then you complement it with a good elevation gain which this route will
provide. You start low at Basak at 235
meters and gain 780 meters upon reaching the crown of Osmeña Peak which you
cannot achieve if coming in from Mantalongon.
Aside that, you walk a steep incline of about four kilometers in length
which is also impossible to get from Mantalongon.
We reach the small village of
Malagaring at 8:55 AM and a local offer us free cups of coffee. He is very happy that some of whom who went
with me today sponsored a Christmas party for the children last December. Nobody could beat charity and goodwill. It would always open doors and windows and,
here in the mountains, it will open wide as I have had done so in my own Babag
Mountain Range. If only more outdoorsmen
would include charity works in their activities, trails that had lain invisible
to outsiders would be happily given.
Neil and company follow a
different route than what I took last November 17, 2013 and then it arrive to a
point where the route they had chosen is the same as mine for about a hundred
meters until it crossed a farm and it became totally different again. This time it is more muddy and slippery and
our footfalls are now forceful to get a good grip. It is quite taxing to gain a foothold
especially if you are wearing an old pair whose soles had seen better days and
water ooze in among the hairline cracks.
What I lacked in good footwear
I compensate with less of LNT. Yes, I am
no fool to just walk in the middle of the trail that is muddy where puddles of
torpid water are present just because it is stated so in the Leave No
Trace. Forgive me but my common sense is
better than that foreign ideology which was designed for terrain in temperate
zones. This is the tropics and our two
seasons are conducive to speedy regeneration of vegetation. I deliberately stepped on a lot of vegetation
because I know better.
We keep up a steady ascent and
the guests from Manila were up to the challenge. Gene would take short rests but I keep my
distance so he would spend a lot of it without worrying about the next person
coming, which is me. The route goes in a
small patch of forest and, as it thinned, farms. We reach the small village of Patong at 10:45
AM and it is a chance to quench thirst with soda drinks. I opt to drink my supply of water instead and
eat sweet buns which I bought at a bakery in Badian.
Although we started an hour
late, we compensate for that by pacing fast and reached our rest stops with
more than an hour to spare; muddy trails were not a hindrance though. From what I ascertained, most likely we would
be at the peak before noon. We leave
Patong at 11:10 AM for the last push for the top. The rain had stopped but it is replaced by
strong gusts of wind. Wind chill factor
is high but the guys had taken food and had a drink to replenish spent reserves
of energy exerted in going up here.
The trail is decked now with
broken lime stones, foreboding a great concrete coverup in the future. This route would lead to the saddle where a
concrete road had stopped. We took a
different trail that branched out from this route and it is muddy again. It pass by hilly farms of spring onions,
cabbages and vegetable pears until the trail weave out along the contours of
roundish hills which gave a false impression that you are in the vicinity of
O-Peak. The pace became hurried but I
keep to my own comfortable speed, taking on the scenery with my camera.
After a final turn below a
false peak, the Grandfather Mountain of the South stood in mute silence without
its shroud of mists. We reach the top at
exactly 11:30 AM and, by God, we were fast.
The cold winds are not hospitable in this exposed spot but we held onto
dear ground by putting weight were wind is most felt. I test my portable radio on an arranged
frequency but the reception is not good although I could pick up very clear
signals from harbor traffic and from a weather station.
I congratulated Shie, Gene and
Julius for snaring Osmeña Peak the hard way and, probably, would be the first
done by Luzon-based mountaineers coming in by way of Basak. It is a textbook reverse traverse hike that
will soon terminate in Mantalongon. When
the guests had their fill and had fixed the apex of their quest with photos, we
slowly go down the hill into the breadbasket of Cebu – the high valley of
Mantalongon.
It is raining hard now and the
trail is very slippery, especially at the lower approaches, but when we had
reached the road, we begin to feel that we are now in home territory. We reach the public market at 1:00 PM and
take a deserved lunch at a local restaurant.
It is still raining outside and windy and the inside of the restaurant
is comfortable but we have to leave for lower ground to talk about the Oslob
trip. Six motorcycles accommodated us
all and we go down the main highway located at sea level.
Shie, Gene and Julius had to
shelve their Oslob trip as the waves spun by the inclement weather are not
encouraging for whale watching. We stay
for a while at Dalaguete’s waterfront park for four big bottles of cold beer to
fill up lost electrolytes. We go back to
the highway when we think that the rain would not stop for a bus back to Cebu
City. What people do not understand is
that you get a good chance to ride on a half-empty bus in Dalaguete than that
in Badian. We just did that and we reach
the big city at 7:30 PM.
Document done in LibreOffice
3.3 Writer
3 comments:
Soon TPM will be there... ahehehehe
Sir, okay ra ba ang trail na wala'y guide? If unsa man gani, naa rapud mga locals na willing mu guide pud gikan Basak?
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