“I
DO NOT KNOW WHAT lay awaits me. I only know that I must be brave...”
This line from the theme song of the movie High Noon kept
ringing in my head as I begin to start on my solo exploration from
Hagnaya Bay to Bogo Bay on this 28th day of April 2015. I just
checked out from the San Remigio Cultural Center and Leisure at 04:00
and I am walking down the road to Hagnaya Port in darkness.
I
had arrived at the Municipality of San Remigio yesterday morning and
I had met Mr. Niño Ybañez, the town’s public information officer.
We discussed about my Dayhagon Canal Adventure and I promised him
that there would be good publicity afterwards when I post this in
Facebook and here in Warrior Pilgrimage. It may be not much but,
just the same, it would generate interest on the Dayhagon Canal and
people would use San Remigio as the jump-off point.
Hagnaya
Port, the gateway to Bantayan Island and the Province of Masbate, had
expanded its size since I visited it the first time in 1983. That
time, it was just a finger of concrete over shallow waters. Now the
port had reclaimed water east of it and will do so in the coming
years. I stood on its farthest edge and gazed at the shoreline from
where I plan to walk. A local instructed me to walk an unpaved road
following the shoreline to a place before the village of Argawanon
and start my journey instead from there.
I
followed the instructions to the letter wearing a bright-orange PAC
Outdoor Gear float vest. I may have looked like a Martian with a
Petzl Elite headlamp ringed on my forehead while a desert camo hat
sits uneasily over my head. I am carrying my Sandugo Khumbu 40L
backpack with a 30-liter Triton dry bag hiding a Silangan hammock, an
extra shirt, a medical kit, a 10-meter 7mm paracord, a Leatherman S2
Juice, a Victorinox SAK Trailmaster and a LuminAid inflatable
solar-powered emergency lantern fully inflated.
I
am ready for sloshing in waist-high water and have worn my black
Mammut Schoeller quick-dry hike pants and my sturdy Columbia Coremic
Ridge 2 shoes. In the front pocket of the float vest is my Cherry
Mobile U2 phone, a whistle, an ID card and my Canon IXUS camera.
Hanging from my neck is my Suuntu A-30 compass. My general direction
would be east. The sun and the shore would guide me, the compass
just a fail-proof back-up.
I
reach the spot and I follow a path lined by mahogany trees which goes
down to the shore of Hagnaya Bay. Healthy mangroves are growing
thick and wild and, where land meets sea, swampy. I step only on
hard surface like stones, wood and on thins trips of sandy ground.
It is a tiny wilderness frequented only by fishermen, whose small
boats are secured safely within the small forest to shelter it from
inclement weather.
The
swamp floor are littered by debris carried by high tides and by wind
and by another debris dumped by humans. I followed the coastline and
sometimes wished that I chose higher ground for parts of the route I
had chosen are difficult to navigate. My bag gets snagged by
branches, I have to select the ground where I would tread and I have
to watch out for those harmful plants.
Almost
always, I retreat to the safety of higher ground when progress is
hampered by impenetrable vegetation. Mangrove roots make foot space
rare and travelling through it is quite tricky. When I unknowingly
disturbed a wasp’s nest, I decide that plunging into thick
vegetation is not practical and exposes me to more danger. I did not
know of the hive’s presence until one stung my left bicep. I froze
and backtracked very very slow to keep me off their radar.
I
cross the first of the many water channels found between fish ponds,
salt plains, islands of mangroves and mud flats. The play of tides
caused these channels as it penetrates into lower inland plains and
created a delta. My shoes sink deep into mud in midstream as I cross
the channel but my eight-foot walking stick is a welcome ally. It
helped me probe the depth of water as well as a reliable aid for
balance.
I
climb up and walk on the first of the many dirt embankments
protecting fish ponds from high tide and surf. I walk on the narrow
dirt causeways with the bay water on my left and the ponds on my
right. Right where there are sluice gates, I would go down the pond
and cross to the other side. Then another water channel and on to
another fish pond.
I
had calculated my exploration would time with a very low water rise
during tides. Low tide was 0.33 meter at 01:16 and high tide would
be 0.76 meter at 08:56 and I would just have to contend with a rise
of just 0.43 meter in between the hours. It is a good window of
opportunity to tackle this route, especially at the channels and the
mud flats, for this would be inundated with water if ever high tide
would reach by even just a meter.
I
meet only a few people to ask directions on this intricate maze of
mud-lined channels and steep dikes. One of those whom I met are a
couple of old women. They gather shellfish for a living. They
offered me a ride on their old canoe but it defeats my purpose and I
politely declined it. I would rather be wet and struggling on my own
accord and this lent my unusual journey a color all its own.
However, they point to a place where there is shallow water to cross.
I
follow a narrow finger of land going to a forest of breast-high
mangroves. The leaves part to reveal more muddy floors. I changed
routes as often as I can to take on firmer ground. I am successful
until I come upon another finger of land that led me to nowhere but
deeper channels. I tried to brave the divide but once I sank deeper
up to my waist I gave up that idea. These are the very places where
quicksands are possible. I backtracked and tried other routes until
I am on to another embankment.
This
time I am gazing down on a salt plain. I could hear the faint sounds
of running motorcycles. About a kilometer away are two radio
transmitter towers. A message alert tone from my mobile phone halt
me in my dizzying task of gaining on the Dayhagon Bridge, a
significant feature of the route that would mark the halfway point of
this adventure. It is a message from Johnas Obinas. I replied that
I would be approaching the Dayhagon Bridge at any moment.
I
re-assess my position and plan a better route by referring to my
compass. I got past the salt plains and I see a glimpse of solid
concrete washed in sunshine a half kilometer away, perhaps it is the
bridge. By now the body of water is narrowing and the coastal side
of Medellin are no more than a slingshot throw away from me. I am
now on the Dayhagon Canal proper and I see two elder women crossing
the canal up to their knees and a dog after them up to its flanks.
I
walk the bank of the Dayhagon until I can see Johnas standing and
weaving his arms at me on the middle of the bridge. I reach the span
at 07:53 and maneuver myself to climb up on it. It is good to see
Johnas again. He is one of the few who learned bushcraft from me and
he is assigned in Medellin as a jail officer. I think I need a break
as he is bent on treating me to a free breakfast. He whisk me away
to Don Pedro Rodriguez on his Skygo motorcycle.
For
a good 30 minutes I get to relax and eat inside a local restaurant.
We go back to the bridge and we parted. It is now 08:35 and still is
the best time to resume a journey. I will now be walking on the side
of Bogo City. I retrieve my walking stick and go down the bridge
into a tree-lined path. I go down a channel and cross it and then
cross another waterway after climbing up a small island in between.
After
that, I begin to traverse the first of the many private properties.
I had completely evaded private lands while walking the shorelines of
San Remigio but, here, I have almost no options. Fences above
fishpond dikes keep away people but there are gaps where one could
pass. Strips of mangroves lined the dikes and most of the dikes are
built right up to the water’s edge.
I
walk above the dikes and it is easy navigating the Dayhagon Canal
here than the ones at San Remigio. I met some fishermen sitting on
the embankments with fishing rods pointing on the canal while one guy
took chances on ankle-high waters of a fish pond. Muddied people
work on the dikes plugging holes and they ignored me. It is a big
fishpond and I enjoy the walk even though the heat of the sun begins
to make its presence felt.
I
have thought long ago that the Dayhagon Canal was a fresh-water creek
whose source I could not determine everytime I go north passing by
the Dayhagon Bridge. I did not even know that it is called Dayhagon
until I studied Cebu using Google Map. I found something unusual on
the land feature between Hagnaya Bay and Bogo Bay. There is a very
narrow body of water traversing on the narrowest part of a neck of
land that made the northernmost part of Cebu look like an island.
The
creek that I once had thought is a canal after all. It crossed from
one body of sea to another and had separated the land north where
Medellin and Daanbantayan are found from the rest of Cebu. In fact,
the man-made canal looks like a neckline. Who were the people who
built this canal? Why? When?
I
do not know the history and the reason why the Spaniards built this
canal. From what I perceived, the Dayhagon used to be an isthmus
connecting the northernmost part of Cebu to the rest of the island.
Economic considerations when demand for sugar became high in the
middle to the later years of the 19th century might have been the
prime reason why this canal was built.
Sugar
canes from the haciendas of Bogo, Tabogon, Borbon and Sogod may have
found its way to the then town of Bogo. The lack of a deep-water
port forced it to travel by land to Hagnaya Port which would had been
time-consuming considering that there were no developed horizontal
infrastructures at that time. The isthmus might had been so low at
some places that it is cheaper to build a canal than building a road.
The
canal might have made possible the transporting of sugar canes easily
to Hagnaya from the depots as Hagnaya is much convenient for a boat
to dock coming in by way of or out towards Negros where the much
bigger plantations of sugar canes are found. That was before the
Industrial Revolution, the steam engine and the locomotive found its
way to Asia and las islas Filipinas.
I
have come upon to the endmost part of the big fishpond and gaze
across an estuary to an open field that had recently been harvested
of sugar canes. I walk along the dike looking for a good place to
cross this small stream. Children had just came out of that stream
with a good number of catch. I cross on the other side and squeeze
into a barbed wire fence.
The
wide plain had been burned off to prepare for another cycle of
planting sugar canes. The fire had reached a buffer zone of wild
vegetation growing between the farm and the mangroves. I walk along
the edges of this narrow wilderness, my observation is at a peak
since this is a favorite hunting ground for all kinds of snakes and I
do not want to be surprised. I open carry a Mora Companion knife
though and it satisfies my requirement of security.
The
path weave along the edges of another farm located on a gentle hill
where there are dried cogon grass. A quail flew away upon my coming
and a lot of flying it did to keep its distance. Typhoon Haiyan had
left many scars on the land and felled many big trees, the spread
roots providing sturdy windbreaks for the next storms. The canal
begins to widen and I am now gazing at the waters of Bogo Bay.
I
walk an open field of scorched grass, cracked soil, termite mounds
and an abandoned house. Not far is a small community on a finger of
land reaching out to the sea. It is a fishing community and a lot of
small boats are kept on dry land. Strong breeze are all over here
and it cooled my now very warm body. Across the bay is Medellin
where there is a golf course.
I
follow the shore southeast to a thick forest of mangrove where there
is a tiny stream. I can see the Polambato Wharf a kilometer away but
going directly by shore is impossible now as a cock farm nearby is
fencing off access to the sea with high nets. I cannot pass by but
have to take another route out instead into dry ground, farms and
more felled trees that became shelters for cows and swamp buffaloes.
I
reach an unpaved road and leave my walking stick among bundled
firewood of same size and height. It is now 10:00 and it is very
warm. I am not surprised by people raising an eyebrow when they see
me passing by. Do not I look like a Martian? Anyway, I reach a
small store on the Bogo-Polambato Wharf Road to take cold refreshment
and eat a banana I saved for this occasion.
After
having an amusing conversation with three elderly women, I rode a
tricycle bound for the bus terminal of Bogo City. It is almost 11:00
and I might as well eat lunch on one of the small restaurants in the
terminal. I would have wanted to make a courtesy call to the city’s
tourism officer and its police station but I looked like a muddy
Martian even without the float vest. I am not appropriately dressed
and nobody would take me seriously.
I
do not profess to be the first person to have walked through the
Dayhagon Canal from Hagnaya Bay to Bogo Bay. There may have been
older adventurers before me and, of course, fishermen and seasonal
workers of sugar farms, who might have traversed it on foot in the
course of their finding a living and were not known for those efforts
for it could not have been part of their priorities and plans or that
they do not have the means to “broadcast” it in popular media as
I do presently with Facebook.
Only
the Municipality of Medellin had included the Dayhagon Canal on their
tourism program but it is done with kayaks and native canoes. See
their website here. My visit of the whole length of the Dayhagon
Canal, to include parts of Hagnaya Bay and Bogo Bay, is a testament
that it could be done by foot, provided that it is timed at low
seawater levels. Since it passes through a lot of water, however low
it may be, flotation devices and safety equipment are a must.
For
sure, there would be others after me and will make San Remigio as a
springboard of their own adventures. The Cebu Highlands Trail, which
I am in the midst of establishing a route from northern tip to
southern tip or vice versa, will be passing by the Dayhagon Bridge,
without a doubt. Because of this, the Dayhagon Canal would be an
ideal side trip, as well as other nearby places that will surely
attract local and international visitors.
My
solo traverse of the Dayhagon Canal would not had been possible of
the following whom I owed a great debt of gratitude. The
Municipality of San Remigio, thru its Public Information Officer, Mr.
Niño Ybañez, for providing me free overnight accommodation at their
San Remigio Cultural Center and Recreation. Likewise, the staff of
their hotel for providing me excellent service.
The
police stations of Bogo City, Medellin and San Remigio for ensuring
security of the route incognito. JO1 Johnas Obinas, the Community
Relations Officer of the Medellin Municipal Jail, for that
well-deserved breakfast and it came at the right time and place. PAC
Outdoor Gear and their great guys – Mr. Anthony Espinosa and Mr.
Carlo Genova, for loaning me one of their reliable float vest from
their shop.
Mr.
Glen Domingo of Portland, Oregon, USA, for providing me an excellent
compass – a Suuntu A-30. It is a fail-proof piece of navigational
equipment that had been handy during the most difficult part of the
hike. Finally, to the warm people of San Remigio and Bogo City whom
I have met and conversed with – THANK YOU!
Document
done LibreOffice 4.3 Writer
1 comment:
Hi sir, nice blog about this canal. In fact this canal even used to have a rotating bridge. Just saw picture in cebu old pics in fb. Im from medellin by the way. I knew there was a canal but was astounished it used to have this kind of bridge. Perhaps 1st in cebu
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