THIS IS A NON-BUSHCRAFT article or
entry. I just placed this activity under the “Bushcraft Buhisan” series. This
is a guided hike which I am doing for my friends from my former club, the Cebu
Mountaineering Society, on December 28, 2017. Yes, it comes at an inopportune
time after Christmas Day and before New Year’s Eve. I may want to spend this
day like other normal person would but I have my own reasons to go out of the
lazy zone.
We met at McDonald in Mambaling,
Cebu City in the early morning. Boy Olmedo, Lilibeth Initan, Mon Corro and
their three new members were there and we walked to Punta Princesa to ride a
tricycle to Buhisan. It turned out the tricycle was only good on level ground
and refused to accelerate on steep roads toward the Buhisan Dam. We were
walking towards the watershed area when a government vehicle stopped to
accommodate us after trying to hitch a ride.
After thanking the people who rode
on the vehicle, we start to follow a path among a man-made forest of mahogany
trees. This used to be my playground more than 25 years ago but I did not find
it suitable as good for outdoor activities, for the very reason that it was
dangerous here due to rampant hunting of birds which could easily injure you
from a wayward bullet. This is also used as a refuge of people running from the
law and becoming a convenient garbage dump from a nearby community. Lastly, the
forest itself is fake.
I was just here for this day upon
the request from my friends. They are preparing for a climb to Mount Kinabalu
and this is the first day of their training and wanted to take it slow on the
first time and gradually become harder on the next few weeks. Yes, they would
also avail of my terrain knowledge for another session next year, that would be
just a few days from today. Anyway, I just follow an unfamiliar route and I
believe it would connect to another bigger trail, which it does.
We crossed a small stream and came
upon a wide level area which, I also believed were used as a picnic area for
locals. Upon a small ravine, I saw a tiny waterfall and it has a lot of empty
shampoo sachets and stones which has bits of soap that had adhered to the
irregular surfaces. Come to think of it: the Buhisan Watershed Area is the
source of potable water for 15 percent of Metro Cebu’s total household
consumers.
The Metropolitan Cebu Water
District neglected to protect it from vandals and pollutants and this is
criminal. Or is this the mandate of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources? Whichever, this has happened for as long as I could remember and
both entities has people that are all suffering from an extreme case of bad
eyesight, close to blindness. If these were a forest that bear money, I am sure
they would have built a high concrete fence complete with machine gun posts.
By this time the stream joined
another stream and the trail forked out into two. In the denseness of
undergrowth, I could not assess of what is beyond on one easy trail but the
higher of the two would make it possible. I followed that and it goes on higher
ground and I could see the man-made lake of Buhisan full of water. At other
times of the year this is bare. It is so strange seeing the Buhisan so watery
today. Its edges are marshy and this is referred to by locals as Pagatpatan.
This is where hunting is rampant.
Most common tree that could survive
and thrive in watery ground is the Leichardt pine (Local name: bangkal),
whose flowers resembled that of pin cushions. I saw this same trees growing in
the same conditions in Lake Lanao, Daanbantayan. Just the same, it resembled
that of another hardy tree called the hambabalud (Sp. Neonauclea
formicaria), which grew in rocky hillsides and bare soil. Far from the water’s
edge are many young Philippine ebony trees (kamagong, mabolo)
planted in between other common species.
We were now on drier ground now and
more trails forked but I always took the leftmost, to be away from the
lakeshore. I was rewarded of a familiar view of the catchment basin and we are
out in more open terrain and sunshine. We followed a dried-up stream but I know
there is another stream underneath us. We followed upstream and came upon three
smaller rocks stacked above a bigger one. People do not really know the purpose
and meanings of leaving trail signs.
Using the rock as a trailsign is
adopted in the Boy Scout and leisure hiking. It is borrowed from the “talking
rocks” used by Southwest Desert Native Americans when communicating with each
other. It is left alone until such time when the recipient received the
message. What the Boy Scout failed to appreciate was how to dispose the rocks
after the recipient of the message – the last person – received the
instructions. It is not left in eternal splendor. I threw the rocks aside
because it is the most proper.
Right on the sandy ground are
vandal lines which formed into a word, to which I do not like to perpetuate
here in this article because I have better breeding, unlike that embarrassing
cockroach that ruled this country like a madman. Two canines “ambushed” us for
company and scouted the yards ahead of us. They really thought we would reward
them with food with their unsolicited “help”. Sorry doggies. Thank you, but, no
thanks.
Water appeared suddenly and it
became a real stream finally. Why is this place called Buhisan? There are many
versions actually and one version came from the word “buhis” (tax or tribute in
Tagalog) which is very absurd. Buhisan actually refers to an old and large
python that rarely moved because of its size. Because of its age and sedentary nature, moss and fungi grew on its scales and created a camouflage effect. It
hunts by simply waiting for a prey to pass by. It lies itself like a log or
hanging like a vine.
But the old folks called this place
as Lensa instead, which in Cebuano is referred to as the rainforest. By this knowledge
learned from the locals, I named the stream from its original name of Lensa
Creek and the circuit of trails found here as Lensa Trail, instead of something
Greek. There are many secret places in Lensa and they are given names by the
locals who made their living here and I know some because bushcraft is not just
a skill but also a repository of wood lore and history.
Upstream are many boulders and a
big pool, made deeper by damming with stones. This is also a popular picnic
area by locals but, today, they are absent. I looked up at the sky and I
frowned at the sight of dark clouds passing. Droplets of moisture drop on you
but it is not rain. It is just the behaviour of a rainforest. We move on and
arrive at place where Lensa Creek divides into two. A headland between two
forks, there is a trail and we would be in safer ground. For a while.
We may have to pass through another
mahogany forest, this time with those treacherous rattan palm tendrils which
could freeze you on your tracks. The barbs are very painful if it is caught on
your skin and disastrous for a branded dry-fit top. It passes on a narrow path
with nothing on one side but space and rocks below. Slowly we reach the same
stream and walked back a little downstream to gawk at the bottom of the Buhisan
Waterfall from its headrock. That legendary snake was found somewhere near here
long ago.
This is now the limits of my new
playground. I do not do anymore a walk on lower ground and among streams here
and today is but an exception. We walk upstream and a smaller tributary joined
the bigger Lensa Creek but it is not yet the one. Trekking on we reach the fork
of the Banauan Creek but it is difficult terrain. The next stream – Creek Bravo
– would be better. We took it and walked a little upstream and took a rest.
I just test their local knowledge
here and one of their member could not retrace or remember the route and it
made them disoriented. I took over again and led them to higher ground and
better trails. Although I am very protective of my camping grounds but, this is
one of those times where mending a fence with my former club takes importance.
I usually do not take people here outside of my circle in bushcraft. But not so
today.
We climb up a ridge and once there
we follow the back of the mountain gently and easily in a forest of mixed exotic and native trees
and shrubs. Birds flew in and out and sang of their presence. The trail climb
up more gently and gently until we came upon a rare open space. We are now on
the sacred ground of the Camp Red Bushcaft and Survival Guild; the fabled place
called Camp Damazo. They saw for themselves how a Moluccan ironwood tree (ipil)
looked like and what distance you would give to a stinging tree (alingatong).
From Camp Damazo, we go straight
ahead and took a trail on the right that goes into thick jungle vegetation. I
showed them Caramon Spring, a good drinking water source which had provided my
bushcraft camps water for more than five years and it had not changed in volume
since I found it in 2012. We crossed a stream, climbed up a steep trail slowly
and safely, crossed another stream and followed the rolling terrain until we
reach a road: the Baksan-Pamutan Road.
I showed them another trail across
and it goes downhill among farms and orchards and quite tame from the ones we
walked before in the morning. The dirt path goes down to Lanipao and then a
road that goes to Napo. The day ended at 12:00 noon which was a good workout,
inhaling good rainforest air. From here we transferred to Guadalupe on motorcycles.
I promised my friends to bring them to another playground of mine next year.
Document done in LibreOffice 5.3
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