Wednesday, February 15, 2023

CALAYAN ISLAND: HOW THE ANGELS CALLED IT A PARADISE BARELY ATTAINED

SUMMER SPECIAL:

THE 25 THINGS YOU MUST DO IN CALAYAN ISLAND

PROLOGUE:

"But for the angels who had the first glimpse of the wonderful and lovely Calayan, they must have thought it would be better, if it remained that way; far from the molesting touch, a paradise barely attained".

CALAYAN ISLAND: HOW THE ANGELS CALLED IT A PARADISE BARELY ATTAINED

πŸ“Œ Calayan, Cagayan, Philippines 

When the first Chinese sailed in silence to every corner in the expanse of the South China sea some 2,000 years ago, they might have passed upon the islands of the tranquil Babuyanes. They might not landed and established settlements because the scattered Babuyan Group of Islands appeared to them as barren and windswept at eye level. But when these Chinese sailors died and became angels and about to fly, in one of the islands called Calayan, scenes so wonderful and lovely these angels must have been gazed upon it on their flight in the heavens.

A view of one of the white sand coves of Calayan

Calayan is one of the islands of the Babuyan Group forming an almost perfect circular archipelago with the other major islands north of Luzon and is the only island municipality of Cagayan province.

The Babuyan Group of Islands consisting the primary islands of Calayan, Fuga, Babuyan, Camiguin and Dalupiri and its smaller islands and rocks is the ultimate "group of islands adventure" the full-blooded explorer could get, so much that reaching these paradise requires a gamble against the treacherous, unruly waters of the Babuyan and Balintang channels. But there is a reward to every bravery; a spectacle of breaching humpback whales, friendly pods of dolphins racing against the surfs and schools of anchovies (munamon) in millions along the way to the so called the "playground of the giants".

Calayan is the largest of the rest of the islands in the Babuyanes. It administratively controls the other inhabited islands mentioned except Fuga which is under the jurisdiction of the municipality of Aparri.

Sibang Cove, the most pristine cove in the island of Calayan

Calayan is just a recent nature adventure discovery as most people don't wander that far up north as its isolation runs into one of the sharpest extremes in the country; a paradise barely conquerable and attainable.

The island itself speaks to the myth of the Babuyanes; an eternal wave-barraged rocky shores edged by aquarium clear seas. And beneath the torrential waves are bounties and the fulfillment of our imaginings of tropical coastal wilds jewelled with colors of teeming life forms. Above the torpedoing surfs, it evokes the idyllic rolling hills comparable but unique to Batanes, the Nagudungan Hills, arguably one of the most breath-taking if not the most perfect landscape-seascape in the country.

The edge of Nagudungan Hills facing the enormous Pacific

As we watched the slow march of the sun across the sky, I felt the sting of white sand over my face as the cool wind of the Pacific playfully blasted the turquoise-bluish green waters of the iconic Sibang Cove. Being the most prominent defining glory of Calayan Island, the finest, revered white-sands of the cove transform golden cream upon contact with the foamy, azure waters of the sea in a backdrop of coral limestone hills surrounded by tropical greeneries that foster and sustain the endemic flightless bird Calayan rail (Gallirallus calayanensis), never could be seen anywhere else on the planet; another testification of how rich the Philippine tropical forests in terms of wildlife inventory.

The wild coast of Magsidel and Dibay, southwestern part of the Calayan Island 

Sibang is trapped between the pristine coves of Caniwara and Cababaan, each have different taste of offerings that mingles well with each type of traveler-adventurers. If one has to boast Instagrammable clicks, swim with the unpredictable current - sometimes gentle, sometimes untamed, or just lie on the pandanus-covered inland shore, you must choose Sibang Cove. If marine biology is your stuff, you got a penchant in extraordinary sea creatures or you're brave enough to snorkel its deep, these excitements can be found west of Sibang, in Caniwara Cove with its immense shallow tidal flat zones and coral beds refuging myriads of species; brittle stars, sand dollars, sea cucumbers, whelk, sea weeds, fishes, different species of starfish, shellfish, urchins and other life forms too many to mention.

The most perfect view of the Caniwara Cove, southeast of the Island

Strolling eastward is the Cababaan Cove where one can commune in quiet solitude. The most unspoiled and longest of the trio white sand coves, Cababaan is truly majestically wild and purely immaculate. Its huge wave patterns and furious stance allow nature to construct its own architectural landscape designs; white rocks and boulders conceived by eons of erosion, accretion and sedimentation. It is that ferocious tendency that makes Cababaan Cove a thing to conquer.

On the far southwest coast of Calayan where the shore is defined by rocky coastal realms, one can be forgiven thinking that places called Magsidel and Dibay have been mistakenly thought to be the rugged American west coast of Oregon or Baja California. Whoever has felt the stinging wind or heard the roar and seen the concussion of angry waves crashing onto a bouldered rocky beach knows that all coasts on the planet are inherently wild.

The Kannaway and Lussok Caves are the kings to behold in the western portion of the island where the land near the shore is hardy and barren brown. But this characteristic has not taken away the bizaare beauty Calayan could possess. There are much more to see in Kannaway Cave other than its namesake which means the "great white herons" regularly flocking above it. Lussok Cave, meanwhile is translated from Ilokano dialect as "a hole". Lussok has two entrances that can only be reached through snorkeling or kayaking. A cave protruding into the pristine seas, the Lussok, like all of other terrestrial caves harbors bats and swiflets and their nests. What makes sea caverns unusual is the lack of speleothems or formations since these are not made from limestones but from columnar basaltic rocks.

One of the beaches found in the nearby island of Camiguin, part of Calayan

These are structures that formed in rocks (commonly in basalt) that consist of columns (mostly commonly hexagonal in shape) that are separated by joints or fractures in the rock that formed when the rock contracted, most often during cooling that happened in great expanse of time.

The cave is perfect for rock jumping and snorkeling onto its crystalline bluish-green waters every thalassophile could wish for.

A sea cave as colorful as a candy

The Punta de Magsidel is a frontier of rocky seascapes and Dibay a coral reef garden-laden bountiful paradise. This wide sea stretch of the island is where most of the big catches are sourced. Coral beds and reefs are shallow where different seafoods can be collected as easy as lacing your shoes. Among the rocks, sea crabs (kappi), sea mantis (palpaltik), urchins (pumapana), edible echinoderms, various shells (e.g. bulaw-bulaw) and ar-arusip (sea grapes) are what you can get from the shallow tidal flats.

The tidal pools on the rocks trap stray fishes as they may have forgotten the receding tide when they wander near the coast. Spear and arrow fishing must be a good try.

As feet go hand in hand with the palate, it's a deserving exaggeration to say that you have not been in Calayan if you haven't eaten a tasty lobster or the scrumptious spanner crab (kusimay).

The solemn water ribbon of Bataraw Falls not that far from the beach front

The rainforest of Calayan on the center of the island is an important bird sanctuary and stop-over for migratory birds flying from northern hemisphere going south as far in Candaba swamps in Pampanga. Towering above like a giant sentinel to the island is the 499-meter tall Mount Calayan, a once active but now an extinct volcano. Surrounded by verdant evergreens, the mountains are home to coots, passerines, birds of prey and the declared vulnerable by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) - the Calayan rail which estimates are numbered to no more than 5,000 mature individuals. Below the lower canopies of the mountains, the population of the now endangered coconut crabs (tatus) once thriving and undisturbed is now dwindling into its extinction as human palates mutated from the ordinary to exotic. Not far from the mountain, the striking Bataraw Falls which its water from the mountain source flowing not too far to the sea can be found in hiding among the foliages.

Tidal pools during high tide that trap stray fishes

Defining and describing in detail the entire island's gems would be an arduous feat to make as countless scenes and stories could be imagined and turned into a reality. I could've written a book that thick if I could do so...

Going back to the angels that have gazed upon Calayan Island on their flight in the heavens, I must prove to them, and to the rest of the world that they were right when these same angels said "scenes so wonderful and lovely" pertaining to the fantabulous island they saw.

Today, clearly change has come to the paradise that was once barely conquerable and attainable to anyone. Resorts and inns now spatter its coasts and interior. Tourism is already seeking its shores every summer and conservationists warn gravely irresponsible human impact even here on Cagayan's last nature frontier.

The crystal clear waters of Lussok Sea Cave ideal for snorkeling and swimming

That's true, Calayan and all the northern islands remain pristine, tantalizingly out of reach for most mass travelers. Its remoteness, the weather and the treacherous open seas remain as the primary defenses of this paradisiacal realm. But honestly, Calayan today is less daunting to visit than 100 to 50 years ago. Its shores became more accessible as cumbersome skiffs and rafts are replaced by swift ferries and planes. Its bewildering wild coasts have been outlined, its terrains mapped, its delicate waters navigated and its forests and mountains have become more fragile than once imagined.

But for the angels who had the first glimpse of the wonderful and lovely Calayan, they must have thought it would be better if it remained that way; far from the molesting touch, a paradise barely attained.

Barred filefish locally known as "sungayan", a testimony of the richness of Calayan waters

More of Babuyanes:

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2215477002038401&id=100007283687906&mibextid=Nif5oz

More of Calayan:

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02crF1Ad5bB1HqmS3MfDc5yXrzefBAneDYx1EpPfkaVstjYZVnRVsfoW395YBZg2gLl&id=100007283687906&mibextid=Nif5oz

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