• philippines

April is a great time to go to Palawan, the temperature is perfect for spending all day on boat and exploring the beautiful coast. It is certainly cooler coming from Singapore.

I flew into Manila airport, then had a 5 hour connection for my 45 minute flight to Francisco B Reyes Airport on the small northern island of Busuanga. I was going to spend 2 days here so I can check out Coron Island before jumping on a boat south to El Nido on Palawan Island for 4 days.

After landing, I took a 45 minute minibus ride to Coron Town where I had booked a hotel, the sun was setting so I quickly headed out and for a walk around the area looking to find the ocean and see the view, but I never got to see it because something much more interesting got in my way.

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Villages on stilts sat all along the shore, the first time I had seen anything like it. I walked along the precarious walkways, some only 1 plank thick, and soon gathered a following of kids who loved to get in front of my camera. It wasn’t long before it got too dark to see where I was going so I headed back out to look for somewhere to eat dinner, I plan to come back here tomorrow after a day on a boat.

Usually I like to hire a private boat so I can go and take photos at my own pace, but since Coron is fairly small I decided to take a group tour to see all the places and just enjoy the area like a regular tourist. Then I could go alone the next day and only visit the best places to shoot. It was cheap at 650php for the day including lunch, I spent a lot of time snorkeling amongst the coral and got to use the underwater pack for my camera that I bought especially for this trip. I was hoping to take some cool underwater panos, but being my first time shooting underwater, none turned out so well.

boat moored on beautiful island in clear ocean water

The last place for the day was the beautiful and calming Kayangan Lake, in the bottom left picture. I swam in all the way across to get away from the other tourists, but with all the swimming I had done in the day, my back was burning that night from way too much sun.

Philippines travel blog

At the end of the tour I headed straight for the stilt villages to walk around, surrounded by kids excited to be in my photos again. I found the perfect panoramic spot and waited watching the children to see what they would do as I shot them running around. It felt nice to see so many welcoming people as I explored their homes. It is funny to see people live like this yet they still have their big screen TVs, smartphones and nice clothes.

Palawan philippines

I hadn’t booked a private boat for the next day, I was thinking I could just rock up at the port and grab one, but this being a busy Easter weekend all the official tour boats were out. So I grabbed a trike and headed for the smaller villages nearby to find a boat to take me.

Palawan philipines

I found two keen young lads and paid them 1500 php for the day, it was a tiny boat which at I wasn’t sure about at first but it turned out to be a great blessing, if I had a large tour boat and older men they wouldn’t have been so willing to maneuver the boat to get the pictures I wanted. They were so eager and I got a great shot of the formations.

Whilst there were many other nice places, none came close to the beauty of this location, the name of which I have completely forgotten.

Crystal clear coastal water

Palawan philippines

Back in Coron town I explored more of the stilt houses before heading to dinner where I watched on as what seemed like the whole town walk by holding candles in celebration of Easter. It was a wonderful sight to see them all coming together like this.

Coron town blog

My last dinner here I went to Sinugba sa Balay for the second time and ordered Tuna Tataki. I was weary of ordering something almost raw fish in the Philippines but it turned out to be the best Tuna I have ever had, even better than Japan! It was freshly caught today so was nice, warm and creamy rather than the cold I am used to. Incredible. If I had discovered it the first night I would have eaten it every meal.

palawan philippines

My 4th day in Palawan was going to be taken up entirely on the ferry to El Nido. It takes 7-8 hours! We left at 8.30am and for the first 3 hours of calm water I lay on the side deck enjoying the view and relaxing whilst I listened to film scores, it was wonderful. Once we hit open water though I was soon getting splashed by the big waves, I had 2 options, sit inside the cramped boat smelling the engine fumes or go up stairs. I chose upstairs and enjoyed 4 hours of what felt like a theme park ride. I had read before that some of the boats can be very small, only holding 20 people, I was so glad this was a bigger boat with the waves we encountered. Even on the top I would get splashed occasionally. At one point we even ran over a smaller boat, pictured in the bottom right. The fisherman had to dive underwater to avoid being hurt. Crazy.

I arrived in El Nido at 4pm with plenty of time before sunset to walk around the town and find a good place for a shot. I wasn’t disappointed by the light that first night and captured a boy as he searched for shellfish at low tide.

Boy searches for shell fish on the coast

After 3 days of being on a boat I needed a rest so I spent my first whole day in El Nido walking up the beach and seeing the local life.

Palawan phiippines

It was lovey to walk amongst the rustic houses, eat lunch as the waves splash at my feet not having to rush anywhere.

Palawan philippines

I went to a few tour operators and found out they would charge me 6000php a day for a private boat here, so much more expensive than Coron, eventually after a lot of bargaining I found one that would give me a small boat again for 4500php for 2 days which I still thought was too much, but my best option. The area surrounding El Nido is split up into 4 separate tours that go around all the pretty beaches and coves, and because I didn’t want to spend the next 4 days on a boat my plan is to try visit as many as I could in 2 days. There will be certain places I don’t want to stay long at, and others I want to take my time and photograph, which I can’t do with a group tour.

El nido beach philippines

The first day I visited many beaches, shooting as I went, sadly though the ocean was too choppy to reach the further places, but after more research, I realised it would only be a waste anyway since those areas are part of the busiest tours and I don’t want people in my shots. So I was happy finding the quiet less popular beaches all to myself.

Deserted beach in palawan philippines

My route took me to Cadlao Island, Dilumacad Island, Miniloc Island where I kayaked around the lagoons, Shimizu Island and the last but best destination, Ipil Beach. It was so pristine yet desolate at the same time. I was the only person there the whole time, which amazed me for such a nice beach. My boat captain started to get impatient with me when it got to 5pm and I was still shooting. I had told him we would finish by 4.

Palawan philippines

For sunset I went back to the same spot along the beach in El Nido town, I hadn’t found a prettier place to shoot and wanted to capture it in the best light so decided I would come back here every night.

Palawan philippines

The next day I was back on the boat and went around a few of the same beaches, avoiding the crowds and enjoying the solidarity. I chose to back to Ipil beach again to capture it with the best light.

El nido philippines

Ipil beach

I loved Ipil Beach so much that on my last day I decided to kayak there and sleep under the stars, it was so nice and relaxing to be all alone, only the sound of waves to listen to.

A perfect final night in Palawan.

El nido tour

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3 years ago when I first arrived in Singapore, I visited Manila and it really opened my eyes to see a 3rd world city. But the Philippines has so many beautiful places to explore and I have been wanting to come back ever since. The only thing I booked on this trip was my flights 10 days apart into Angeles and my first night’s hotel, everything after that I will just go with the flow. All I had was a list of places I wanted to visit. I wanted it to be a road trip, something I haven’t done for a long time.

I chose to fly into Angeles because it’s the closest international airport to Banaue rice terraces, but when I walked around the town I soon found out what everyone else is here for. It was like Soi Cowboy in Bangkok with young girls walking along side old fat white men. Lovely.

The next morning I went searching for a car hire. I jumped on a Jeepney to save time only to find google maps was completely wrong about the location, which turned out to be a regularly occurrence here. I did get a cool shot during the ride though.

Banaue Philippines

Car rental is expensive here at $50 a day compared to Indonesia where you can get a car, gas and driver for less than that. All the rental places I found were out of cars and I would have to wait until late afternoon to get one, I was eager to get get out of this town to prettier scenery. Luckily I found a local who would rent me his personal car for the 10 days – a 1 year old Toyota!

I filled up the tank then hit the toll way straight away heading north, my first destination being the rice terraces. As darkness fell I arrived in Baguio, a busy town where the traffic was terrible. I decided to stop here for the night since there were plenty of hotels around and I didn’t want to miss any scenery along the way.

I woke early the next day so I could make it to Banaue before sunset, I had a little walk around the area first to see the local life, exploring the communities into the hills around.

baguio

Baguio Philippines

It was a great drive through the mountains and villages all day, the roads constantly winding and the air getting cooler. I stopped to photograph anything that caught my eye, I was especially on the lookout for Jeepneys to shoot, something with a cool paint job with a beautiful mountain backdrop. Of course my expectations were too high.

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dead-jeepney

Banaue Philippines

Trike Philippines

I stopped in the town of Bontoc for lunch and walked around, since I had been sat in the car for 6 hours I needed to stretch my legs. I found this cool trike stand near the local market that was a perfect street scene to shoot in black and white. The locals couldn’t understand why I was shooting them for 30 minutes as I dodged traffic stood in the road.

Trikes Philippines taxi

I arrived in Banaue at 5pm getting a glimpse of the incredible terraces before the light faded and I headed to find a place to stay for the night, I bought a sim card with plenty of data so I could search for a place easily rather than having to book in advance for a real road trip experience that allowed me to go wherever caught my fancy. I found Uyami’s Green View Lodge which was cheap and came with breakfast and the perfect spot right next to town.

Banaue Philippines

There are many rice terraces to visit in the area, the main being Banaue itself which I walked around for the whole first day scouting the area for the perfect shot. I never really found it and had no plan to come back to shoot. It was great to walk in the edges of the terraces with the cool mountain breeze blowing and seeing the people that live and work here go about their days though.

Bata rice terraces

The next day I headed to Batad Rice Terraces, an hour drive east along a newly paved road. If I had come a few weeks earlier it would have been another 30 minutes of hiking down steep hill to the villages, something fine on the way but would be killer after a day trekking up and down all the steep hills. Along the way there were various sites I stopped to look at, one of which I pulled to the side of the road near a man on a motorbike. He moved out the way a little which made me think I could move in a little more when disaster struck and I drove slightly off the road with the car resting on the axel. I was so gutted thinking that would be the end of the trip, who know what damage I had done, or if the car could get back fully onto the road. This was when I found out how nice Filipinos are, the motorcyclist shouted for his friends and 10 of them helped lift the car up whilst I reversed it back. I only wish I had a photo to show you but I was too busy, I was just so relieved and continued on my way after thanking them profusely.

A 20 minute walk downhill took me to the heart of Batad village where it sat amongst the terraces, with lots of small inns to stay in overnight I wasn’t sure if I would stay here or not tonight. I kept walking around the steep terraces wishing my camera gear wasn’t so heavy until I came to this incredible view looking down. It was a perfect time to visit and photograph which is always a concern planning a trip to shoot rice terraces, I had no idea what stage of growth they would be at so I was excited to see them filled with water reflecting the clouds above. I spent 2 hours shooting various compositions as I waited for the clouds to create a nice patterns of light on the landscape below.

Batad Rice terraces philippines

Banaue

I then continued hiking to Cambulo, 3 hours away, along the way I passed groups of tourists coming back asking why I didn’t have a guide to show me the way. But the trail was obvious and looked easy so I didn’t think I could get lost. How wrong I was! The trail split at various points and I soon found out I was on the wrong route. Even asking a worker didn’t help as their English wasn’t great. After wasting a lot of time, I decided to head back to my car and try again tomorrow as it was 4pm and I wouldn’t make it back before dark.

With my second attempt to Cambulo I knew exactly which way to go and arrived at 1pm hot and tired after step climbs and balancing on the narrow terrace walls. It was a cloudy day and the light didn’t look great so the scenes I found exploring the levels lacked any magic. I loved walking around the village however and seeing the locals, it was so peaceful, what a wonderful place it must be to live walking to school along the terraces each day, no mobile signal- a simple life amongst beautiful terraces.

Cambulo rice terraces philippines

At 4pm just as I was thinking of leaving a storm passed over with heavy rain for over an hour, I didn’t want to hike back and get drenched so I had no choice but to stay in the only inn for the night. The sky eventually cleared and the terraces lit up with the perfect light just before sunset. To think if it hadn’t been for the rain and trapped me here I would have missed it. How wrong I was to think the light wouldn’t be good here at this time because of the surrounding mountains.

banaue

I walked back to the inn so happy, relaxed and away from my usual busy life. The villagers were all sat outside their homes talking and laughing. It only cost $3 to stay for the night, and it was just as nice as some $50 hotels. I also ate the best meal on the trip here for only $1.50, Chicken Adobo and it changed my previous opinion of this dish!

Philippines rice terraces

As there was nothing to do here after dark I fell asleep at 8pm and woke before sunrise setting off back to Batad after a morning walk around the village.

I spent my last day around Banaue town, the light was good today so I shot the terraces at various angles, but they just didn’t compare to the colours and shapes of Batad and Cambulo.

banaue-town

Bane Rice terraces philippines

Banaue Rice Terraces

I made my way west through the mountains towards the coast in the afternoon, it was an incredible drive with the golden light hitting the landscape, possibly one of the best drives of my life! I hoped to make it to the coast by sunset but when darkness came, I still had 2 hours of driving left winding through the mountains. This was when I discovered how much I hated the tinted windscreens they use in the Philippines; it was so hard to see and I was so happy when I got out of the mountains into the lit streets.

philippines

The 2nd half of the trip was spent driving south down the coast through Alaminos, Iba and Subic Bay. The coast was disappointing however with very few photographic opportunities and the “resorts” I stayed in, even worse. They all looked like they had seen better days, but I did love that the owner of Isla Vista was also the local Doctor!

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serenity-lone-boat-in-the-ocean

Phhilippines

I had planned to visit Mount Pinatubo, a volcano that had a lake inside, but after 3 hours of driving just to get there I found out it was closed. I was amazed a natural wonder would ever be closed especially since it isn’t rainy season. I drove all the way back towards the City of Balanga where I enjoyed the quiet roads, whilst there was little to photograph the drive was beautiful amongst the forests and small villages. I would take detours onto small bumpy roads trying to find the coast that would lead nowhere.

On my last morning before heading for the airport I discovered this lovely rusting truck on the side of the road and I spent an hour shooting it from various angles to the delight of the owner’s children. They had no idea why I would want to photograph such an old piece of junk.

truck

Whilst the 2nd half of my road trip couldn’t compare to the first I still enjoyed the drives and seeing the local life, there was always something to see along the quiet roads. Nothing beats driving down a road until the pavement ends and you can’t go any further. You can’t beat a road trip with no plan.

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