Island hopping in the Philippines
Head to the 7,107 beach-fringed, tourist-free isles of the Philippines for a glimpse of untouched South-East Asia
The sun had melted like mango ice cream on hot coconut pie as I strolled to a beachside restaurant, reflecting on a morning snorkelling with green turtles in the warm, aquamarine ocean – it had been a perfect day in paradise.
Throughout several weeks travelling around the Philippines I’d only met a handful of non-Asian tourists. From Thailand to Singapore, visitors follow well-trodden trails across South-East Asia, yet comparatively few cross the South China Sea to the Philippines.
The Philippines has never been easy to grasp. It isn’t compact like Thailand, but made up of 7,107 diverse islands sprawled across a huge tract of the Pacific Ocean. Dozens of ferries and hundreds of buses depart Manila every day for all corners of the islands. I felt thoroughly daunted by the prospect of trying to capture a representative flavour of this archipelagic nation in two short weeks.
Our man in Manila
First challenge, however, was Manila. The capital’s reputation doesn’t do the Philippines many favours and almost everybody I’d spoken to before my journey warned vaguely of its dangers. Such dystopian views unfairly oversimplify ‘Metro Manila’, which is actually 17 very different cities that have coalesced into one megalopolis on Luzon Island. “I want to show you there are many faces to Manila; the old and the dirty but also the new and the rich,” said theatrical Juanita, my city guide.
Cue modern Makati City. Its broad avenues and mirror-glass skyscrapers could be downtown USA. Affluent Filipinos pursue a national addiction termed ‘malling’, shopping at immense retail malls on Makati Avenue and chatting over Starbucks’ coffees in Tagalog dialect that frequently mutates into ‘Taglish’ – expressive English with an American twang.
Some of these hopeful migrants may have hailed from along the Bay of Manila’s crowded, ramshackle districts that paradoxically host many of the city’s five-star hotels. Gritty Ermita has turbocharged energy.
We passed cockfighting pits and go-go bars; ate prawns fried in tempura batter at a seafood dampa (a wet market where you select your fish and then take it to a stall to be cooked), and sat in uproarious traffic jams of horn-honking chrome jeepneys (hybrid jeeps) bearing bravura names such as ‘Street Fighter’.
The pace slackens around Intramuros, a district of Spanish colonial heritage, with a church dating back to 1587. Then the streets disappear into the Quiapo district where Juanita and I walked to a basilica where a packed congregation fanned themselves in drenching humidity and mumbled prayers towards an altar constructed around a miracle-inducing 18th-century Black Nazarene icon.
“They pray for good health and jobs abroad so they can send money back home,” whispered Juanita. And the old ladies in rows of plastic chairs, I asked?
“They will pray for you if you pay them,” he laughed. This sense of fun and enterprise would characterise everything I was to enjoy about Asia’s only predominately Catholic people during my stay.
On the terraces
The terraces couldn’t have been more dramatic: a recent cyclone had left bruised skies and coffee-coloured scars in the earth while the stepped mountain slopes of the chartreuse-green rice terraces, some thousands of years old, plummeted several kilometres out of billowing clouds like a stairway from heaven.
I hiked to the impressively frothy Tappia Waterfall along the stone-built terrace walls from Batad, passing local Ifugao tribeswomen bent double weeding paddies with teeth stained red from chewing moma (betel nut).
I can still recall the pungent aroma of fermenting copra (coconut) drying by the roadside. For all the diversity I was discovering, this confederation of cultures does have a strong shared identity – of devout Catholicism and the vestiges of Spanish colonialism. This manifests itself most vividly in extravagant religious fiestas, particularly celebrated during May’s Flores de Mayo.
“People here are very competitive,” beamed Amie Villenas from Lucban in southern Luzon, where the Pahiyas Fiesta takes place annually each May. This was an understatement – the entire town had gone berserk and decorated their homes’ facades head-to-toe in fresh farm produce and kiping – faux leaves and flowers moulded from rice-flour paste.
The town committee awards prizes for the best-decorated houses. “But prizes are not the main motivation behind Pahiyas,” insisted Amie, as we examined an avocado, banana and sugar cane-adorned townhouse arranged to resemble a rice paddy replete with a kiping-sculpted water-buffalo. “The idea is to offer a little of your harvest to say thanks to San Isidro Labrador [the patron saint of farmers] and get a better harvest the following year.”
Beyond southern Luzon the Philippines splintered into a thousand islands called the Visayas, where I would spend a week island-hopping in paradise. After a morning’s whale shark snorkelling near Donsol (south Luzon), I travelled south by bus through the infrequently visited Samar and Leyte islands towards Cebu. On umpteen occasions I promised myself to return, as picturesque fishing villages of nipa palm thatched huts, white-sand beaches and distant island chains came and went.
Cebu revisited
I imagined the great Portuguese navigator, Ferdinand Magellan, felt the same sense of wonder ‘discovering’ the Visayas in April 1521. Although I’m convinced his arrival on Cebu Island by creaking wooden galleon would have been more romantic than mine, as driving tropical rain forced me beneath deck to endure Pirates of the Caribbean II on the in-ferry entertainment during the sea voyage into modern Cebu City.
Neither would Magellan have recognised the triangular-shaped San Pedro Fort close to Cebu’s beautiful art-deco port. Its metre-thick walls and circular bastions were constructed in 1565 during a second more successful attempt by the Spaniards to colonise.
By then Magellan was dead, slain by an irate local chief named Lapu-Lapu shortly after arriving. Inside the fort now is a fragrant garden, where ylang-ylang flowers sweetly deodorise the air while a blind guitarist strums Pretty Woman for pesos. Nearby, located behind the lichen-encrusted Santo Niño Cathedral, I finally found Magellan’s now refurbished Cross.
Chocolate Hills & cute creatures
Bohol is quirky and fun, a rugged-looking island with coralline-stone churches and tricycles emblazoned with sanctimonious religious scripture. “The tricycles used to have pictures of sexy women but the drivers were ordered by the governor to remove them,” revealed local guide, Merlou Reyes.
There is a little tourist circuit on Bohol, popular with coach-loads of excitable Philippine tourists, beginning at the bizarre Chocolate Hills. “There are two theories regarding the origin of the Chocolate Hills,” began Merlou, from a viewpoint near Carmen. As far as my eye could see the landscape was pimpled with some 1,700 almost identical, 40m-high rounded, green-brownish hills that stood out from the luxuriant surrounding jungle. Imagine a basket of Easter eggs.
I could have lovingly embraced the tiny tarsiers – next up on Bohol’s tourist trail – but they probably would’ve given me a nasty nip. Think Steven Spielberg’s Gremlins, add bushy fur, bony humanoid fingers and saucer-wide eyes (larger than their brains) et voila… a tarsier.
These ancient endemics have been clinging to trees with a look of startled surprise for 45 million years. Rare and located nearly exclusively on Bohol, there are several thousand of them on the island, explained Victor, who locates these nocturnal critters in the Tarsier Sanctuary’s mountain forest. Merlou and I saw six of them and cooed every time one of them clapped their adorable eyes upon us.
And relax…
“Relax,” said the white-jacketed steward after I’d sprinted across Dumaguete Quay on Negros Island, close to missing the ferry connection to Siquijor, “the ferry leaves on Philippines time.”
I saw no spirits. But I had been treated to a country with every ounce of the allure of its more popular South-East Asian neighbours yet which remains mystifyingly free of visitors. I’d skipped through ten islands during my journey, which left exactly 7,097 unaccounted for – a lifetime of further adventures.
The author travelled with Far East specialists Bamboo Travel, who can make tailor-made itineraries all over the Philippines
Please note: This article was first published in 2016 and updated in 2022.