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Showing posts from November, 2019

- Are you Sikatuna yet?

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A Pleasant Road Trip to Sikatuna, Bohol As I said in a previous post, we like to go on “excursions” if we have free time. It’s great to be able to travel around Bohol in our own car and explore. Normally the roads in Bohol are very good with not much traffic, especially outside the city. Most of the country highways are pretty nice We were on one such excursion recently to the east and north of Tagbilaran, where we went to Baclayan, Alburquerque, Loay, and Loboc. We also went to Sikatuna. It is a small pleasant town of about 7000 people, actually the smallest municipality by land area in Bohol.  Sikatuna Town Hall Who is the clown in the back? Historic church in Sikatuna It is named for the native chieftain, Datu Sikatuna, who in 1565 signed a peace treaty, the Blood Compact, with the Spanish explorer Miguel Lopez de Legazpi. It is said that both leaders contributed their own blood into a cup from which they both drank, thus sealing the Compact and the

- Dumaguete and Tagbilaran

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Dumaguete and Tagbilaran The two cities are similar in many ways. Both are smaller cities. Dumaguete has about 134,000 residents; Tagbilaran has about 105,000. Both are provincial capitals, Dumaguete of Negros Oriental, and Tagbilaran of Bohol. Both have many foreign expats living nearby. In Tagbilaran, many live on nearby Panglao Island. In Dumaguete many foreigners live in Valencia in the mountains or in Dauin or other towns nearby. Both have a lot of tourist attractions nearby. Dumaguete has the mountains and waterfalls and Apo Island and Siquijor Island and Rizal Boulevard and many other attractions. Tagbilaran has the Chocolate Hills, tarsiers and nature preserves, river cruises, Panglao Island with Alona Beach and eight other beautiful beaches with white sand, coconut trees, and amazing clear water, and many other attractions. The Island of Bohol Tagbilaran is in the lower left, beside Panglao And both have several malls and large shopping centers. Duma

- Goodbye Dumaguete, Hello Tagbilaran

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From Dumaguete to Tagbilaran Leaving Dumaguete Dumaguete is the provincial capital of Negros Oriental on the island of Negros Nobody likes to move, and we weren’t anxious to either, but Lyn and Wendie tackled the task with alacrity. Our friends and neighbors Ariel and Jen helped us prepare. We don’t have a huge amount of furniture, but we do have several big items. And rather than have our household items shipped, we chose to bring them with us. We decided to keep our old Mitsubishi, but that wouldn’t be big enough to hold all of our stuff. Waiting to board the RORO Our kind Filipino friends Boy and Lourdes volunteered to help us move with their Suzuki multicab. We loaded everything in the two vehicles, and the seven of us (Uncle Boy and Auntie Lourdes, 3 grandchildren, and Lyn and I) took off. Wendie was already in Tagbilarin.  Uncle Boy and his multicab on the RORO Since there is no RORO (roll on, roll off) ferry directly from Dumaguete to Tagb