Colayo’s cool waters and majestic mountains
>> Sunday, May 27, 2012
HAPPY WEEKEND
Gina Dizon
(First
of three parts)
PASIL,
Kalinga - The trek up
Colayo’s 13-km route over rolling hills and demanding
footbridges that looked down on roaring and taunting
waters was worth it.
The
walk started at the junction of the mining town of BatongBuhay in Barangay
Balatoc. I heaved heavy breaths trudging the
80- degree concreted stairway with an asthma ready to explode.
The stairway turned out to be 15 minutes which seemed an hour.
I
found my other companions- Samuel Tayaan from Colayo, a classmate in St
Mary’s High School of Sagada, and
visiting tourist Stephen Clark waiting at cool
tree-clad Biyog sitio of Batong Buhay before we
took on the trek.
Easy
walking over rolling hills but a fenced part of the rugged road got
me wondering some guy did not want the road opened or maybe wanted compensation
for road right of way.
The
road from Batong Buhay to Colayo was being repaired as I
trudged along the way to the village where local
folks demanded the road be opened so they could get their farm
produce to market outlets easier.
We
met young and elder women carrying meat of ugsa (deer) and
sayote shoots. Samuel bought two rods lined with deer
meat. Deer meat was delicious at dinner.
I
came to know from Colayo elder Jaime Guyang later that day that
hunting was done at one side of the mountain for a
year. The other side was untouched to let young deer and wild
animals grow.
This
side of the mountain was open for hunting the next year. This
way of regulation was noted in the cultural practice of “lapat” referring
to the ban of the utilization of forest resources within
a given period of time, in furtherance to the Sangguniang
Bayan resolution authored by Councilor Samuel Tayaan
adopting Republic Act 9147 providing for the conservation and
protection of wildlife resources.
I relaxed
to take pictures of the village of Batong Buhay in
Balatoc where one could see rice terraces moving
upward while the river
murmured. Boomag showed a side of the mining town an ecological
spirited look.
Batong
Buhay that one readily seen upon arrival
at the village were lined up with shanties along the
road which looked like bunkhouses where they
sold candies , sardines, instant Maggie noodles
to cigarettes and Ginebra San Miguel.
This
mining area saw active mining operations
the past seven years with the entrance
of Makilala Mining Company and Korean BumKwang G&C
Company since the New Peoples Army shot down the mining
company’s tower in the early ‘80s.
Boomag
rice terraces perched quaintly above the Balatoc River. I took
pictures from a road of which flowed waters that came from
Boomag mountain. The road heavy with metal rods was
then built by BatongBuhay Mines under Philex Mining Company management.
It was abandoned in the ‘80s when the electric tower of the company
was shot down in 1985.
Rocks
along the river were red, evidence of a magma filled
mountain from the dormant Boomag volcano. I
smelled the stench of sulfur vapor smelling like rotten
eggs.
The
waters along the Paniyew Creek were red which seemed like blood flowing.
I felt a shiver and a shudder at such a sight. Jaime Guyang told me
later that day that pregnant women who passed along Paniyew Creek lost their babies or something bad happened
to the unborn child, or to a very young child. Strange that
my eerie feeling coincidentally jibed with the
people’s superstitious belief.
Paniyew
Mountain looked like a hundred faces. While passing through, the mountain
seemed to either bless one in his journey or look
suspiciously. Faces of dogs and cats and depending on one’s
imagination were etched on the rocks and the trees yonder Paniyew
Peak. I guess those faces reminds one to take nothing but
pictures and leave nothing but footprints when visiting and leaving
Colayo.
Trudging
the way to Colayo amidst pine trees and cool mountain breezes
is a respite and a sight to see the Balatoc River
brimming with bronze colored waters.
I
paused often times to take a look at the towering
mountain of Binulawan yonder bordering LubuaganTinglayan and Pasil.
It must be that the towering mountains of Kalinga trekked by
sturdy children, women, and men signified life’s trying edges. (to be continued next issue)
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