Category Archives: Misamis Oriental

Banaug Shoal


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Lush black corals, seafans and whips. Schools of fishes like Randall’s, silver fusiliers, drummers, surgeonfishes, pipe and trumpet fishes and many more. (Source)

The spot is right in front of Mantangale Dive Resort, a short boat time (10 min.), Easy to find,

Average depth: 25 m / 82 ft
Max depth: 45 m / 147.6 ft
Current: None
Visibility: Good ( 10 – 30 m)
(Source)

Website:no website found
Facebook:no page found
Email:no email found
Landline:no number found
Mobile:no number found
Municipal:Balingoan
Barangay:Matangale
Address:no street address found
Google Map:Banaug Shoal

Lapinig Island


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Pulo Island, sometimes called Lapinig Island ‘cos it belongs to Barangay Lapinig.

If you have been to Balingoan en route to Camiguin, you probably noticed the very small island, more of an islet, in the port. That’s Lapinig Island! It looks dull and boring on the surface but what’s underwater is a different story. It’s an action packed world down there! (Source)

Website:no website found
Facebook:no page found
Email:no email found
Landline:no number found
Mobile:no number found
Municipal:Balingoan
Barangay:Lapinig
Address:no street address found
Google Map:
Pulo Island

Villa Arcadia Beach Resort


Aircon Rooms


Dorm Type Room


Villa Arcadia’s view of Sipaka Point and Camiguin Island

Containing an area of 16,051 Sq. Meters.
-18 Air-Condition Rooms
– 2 Air-Condition Dormitories
– 5 Non-Aircon Rooms
– 1 Air-Condition Conference Hall
– 1 Open Type Conference Hall (overlooking & can accommodate  150 Persons)
– 4 Open Cottages
– Swimming Pool
– White Sand Beach
– Sunset Beach
– Concrete Parking Lot (can park all types of vehicles)
– Basketball Court
– Waterspots, Island Hopping, etc.

 


*************************************************************************Please note, that when you visit a Resort with Pools there are some Rules & Reminders. It can look like this…


(Sample only)

Check our Outdoor Clothing section for advice on what clothing to bring for Outdoor Activities, like White Water Rafting, Swimmingpool,  Beach etc.
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Details:

Website:no page found
Facebook:Villa Arcadia Beach Resort
Email:no email found
Landline:(08851) 69723
8851 24826 ??
Mobile:0917 359 6523
City/Municipal:Talisayan
Barangay:Kalamcam
Address:Cagayan-Butuan Hiway
Google Map:Villa Arcadia Beach Resort
more Info: (2017)Entrance Fee: P10 - P50

Room Rates: P1399 - P4000

Mimbilisan Protected Landscape


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Mimbilisan Falls is within the Mimbilisan Protected Landscape.

Mimbilisan Protected Landscape.

This protected area is located in Barangays Mapua & Bugdang in Balingoan and some portions in Talisayan, Misamis Oriental.
(N8.948884 E124.86517)
Talisayan
Covering 66.515 hectares the Mimbilisan Protected Landscape
is a critical watershed that provides valuable ecological services to its host municipalities and nearby communities.
Mimbilisan is characterized by rolling hills and low lying mountains, and is shaped like a gorge with Mindocdocan Creek at its base.
With a maximum elevation of 535 meters above sea level, the presence of extensive forests and water retentive aquifers on Mimbilisan allows it to function as a significant water reservoir.
Adjacent moderately steep slopes permit agricultural activity. Surrounding areas are thus planted with coconut, coffee, banana,
abaca, corn, cassava, and other root crops.
Forest and agricultural land contribute to critical watershed
The forests of Mimbilisan consist of dipterocarps, Moraceae species of shrubs and trees, vines and lianas, palms, and numerous
riparian or plant species that are specific to wetlands and banks of rivers and streams.
The deep penetrating roots of trees, such as the dipterocarps, regulate water inflow and discharges, and control floods and drought in the area. The diversity of the forest regulates and enhances climate stability in this and nearby localities.

Important flora and fauna found in Mimbilisan Protected Landscape include red lauan, tarictic hornbill, grass owl, rufous hornbill, large-billed crow, jungle fowl, Philippine long tailed macaque, Philippine cobra, monitor lizards, and river crabs.
Coconut trees dominate the agricultural areas. Grasses and low-lying shrubbery cover other patches of uncultivated land. Fast growing species of trees are sparsely planted in the area, usually as tree fences of households and boundaries of farmlots.
These species include gmelina, bagras, falcata, and mahogany.

High ecotourism potential
Realizing the ecotourism potential of the Mimbilisan Protected Landscape, funds from the national government have been requested for the construction of various ecotourism structures. A Visitor Center has been established while plans for other infrastructure, such as a Protected Area Office, resting area for staff and visitors, and others, are being developed.
Various activities have been undertaken to further strengthen the protected area’s functions as a critical watershed and site for ecotourism and other recreational activities. These projects include an Upland Development Program that developed 10 hectares in 2010. From 2011-2012, 40 hectares were planted with narra, red and white lauan, and molave under the National Greening Program.
Activities that may be introduced through a well thought ecotourism plan include hiking through the forest; nature and biodiversity appreciation through plant walks; environmental education tours that highlight the importance of the site as a critical
watershed; and nature photography. Birdwatching can also be developed as the Mimbilisan Protected Landscape serves as a feeding and nesting station of migratory birds. (Source)

Website:no website found
Facebook:no page found
Email:no email found
Landline:no number found
Mobile:no number found
Municipal:Balingoan
Barangay:Mapua
Address:no street address found
Google Map:Mimbilisan Falls

Save

Save

Bugdang Cave

No other info at this time. Research in progress.

Website:no page found
Facebook:no page found
Email:no email found
Landline:no number found
Mobile:no number found
City/Municipal:Talisayan
Barangay:Bugdang
Address:no street address found
Google Map:Bugdang Cave ?

Nita’s Place

Seafood Restaurant

Since 1972, Nita’s Place has always been an oasis for weary road travelers this side of Mindanao. Several decades later, the delightful traditional home-cooked seafood meals have not changed and the restaurant remained popular as it continued to give customers a respite from the hours on the road. (Source)

 


Details:

Website:no page found
Facebook:Nita’s Place
Email:no email found
Landline:no number found
Mobile:0935 932 3785
Municipal:Talisayan
Barangay:Poblacion
Address:National Bypass Road
Google Map:Nita’s Place
more Info:Hours 6:00 AM - 10:00 PM

Whale Shark Museum


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What exactly the Whale Shark Museum is all about, we do not know at this point!

Whale sharks have been present in Talisayan’s waters since at least the 1950s and hunting them for their fins was a source of income for some coastal communities until the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources banned the practice in 1998. (Source)

Talisayan in Misamis Oriental is planning to develop whale shark sightseeing tours. (Source)

There have been some observations of Whale Sharks and Mega-mouth Sharks in Misamis Oriental water.

WHALE SHARK (Rhincodon typus)
The whale shark is the largest fish. One of the largest whale sharks recorded, reportedly from the Taiwanese fishery in 1987, measured 20 m and 34 tons in mass (Chen et al., 1997) .

Most of the whale sharks found in the Philippines have lengths of five to seven meters, meaning they are juveniles as sexually mature individuals are eight to nine meters long, at around 20 to 25 years of age. The smallest whale shark in the world was found in Bicol waters at 0.46m in length. The whale shark has a distinguishable checkerboard and spots pattern on its body except in the ventral side. Another distinguishing feature of the whale shark would be its terminally located mouth. They are found throughout the Philippines with a number of feeding aggregations near the coast, such as the Ticao/Burias Pass, Bohol/Mindanao Sea, and Puerto Princesa Bay. These feeding aggregation sites are the location of a lucrative whale shark interaction tourism enterprise. (Source)

MEGAMOUTH SHARK (Megachasma pelagios)
Reaching a length of more than 5m, the megamouth shark is the world’s third largest fish next to the whale shark and basking shark.


The species is wide-ranging and is recorded to occur in depths between 15 to 150m. The megamouth shark is one of the rarest sharks in the world with only 63 records since the first specimen was recovered in 1976. Fourteen of those incidences were reported from the Philippines as strandings or as bycatch. (Source)

Articles about Megamouth and Whale Sharks in Misamis Oriental waters:

Megamouth Shark in Cagayan de Oro
“On the night of February 20, 1998, three fishermen in Macajalar Bay, Cagayan de Oro caught a fish they couldn’t identify.”

The Capture of Megamouth
“They had expected small fish and discarded pieces of polluting cellophane, but this one, this incredible mouth only, was unbelievably massive. What kind of fish owned that mouth? A shark? A whale? A dolphin?” (February 1998)

Whale Sharks in Iligan Bay
“So, Iligan Bay is also along the whale sharks’ migration path. This was confirmed on Feb. 4, 1999 as a 15-meter whale shark, Rhincodon typus, was trapped in a fishpen of Eduardo Gaid, and released unharmed by noon in Barangay Maputi, here, about 60 kilometers from Cagayan de Oro and 28 kilometers away from Iligan City.”

Megamouth 28
“MEGAMOUTH 28 was caught in the net of Sofronio Castañares in Macajalar Bay, Philippines, around 3 am on January 30, 2005. The fish dragged Castañares’ paddle-driven banca for about an hour, until it stopped, apparently exhausted. “

Extremely Rare and Weird Looking Megamouth Shark Washed Ashore In The Philippines (June 2014)

Megamouth shark washes up in Philippines (Cebu) and is only the 60th we’ve ever seen (January 2015)

Megamouth, whale sharks resurface in Macajalar Bay (September 2018)

A megamouth shark (Megachasma pelagios) that was unintentionally caught by a fisherman off Macajalar Bay (July 2019)

The following sightings of Megamouth Sharks are listed by date:

Date: June 30, 2014
Location: Caught in Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines
Sex: F
Length: 549 cm
Disposition: This shark weighed between 881-1,102 lbs. It washed ashore dead and cause of death is being investigated. It will be buried by officials.

Date: March 12, 2006
Location: Barra, Macabalan, Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines
Sex: F
Length: 226 cm
Disposition: Accidental gill net capture by fishermen.Died before it could be set free.

Date: January 30, 2005
Location: Cagayan de Oro, Philippines
Sex: F ?
Length: 417 cm
Disposition: Caught by fisherman, buried

Date: January 6, 2003
Location: Cagayan de Oro City, Philippines
Sex: Unknown
Length: 497 cm
Disposition: Consumed

Date: February 21, 1998
Location: Cagayan de Oro, Philippines
Sex: M
Length: ca. 549 cm TL
Disposition: Consumed

(Source)

Website:Whale Shark Museum
Facebook:Whale Shark Museum
Email:no email found
Landline:no number find
Mobile:no nuumber fouund
City/Municipal:Talisayan
Barangay:Poblacion
Address:no address found
Google Map:Whale Shark Museum