"Times
have indeed changed," recounts Mr. John Fortes in a social gathering
at the Laiya Beach last 11 May put together by the club in his honor.
We climb to
seek solitude and idyllic state offered by nature. Now we climb to find that we
bring the noise and the clutter we are escaping from to the mountains.
That's the
startling perspective John shared 23 years after he founded the PAL MC in 1979.
While 23 years
seemed just like yesterday, the state of degradation on the environment made
that yesterday looked like a century away.
Banny Hermanos
on seeing a flock of crowd and the increasing number of nipa huts in Barangay
Hugom said, "This place is now a place for all. That's the price we
paid for accessibility."
He recalled
way back in 1987, while looking for an alternative initiation climb for Famy
and Maculot, he and Timmy Toledo stumbled into Laiya as an isolated lost
paradise with pristine beauty. There
were no resorts-only a handful of bancas. With just a map and the drive for
something new as an operations manager for the club, they discovered Mt. Catmon
after traveling for two hours in a Toyota 4X4 land cruiser from San Juan
Batangas. Today Laiya is a mere two and a half hour drive away from EDSA via
Lipa.
"See
that island?" I asked Dom Goduco incumbent Treasurer and major
influencer of the club, while pointing South West from the beach. "I
finally landed in Marinduque last week." We go as far as Batanes, Polilio, Camiguin to
get disconnected from it all. Yes within our midst, are still islands we have
not explored.
Marinduque I
promoted is one theme park that brings you back in time. It takes you just half
a day to circle the 959 square kilometer island visiting all its 6
municipalities. The capital Boac is a livable Nayong Pilipino. To move from one
end to the next, you skirt around the coastline in an hour from west side.
Aside from snorkeling, you can climb Mt. Malindig with an altitude of 1,147 M
ASL in 4-5 hours and cap your weekend in a relaxing hot spring. Best of all, it
is still not a destination. Where else can you budget a P 600.00 weekend in a 6-hour
travel from Manila in such a setting?
John in the
late 70's. Banny in the 80's. Us now in the 21st century. Three generations
that span decades of climbing. They thread on new grounds searching. While the
discovery in itself is satisfying, the fulfillment is letting others follow. We
pay tribute to them as quoting the philosopher Homer, "a guest never
forgets the host who had treated him kindly."
Thank you for opening these places to us.
Chito Razon
15May2002
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