Come to Bohol – and experience the imaginative expressions of the Boholano spirit, the vitality of its culture, and the beauty of its artistic world.
The echoes of history resound in Bohol. Bohol is also a land of history, a land of heroes. The Blood Compact between Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and Datu Sikatuna, the Longest Revolt against Spanish Colonialism led by Francisco Dagohoy – these are just but two important historical chapters in Philippine history, contributing to the shaping of Filipino nationhood through the courage, patriotism, creativity, sense of brotherhood, and commitment of our Boholano heroes and statesmen.
Sandugo Festival
And these virtues and values have been celebrated in many a cultural event, through the efforts of a lot of artists and cultural works.
The most festive of all is the SANDUGO FESTIVAL SEASON, celebrated every July.
Loboc Children’s Choir
Be enthralled with the angelic voices of the famous Children’s Choir from Loboc, twice National Champion in the NAMCYA Competition for Children’s Choirs.
Dimiao Children’s Rondalla
Listen in awe and rapture to the haunting melodies played by the CHILDREN’S RONDALLA from Dimiao, the current national champion in the NAMCYA Competition for Children’s Rondallas.
Teatro Bol-anon
Be magnetized by the dramatic power of Teatro Bol-anon, the first repertory theater company in Bohol.
Loay Pipe Organ
The Province of Bohol boasts of 10 pipe organs. Of late, only one has been fully restored, that of the Loay parish church. A successful inaugural concert was held last May 30 with the Benedictine monk, Fr. Benildus Ma. Maramba performing.
Heritage Site
Most of the colonial structures still existing on the island were erected at the instigation of the Spanish friars. The structures served well during their time, and even today, their utilization speaks well of their adaptation and usefulness.
Cottage Industries
Our Culture Tourism in Bohol also includes a visit to the folk craft and cottage industries obtaining in several towns. Make a culturally enriching observation of village life as it throbs with the gentle activity of family-based village crafts and industries. Like loom weaving in Tubigon and Inabanga.
FRUITS
Mangga (Mangifera Indica Linnaeus)
Language | Name |
Cebuano | mangga |
Tagalog | mangga |
Malay | mangga |
Bahasa | mangga |
English | mango |
German | Mango |
Dutch | mango |
Spanish | mango |
French | mangue |
The mango is rightly the king of fruits; its sweet taste is universally appreciated. Originally, the mango tree comes from India and Burma, but already in the sixteenth century had been spread across most of tropical Asia; some had already been brought to Southeast Asia by Buddhist monks in the fourth and fifth centuries, and is now present in all tropical countries. The mango tree is a large evergreen tree with a dark green, umbrella-shaped crown, that can grow up to twenty meters tall. It has simple, leathery, oblong-lanceolate leaves, about 30 long by 3 to 5 cm wide on flowering branches, and up to 50 cm on sterile branches. Young leaves are red, but older leaves turn green. Shiny dark green when exposed to the sunlight, or lighter green when underneath. The small greenish white or pinkish flowers grow on a much branched panicle. The flowers are radially symmetrical, and usually have 5 petals, streaked with red. Both male and bisexual flowers grow on the same tree. The mango fruit is irregularly egg-shaped, and between 8 and 12 cm long, but some varieties can grow as big as 30 cm. The skin is smooth greenish-yellow, sometimes partly red. The underlying yellow-orange flesh varies in quality from soft, sweet, juicy and fiber-free in high-quality varieties to turpentine-flavored and fibrous in wild seedlings. The single flat seed is encased in the white fibrous inner layer of the fruit.
Mangos are grown in over a dozen varieties in various tropical countries, each country having a preference for a specific type. At the U.P in Los Baños, no less than fifty different cultivars are kept. However, in the Philippines, and on Bohol, the most common type is the ‘carabao’ cultivar. When ripe, this variety has a smooth, yellow, and thin skin. The flesh is yellow, very tender and melts in the mouth with delicate aromatic flavor. The fruit’s fiber is medium-coarse, short, and confined almost entirely to the edge of the seed. When eaten ripe, it is normally sliced into three parts along the flat seed.
Although most westerns only know mangos in their ripe, yellow or yellow-orange state, among Filipinos, the green unripe fruits are also very popular. It is then eaten with bagoong, a salty kind of shrimp-paste, or just plain salt or sugar. Pregnant women are well known to crave for sour mango during the first three months of their pregnancy, and are infamous to send out their husband in the middle of the night, during a heavy tropical rainstorm, to obtain it.
More information The Mango Information Network has a lot of information on Mangos and the growth of Mangos in the Philippines. The Fruits & Nuts Information Center also provides a wealth of information.
Saging (Musa spp.)
Language | Name |
Cebuano | saging |
Tagalog | saging |
Malay | pisang |
Bahasa | pisang |
English | banana |
German | Banane |
Dutch | banaan |
Spanish | plátano |
French | banane |
Most westerners who arrive in a tropical country for the first time will be amazed about the sheer number of varieties of bananas. Grown up at home with just one type, the range of sizes, colours, and flavours is somewhat of a revelation.
Also the western idea of a ‘banana tree’ will need revision. The banana fruit actually grows on a huge, fast growing perennial plant. Banana plants are one of the most useful tropical crops. The huge leaves are used for packing your lunch and puto, bud-bud, and soman, local delicacies made out of rice or sticky rice. Furthermore, they can serve as a makeshift umbrella. The stem of the banana-plant is used as pig fodder. The banana fruits themselves grow in clusters (hands) on a large stem that first carried the small white flowers. At the end of the flower stem is a large purple bud, called puso, which is eaten as a vegetable. The fruits themselves can be eaten raw, cooked, or fried.
The banana plant is a native of the Indo-Malaysian region, but has now spread to all tropical countries. On Bohol you won’t find the large banana plantations as can be found on Mindanao, but you’ll find banana plants almost everywhere.
If you’re in a more relaxed mood, you can sing along with Harry Belafonte’s Banana Boat Song.
Guayabano (Annona muricata)
Language | Name |
Cebuano | guayabano; duyan |
Tagalog | guayabano |
Malay | durian belanda |
Bahasa | sirsak |
English | soursop |
German | – |
Dutch | zuurzak |
Spanish | guayabano |
French | – |
The soursop is a native of northern South America, but it was one of the first fruit trees to be introduced in Asia by European explorers. The name soursop is derived from the Dutch zuurzak or sour sack, after its somewhat acidic flavour. The Dutch name is still in use Indonesia, and Malay, it is called a durian belanda, literally a Dutch durian. However, apart from the remotely similar shape, the fruit is quite different from the durian. The flesh is white, soft, and very juicy, and has a delicous sweet-sour taste. Embedded in the flesh are a large number of darkbrown seeds. The yellow flowers can appear anywhere on the trunk, and will develop in a green, irregularly shaped fruit with many short, soft spines. When nearly ripe, the fruit will have to be picked, because, if it is allowed to fall, it will be smashed. It will then take a few days to fully ripen, and must be eaten within a few days. The fruit needs to be handled with much care, which is probably the main reason you’ll never see them outside the regions where they are grown. The fruit is also often used for making refreshing drinks. The season for soursop is roughly from August to November.
More information on the soursop is available in Fruits of warm climates, pp. 75-80 by Julia F. Morton.
Durian (Durio zibethinus)
Language | Name |
Cebuano | durian |
Tagalog | durian |
Malay | durian |
Bahasa | durian |
English | durian |
German | – |
Dutch | durian; stinkvrucht |
Spanish | – |
French | – |
No fruit is as controversial as the Durian. “Smells like hell, but tastes like heaven,” is a commonly heard saying, and, to be honest, it will take most people who’re not from Southeast Asia some time to appreciate its taste. In Dutch it is even known by the unflattering name stinkvrucht; bad-smelling fruit. The famous naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, in his Malay Archipelago, Vol. 1, however, claims the durian tastes like “a rich butter-like custard highly flavoured with almonds […] intermingled with it come wafts of flavour that call to mind cream-cheese, onion-sauce, brown sherry, and other incongruities. Then there is a rich glutinous smoothness in the pulp which nothing else possesses, but which adds to its delicacy. It is neither acid, nor sweet, nor juicy; yet one feels the want of more of these qualities, for it is perfect as it is. It produces no nausea or other bad effect, and the more you eat of it the less you feel inclined to stop. In fact to eat Durians is a new sensation, worth a voyage to the East to experience.”
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January 23, 2016 at 9:41 am
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