Thursday, April 30, 2009

Boracay Island
There are many world class beaches in the Philippines, Boracay is one of the favorite.
I am not contented with my experience. Please view some of the actual photos taken by those who saw and experience the land themselves. Have a glimpse of this beautiful island beach with choices of resorts below, yest less expensive:



















Below are some of Boracay's Hotels:
Best Seller:
Friday's Resort
The Panoly Resort
Willys Beach Resort
Sea Wind Resort
Club Ten Beach Resort
Seraph Resort
One MGM Resort
Asya Boracay
Hotel Isla Boracay-South Resort
Nami Private Villas Resort
Discovery Shore
Boracay Terraces Resort
Red Coconut Resort
Nigi-Nigi Nu Noos Beach Resort
Waling Waling Beach Resort
Boracay Mandarin Island Resort
Cocomangas Hotel Beach Resort
Patio Pacific Resort
Most Requested Boracay Hotel:
Patio Pacific Resort
Alyssa Resort
Bamboo Beach Resort
Sand Castle Beach Resort
Waling Waling Beach Resort
Alice in Wonderland Resort Hotel
Hotel Isla Boracay-South Resort
Boracay Regency Beach Resort
Blue Mango Inn Beach Resort
Nami Private Villas Resort
Willy's Beach Resort
Sea Wind Resort
Dave's Straw Hat Inn
The Panoly Resort
Escondido Beach Resort
Two Seasons Boracay
Crystal Sand Beach Resort
Pearl of the Pacific Resort
Seraph Resort
Nigi-Nigi Nu Noos Beach Resort
Affordable Boracay Beach Resort and Hotels:
Cocomangas Hotel Beach Resort
Club Ten Beach Resort
True Home Hotel Resort
The Orchids Resort
Casa Pilar Boracay
Blue Mango Inn Beach Resort
Boracay Courtyard Beach Resort
Bans Beach Resort
Dave's Straw Hat Inn
Arwana Beach Hotel and Restaurant
Lorenzo Grand Villa Resort
The Sun Village Beachfront Resort
Boracay Holiday Resort
About Boracay Island Philippines:
Boracay is a tropical island located approximately 315km (200 miles) south of Manila and 2km off the northwest tip of the island of Panay in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines. It is one of the country's most popular tourist destinations. The island comprises the barangays of Manoc-Manoc, Balabag, and Yapak (3 of the 17 barangays which make up the municipality of Malay), and is under the administrative control of the Philippine Tourism Authority in coordination with the Provincial Government of Aklan.

Boracay Island is located off the northwest corner of the island of Panay, and belongs to the Western Visayas island-group, or Region VI, of the Philippines. The island is approximately seven kilometers long, dog-bone shaped with the narrowest spot being less than one kilometer wide, and has a total land area of 10.32 square kilometers.
South-facing Cagban Beach is located across a small strait from the jetty port at Caticlan on Panay island, and the Cagban jetty port serves as Boracay's main entry and exit point during most of the year. When wind and sea conditions dictate, east-facing Tambisaan Beach serves as an alternative entry and exit point.

Boracay's two primary tourism beaches, White Beach and Bulabog Beach, are located on opposite sides of the island's narrow central area. White Beach faces westwards and Bulabog Beach faces eastwards. The island also has several other beaches.
White Beach is the main tourism beach. It is a bit over four kilometers long and is lined with resorts, hotels, lodging houses, restaurants, and other tourism-related businesses. In the central portion, for about two kilometers, there is a footpath known as the Beachfront Path separating the beach itself from the establishments located along it. North and south of the Beachfront Path, beachfront establishments do literally front along the beach itself. Several roads and paths connect the Beachfront Path with Boracay's Main Road, a vehicular road which runs the length of the island. At the extreme northern end of White Beach, a footpath runs around the headland there and connects White Beach with Diniwid Beach.

Bulabog Beach, across the island from White Beach, is a secondary tourism beach and Boracay's main windsurfing and kiteboarding area.

Boracay is divided, for land use and conservation purposes, into 400 hectares of preserved forestland and 628.96 hectares of agricultural Land.[4][5][6]

Climate
Amihan and Habagat

Weather in Boracay is generally divided into two seasonal weather patterns known locally as the Amihan and Habagat seasons. In the Tagalog language, Amihan means a cool northeast wind, and Habagat means west or southwest wind; south-west monsoon. Amihan and Habagat seasons are generally associated respectively with the El Niño and La Niña global weather patterns. The Amihan season is characterized by moderate temperatures, little or no rainfall, and a prevailing wind from the east. The Habagat season is characterized by hot and humid weather, frequent heavy rainfall, and a prevailing wind from the west.

On Boracay, the main indicator of the switch between the Amihan and Habagat seasonal patterns is the switch in wind direction. In most years this transition is abrupt and occurs overnight. In some years there is a period of perhaps a week or two where the wind will switch between Amihan and Habagat patterns several times before settling into the pattern for the new season. As a general rule of thumb, Boracay will be in the Amihan weather pattern from sometime in September or October to sometime in May or June and in the Habagat weather pattern for the remainder of the year. These dates can vary in individual years, though.

Daytime temperatures on Boracay generally range from 77-90°F (25-32°C) from the beginning of the Amihan season into February or March, increase to the 82-100°F(28-38°C) range until the onset of the Habagat season, and moderate back to the 77-90°F (25-32°C) range with the return of the Amihan season.[8] During Tropical Storm periods, temperatures can fall below 68°F (20°C). Tropical Storms can impact Boracay at any time of year, but are most likely to be seen during the Habagat season.[9]

Tourism
Partly because of its wind and weather patterns, tourism in Boracay is at its peak during the Amihan season. During Amihan, the prevailing wind blows from the east. Boracay's main tourism area, White Beach, is on the western side of the island and is sheltered from the wind. During the Amihan season, the water off White Beach is often glassy-smooth. On the eastern side of the island, hills on the northern and southern ends of the island channel the Amihan season wind from the east onshore, onto Bulabog Beach in the central part of the island's eastern side. This makes the reef-protected waters off that beach ideal for windsurfing and kiteboarding / kitesurfing.

Accommodation
A number of accommodation types are scattered all over the island, ranging from luxurious hotel types to budget, spartan rooms. Guests can also choose according to location--Station 3 is where most of the cheaper lodgings are located, while Station 2 is meant for those who want to be within close proximity of the bars. Station 1, meanwhile, is where you can find the more isolated accommodations, offering peace and quiet to those looking for a respite from the usual action-packed Boracay night scene. These are usually for the more upscale vacationers.

Boracay is the site of a world-class 18-hole par 72 golf course designed by Graham Marsh. In addition, Boracay now has in excess of 350 beach resorts with more than 2,000 rooms ranging in quality from five-star to budget accommodations, so tourists are sure to find whatever they are looking for.

Boracay also offers a wide range of restaurants, bars, pubs, and nightclubs that bop until morning.

Most Boracay hotels and resorts have Low and High Season price levels, with High Season prices generally coinciding with Amihan Season dates. Some have additional "Super" Peak Period pricing during periods of heavy tourism (usually including Christmas / New Year, Easter / Holy Week, and Chinese New Year periods).

Events
Boracay is one competitive venue for the Asian Windsurfing Tour, with the week-long Boracay International Funboard Cup competition usually being held on Bulabog Beach each January..

The well-known Ati-Atihan Festival takes place each January in Kalibo on nearby Panay island. A much smaller Ati-Atihan festival is celebrated on Boracay, usually in the second or third week of January.

Dragon boat races are held annually on Boracay under the auspices of the Philippine Dragon Boat Federation, with teams coming from around the Philippines and from other Asian nations to compete. The races usually take place sometime in April or May.
Since 2003, the Philippine Ultimate Association has been organizing the Boracay Open Asian Beach Ultimate Tournament, an ultimate frisbee event, which is usually held during summer.

The Olympic Council of Asia has announced that Boracay will host the 2014 Asian Beach Games.

The Boracay Dragons, Boracay's ultimate frisbee team, is ranked #1 in the Philippines. They competed in Brazil for World Championship Beach Ultimate 2007. All of the players on the Boracay team were shorter than the shortest players on every other team combined, and only half of the team could afford to fly to Brazil. Nonetheless, the Boracay team took home the most awards undefeated against every other team until the final match in which they lost. Despite being second place in the tournament, the Boracay Dragons are considered to be 2007's most formidable Ultimate Frisbee team.

Languages
Other than Filipino (Tagalog), English is widely spoken in Boracay. Aklanon or Akeanon, is also spoken, as Boracay is part of Aklan Province. The Ati language was spoken by the original inhabitants of the island.

Transportation
On the island, the two main modes of transport are via motor-tricycles along the main road or by walking along the beaches. Pedicabs are also available for transport along the Beachfront Path. Other means of transportation include mountain bikes, quadbikes and motorbikes, all of which can be rented.

To explore around the island's coast, motorized bancas and sailing paraws are available for rent. These are outrigger canoes and are common sight in waters around the island. The sailing paraw is a narrow hulled boat with outriggers either side and with passengers sometimes seated on a trampoline platform between the outrigger supports. These are extremely fast off the wind, but can be unwieldy for inexperienced sailors.

Boracay Radio Station
106.1 Radio Boracay Website
Yes FM 91.1 Boracay Website
B 97 Boracay 97.3 FM

Excerpt from Wikipaedia
Most of the photos are excerpt from Google and Yahoo Images.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

VISUAL ARTS/PAINTINGS
(THEN AND NOW)

This is a giant painting exhibited at Metropolitan Museum of Manila
(best viewed if you personally visit the museum)

Title: Spoliarium
Artist: Juan Luna

This was to be his entity at the Madrid Exposition of 1884. It was an immediate sensation. It won not only the highest possible honor, the first of three Gold Medals, but also enthusiastic notice in the newspaper columns of Madrid, Barcelona, and Paris. Many of the notices were extravagant raves. Below are some of the remarks made by various cristics in those days:
-"The largest work, the most frightful, the most discussed work of the Exposition."
-"It is more than a painting, it is a book, a poem."
-"It is something more than the mere mechanism of genius, of the art composition. . . Luna is a thinker."
-"The superior qualities of Luna are: as an artist, his ambition to produce great designs; to subdue the multitude with the resources of the highest class in art; serious and rough, not with vile adulations from the pencil nor of color in beautiful lines; as a painter, his energetic style, broad and noble, truthful and on occasion fantastic."
-"A giant of art, a kind of Hercules, that enters furiously leveling down all the gods with blows from his club, bringing in a new art, full of ideas and forms, carrying a Spartan soul and the brush of Michelangelo. More than sixty years did Michelangelo study! How many years did Luna study? Six! Let us wait."
Per my own research...
"Nilampaso lang naman ni Juan Luna
at ng ibang Pinoy artist ang mga tinuturing
na pinakamagagaling sa "paintings" sa Europe
at buong mundo nuong panahon nila."
It all happened when most of presently known Asian nations is still figuring out the meaning of modern art, Philippines was already making waves in Europe.
Consensus of opinion among critics, painters, and the press of Madrid and Barcelona was that Luna deserved, besides his gold medal, the rare and more prestigious "Prize of Honor" award, which had previously been conferred on Francisco Padilla, the greatest contemporary Spanish historical painter, in the 1878 Madrid Exposition. It must be remembered that in this same Exposition of 1884, another Filipino, Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo, won a silver medal for his entry, Christian Virgins Exposed to the Populace. No wonder the Filipino community in Madrid went wild with joy. The double victory called for a celebration, and a banquet was held at the Café Inglés, to which were invited some European friends. On this occasion, Rizal delivered his speech extolling the two winners to such majestic heights that today it is difficult to criticize the works of Luna and Hidalgo without inviting the censure of conservative admirers of their kind of painting. Rizal interpreted the Spoliarium as a symbol of "our social, moral, and political life: humanity unredeemed, reason and aspiration in open fight with prejudice, fanaticism, and injustice." On another occasion, Lopez-Jaena likewise read political implications in the Spoliarium, as follows: "For me, if there is something grand, something sublime, in the Spoliarium, it is because behind the canvas, behind the painted figures . . . there floats the living image of the Filipino people sighing its misfortune. Because. . . the Philippines is nothing more than a real Spoliarium with all its horrors.
"Portion of this writings were excerpt from the Article of Eric ToresRemarkable discovery"

Below are some of the known paintings then till present:
Artist: BenCab

Artist: BenCab

Artist: Ben Cab

Artist: Baldemor

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)
Artist: Felix Hidalgo
(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

Artist: Ang Kiukok

Artist: Ang Kiukok

(Still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Baldemor

(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)
(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)
Artist: Ang Kiukok
Artist: Ang Kiukok
Artist: Ang Kiukok

(still to be labeled)

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Botong Francisco

Artist: Botong Francisco
Artist: Botong Francisco

Artist: Botong Francisco

Artist: Botong Francisco

Artist: Botong Francisco
Artist: Botong Francisco

Artist: Cesar Legaspi
(still to be labeled)

Artist: Cesar Legaspi

Artist: Felix Hidalgo

Artist: Felix Hidalgo

Artist: Felix Hidalgo

Artist: Fernando Amorsolo

Artist; Fernando Amorsolo

Artist: Fernando Amorsolo

Artist: Fernando Amorsolo

Artist: Fernando Amorsolo

Artist: Fernando Amorsolo

Artist: J Navarro

Artist: Hernando R. Ocampo

Artist: Hernando R. Ocampo

Artist: Hernando R. Ocampo

Artist: Jose T. Joya

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Jose T. Joya

Artist: Jose T. Joya

Artist: Jose T. Joya

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

Artist: Juan Luna

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Baldemor

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Sanso

Artist: Vicente Manansala

Artist: Vicente Manansala

Artist: Vicente Manansala

Artist: Vicente Manansala

(still to be labeled)

Artist: Victor C. Edades

(still to be labeled)
There's more!
Note: We do not sell paintings but can recommend museums or gallery to anyone who wish to visit Philippines.