 | Welcome to Travel Factor! | Jan 16, 2007 |
Founded in 2006, from a humble beginning of small surf trips to San Juan, La Union, the same group has explored and is continuously combing the Philippines for alternative destinations. Today, Travel Factor (TF) has grown to be one of the biggest adventure tour providers in the country.
Travel Factor takes pride in its current lineup of trips promoted in 7 categories: SURFVIVOR, PHOTOHOLIC, CONQUER, DIVE, BACKPACKING, FOODTRIP and the Ultimate Beach Bumming Experience (UBBE).
TF is managed and owned by travelers and entrepreneurs Michelle Tan, Reg Mamaril, Cedric Valera, Leia Nagal, Lallie Udquin and Leyna Torralba.
Completing Team TF are Eric Derama, Jessie Morqueda and Aica Lenon.
Affordable trips. Ultimate experiences.
WE KNOW ADVENTURE.
For Requests and Inquiries on Group and Special Package Tours:
Send email to tours@travelfactor.org
Contact us on weekdays 10am - 8pm at +63 2 746 5119 or +63 917 847 5341.
Catch TEAM TF at work and be the office visitor of the day: Click here for Location Map
We have moved to FACEBOOK. For the latest news, pls. check:
 | Thanks for dressing up and partying with us! Thank you for sharing your pictures, here's the link to the AVP played during MEETING DE AVANCE: Travel Factor New Year Party. http://thetravelfactor.multiply.com/video/item/18 | Jan 3, '10 12:02 PM for everyone |
This is the AVP we played at
TRAVEL FACTOR PILIPINAS MEETING DE AVANCE 2010
at Alchemy Super Club, Jan 2, 2010.
Thank you to all who attended! This AVP is for all of you.
You are Travel Factor.
Happy New Year!
Download this and other original video files with Multiply Premium.Link: http://www.expressbuzz.com/edition/story.aspx?Title=Rice%20terraces%20to%20heaven&artid=UuvFnJ58zfE=&SectionID=OptbZECmFoc=&MainSectionID=n35v%7C01wo4w=&SectionName=dl2XZklJ2/w=&SEO=Rice terraces to heaven Shweta Ganesh Kumar First Published : 04 Oct 2009 11:39:00 AM IST Last Updated : 07 Oct 2009 01:23:58 PM IST
Each sharp bend in the winding mountain road was heightening our sense of anticipation. Our destination was Sag ada, a must-go for adventure-seekers and adrenaline junkies, located high up in the mountain province of the Philipp ines. The journey had taken us sixteen hours from Manila and the twelve of us who had been on the road were waiting to set foot onto the mountain township. It’s not like the journey had been any less exciting though. Lining the long and winding road were the famed rice terraces that are centuries old. These terraces have the distinction of being on the UNESCO world heritage site list. Built by the Ifugao tribe for their own community, the terraces are a spectacular sight. For as far as we could see, the mountains around us had been carved into large rice fields that looked like massive amphitheatres. It was in awe-struck silence and with our eyes fixed on these man made structures that we made our way up to the sleepy town of Sagada nestled in the Cordilleras mountain range. Scarcely had we taken in the mild wintery feel and the cool mountain breeze, that it was time to head to yet another site Sagada was famous for. Its limestone caves that form a criss-crossing network deep underneath the mountain town. Our group was being taken on a cave connection adventure. This meant that we would be doing some hardcore spelunking to get to the tourist friendly Sumaguing cave that was known for its limestone formations. Our entry point was the lesser known Lumiang cave. Once used as a burial cave, even today massive pinewood coffins mark the entrance and set the foreboding tone for the rest of the adventure. Local guides who led the way with Petromax lanterns accompanied our group in our descent to the bowels of the earth. “This cave is only 100 metres deep while Sumaguing is around 163 metres,” the head guide told us. Not sure whether the information was vital to my survival, with a slightly pounding heart, I took my first step into the depths of the clammy cave. And within a few minutes, I knew that there was no training or information that could have prepared me for this underground expedition. Cold and moist to the touch, the cave is filled with narrow claustrophobic spaces that you have to squeeze through to move forward. Right hand clutching onto a rock above ones head, left in another crevice, right foot firmly placed on a largish rock while the left foot dangles in space looking for a foothold. As the hours went by our movements started to have a distinct rhythm, ‘Stumble, grasp, clutch and slide’. As we moved closer and closer to the second cave the terrain changed from rocky to muddy. Left with lone rocks to clutch onto, more and more of us found ourselves clambering up clay slopes, slipping and sliding all the way. With the help of ropes and the will power to see daylight again, and to the accompaniment of the shrill shrieks of the thousands of bats that inhabited the caves, we ploughed on. When, suddenly, we stopped in our tracks to see the breathtaking sight that made it all worthwhile. This was Sagada’s underground river, the force that had shaped these limestone caves and the formations inside, over thousands of years. We had to wade through the bone-chilling, crystal clear waters to exit the caves. At the end of five-and-a-half hours, it was a dirt and bat dropping encrusted group that emerged into the open air with shaky knees and scrapes galore. And yet what we had seen and experienced made all the aches and pains, pale in comparison. The next day at the break of dawn, we trooped up Kiltepan viewpoint to catch the first sun rays touch Sagada. And true to its reputation, the sight of the sun breaking through the clouds and bathing Sagada in its mild orange hue was stunning. After watching Sagada wake up, we headed towards our next challenge, a one and a half-hour trek to the biggest falls in the area Bomod-Ok. We hiked along rice terraces, across streams and through small village settlements. Even with the occasional stop on the way to take pictures, it was not long before the waterfalls came into view. Cascading from a height of almost two hundred feet, we felt the cold spray from the falls temptingly dust our skin. It was all the invitation we needed to unload our backpacks and dive into the ice cold waters. It was a thoroughly refre shed group that made its way back the mountainside to call it a day. We all woke up with a twinge of sadness on the last day, as in a few hours it would be time to head back to Manila. But even then there was no time to dwell on it, as there were places to see and exp erience before we left. First stop was the St Mary’s Episcopal church the oldest in the mountain province. After a few mom ents of peaceful contemplation ins ide the calm, stone structure it was time to hike across the Cavalry hills to the Echo valley. Cupping our hands we shouted out syllable after syllable and waited for the valley to obligingly repeat our words. And then came the final destination, Sag ada’s centuries old living tradition of the Hanging Coffins. Perched precariously on the Sagada’s limestone cliffs, these coffins dot the landscape, with the oldest coffin being centuries old, while the latest just a few weeks. To me, Sagada was a kaleidoscope of experiences that are mystical and overwhelming. And while we kept our faces to the window for the last glimpses of the township, I realised that what one of my fellow travellers had told me at the beginning of the trip was indeed true. “If this is your first visit here,” he had said, “Be warned, for Sagada is addictive!”
factfile Sagada is accessible only via road from Manila. While there are daily buses that ply on the twelve to fifteen hour routes most travellers choose to book tours with travel operators. This works out at very reasonable rates and they also cover all the sightseeing spots. One of the best operators is the manila-based Travel Factor (www.travelfactor.org).
Accommodation: Most tour operators include stay in the package. If backpacking in Sagada, there is no shortage of options as most houses here have been converted to inns. There are also a few basic hotels in the township.
Food: Most inns offer home-cooked food for their guests. Travel Factor presents Backpacking Indochina!
visit www.travelfactor.org to get the full details on upcoming schedule Oct 29 - Nov 5, 2009 and Feb 5 - 13, 2009
Download this and other original video files with Multiply Premium. | Shut off your computer when not in use, and save 200 lbs of C02. Conserve energy by using your computer's "sleep mode" instead of a screensaver. Learn more simple Ways to Stop Global Warming http://www.stopglobalwarming.org/sgw_actionitems.asp | Oct 1, '09 5:44 AM for everyone |
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