Our group, the Pinoy Spelunker were very honored to be a part
of the Cavinti Underground Cave System re-opening to the public last February
10, 2014. We had waited for this opening since October of last year and even if
it fell on a Monday, some took vacation leave just to be here. Present on this
event is no other than the Cavinti mayor, Milbert Oliveros and Laguna board member,
Angelica Jones. Together with tourism office reps and officials from other districts of Laguna, the
opening on the morning of that day is very warm and exciting!
Ribbon cutting at the Cavinti Cave Entrance |
with various city officials, LGUs ang guests |
Located at Brgy. Paowin of the
province of Cavinti, Laguna, the trip from Manila to the Bumbungan Ecopark at Brgy. Tibatib (just right after Pagsanjan) that serves as
the registry point for the visitors and the drop and pick up point of the 4x4
ride is only about 3 hours. Nice view, clean fresh air and laid back skirts of the
side of the mountain, you are sure treated with so much nature the trip on the
way itself is a refreshing experience.
with Cavinti Mayor Milbert Oliveros |
Reaching the registry point, a visitor will be asked to
register, take a cave tour briefing and pay an entrance fee of P 1,300. A bit
expensive by local standards, this amount is currently being reviewed since
many locals had expressed dismay for its inaffordability despite the official Cavinti
office releasing a breakdown of the cave fee price. The following are the
things that are included on the fee: Use of Helmet and headlamp, 4x4 RT ride
from Bumbungan Ecopark to the Cavinti Cave site (approx..1 hr, one-way if good
weather), balsa ride from the river to the cave, guide fee, environmental fee,
packed lunch (since no stores yet are available on site)
This cave system was carefully studied by the LGU and DENR.
Knowing that many precious formations can easily be destroyed by vandalism and
looting, they had closed the cave system to the public last October although this
cave has been known to be discovered since 1980s by a local logger.
Rampant illegal logging is currently experienced on many
portions of the mountains in the Laguna area.
On the rough road way to the cave, you can see patches of bald mountain
spots cleared away by the loggers. With the deep orange-brown dirt road and
bumpy ride, you begin to think that it’s better not to fix the
rough road anymore so that the illegal loggers won’t easily get away out of the mountains
with their stolen trees and lumbers.
the denuded forest along the way |
After almost an hour of uberly bumpy and shaky ride on the
open 4x4, you get off with very tensed muscles! You’ll shake it off by about 10 minutes walk towards the river and that’s
where your adrenaline will kick in! Seeing
the river view side by side with the mountainous terrain will surely captivate
your senses! My impulse is to run straight and dip myself on the river and yes I
did that!
There is a balsa or bamboo raft waiting; this will be used
to transport you towards the cave side. It can hold up to 12 persons at one
time. There will be batching system on the cave trips. A group pf 10 only will
be allowed to enter one at a time and as far as I remember only about 70 people
per day will be allowed to visit the caves everyday. (I do hope the LGU and tourism
management will really stand by this!)
After about 3 minutes ride towards the side of the mountain
where the cave is located, you will have to walk a few minutes inside a forest,
after which you will see a very unassuming rock cavity that serves as the main entrance
to the first cave!!!
Walk on the bamboo ledge and you will get in the first chamber.
Now, pictures will tell more so scroll below for what you can see inside the
cave…
On the second chamber, you’ll get to experience the wet part
of the cave where in you can take a dip and swim in the subterranean river and
enjoy the super cold water falls inside!
The Cavinti Underground River cave is said to have about 12
chambers according to our guide, but only 2 is opened to the public, as of the
moment. Other chambers contain very delicate speleothems not suitable for
public access but only for scientific and education research. Even though we’ve only been to 2 chambers, the
beauty of the cave that unfolded before our eyes is beyond words! I’ve been to
almost 3 dozen caves and I must say that Cavinti is really wonderful and
perhaps even more beautiful than the Palawan underground river.
The rough road
on the way to the cave site and the river that cuts it off from the land and
makes the cave quite hard to reach can be blessing and part of me wish that the
tourism office and LGU to no longer fix the road on the way to the cave site to
avoid uncontrolled visitors, potential looters and vandals and to mention again, not to make llegal logging more easier for the nature-criminals.
Currently the cave entrance is under review, will update this
blog for any changes. People also has to
understand the cost of maintaining the integrity of our ecosystem although the
mind-set here locally is that nature is for free, we cannot afford the consequences that might
result from abusing it. The cave fee should be reviewed in such a way that local
visitors can afford it but not so affordable that mass tourists are encouraged.
Let’s remember that tourism should only be a secondary benefit from nature,
nature should be conserved and protected first and for most, for the most
expensive things and services nature do for us can never be paid off monetarily
by the fees generated from tourism!
UPDATE: Last March 27, Cavinti tourism office announced a re-pricing on the entrance fees. The following are the new applicable rates, until further notice.
Cavinti residents - Php 200.00
Filipino Tourists - Php 540.00
Foreign Tourists - Php 1000.00
Sourced: Cavinti Tourism
what a nice caving experience. do you think cavinti cave system is the most beautiful among all the caves you already saw in person?
ReplyDeleteHi Bong, I can say yes as of the moment :-) even though I've only been to 2 chambers ( since at that time not all 11 are allowed to be entered). Second would be the Cantabon Cave in Siquijor. Thank you for reading!
ReplyDeleteI hope tourists would respect the ecosystem and preserve the pristine conditions of the caves and surrounding areas. Human skin contact of the rock formations, i.e stalactites and stalagmites, must be absolutely prohibited as the growth of the limestone, which has been in the process for thousand of years (other records say million of years even) will cease.
ReplyDelete