Balanan Lake in Siaton and Sibulan’s Twin Lakes Balinsasayao and Danao are the centerpieces of Negros Oriental’s biggest and most important ecotourism sites. Read More
Posted on 04 June 2009 by admin
Balanan Lake in Siaton and Sibulan’s Twin Lakes Balinsasayao and Danao are the centerpieces of Negros Oriental’s biggest and most important ecotourism sites. Read More
Posted on 12 May 2009 by admin
The best-known landmark in the Province, the Campanario was built to serve as belfry and look-out tower during a time of frequent moro raids. Read More
Posted on 12 May 2009 by admin
The promenade by the bay is Dumaguete City’s tourism hub. Built up beginning 1916 the 780-meter strip, shaded by venerable old trees, has green lawns, benches and ornate park lamps. Read More
Posted on 07 May 2009 by admin
The are numerous caves throughout the entire Province but extensive karst phenomena in Mabinay ensured its claim to being the CaveTown of Negros Oriental. Read More
Posted on 07 May 2009 by admin
Negros Oriental’s tourism assets are refreshing for the waters that cascade down rugged mountainsides into popular swimming calderas. Read More
Posted on 07 May 2009 by admin
Negros Oriental is endowed with over a hundred kilometers of white, golden, or dark sand beaches. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Nineteenth-century chronicler Licinio Ruiz mentions Amblan, a settlement said to have been named after a superior kind of guava. The town was made a parish independent of Tanjay in 1848, was renamed New Ayuquitan in 1912, became Amlan after WW II. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
It is said that Ayungon is derived from the name of a deaf man, “Ayung,” who cut down a “dungon” tree. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
The Province’s first town to the south of the capital may be its smallest, but it has some big things going for it. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Upon its separation from Bayawan in 1971, Basay became Oriental Negros’ southernmost town, with Negros Occidental at its rear. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Oriental Negros’ lone municipality named after a native of distinction , Bindoy started out as barrio Payabon of Manjuyod. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Origin of Name: There are three versions, the first two being interrelated; first, there was a majestic tree that towered over all trees that the Spaniards asked for its name, which was Calawin. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
A recent photographic expedition to Guihulngan brought back some remarkable shots of numerous geologic formations in Hinakpan that resemble the Chocolate Hills of a neighboring island. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Boundless sugar cane fields, typical of the northern landscape, green Jimalalud most months of the year. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
The early settlement was called Hinoba-an, a barrio of Jimalalud. One story has it renamed as La Libertad to mark the residents’ successful repulse of the marauding brigands that regularly plundered the north at that time. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Folklore has it that the beautiful Binay fell in love with the son of her father’s rival chieftain. Her father ended the affair by having her lover killed. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
An Augustinian Recollect, Fr Antonio Moreno, is credited with creating Manjuyod: he spearheaded construction of its town hall, laid out the plaza and municipal streets. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Barrio Tampa of Tanjay reminded the parish priest of his Pamplona hometown in Spain: Tampa spilled about the foot of Cambunyao mountain just as Pamplona sprawls at the foot of the Pyrenees. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Seven kilometers of attractive shoreline along Tañon Strait give San Jose two of the Province’s shortest take-off points to Cebu – Tampi and Jilocon, Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Miguel de Loarca, a member of the 1572 Legaspi expedition, was said to have encountered in the southern coast of Negros Island three warring settlements called Lunsod, Secopan and Cawitan. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Often referred to as the rice bowl of the Province, Siaton’s terrain is more than flat paddies. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Just next door to the capital, Sibulan is the site of important institutions and operations. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Early Tayasan comprised a much larger area including the barrios of Ayung, Himbabalud and Hinoba-an, which eventually grew into the towns of Ayungon, Jimalalud and La Libertad, respectively. Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
Nestled on the slopes of Mt Talinis, it used to be called Ermita (Spanish for a place of refuge, because this was where the natives retreated to during moro raids), Nueva Valencia (by a priest who was reminded of his Valencia hometown in Spain), and Luzurriaga (after a prominent local politician). Read More
Posted on 28 April 2009 by admin
No other town or city in the Province is as inextricably wed to its founder as Vallehermoso is to Diego de la Viña who, in 1881, carved what would become Negros Oriental’s northernmost town out of a valley called Bagawines, wilderness shunned for over three centuries as the habitat of unfriendly bukidnons. Read More