The cataclysmic eruption of Pinatubo
Volcano in 1991 reduced the once 1,745 meters ASL mountain to a crater with an
average height of 1,300 meters, with the rim about 2.4 km across, and a crater
lake of unknown depth. The unbelievable amount of materials ejected by this
volcano inundated Central Luzon and Zambales and altered the area’s topography for
millennia to come.
Last February 26-28, climbing buddies from
college organized a Mt. Pinatubo climb to explore the possibility of descending
the crater from Pampanga side and scout for a route that will traverse into
Zambales side. We have already accomplished this feat 21 years ago and have set
the record for the first crater traverse (blog of climb here),
but we are itching for a repeat performance.
There are three established trail to the
crater of Pinatubo: the most popular and easiest is from Capas, Tarlac via the (overbearing,
expensive and very restrictive) operators of 4X4 tour vehicles which entails a
long motorized ride and a short hike to the crater rim; the second is via
Sapang Uwak, Porac, Pampanga with an established hiking trail; and the third is
via San Marcelino, Zambales.
We (me, Jules and Bong) opted for a river
route with a jump-off near the intersection of Porac-Subic road (SCTEX) and
Pasig-Potrero River in Porac. This route entails a 23 km hike following the
meandering Pasig-Potrero River up to the crater rim. In addition to the usual
3-day camping gears and supplies, we carried ropes, abseiling equipment and
ascenders – an average load of 15 kg per climber.
Day 1, February 26
We arrived very early at Porac from Manila
purposely to meet up with our Aeta porters. We can haul our backpacks but we
are looking forward to a lighter load – but no porter showed as daylight came. The
hike started at 0630 in a seemingly flat terrain of water, sand, rocks and
boulder. Elevation gain is noticeable only because of the flow of the river.
The remnant lahar-river bed is wide from the start and narrows down in a few
canyons and gullies near the crater mound. Getting your feet wet is inevitable
as you have to cross the river a few dozen times at knee-deep water during dry
season. We were lucky with overcast skies and cool weather during the whole
trip. A Mt. Pinatubo river trek under a hot sun would have been very difficult
and draining. The vegetation along the banks are mostly cogon and sparse small
trees.
After walking for about 7 km, we came upon
a community of Aeta at the riverbanks and there we met our porters who thought
we cancelled our trip. We were relieved of our loads in exchange for P700 per
porter and what followed was a brisk trek across the desolate and monotonous
lahar fields of Porac. Sand, rocks, boulders, huge boulders, river crossing to
the left bank, river crossing to the right bank… for 18 km. Recommended in this
trek are shoes with thicker soles for cushion on uneven rocks and boulders and non-waterproof
fabric as it will retain water after river crossing. Along the way are narrow
canyons, a waterfalls and a two-layer waterfalls. At the 18 km point, the Aeta
porters called it quits and left us to haul our gears on our own. It was also
at this point that the terrain started to ascend in a steeper slope. The going
at this point was slow and we arrived at the very windy crater rim at around
1500.
Nth river crossing of the same river |
A waterfalls marks the halfway point, trail is to the right |
A two-layer waterfalls ... another detour to the right |
From this gully starts the Pasig-Potrero River |
A volcanic crater is always intimidating –
and Mt. Pinatubo’s crater is huge! Surrounding
the crater are the jagged peaks of the rim with vertical drop to the crater
floor.
Panorama of the crater from the eastern rim |
Pinatubo sunset |
Day 2, February 27
This day we explored potential routes down
to the crater floor below. The first candidate is a drop to a ledge about 30
meters below the rim edge and with a stable rock anchor for the ropes. Jules
went down while I belayed. It turned out that the ledge leads to another drop
with an undetermined depth. As we lack more ropes to descend to the second
drop, we did not attempt to reach the crater floor this way.
Preparing for crater descent, securing anchor and belay ropes |
After lunch, me and Jules again scouted for
a route at the south of the campsite. After trekking and scaling steep grassy
slopes for 2km, we reached a saddle with a single vertical drop of about 50
meters directly to the crater floor - a
candidate route for the next attempt. Until next time, this crater traverse
will be.
Our refuge (yellow tent) as seen from a ridge to the southeast of rim |
The frontyard view |
DAY 3, February 28
Descent started late at 0730 with a detour
to the saddle where we trekked the other day – to find Jules’ missing
smartphone. Failed to find the phone after 2 hours and proceeded the long trek
down. We walked for 16 km with few brief stops and consuming only sports gel
for sustenance. At the Aeta community, we met up again with our Aeta porters
who hauled our backpacks for the remaining 5 km near the jump-off which we
reached by 1600.
My total trekked distance for the climb was
46 km, 16 km of which with porters. Elevation gain/loss is about 1,100 meters. Photo credits: Jules Calagui and Bong Malabed. Track of the route (from different time on the same trail) here.
By Noel Mercado II
By Noel Mercado II
This is a great post, Mt. Pinatubo is one of my favorite trails. You can also check this event Dirt Weekend Nuvali
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