This ride is a field test of our cold-weather trekking gears and newly-installed bike parts and accessories. Gearing up and
testing for that planned high-altitude Indian Himalaya ride, and Benguet in February is the coldest and the highest you can get in the Philippines. Four mountain
bikers from Irosin, Sorsogon (me, Kareen my wife, Tyrone and Paulo) once again took leave from day jobs and rode two long bus rides to revisit the
roof of Luzon. This ride is a 5-day loop of Baguio
City – Bokod – Kabayan – Atok – Baguio City (with a side trip to Mt. Pulag).
Day 1, Baguio City to
BSU-Bokod Campus
From Poblacion Bokod, the road incline goes wild up to
Ambangeg junction. In 2013, we pushed our bike in this rough road segment. Nowadays, the road is concreted so we biked all the way up. Slow going
until we reached BSU-Bokod Campus by 4:30 PM. If staying in Bokod, you can sleep
in a transient house maintained by BSU-Bokod for P 200 per person. We were
lucky to have the whole house by ourselves.
Stava ride data here:
https://www.strava.com/activities/2138501393.
Day 2, DENR-PASU, Bokod
to Babadak, Kabayan
All climbers must register and get permits to climb Mt.
Pulag – and bring medical certificates! After signing-up at DENR-PASU office,
we biked down to the junction to have a “habal-habal” motorcycle driver haul
our bike bags up to the ranger station (for P 250). And up to Babadak we biked –
this time biked all the way up, with no walking. The road is 99% concreted and
in good condition, but of course the incline was punishing. It took 5.5 hours
to cover 11.5 km with an elevation gain of 1,224 meters. Strava data of the
ride is here:
https://www.strava.com/activities/2148147547.
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Forest fire in Bokod |
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The "tahi" technique for steep climbs, zigzag the road |
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Steep climbs all the way up to Babadak |
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Approaching Babadak |
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Cold Camp 2 of Mt. Pulag |
At Babadak, we were reunited with our gears and transitioned
to hiking mode. The permits, DENR and LGU fees, a guide, a porter (carrying
17.5 kg) costs around P 800 per person. Cyclists can safely “park” their bikes
inside the new DENR sub-office at Babadak, just ask nicely. We hiked up and
reached Camp 2 just in time for the sunset.
And as the sun went down so did the temperature. My wife and
I wore everything we had (thermal underwear, fleece jacket, down jacket,
technical jacket, trekking pants, technical pants) as we intentionally did not
bring the bulky sleeping bags. Should have brought more socks and that ski gloves.
Day 3, Mt. Pulag Camp
2 to Summit to Babadak
We were awake at 4 AM, with clouds are rolling in, “amihan”
winds blowing and it is freezing cold at Mt. Pulag. Agnes the guide advised us
to wait for a break in the weather. But with the weather still uncooperative by
6 AM, we decided to do a windy, rainy and misty summit assault. No sea of
clouds at the summit this time.
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Cold, windy, rainy and misty Mt. Pulag grasslands |
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Mt. Pulag summit, sans the sea of clouds |
The cold, cloudy, windy, rainy weather continued until we
were back down to Babadak ranger station at 2 PM. Many of our gears are wet
(and heavy), the road pavement is treacherously slippery, and it is a long downhill
ride to Kabayan (our planned stop). So we decided to find a homestay in Babadak
to rest and dry our gears.
Day 4, Babadak to Poblacion
Kabayan (via Bashoy)
It was a shiny but cold start at 9 AM from Babadak at 2,448
meters above sea level. Fleece and down jackets were needed for that downhill ride
to Kabayan via Bashoy. About 2 km segment of Bashoy-Babadak Road is still rocky
road. Insane downhill ride and thanking Shimano Deore for that smooth hydraulic disc brake system. The road met up with Bokod-Kabayan-Buguias Road, and northwards
we went up to Kabayan which we reached at 2 PM for a late lunch.
Let’s clean up, dry our gears and do laundry! Everything was
washed up by 4 PM at Pine Cone Lodge and after that is a visit to Kabayan Museum.
This small museum (operated by National Museum) is worth visiting for that
unique perspective on local history and culture.
Day 5, Poblacion Kabayan
to Baguio City
Started out from Pine Cone Lodge at 5:30 AM after a longsilog
breakfast. Cold, pitch black and barking dogs into Kabayan Barrio. Dawn is
breaking as we started the monstrous ascent from the bridge over Agno River to
Mt. Timbak – 1,521 meters of elevation gain in one long 12 km climb with a
total time of 9 hours. Some road sections have 20% incline! It was a slow push-bike ascent, stopping every few meters to catch breathe, long rests after every
kilometer. No water source nor sari-sari store along the climb – so stock up on
water and food.
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The insanely steep Kabayan-Timbak road |
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Outline of Mt. Pulag |
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No more stove fuel! No problem, the kaldero can take the soot from pine leaves and branches, and have that coffee outside. |
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Hirap ng daan na ito! |
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Reward at the top of Kabayan-Timbak Road |
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The Philippine Pali, highest point of the highway system. |
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Halsema Highway |
It was past 3 PM when we topped the Mt. Timbak saddle. We
decided to forego a summit assault to Mt. Timbak as the team decided to ride
all the way to Baguio City that day. From Mt. Timbak is a downhill to the
Halsema Highway, to the the highway highest point, to Atok, to guerilla saddle with plenty
of restaurant, to Tublay, then La Trinidad and to Baguio City which we reached by
past 10 PM.
Great ride! More pictures
here.
Part 2 of this ride would be a summit assault to Mt. Timbak, a visit to Lake Tabeo and a climb to Mt. Tabayoc – as originally planned. Plus to the "new" highway highest point in Buguias-Tinoc Road. May babalikan, later.
By Noel Mercado
wow!! I have so much respect to this people who pedaled there asses to highest, steepest, craziest vertical-horizontal mountain roads!! do Crazy, just do it!
ReplyDeleteawesome view.well sir you have a healthy hobby,keep going!!! sakit.info
ReplyDelete