With my dive buddies, Ramon and
Dennis Nakpil in tow, the early morning fog and mist-filled ridge of Tagaytay all
the way down to Batulao highlights the cruise en route to our dive excursion. Sadly,
the once-scenic ridge in Luzon, Tagaytay has transformed
into a horrific carnival and fast food row complete with candy colored street
lights. Fortunately
though, past the Cavite–Batangas boundary only a few new
residences have mushroomed saving the pleasantry in driving through. The
rolling hills of sugarcane along Nasugbu, the 97-year-old Central Azucarera Don Pedro plantation, the WWII-era trucks hauling
the harvests, the scent of molasses along Lian’s bridge, the small sugarcane
hills towards Matabungkay, and the grass airstrip on the estate of Don Santiago
Zobel and the Ayalas all seem to have been frozen in time. The only things that
could be construed as “modern” were the air-conditioned buses that ply the Manila-Calatagan
route, a bank ATM, and a branch of the ubiquitous fast food chain Jollibee in
Nasugbu.
FLATS
We made a quick stop at the
junction of Matuod and Lian’s national road to meet-up with our guest diver and
friend, Ed Hontiveros. Ed is an
architect by profession. He and his sister Maan have supported De La Salle
University’s Marine Biological Station in Matuod for decades. They work as
volunteer research divers helping monitor the marine ecosystem in and around Talin Bay.
After an easy 2½ hour drive, we
reached the main town of Calatagan,
whose name translates to “a flat place”. The Sto. Domingo de Silos church built in 1913 greets visitors driving entering the town proper. Noticeably, there are more residences and sari-sari
stores standing than before as well as a handful of resorts, but no fast food
chains. The end of the road wharf that used to accommodate a small cattle barge
and a few outrigger boats or bankas is
now five times as large, heavily built to accommodate midsized “roll-on
roll-off” ferries transporting passengers and goods across the islands of Mindoro.
Calatagan does not describe its
own rather hilly landscape as much as it does its underwater terrain. From the inner
shores of Pagapas Bay, around the 120-year-old Cape Santiago lighthouse or Punta de Santiago, Lian and all the way up
to Nasugbu, the flat sandy substrate is quite consistent, varying only in reef
formation.
The Punta de Santiago lighthouse stands 20 meters away from the bluff of
the southern most point of Calatagan. It has a 15.5 m
high brick tower topped
with a relatively new Japanese-made aluminum lantern. Around which, is a
balcony supported by Spanish-designed wrought iron angular grills similar to
those in the Capones island lighthouse. Named after its land donor Don Santiago
Zobel, Punta de Santiago’s tower can
be reached via a cast iron spiral staircase. Its beacon serves as a guide for ships
plying the Verde Island Passage between Luzon and Mindoro to and from Manila. For decades, even
with this navigational light, Calatagan’s shallow reefs have caused several
ships to run aground especially during the stormy months of July-September.
Barrier tidal reefs spread
parallel to shore all the way up to the Matabungkay and Nasugbu areas. The reef
provides tide pools between the mangroves and the open sea that keeps marine
fingerlings safe from large predators, allowing them to grow bigger and
stronger before swimming out
into the deep.
In the 1950’s, approximately 133
hectares of mangrove trees could be seen in Pagapas Bay
alone. In the early 90’s only 27 hectares were left. Although Pagapas Bay and
the whole municipal waters of Calatagan were declared a Marine Reserve, today the
shoreline of Calatagan continues to lose its mangroves, some of which have been
replaced with either fish ponds or private beach properties clearing away corals
from their frontages, to allow room for more recreational areas or ponds using the
same corals as walls or dikes.
Calatagan also has a special
place in our country’s history. As early as 1958, archaeologists have found
many traces of pre-colonial trade in Calatagan. The Archeological Division of
the National Museum made burial site diggings in Kay
Tomas (part of the former Hacienda de
Calatagan, acquired by the Zobel de Ayala family in 1829) and Pulong
Bakaw. They unearthed 14th and 15th
century ceramics such as glass bracelets, bowls, and vessels from China made during the Ming Dynasty, Celadon and
Sawankhalok vessels from Thailand
and Indo-China, as well as Annamese vessels from Vietnam. They also discovered locally-made
pottery such as earthenware jars, plates, basins, pots, and other vessels with
different patterns made by incisions and impressions. One of the more famous
jars found was called the Calatagan Jar or Bangang
Kalatagan, which has inscriptions in the Philippines most ancient script, Baybayin.
Other than the National Museum,
a few of these artifacts and replicas can also be seen in a resort in Kay
Tomas, whose frontage was once a mangrove area.
FISHING GROUND
Since we were not aware of any
dive resort in Calatagan, we rented scuba cylinders from Milton Pedrigal the
day before leaving Manila.
Milton is a
good friend and one of the old salts in the diving community who specializes in
rebuilding and repairing scuba compressors.
Finding a boat for diving in
Calatagan was quite a task. Luckily, Ramon managed to find our aging boatman,
Mang Joaquin who arranged the most suitable boat for us. Though he no longer steers
boats, his nephew was just as skillful. A relic of the past, only a Briggs-and-Stratton
powered Bangka
fit for three divers (we were four with 8 tanks plus gear) allowed us to slugushly
access the sites.
We set our base beside a nipa hut
adjacent
to Playa Calatagan, a leisure-commercial-residential resort. The
frontage consisted of white sandy beach that stretched out flat to the
intertidal zone ending in a natural barrier reef. It was the closest place for
the boat to dock and load our gear.
We made our first dive near the dead lighthouse or parolang patay. After missing the reef
for almost an hour, we finally found one and were surprised to see a few healthy
reefs with some juvenile groupers, gray sweet lips, and a juvenile turtle. Dennis
and Ed missed the reef and spent their bottom time swimming on the sandy
bottom. Not all the corals were as colorful; some were covered with brown
algae.
Since we didn’t see any access to a nearby shore, we decided
to motor back and have lunch in our base. Under the coconut trees, on a bamboo
table and benches we exchanged pleasantries as we ate our meal and enjoyed the cool
sea breeze and view.
Reef clusters or pulo-pulo are quite abundant in the
deeper reef of Calatagan. Though a bit hard to spot, they are located several
meters out from the barrier reef and extend past 90 feet deep almost a kilometer
away from shore. Flat sandy beds are quite common.
Decades ago, gargantuan predators
such as the marble grouper or kalatang
(or super large lapu-lapu) dominated the reef together with the square and moon
tail or secilla groupers, hunchback
or apahap groupers. Red snappers,
huge moray eels, sweet lips, sting rays, and cuttle-fishes hopped from one reef
to another in seek of their prey. Spiny
lobsters such as the green, blue, brown, curacha,
and the pitik also lived communally
in the area. Green turtles can often be seen surfacing to take a breath of air
if not resting on a reef. Large needle-nose fish, flying fishes, jacks and
mantas would from time-to-time jump out of the water escaping from a predator,
while a few sports fishers/anglers would also wait out at sea for a jack or a
king mackerel to take a bite off their baited hooks.
According to the 2006 initial samplings
made by the University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute, the water
circulating within the Verde Island Passage corridor distribute spawning areas
and settlement sites in certain months of the year. The western part of Balayan
Bay including Calatagan’s Pagaspas and Punta de Santiago area have high densities
of fish eggs and larvae. Even higher concentrations can be found around Tingloy,
Verde Island, the islets and shoals of Calapan
and Puerto Galera.
OVER FISHING
Even with the intervention of coastal
resource management groups along the Nasugbu, Lian and Calatagan shores and the
presence of the Bantay Dagat, the
effects of illegal fishing have taken its toll in Calatagan’s reefs. Empty coral
heads and the presence of brownish slime encapsulating sections of its reef give
it a ghostly aura.
Regarded as sea guardians by the
local populace, the Bantay Dagat (lit.
“Sea Guard”) are made up of civilian
volunteers tasked to keep a 24-hour watch on Philippine coastal waters up to 15
kilometers from shore. Equipped with patrol boats, they are only allowed to
protect municipal waters as mandated by law. Calatagan’s Bantay Dagat has a base near Punta
de Santiago where they also provide a dive guide and a few diving equipment
for hire for those wishing to tour the several artificial reefs in front of the
Madrigal’s beach house.
The Calatagan Artificial Reef and
Fish Sanctuary was established in 1999 by Vicente Madrigal Warns with the
cooperation of the Barangay Bagong Silang and help from volunteer divers. In
response to the rampant blast and cyanide fishing occurring in the area, the
project was conceived as a tool for community awareness to protect and preserve
their marine ecosystem and for the artificial reef to serve as a new breeding
haven for both new and displaced marine faunas.
We decided to make our second dive
on the artificial reef site. As we descended past one of the buoy markers, one
could see a strange looking dark and massive object at the bottom. Once the
view became clearer, you get to feel as if you’re landing on a Mayan-pyramid.
The main artificial reefs truly looked like one, measuring around 13 meters tall
on its apex and 10 meters wide at the base the monolithic structure is a pile
of molded
blocks made of mortar mixed with discarded corals with
interconnecting open canals from one reef to another. Each hallow blocks had tube
entrances leading to its inner chamber. There were also some four foot hallow
pyramids littered on the sandy bottom. Young coral encrustations and small reef
fishes have already taken foot on these man made structures.
After the dive we headed back to
our base. We took turns in bathing, one pumping by hand the cold deep well
water outside the hut.
The end of the dive brought us
mixed feelings. The unexpected sighting of a variety of marine life and seeing
the artificial reef was a treat. On the other hand, we were disappointed to see
traces of dead coral heads and wondered if the remaining reefs and surrounding
ecosystem are being monitored.
TREASURES
After decades of skipping out on Calatagan
in our dive destinations list, we found some of its marine resources in a much
better state than Matabungkay and Nasugbu areas. The effects of fish pond expansion,
its discharges and resort development should be of great concern to the
community.
Hopefully, the communal guardians
and residents will continue to work in unison pursuing their mission in helping Calatagan’s reefs,
tidal flats, mangroves, and interconnecting natural resources to recover, and
bring back its myriad of marine treasures for its people and future generations.
Amidst all the changes it has
undergone, Calatagan is still a quiet provincial town. Whatever transformations
its settlers and migrants wish to make, it must be tempered with a continued
proactive concern and respect for their coastal environment.