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Mt. Pulog...Earth's "Bald Pate"

Posted on Friday, 8 August 2014



Mt. Pulog…earth’s “bald” pate
By Apolinario Villalobos

For nature lovers, climbing a mountain, though tedious, is a respite to release tension and pressure from daily routines. The Philippines is pockmarked with elevations for this purpose, from the lowest, Taal Volcano, in Batangas of Luzon, to the highest, Mt. Apo between Davao del Sur and North Cotabato in Mindanao.

The first time, I climbed Mt. Pulog (poo-lag), I just thought it would be an easy climb, in fact, just a trek, when the organizers informed us that going up to its peak would be a breeze on “clean” trails. Mt. Pulog, with its height of 9,623 feet above sea level, is the pride of the Cordillera mountain range. Nevertheless, we were told that the climb would just be easy.

The climb, organized by PAL Mountaineering Club, was made in November 1979, when the trails leading to the mountain’s peak were not yet so much trodden by local as well as foreign trekkers. As it was my first time to climb the mountain, I was excited no end, for I have already seen photos of its spectacular terrain that leads to its peak – treeless protrusions, endless field of grass, interspersed with flowers and dwarf bamboos, and thin wisps of clouds that hide some portions of neighboring lesser peaks. Mt. Pulog, in the vernacular connotes baldness, an appropriate name, considering the aforementioned description of this peak.

From Baguio City, we embarked on a four-hour drive to Ambangeg, an old logging camp, for a trek to Lebang Lake, where the trek to the summit was to start. Along the way, we were fascinated by mountainside sceneries – all breathtaking, including those of the Binga and Ambuklao dams. The continuous upward trek to Lebang Lake was arduous and a knee-buckling experience.  It was all the way up, that required rest every fifty steps in my case.  We were however, compensated with the view from the winding road that we were trying to tame. Finally, at seven in the evening, we reached Lebang Lake under the boastful glow of the moon, relieved, especially when we met Apo Usok, the mountain’s “sentinel”, who had spent more than fifty years of his life in his smoke-blackened hut.

We immediately opened our cold packed dinner for a few bite, as the cold to which most of us were not used, practically, penetrated the double layers of shirts we wore, on top of which as the final layer was the parka. We took time to visit Apo Usok who told us stories about the mountain, while enjoying sips of gin that we brought to counter the bite of the cold night. Those who did not have enough strength to pitch their tents, spent the night in the comfort of Apo Usok’s hut.

The following early morning, we assaulted the peak which was shrouded yet with clouds. On our way up, the clouds seemed to follow us, while gingerly finding footing on the slippery trail that winded through a forest of elfin pines, and clusters of wild strawberries. We found relief in a cool spring that we found along the way, where we refilled our water canteens. We could not help ourselves but get delighted by the ring of forest that girded the mountain, for the surprises that it gave us. One moment, we were groping our way through a fog, and the next moment, we were out in a clearing practically carpeted with grass, flowers, and dwarf bamboos! 

The most touching moment was when we were trudging on the carpet of soft peat moss that wound through moss and lichen-covered trunks of gnarled centuries old trees. In an instant, the fatigue that overwhelmed me during the first hour of my trek disappeared. As if on cue, the fog thinned out when we reached the border of the forest from where the majestic panorama of the summit enfolded. Everything was green with the undulating blades of grass, all the way up to the waiting bald pate crowned with a thin lace of cloud. The only distraction to this seemingly endless vista was the winding trail. It was just a great scene to behold!

We were all overcame with awe, everybody was emotional. We solemnly walked in a single file towards the summit where some ribbons of clouds covered us up to our knees. There was a general feeling that it was not a trek, but rather, a “pilgrimage” to a “high place” where we were to meet Him, to pay our homage. At the moment we set foot on the summit, we felt a strong attachment to Mother Nature, so that we were reluctant to leave the grassy pate, when it was time to trace our steps back to Lebang Lake.

On our way down, we picked up candy wrappers, empty cans of sardines and soft drinks, cigarette butts…every sign of the modern time that we found along the way, and which the unscrupulous “nature lovers” dropped, to be brought down to where they belong – the garbage can. Our group has been espousing the dictum, “take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints, kill nothing but time”.

(Aside from Ambangeg, another way towards Lebang Lake, where the trek to the summit starts, is via the village of Ellet, onward through the Abukot sawmill, from where a logging road can be followed towards the lake. The best time to climb Mt. Pulog are during the summer months of March and April, however, “heavy traffic” of trekkers is expected. It is important that climbs be coordinated with the Baguio City Tourism Office, to check guidelines updates on restrictions as regards the rules on the mountain’s preservation.)


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