|
Apayao
The
Cordilleras begin as low hills in Apayao's north and rise to peaks as
high as 2,500 feet above sea level in a chain that runs from north to
south. Apayao is bounded in the north and east by the province of
Cagayan. To the west of the province lie Ilocos Norte and Abra while the
province of Kalinga lies to the south. The Cordillera dominates the
landscape but towards the east, the mountains give way to some lowland
swamps.
The
climate of the province is perceptively drier in the months between
November and April and wet the rest of the year. Rains fall heaviest in
the month of September and typhoons occasionally visit between July and
October.
|
History
Apayao was among
the earliest areas penetrated by the Spaniards in the Cordilleras, but the
region remained largely outside Spanish control until late in the 19th
century. As early as 1610, the Dominican friars established a mission in what is
now the municipality of Pudtol. In 1684, the friars again made vain attempts to
convert the people and established a church in what is now Cabugao. The ruins of
the early churches in Pudtol and Cabugao still stand as mute testimony to the
failed attempts to occupy Apayao. In 1891, the Spaniards established the comandancias
of Apayao and Cabugaoan over what are presently eastern and western Apayao.
However, colonial hold on the areas was tenuous at best and for most of the
Spanish colonial period, the Isnegs remained unencumbered by Spanish
colonization.
On August 18,
1908, by virtue of Act No. 1876, the Philippine Legislature created the Mountain
Province. Apayao, which had been attached to the province of Cagayan, was made a
sub-province of the Mountain Province. The old Mountain Province was divided
into four provinces by virtue of Republic Act No. 4695 on June 18, 1966. The
sub-provinces of Apayao and Kalinga were fused into the province of
Kalinga-Apayao. Apayao was created as a distinct province from out of
Kalinga-Apayao on February 14, 1995 with the passage of Republic Act No. 7878.
People, Culture
and the Arts
The Isnegs,
Ilocanos, and Itawits form the majority of the people living in the province of
Apayao.
The Isnegs are
the indigenous people of the province and are interchangeably referred as
Apayaos. The term "Isneg" was derived from a combination of "is"
meaning "recede" and "uneg" meaning
"interior". Thus, it means people who have gone into the interior. The
Ilocanos inhabit the river valleys and plains and most migrated into the region
in the last fifty years.
Up until
recently, the Isnegs were slash and burn agriculturists. They have increasingly
abandoned the practice and have adopted intensive rice cultivation in stead. The
Isneg are noted basket and mat weavers and the womenfolk trade their products
for cloth, pots and materials from Ilocano traders.
Isneg women
have been known to favor colorful garments for their traditional costumes, which
consist of both small and large wrap-around pieces of cloth called the aken.
The smaller piece is used as everyday wear, while the large one is reserved for
ceremonial occasions. They also wear the badio, a short-waisted,
long-sleeved blouse, which is either plain or heavily embroidered. Menfolk, on
the other hand, are traditionally clothed in dark-colored (often plain blue)
G-string called abag, which on special occasions is adorned with
an iput – a lavishly colored tail attached to the back end.
Isneg oral
tradition is rich with folk riddles. Many of these structurally simple but
elegant two liners with a few syllables and rhymed at the end, present a riddle.
Some Isnegs possess skills in traditional and oral arts, such as the magpayaw
(shouters), the singers of the oggayam, and the debaters who joust with anenas
(oral poetry). There are others held in esteem as musicians such as those who
display prowess in playing the difficult gorabil, a bamboo violin.
Trade and
Investments
Apayao's
development rests upon the foundation of its rich natural resources. Forests
cover around 66% of its total land area, and produce timber, rattan and bamboo.
About 19% of the province's land area is dedicated to agricultural production.
Palay, coffee, corn, root crops and vegetables are the primary crops, while
fruits such as citrus, bananas and pineapples are the main commercial crops. The
province also raises swine, carabao, cattle, goat, chicken and duck. There are
untapped deposits of gold and copper, phosphate, siliceous sand and shale. The
total employable work force is numbered at about 43,000.
The provincial
capitol, Cabugao, is accessible from Cagayan, Ilocos Norte and Kalinga via an
86-kilometer system of roads. The Municipal Telephone Project Office provides
international and domestic telephone services. Local power cooperatives
distribute power to nearly all the municipalities of the province and water is
supplied by communal water systems, deep wells and dug wells. The Land Bank of
the Philippines and a rural bank provide credit facilities within the province.
Apayao is
anchoring its economy on its resource base but needs investments in key areas
like communication, transportation, power generation, banking, and
infrastructure. Agriculture remains the province's main potential. Marketing
agricultural inputs, such as fertilizers, farm machinery, seeds and feeds offer
a profitable opportunity for investors. Agriculture related manufacturing, such
as food processing, can make use of the abundance of raw materials since the
province produces banana, squash, corn, peanuts, beans, fruits and vegetables.
Handicraft manufacture can also take advantage of the availability of forest and
mineral resources like rattan, nito, bamboo, wood, marble and gemstones.
The mineral resources of the province are also open to small and medium scale
mining operations. The province's rivers can also be tapped for bottled water
operations since most are classified as A-1 in purity. Apayao's tourism
potential is hardly explored but given the natural beauty of the province, as
well as the unique culture and heritage of the people, Apayao can cash in on
eco-tourism ventures, adventure sports promotions and cultural tourism.
Developing the nascent tourism industry in Apayao will need investments in
hotels, restaurants, and tourist support services.
|
Region
|
Cordillera Autonomous
Region (CAR)
|
|
Province
|
Apayao
|
|
Governor
|
Elias Bulut Sr.
|
|
Capital
|
Kabugao
|
|
Income/Financial
Resources (1999)
|
P150.3 M
|
|
Income classification
(1996)
|
Not Classified
|
|
Expenditure (1998)
|
P142.2 M
|
|
Population (2000
projection)
|
93,081
|
|
Labor Force (1998)
|
56,000
|
|
Land area (in hectares)
|
292,794
|
|
Major dialects/languages
|
Ilocano
|
|
Barangays
|
128
|
|
City/ies
|
None
|
|
Municipalities
|
7 (KABUGAO, Calanasan,
Conner, Flora, Luna, Pudtol, Santa Marcela)
|
|
Infrastructure facilities
|
|
|
Major products
|
|
|
Natural resources
|
copper, manganese, gold,
phosphate, agricultural and pasture lands, forests
|
|
Indigenous people
|
Isneg, Kalinga
|
Development Initiative
Highlights:
- To develop its potential as an
agricultural resource provider
- To encourage industries based
on local craft traditions
- To promote and increase access
to basic services
- To further enhance the
infrastructure of the province