The complete guide in finding the best affordable hotels and accommodations when you are in Bohol, Philippines.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Domene Kaw Pension
Domene Kaw Pension
Pangdan, Jagna, Bohol
*12 rooms, all with air-conditioning ,cable TV and hot and cold shower:
-5 rooms facing Camiguin island or the open sea facing Mindanao with a mystical view of sunrise and sunset.
-5 rooms facing the road with the view of greens.
-All rooms with a huge terrace.
-2 huge family rooms with 2 king size bed and the other has 1 king side bed with ref. Recommended as honeymoon suite.
*Dining area which serves international food
*A function room whContact Person:
Contact Person: Sandra Tan Tiu
domene_kaw@yahoo.com.ph
Website: domekaw.com
Thursday, February 11, 2010
The Philippine Tarsier
This picture of the Philippine Tarsier was taken at the Tarsier Sanctuary in Loboc, Bohol.
Some info about the tarsier from bohol.ph:
The Philippine tarsier, (Tarsius syrichta) is very peculiar small animal. In fact it is one of the smallest known primates, no larger than a adult men's hand. Mostly active at night, it lives on a diet of insects. Folk traditions sometimes has it that tarsiers eat charcoal, but actually they retrieve the insects from (sometimes burned) wood. It can be found in the islands of Samar, Leyte, Bohol, and Mindanao in the Philippines.
If no action is taken, the tarsier might not survive. Although it is a protected species, and the practice of catching them and then selling them as stuffed tarsiers to tourists has stopped, the species is still threatened by the destruction of his natural forest habitat. Many years of both legal and illegal logging and slash-and-burn agriculture have greatly reduced these forests, and reduced the tarsier population to a dangerously small size. If no action is taken now, the Philippine tarsier can soon be added to the list of extinct species.
If no action is taken, the tarsier might not survive. Although it is a protected species, and the practice of catching them and then selling them as stuffed tarsiers to tourists has stopped, the species is still threatened by the destruction of his natural forest habitat. Many years of both legal and illegal logging and slash-and-burn agriculture have greatly reduced these forests, and reduced the tarsier population to a dangerously small size. If no action is taken now, the Philippine tarsier can soon be added to the list of extinct species.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Early Morning Scene at the Port of Tagbilaran City
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