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A PHILIPPINE ODYSSEY: A COLLECTION OF FEATURED TRAVEL ARTICLES (New Day Publishers, 2005), features Veteran Business Mirror travel writer, architect and author Benjamin Locsin Layug's 33 travel articles featured in TODAY and the Philippine Daily Inquirer.  It takes you on a nature trip as well as an historical, cultural and religious tour around many of the country's tourist destinations.

Travel with the author as he goes spelunking in caves (Sumaging Cave in Sagada and Calbiga Caves and Sohoton Caves in Samar), mountain climbing (Mt. Makulot in Batangas and Mt. Hibok-Hibok in Camiguin), fiesta hopping (Pola's Lechon Festival), trekking (Sagada and Batad Rice Terraces in Banaue),  frolicking at waterfalls (Tamaraw Falls in Mindoro and Katibawasan Falls in Camiguin), beachcombing (Boracay, Camiguin,  Higatangan Island in Biliran, Guimaras, Higantes Islands in Iloilo), lake exploring (San Pablo City in Laguna and Ormoc City in Leyte), scuba diving (Club Paradise in Palawan),  sea kayaking (Marabut in Samar), going on an "African" safari (Calauit Game Reserve and Wildlife Sanctuary in Palawan), island hopping (Gigantes, Guimaras and Palawan) or simply cooling off (Tagaytay City in Cavite and Baguio City in Benguet).

Also read, from this architect's point of view, about old churches (San Agustin Church and San Sebastian Church in Manila, Basilica Minore del Santo Nino in Cebu, Baguio Cathedral, the churches of Bacolor and Guagua in Pampanga, and the churches of Sariaya, Lucban and Tayabas in Quezon and Taal in Batangas), old cemeteries (Paco Park in Manila and the Underground Cemetery of Nagcarlan), old fortresses (Intramuros in Manila, Corregidor and Fort San Pedro in Cebu), museums (Villa Escudero's AERA Museum and San Agustin Museum) and ancestral houses (Taal in Batangas, Pola in Mindoro Oriental and Sariaya in Quezon).

The book is available at select National Bookstores and Powerbook outlets. You can also email New Day Publishers at sales@newdaypublishers.com and newday@pworld.com.ph for details, or call telephone numbers 928-8046 and 927-5982.  You can also order, via the internet, at www.newdaypublishers.com, www.kabayancentral.com, www.bookfinder.com and www.chelsey.biz.

Long ago, a reef platform attached to northwestern Panay Island, rose and revealed two islets.  The China and Sulu Seas, on the southwestern edge of Asia, worked diligently for centuries to accumulate sand between the two islets, joining them, thus forming Boracay Island, the Philippine's contribution to the world's natural treasures.    Boracay has all the elements of a tropical paradise - powdery white sand, crystal   blue   waters, coconut palm trees rustled by balmy breezes, flowering plants and healthy coral reefs and marine life.

Boracay is a place to be active.  You can dine, shop, dive, snorkel, play golf, ride horses, paddleboat, kayak, windsurf, sail, hike or bike to your heart's delight.  All are popular activities and visitors still keep coming back for more adventure and fun. 

On the other hand, you can live the quiet, indolent and carefree life by lying on a hammock strung between swaying coconut palm trees while reading a good book.  You can also experience nature at its best by sinking your ankles deep into Boracay's soft, white sand, build sand castles, swim its warm, crystal-blue waters and watch the parade of white clouds.  At dusk, you can watch the magnificent setting of the blazing, flame-colored sun and, by nightfall, bask in the moonlight or gaze at the stars for inspiration, keeping your eyes open for a falling star. 

The Philippines is known far and wide as the only predominantly Roman Catholic country in Asia and, as a result of almost four centuries of Spanish rule, have many outstanding churches, the most in the region.  Veteran Business Mirror travel writer, author and architect Benjamin Locsin Layug, in his new book A TOURIST GUIDE TO NOTABLE PHILIPPINE CHURCHES (New Day Publishers, 2007), delves, in detail, on the historical, religious and aesthetic significance, as well as tourist appeal, of these churches.                 

Churches are extremely valuable for their aesthetic and historical significance, being built not only to provide permanent structures for worship but also to impress early Filipino non-believers with the strength of the Catholic faith.  Aside from many being pilgrimage sites ( Basilica Minore de Peñafrancia in Camarines Sur, Minor Basilica of the Santo Niño in Cebu, etc.), a number of churches are also sites of significant historical events in the country (Barasoain Church in Bulacan, Santa Barbara Church in Iloilo, etc.).  Churches are also unique structures in themselves, using diverse materials (stone, wood, concrete, etc.) as well as styles: Aztec, Byzantine, Chinese, Gothic, Islamic, Mudejar, Renaissance and Romanesque, used singularly or in combination.  The resulting exuberantly eclectic ornamentation has created stunning churches with whimsical facades and lavish interiors. 

 
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