Philippines
Large Bulucan Island

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    • Day 56

      Arrival at Flower (Gilligan's) Island

      April 29 on the Philippines ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

      After a good nights sleep and buffet breakfast at the Manila airport-connected Belmont Hotel, took a Grab to the quaint old Domestic Terminal 4. We took a turboprop with tight seat spacing for Doug's knees on very friendly Air Swift to El Nido airport, which is very small, manual baggage unloading. The resort arranged transportation by car and then a speed boat to Flower Island Resort, taking two hours total. Suddenly, we were met by staff, given a shell necklace, and joined a group of 5 other guests. A big bonus is that our bungalow actually has air con! There are no electrical plugs or internet connection other than the dining room and the bar, and it went down at times, so we are relatively remote. The resort in general seems very authentic and well maintained, operating for 30 years, 21 units on an uncrowded property on the ocean. Palawan is the least inhabited area of the Phillipines, contrasting with Manila, which is the most densely populated city in the world.Read more

    • Day 61

      Flower Island Resort

      May 4 on the Philippines ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

      We stayed six nights, five days at the resort "off the beaten track". We did this as we understood the reef nearby was good for snorkeling and wanted to be able to do that without taking a tour boat which typically goes to multiple spots with lunch on a beach. A stay of 4-7nights seems ideal depending on whether you want to do any out trips to other lagoons to do diving, snorkeling (turtle sanctuary, corals, lagoon and caves. On site there is a nice infinity pool, bar, restaurant, palapas, beach, snorkeling equipment and kayaks. We had a quiet, relaxing time overall; it took a day to adjust to slowing down. Slept well, enjoyed our bungalow. No Mosquitos! (end of dry season and with the hot temperatures the land, creek beds and vegetation was visibly dry). Staff friendly and hardworking. Breakfast buffet was included and it was $23 USD for lunch and dinner buffets. Overall food was good except for the chicken (tough), local and there was seafood most nights. We did find it too much to have a buffet three times a day and would have liked to see more a la carte options for lunch than pizza and clubhouse. We walked the 45 minute cobble path around the island and took the "sidewalk" up to the tower for impressive 360 degree views, seeing a native four foot monitor lizard a long the way.Read more

    • Day 59

      Pearl Farm

      May 2 on the Philippines ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

      Spent a day of relaxing then bòoked this tour from the Resort. From reading a book left in our room, we have pieced together the story of what seems to be a rather unique place. Jewelmer is a "fully vertically integrated company involved in cultivation, design, manufacturing and distribution of pearls". It was was cofounded in 1979 by a French sea captain and aviation pilot Jacques Branellec and Manuel Cojangco (whose family owns the Phillipino beer San Miguel). They have the rights to use 8,000 hectacres of ocean including this island, the next one and the one that the Pearl Farm is located on. The area is essentially a nature reserve as pearls require a very clean water environment. We took a 20 minute boat ride over to see the farm and oyster "hatchery" which supplies the other 3 farms with baby oysters via helicopter fly out. There are 266 employees living on site. Fresh water comes by pipeline from an adjacent island into a filtration system which supplies the Pearl Farm as well as Flower Island with both fresh and potable water. The marine biologist explained growing baby oysters to South Seas golden pearl takes 377 steps and five years! Jewelmer only uses 2% of its pearl production in its brand of jewelry aimed at the "high end luxury market" and the rest is wholesaled off. A strand of pearls on display retailed at $30,000 USD. Additional inhabitants of the island were large fruit bats which were hanging in the mangrove trees nearby.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Large Bulucan Island, Q31825984

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