X

Vandalism forces Baguio’s bamboo park to close down

While international travel may be a stretch during this pandemic, local tourism is slowly warming up, with people again visiting famous sites including a bamboo eco-park in Baguio that could rival that of Kyoto’s Arashiyama Bamboo Forest. 

[READ: Starting Oct. 21, non-essential international travel is allowed. In the middle of a pandemic]

But even before more people could enjoy this nature-oriented destination, Baguio Bamboo Eco-Park at St. Francis Xavier Seminary in Liteng, Pacdal, Baguio City has been closed down. Why? Because of tourist vandalism.

TO THE VISITING PUBLIC: WE ARE TEMPORARILY CLOSING THE BAMBOO ECOPARK IN BAGUIO CITY DUE TO VANDALISM. Some visitors…

Posted by Edgardo Manda on Monday, November 9, 2020

In a post dated Nov. 9, Philippine Bamboo Foundation president Edgardo Manda said, “Some visitors do not respect the place and have defaced bamboo culms (or poles) by engraving their names and relieving themselves along the pathway.”

AY APU NAGPINTAS KET APAN YU DADAILEN

Posted by Vagabond Igorot on Saturday, November 7, 2020

A local page called Vagabond Igorot first brought the issue to light in a series of photographs that prominently show the damage done by the vandals. The park is home to some local species of bamboo that is slated to cover up to a million hectares of land, according to the Baguio City local government.

Opened in March, the bamboo plantation is part of the country’s commitment to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to reforest 20 million hectares by 2020, in an effort to conserve the environment.

 

 

Get more stories like this by subscribing to our weekly newsletter here.

Read more:

LOOK: A cabin built entirely out of bamboo is now a holiday home for Siquijor tourists

Bamboo shoots are poisonous but why are Japanese eating it as sashimi?

Bamboo houses for Manila’s slums wins UK-based RICS contest

Categories: FIXTURE Nolisoli
Christian San Jose: