BARLIG, Mtn. Province – This eastern town will conduct its own version of tourism planning workshop on May 30-31, 2018 at Chupac, Kadaclan, Barlig.
Tourism planning is necessary before the town embarks on tourism development and promotion. The town is a host to various tourism attractions such as waterfalls, rice terraces, hot springs, caves and lakes. Mount Amuyao hovers over all mountains here being the highest mountain peak in the area and is being frequented by many tourists.
Genesis Changilan, the town’s chief executive, said that the planning would further enhance the town’s efforts at tourism promotion. “I hope this would lead to more tourists visiting our place”, he said.
The participants will be oriented on the Basic Tourism Awareness concepts, Municipal Tourism Situationer, and the Municipal Tourism Profile whose data are needed in the planning workshop.
Tyronne Lawey, a staff at the Provincial Tourism Office, will kick off the affair by profiling the municipal tourism industry to the conduct of value chain analysis on tourism and the workshop proper.
The tourism planning workshop was started in Paracelis last April 26-27, 2018 and it will be conducted in all the 10 municipalities.
It is very much expected that participants will be the newly elected barangay officials as well as stakeholders in government and the private sector.
For the first time in the history of the town, tourism stakeholders will be convened to look for ways to make tourism in the town viable and sustainable in the years to come.
Mayor Changilan issued an executive order last month closing the Batad to Mt. Amuyao traverse or trail due to unabated garbage woes.
It was reported that guides and tourists going to Mt. Amuyao via the Batad-Cambulo trail do not register at the municipal tourism information center and, thus, do not pay corresponding environmental fees.
They were reportedly the ones who leave trash and garbage at the summit of the mountain.
A new four-hour trekking route was established from Mount Amuyao to Kadaclan through the hunters’ trail.
**
Roger Sacyaten