Sinag is Pilipino for Shine or Light. Tala is Morning Star. Sinagtala is starlight or more appropriately, morning star light. It is also a mountain village from where the star or more accurately, the planet Venus is seen bright. Yes, Sinagtala is Starbright. The village is on the slopes of Mt. Natib, one of a chain of volcanoes, hopefully extinct, of Bataan. It nestles, 500 meters above sea level, along the northern spine of the Bataan mountain ranges. It is planted to coffee, citrus, lanzones, coconut, rambutan, etc. and is home to ferns, wild orchids and animals, birds and bats that feed on flowers of the Anae trees, nurse to coffee trees. The climate is similar to Tagaytay, with a panoramic view of the plains of Central Luzon. A 30- minute hike to the spine rewards one with the view of Subic Bay to the west and Manila Bay to the east. From the top, one can descend through lush forests to the crater where the Pasukulan waterfalls cascade more than 100 feet down to a clear pool which drains to one of two rivers that bound the village.

Very few, even among Bataenos, are aware that this shangrila exists and is accesible within 15 minutes from the Orani junction of the Roman Highway. With the completion of the Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway, (SCTEX), it is accessible from Subic or Clark within 30 minutes.
Tala or Morning Star is prominent and bright at dawn. Thus, the articles posted here focus mainly on developmental issues which the author hope to contribute to a new dawning of Bataan and the Philippines.



3 comments:

i heart DJ said...

thank you SIR for bringing another pride to our hometown. I'm a true-blue oranian and it is very clear in my mind that bataan will definitely be my retiring home. having spent more than half of my life in the city, i always miss orani and have prepared myself and my family a retirement place, yes somewhere up there, a mountain home!
having blessed with a job that gave me opportunities to be around the country, i could only say BATAAN is no doubt a place we could only be proud of. Only that we ask you and the local government to keep it safe and preserve it's natural beauty because we only have one Bataan, my home, our home.

fernaninSubic said...

i love what you are doing to that venue.how do we become a member po,sir?Fernandito A. Lanada,21 national highway,lower kalaklan,olon gapo city.2200.0918.245.7657.a friend said she did your collaterals.Gbu po.nam myoho rengge kyo

Unknown said...

Hi Mr Payumo, I am Julius Cruz from Paranaque, hoping to find a way to contact/reach out to you to seek advise and help about BoT law and operation, to assist my fathers request to improve a local sports and resort center in hometown of Victorias City, Negros Occidental.

I know this may not be ideal or appropriate for email, blog comment, but would want to get my head wrapped and started about BoT in the right direction and from the right source.

Hoping to get a response on how to engage you and on a more proper/preferred mode. Many thanks

Julius - 09175772516