I got the rare opportunity to ride a fishing boat during one of my visits to Cebu City.
I started my adventure in a small fishing village located in the northern coast of Mactan Island.
The houses in that village stand on stilts and are interconnected by rickety wooden bridges. It was low tide so my fisherman guides told me that I had to walk through mud before I could ride their banca.
Mactan Channel is that narrow strip of sea between the main island of Cebu and Mactan Island. This strait once served as the only gateway to Cebu City. It was also the same strait crossed by Magellan for his ill-fated battle against Lapu-Lapu.
People need not copy Magellan’s way of crossing the strait since there are bridges connecting Cebu and Mactan Islands. The newest bridge, I think, is the Marcelo Fernan Bridge, which looks beautiful from afar.
I finally passed under the Marcelo Fernan Bridge! Now I can say that I not only passed on the bridge but also under it.
Marcelo Fernan Bridge was opened to motorists in August 1999. It was named after Marcelo Fernan, a Cebuano politician who was the only person to serve as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and Senate president.
Marcelo Fernan Bridge is considered to have the widest and longest bridge span in our country.
I took a video of my one my trip along this bridge and you can watch it in this YouTube video:
South of Marcelo Fernan Bridge is the old Mactan-Mandaue Bridge, which was opened to motorists in 1972.
I read that this old bridge was built and design wholly by Filipino engineers. Ika nga nila, “gawang Pinoy”.
The government is now planning to build the 3rd bridge connecting Cebu City and the south part of Mactan Island to the tune of 28 Billion Pesos. The 3rd bridge will be like NLEX and SLEX so motorists have to pay the toll fee.
Mactan Channel was once a rich fishing ground. There are still fishing activities in the channel but only subsistence fisherman spend their time there. In fact, the famous danggit of Cebu is not caught in Mactan Channel but in other areas of Philippines like the seas around Palawan.
Mactan Channel is no longer a fishing ground. It is more of an industrial/commercial area. The coasts surrounding the sea are occupied with malls and ports, like the International Port of Cebu.
I also saw large ships during our journey, like this one operated by 2Go:
There’s the decaying ships of GoThong:
And the resourceful Resourceful:
Then there is the Lady of the Gate standing beside the gate of the Port of Cebu.
It’s a little bit scary to float on a flimsy banca beside these big ships.
The cityscape of Cebu is changing. The old, one to three-storey ancient houses are giving way to skyscrapers. The Cebu Cathedral, the once tallest structure in Metro Cebu, is now blocked from view by new developments.
This transformation of Cebu is evident as I viewed the city from the sea.
It’s a different story on the Mactan Island side of the channel. Communities and some factories occupy the shoreline.
We ended our sightseeing near the south entrance of Mactan Channel and then headed back to the fishing village.
My short boat ride along the Mactan Channel was interesting. I saw Cebu from a different perspective. I saw Cebu again as the Princess of the Visayan Sea.
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Read more about my latest adventure in Cebu:
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 17): A Great View of Cebu City from Tops Busay
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 16): A Taste of Mandarin in Cebu City
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 15): Taboan the Pasalubong Center of Cebu City
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 14): My Accidental Visit to Mt. Carmel Church
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 13): Another Visit to the Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 12): Why Cebuanos Call Mama Mary as Birhen sa Regla?
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 11): Sto. Niño Basilica - Mother and Head of All Churches of the Philippine Islands
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 10): A Visit to the Fake(?) Magellan’s Cross
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 9): The Story of Rajah Humabon - King of Cebu
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 8): Calle Colon, the Oldest Street in the Philippines
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 7): The Worst Cebu Hotel
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 6): The Colorful Lighthouse of Lilo-an
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 5): The Mysterious Church of Lilo-an
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 4): Bagacay Point Lighthouse
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Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 17): A Great View of Cebu City from Tops Busay
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 16): A Taste of Mandarin in Cebu City
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 15): Taboan the Pasalubong Center of Cebu City
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 14): My Accidental Visit to Mt. Carmel Church
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 13): Another Visit to the Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 12): Why Cebuanos Call Mama Mary as Birhen sa Regla?
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 11): Sto. Niño Basilica - Mother and Head of All Churches of the Philippine Islands
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 10): A Visit to the Fake(?) Magellan’s Cross
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 9): The Story of Rajah Humabon - King of Cebu
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 8): Calle Colon, the Oldest Street in the Philippines
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 7): The Worst Cebu Hotel
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 6): The Colorful Lighthouse of Lilo-an
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 5): The Mysterious Church of Lilo-an
Laag-Laag sa Cebu (Part 4): Bagacay Point Lighthouse
Very interesting esp the history of the bridge. Proud to be Pinoy, ika nga. When the skyways were being built here in Bangkok, majority of the engineers were from the Philippines so it only means that we could actually do them in our own country. Thanks for sharing a side of Cebu, a must visit next time.
ReplyDeleteWow! It's my first time to know that Filipinos help in building the infrastructure in Thailand. :-)
DeleteGood to know.
Nawaý makabisita ka uli ng Cebu.
Ang tagal ko na rin hindi nakakapunta diyan sa cebu after graduate..nice place...
ReplyDeletecelebrating my 8 years in blogging..
Congrats uli. Happy 8th. :-)
DeleteSana makapunta ka po uli ng Cebu
Beautiful! I can't remember the last time I went in a wooden boat like that - used to when I was young, rowed to my grandma's fruit orchards across the river. Those were the days, the good old days.
ReplyDeleteWow. You rowed a boat on your own?! I haven't done that yet. Hope to do it in the future with my son.
DeleteNothing beats the excitement of riding a banca. I remember my first time to ride a wooden boat. We were late for our appointment and we needed to cross from Navotas to Malabon so we decided to take a faster route which is by boat. I was so scared and I was praying hard. Mind you, I was just six years old. Hahaha!
ReplyDeleteYou were such a brave child. :-)
DeleteYou will be in double trouble if you fall in Manila Bay. Aside form the possibility of drowning, you will drink the polluted/disgusting/e.coli-infested waters of Manila Bay.
I think I might visit the city again next year. :)
ReplyDeleteYey! Kwentuhan mo kami kapag nakabisita ka na. :-)
Delete