34 APRIL 2018 / TRAVELANDLEISUREASIA.COM
/ travel diary /
SPOTTING A
PHILIPPINE
COCKATOO
Once common
across the
archipelago, a
combination of
habitat loss and
poaching over the
last 30 years has
seen the Philippine
Cockatoo broughtSAGADA’S
HANGING
COFFINS
Inhabitants of the
mountainous town
of Sagada in
northern Luzon
have a rather
unconventional way
of honoring their
dead. Rather than
burial or cremation,
some departed
members of the
Igorot community
have chosen for
their coffins to be
suspended halfway
up a sheer cliff. Only
when placed at
such a lofty location
will they then be
closer to their
ancestral spirits.
— M.D.MEETING THE
BATAK TRIBE
With few signs of
modernity, it is a
simple and yet
demanding life
played out by the
Batak people, the
country’s oldest
indigenous tribe, in
the shadow of
Cleopatra’s
Needle—one of
Palawan’s most
distinctive mountain
summits. Living a
subsistence
lifestyle on the edge
of the forest, the
tribe survives by
tapping resin from
the almaciga tree.
— M.D.
to the verge of
extinction. However,
with the help of
local support from
communities on
Palawan, the future
of this stunning,
sociable and noisy
bird may just be
starting to get a
touch brighter.
— M.D.