Cagayan Valley
Sourced from Wikivoyage. Text is available under the CC-by-SA 3.0 license.
Cagayan Valley is a region at the northeastern corner of Luzon. The regional center is Tuguegarao, and is composed of five provinces in administrative terms, namely: Batanes, Cagayan, Isabela, Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino. This guide only covers the mainland areas: Batanes is treated as a separate region for its isolation and distinct culture.Most of the region lies in a large valley in northeastern Luzon, between the Cordilleras and the Sierra Madre mountain ranges. The Cagayan River, the country's longest river, runs through its center and flows out to Luzon Strait in the north, in the town of Aparri, Cagayan.
Provinces
The Batanes islands is grouped as part of Cagayan Valley administratively, but Wikivoyage treats it as a separate region.
Cities
- - Regional economic center; has the primary entry point by plane.
- - Has the second airport with commercial service.
- - Tourist town midway between Santiago and Tuguegarao.
- - Secondary regional economic center.
Other destinations
- — A remote region facing the Philippine Sea, it has a large national park, and three municipalities only accessible by plane and boat, or for the adventurous, hiking through the Sierra Madre. An ongoing road project is expected to make access easier here, though construction is slow.
- — A nature reserve off the northeastern tip of Luzon island.
- — Rural area, composed of seven municipalities and two protected areas.
Understand
The region is largely fertile plains crisscrossed by rivers, but it is far from that. Parts of the region lie along the forested Sierra Madre, and the province of Nueva Vizcaya is mostly mountainous, lying between the Cordillera and Sierra Madre.
The region is historically inhabited by hunter-gatherer Ilongots and the lowland Ibanag, but they has since been displaced by Ilocano migration.
The region is historically inhabited by hunter-gatherer Ilongots and the lowland Ibanag, but they has since been displaced by Ilocano migration.
Get in
By plane
Flying may not be the cheapest, but the fastest way of reaching the region.Tuguegarao Airport (TUG) and Cauayan Airport (CYZ) are served by domestic flights from Manila. Tuguegarao is the main point of entry by plane; Cebu Pacific offers flights from Manila twice a day for . Cauayan is served by a daily flight on Cebu Pacific for .
A new airport, the Cagayan North International Airport or Lal-lo International Airport (LLC) has opened in rural Lal-lo, making the northeastern corner of the region accessible by plane, but is only served by flights by charter carrier Royal Air, and it remains uncertain it will be served by other carriers.
By bus
There are regular provincial bus trips from Manila to most points in the region; most ply the Cagayan Valley Road or Maharlika Highway (Asian Highway 26/Route 1) which is the main highway through the region. Most travellers enter by bus, which are cheaper, although slower than taking a domestic flight.By car
Cagayan Valley is connected to nearby regions by highway, but most roads pass through mountain passes, most notably the Dalton Pass at the boundary with Central Luzon, and are full of hairpin curves.Stay safe
The region has a high risk for typhoons, and the climate is more close to a rainforest, that means, there is no dry season.