TIME Traveler:
 

TRAVEL ARCHIVES:


A River Runs Through it
Beating Bangkok's traffic the scenic way—by boat

Betting Big
Head to Macau for the original fusion cuisine

Taipei Getaway
Sample the nightlife of a city that doesn't sleep


Be Prepared
Travel tips for the wary wanderer

Gadgets to Go
Cool stuff for the day-tripper or road warrior

Female Bonding
Exclusive travel services for women

World.Wild.Web
Surf the Net to get more out of your journey


The House that Art Built
Japan's Naoshima Island is home to a unique museum-hotel

Behind the Masks
Deciphering the Enigma of Noh theater

Buddha Will Provide
Sichuan's giant Buddha bridges culture and commerce

Burmese Days
Following in the bootsteps of George Orwell


Up High, Down Under
Get giddy in Australia's Hunter Valley—without a drop of its fine wines

Berth of a Nation
Sumptuous and soothing, the Victoria Express is Vietnam's inner-peace train

Sea Odyssey
A Sulawesi cruise brings back the romance of sailing

Sold Down the River
Upstream through the Three Gorges, as the waters rise


Water World
The Philippines' Apo island remains pristine

Soft Touch
Sri Lanka's Ayurveda spas pour oil over troubled bodies

The Wild Bunch
Thailand's dude ranch brings out the good, bad and ugly


Wild China
Young Chinese have caught the adventure bug

Land that Time Forgot
Newly free East Timor may be Asia's hottest destination




Water World
Apo is alive—because it's neither overfished nor overdived

JUERGEN FREUND
By reinventing itself as a marine sanctuary, Apo has boosted its stocks of sea life
Halrio Autor, 55, a fisherman from the Philippines' Apo Island, splits open a young coconut. The sweet juice trickles onto the sand. "Drink, drink," he urges, flashing a gummy grin. Earlier, he offered some home brew called tuba, made from fermented coconut juice, but I hadn't liked it. At 10¢ a shot, the murky orange liquid isn't exactly divine nectar—just a cheap way for the locals to get sloshed. And the tourists? Well, they come for Apo's other liquid delights: its iridescent turquoise waters, teeming with marine life.

Apo, a rugged nugget in the Visayan Islands, is no ordinary dive resort. This 72-hectare lump of volcanic rock is the Philippines' case study of how local communities can best manage their coastal resources. In 1985, community education field-workers at neighboring Silliman University proposed to the 720 islanders some alien ideas. Stop the dynamite fishing, and the yield will increase. Turn the island into a marine reserve, and watch the tourists flock. But convincing the fisherfolk was not easy. Ecotourism? The well-meaning field-workers might as well have come from outer space.

At 16, Apo-born Alvin Pascobello joined a team that went door-to-door to sell the proposals. Over the next few years, the program gradually took shape: the coast was mapped, laws passed and support swelled. Finally, a marine sanctuary extending 500 meters offshore was established, policed by village women who took eagle-eyed pride in enforcing the no-fishing ban. "Poachers got shot at," deadpans a resident. Earlier this year, just as his hard work began to pay off, Pascobello, then head of Apo's coastal resource management project, lost his own battle with liver cancer at 32.

Today, with its two dedicated diving resorts and fish-friendly ethos, Apo is a very different place. Marine catches have doubled, the seafaring community has prospered, and the neoprene-clad visitors who regularly arrive on Apo's sandy shores are warmly welcomed—then issued a strict list of warnings: no more than 15 divers and eight snorkelers a day in the marine sanctuary, a fine of $2,000 for speargun fishing, and no gloves (divers are less likely to collect the potentially poisonous live corals with unprotected fingers).

Apo's seas have thrived correspondingly. "There are more than 200 species of coral, all of them in pristine quality," says Alan White, who is now working with the U.S. Agency for International Development-funded Coastal Resource Management Project. Aside from the marine sanctuary, Apo has about 11 dive sites with the usual submerged suspects: big hawksbill turtles, sea snakes and silver-striped mangrove jacks. The grins on divers' faces say it all. "That was brilliant!" gushes a British tourist, flopping onto a bench after his third submersion of the day. If the island rhythms lull you into listlessness—and there is some serious hammock swinging to be done—one prime snorkeling spot can be reached a mere five strides from the main beach in Apo village. Just wade in chest deep and watch.

When fingers go wrinkly, there are always scenes of rustic village life to enjoy. End to end, Apo is a manageable hour-long stroll. In the main hamlet of Cogon, fishermen make bubuk, or bamboo traps, girls wash clothes by the village well, and a banana leaf-festooned baby Jesus rests in the local chapel. At dusk, activity at the open-air pool tables shifts up a notch and friends gather at family compounds to watch Tagalog movies. The island has two low-key guesthouses that go quiet around 11 p.m., and, thankfully, there are no plans to develop more. Try the Kan-upe for some serious cocooning and ethnic chic or the hilltop Liberty's Resort for glorious sunset views over the reefs.

Diving in Apo won't break the bank and is especially good value when compared with other spots around Asia. Paul's Diving, a professionally run outfit, charges $19 for a boat dive. To get to Apo, landlubbers can take the scenic coastal route to Liloan from Cebu city, then a series of short boat rides. Alternatively, there's an easy Supercat ferry jaunt from Cebu to Dumaguete, then a brief hop on a banca (Philippine outrigger). Foodwise, both Paul's and Kan-upe offer meals, but Apo's chefs aren't known for their culinary imagination. Then again, as fisherman Autor suggests, winking, there is always pungent kinilaw, the local vinegar-and-salt-spiked version of sushi. But after logging a couple of dives, even the tastiest fish appear better alive than dead.



Get the Magazine — Try 4 Issues Free!


Sign up for the World Watch newsletter




promotion


Copyright © 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe to TIME | Customer Service | FAQ | About TIME Asia | Search | Write to Us | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Press Releases | Media Kit