Moalboal, difficult to pronounce and even harder to leave.

After a couple of months of settling into my new home in Manila I made my first trip outside the city last week visiting Cebu City and Moalboal, both on the island of Cebu, about an hours flight from Manila.

My main interest was to experience the famous “sardine run” at Moalboal which turned out to be the most amazing sight I have seen in nature.

Lacking an underwater camera I don’t have a single image of this surreal sight but if you google or search on youtube there will be plenty of content to choose from.

Moalboal is a small tourist town on the opposite side of Cebu island from Cebu City, a scenic three hour drive through gritty industrial towns followed by lush green rolling hills, palm trees and quaint filipino villages.

The town of Moalboal proper is completely forgettable, but the smaller town of Moalboal, just ten minutes away and 100 peso by tricycle is another matter. Consisting of a handful of cafe, bar, restaurant and dive shop lined streets cascading down a hill to Panagasama Beach this is a beach goers heaven.

The long stretch of beach consists of a shallow coral section extending a hundred metres from shore followed by a sheer drop-off into the deep blue.

The beach is famous for its “sardine run” and for the huge sea turtles that come in from the deep each morning to feed on seaweed in the shallows.

For the lazy traveller in search of adventure Moalboal is an ideal destination. Far from needing to hike for days through the jungle to find a secret, secluded beach where the magic happens, in Moalboal all you need to do is rent a snorkel, mask and flippers (P200/$5AUD per day) and swim out 50 metres or so. The sardines are easily located by heading to the nearest cluster of snorkelers.

Once on site all you need to do is float face down and watch the amazing passing parade.

I have literally never seen a sight like this in nature in my life. I can best describe it as a cloud of millions of sardines just beneath the surface of perhaps 50 metres in width, the same in depth, and a few hundred metres in length. This cloud of fish seethes and roils up and down the beach making the most amazing shapes, the sun glinting off their silver and electric blue striped sides.

At times, spooked by something the cloud will explode upward at an astonishing speed and then, just as quickly it will suck back down into formation as if by some giant vacuum.

At one point the sea of fish parted to form a perfect circle and a sunbeam shining down through the circle perfectly illuminated a giant sea turtle that had floated up from the deep and was swimming along serenely beneath me. This was truly and unforgettable sight.

While I was there the town was quiet and I had the fish mostly to myself adding to the surreal nature of the experience.

Moalboal was badly effected by the super typhoon Odette which made landfall on Cebu island in early December 2021. The town had no power, water or internet for many weeks after the storm passed and there are a number of buildings along the waterfront that are damaged beyond repair and are lying abandonded.

Still, despite the adversity, the people of Moalboal are as happy and as welcoming as everyone else I have met in the Philippines and are simply getting on with life with a thousand kilowatt smile on their faces.

I plan to return and maybe spend some time there in the new year, waterproof camera in hand.

A room with a view

Part of the same building above, an abandonded resort, a mural and a wall are all that remain.

Chill Bar minus part of its thatched roof.

Side view of Chill.

For the time being these building make an ideal photography set in search of a model.

Waterfront views.

Sun breaks through the clouds. Negros Island is in the background.

Getting my street on

I went for a wander around my local neighbourhood last week for my first street photography in quite some time and my first attempt photographing people on the street in the Philippines. I wondered how willing the locals would be to be immortalised in pixels. It was no surprise that the people I encountered, like all of the people I have encountered in my few months here, were super friendly and accommodating. Nobody waved me off and many wanted to stop and chat. #itsmorefuninthephilippines

On the move

Laundry Lady

Waiting

Three Amigo’s

Lunch Break

About a boy

Back to the studio

I was thrilled to get some studio time in last weekend and my first chance to photograph some beautiful Filipina models. I didn’t realise how much I had missed the studio during the period of the Scary Virus and a longer than usual family visit to Australia between relocating from Vietnam to the Philippines.

I traveled from Makati City to the neighbouring Queson City, where the studio was located. The models, studio manager and Hair and Make Up lady were all lovely and over the course of a few hours I made a pleasing set of images. Escaping just before an afternoon monsoon downpour turned roads into rivers between QC and Makati.

In all there were four stunning Filipina models who I photographed with a new Filipino friend. Usually I shoot fairly wide open in the studio but on this occasion I racked out to f11 to f14. I shot with my trusty Canon 5D Mark IV and the 24/70 lens. The lighting was provided by the studio and consisted of a three light Godox set up which worked well.

Modelling in the Philippines is off the charts and I can’t wait to do more.

Double Trouble

Into the light.

Mika

A model on the move.

Strike a pose.

Confidence is the new sexy

Nicks by name, nicks by nature.

Back Photography.

Ring light.

Intramuros Farewell

Finally a few street shots from Intramuros to close out this short series.

Spanish architecture and horse drawn carts

“Sign, sign, everywhere a sign”

Waiting at the cantina

Walking on water. The hyacinth guy

Intricately carved wooden doors highlight even more outstanding architecture at Manila Cathedral

Fort Santiago, Intramuros, Manila.

Fort Santiago, also contained “within the walls” of Intramuros is a Spanish bastion also built in the 1500’s by Spanish navigator Miguel Lopes de Legazpi. It is the oldest Spanish bastion in the country and is a site that has witnessed many major historical events in Philippine history. Like the nearby Manila Cathedral, the old fort has been rebuilt over the years, again due to damage caused by natural and manmade disasters, most recently following severe damage inflicted on the structure during the Battle of Manila in 1945. Today, the immaculately presented site makes for a pleasant stroll to soak up the history of the area.

The main entrance to the Fort

Map of Fort Santiago

The main gate

The buildings still bear the scars of the Battle of Manila. Bullet holes abound.

Looking back to the entrance.

Exploring my new home. Manila, Philippines.

Mostly now settled in to my new home in Manila it’s time to explore.

Manila Cathedral, is located in Intramuros (literally “within the walls”), of the old city of Manila. First constructed in 1581. The Cathedral has undergone many rebuilds due to damage by various natural and man made disasters since then, most recently following the Second World War, when Intramuros was the site of the last stand of Japanese forces.

During the Battle of Manila, February to March 1945, it is estimated that 100,000 people lost their lives. The Japanese forces were entrenched in the city and were routed by American and Philippine forces under the command of General Douglas McArthur.

During the course of the month long battle the Japanese torched the city while the Americans bombed it, giving Manila, previously known as “the Pearl of the Orient” the unenviable distinction of being the third most devastated capital city of the Second World War after only Berlin and Warsaw.