Recently, National Geographic published
21 Best Beaches in the world and Pink Beach, the Sta. Cruz island made the cut.
Located in Zamboanga City, I had traveled by air, land and water. Travel by air
- from Manila or any other destinations (In Philippines) take local flight to
Zamboanga City; then by land - take tricycle to Paseo del Mar Port, then take
motorized boat going to Sta. Cruz Island. It will take 1.5 hours from airport
to Sta. Cruz island that includes cueing and safety orientation.
For preservation purposes, number of visitors are regulated, thus advance coordination is required with local government of Zamboanga. I arrived at port on Sunday at 7:30am, and was assigned a group number for safety, rules and regulations orientation which takes 15 - 30 minutes which I find informative and comedic on way it was delivered. Informative - pink sand was result from all the crushed red organ pipe coral that washes ashore; and that it takes year to regenerate this pink sand; and that contrary to safety concerns a military headquarter is stationed on the island to patrol and ensure the safety of every visitors.
On rules and regulations - no smoking
and drinking alcoholic beverages on the island, drunk visitors are strictly
prohibited to travel, visitors are allowed to bring food and stuff but ensure
proper disposal of garbage, no load music and/or partying and taking sand as
souvenir is a big offense. Military personnel are given task to monitor and
implement rules, and Php1,000.00 penalty is imposed for every violation. For
sand souvenirs, if your will be caught at port, you need to rent your own
motorized boat and personally return collected sand with Php 5,000 penalty.
Also, maximum of 15 passenger is allowed per boat, and wearing of life jacket
is a must.
Afar, it was typical
turquoise, blue, green and white color spectrum of an island, the promised pink
sand is only visible on certain portion of shore, when sand is washed off and
up close, yet, it was never a disappointment. The island gives enigmatic vibes
- no traces of commercialization, invisible eyes of military personnel securing
the island, the calmness and seclusion from limited visitors. Basic needs are
available - comfort room, faucet and sink for washing, grilling / cooking
station and villa (with table, chairs and roof) if you decides to take siesta,
local vendors of squid, fish and crabs (free cooking) at reasonable prices, it
was squeaky clean, and Picturesque indeed - Instagram worthy, My day
approve and vlogger material winner.
The downside - (1) there is
a sandbar 10 minutes away from the island with diverse sea shells, but only
allows visitors 10 minutes stay for picture taking. (2) Island the shore is
clothed with white-pink refined sand but on water its more corals than sand, thus,
aqua shoes is recommended, (3) I also notice uneven shallow-deep portion, so
extra precaution specially if you don't know how to swim; and lastly, (4) no
overnight staying, you need to get back at port by 2pm and unlucky for us, wee
need to leave after lunch at time of visit due to approaching thunder
storm.
Officially registered in my bucketlist! This is very informative, thank you!
ReplyDeleteVery informative!
ReplyDelete