Monday, May 18, 2026

FEATURE
Inclusive tourism at work
Sawsawan sa Loay

They would have nursed the bellow-blown fire by four, because, by ten AM, the heat from the smoldering pile of coconut charcoal and the soul-sapping combination of the sun baking the low corrugated tin sheet roofing in the roadside shop would be too much to sap the body of the energy to heave the heavy mallets pounding the red-hot steel.

By then, the tandem of Cristino Baclayo and Pedro Guadalquiver would have been whetting to the fine hone, a dozen to 18 newly forged 10-12 inches of jungle machetes, house bolos, razor sharp.

“We like to start early while its bearable,” shared Guadalquiver, 37 years old, whose heavily calloused hands from hand-hammering and sweat breaking off from his muscular biceps, betray the body’s natural propensity to seek out a bit of comfort in an already uncomfortable life.

Starting early makes them work for only half the day, the baking heat of the workshop by noon is stifling enough and the nipa and mangrove forest behind the shop is only a little help.

Baclayo, was just 14 when his father taught him the rudiments of the industry: how to handle the tongs, tend the fire with the bellows, know when iron is hot enough for the beating, how to pound the spring into the basic shape, how much stress is needed so a blade doesn’t easily snap when applied tension and how to harden the beaten metal enough to resist wear.

“Austenitizing and rapidly quenching in water or oil to temper the metal, may be easy, but has to be timed right,” Baclayo, who has learned the trade by heart at a young age, explained.

Having completed Grade 6, Baclayo thinks he has limited his chances and has to follow that same route his father and his grandparents had been into.

Car leaf springs, coil springs, even discarded chain-saw blades are fair game, as long as there is patience enough to keep the fire burning and the bellows blowing, and no matter the shape, we pound it to desired blade length to the customer’s satisfaction, Bacayo said.

It would take nearly an hour to forge one medium sized bolo, without the handle, and that would take at least 1 thousand beatings by a four-kilo sledgehammer to form it into shape.

While Guadalquiver pounds, Baclayo maneuvers the red-hot steel flat on the anvil, one hand gripping tongs holding the forged blade, another arm, swinging the heavy mallet in a rhythm which echoes to the mangrove forests behind the shop.

He then reverses it to the other side, careful to make sure the mallets hit the proper spot needing the cure.

And then he turns it on the side every few beatings; the sound of steel and the swooshing from the bellows make up the chorus accentuated by the zoom of cars and motorcycle passing by the roadside shop.

A few more trips back to the burning coals and then the anvil, and the bolo comes to shape, edged and bevelled for the right-handed or left-handed user.

Then comes the delicate job of treating the forge, when the tapered sundang is successively quenched at slightly different temperatures into water or oil to harden the metal.

Sawsaw, is a local term for dipping the forge into water or oil to attain a certain metal toughness that does not easily chip, thus the word sawsawan is generally meant a metal quenching workshop.

And then whetting the bevelled sundang into its characteristic pinuti razor sharp.

“The job is backbreaking,” admits Guadalquiver.

“And it is dangerous,” adds Baclayo who occasionally buries the cooling forged metal back into the glowing coconut charcoal fed by the bellows.

From a solid lead spring of about 6-9 centimeters by 220 centimeters structures enough to be tough not to easily snap when applied with a good tension, two bolos can be forged.

Not without the risk of getting burned by mishandling the glowing steel, or getting one’s hands hit by the sledgehammer, the ball and the peen hammer, and working on the sharpened forges.

“But, it assures us of food for the family,” Guadalquiver said, adding that all it takes is industry and the strength to keep on pounding.

“I would hate it if my kids would follow this very physical job,” Baclayo, whose family traces a long lineage of blacksmiths.

Good for him, his four children are all girls, which he thinks make them unfit for the job.

Blacksmithing in Loay, which has seen a boom in the recent past years, however could be much older than most local workers know.

As far as they can remember, it was a guy evacuating from the risks of volcanic eruption in Camiguin, who started the forging industry here.

But then, in the 1990s, there was only one rickety shop standing along the highway in Villalimpia, Loay as against nearly ten shops forging side by side .

“I learned the skill from my aunt, who was among the first managers of the industry, and I have gone through many employers elready,” admits Guadalquiver, who has become Baclayo’s forging partner.

However, since Bohol opted to embrace eco-cultural tourism and agro-industry, the future of forging bolos opened for Baclayo and Guadalquiver, whose teen years were not as good as it is now.

Born at the time when access to universal education was still much harder when Bohol lay 7th at the bottom of the poorest provinces in the Philippines, education ranks lower, than working for food, if only to survive.

Since Bohol picked tourism because officials see that it spurs the opening of countless jobs, supports industries and pours in the necessary from the tourists themselves, life changed here.

When many believed tourism only enriches the tour operators and investors in the industry, Department of Tourism trained and accredited tour guides, tour drivers, hospitality management stakeholders and even tour stop workers started getting regular pay.

And then the farmers who grow the food started getting better sales.

As the demand for food for tourists increased, roadside agricultural products display stalls become regular stops.

And so are the blacksmithing shops where tourists seek souvenirs, engage blacksmiths and even get a hand in forging weapons.

Now a common fixture along the national highway in Loay, forge shops may have been back to resurrect the glory of Bohol’s heritage of freedom from foreign dominion.

In 1525, when Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and his men drifted to the sheltered Hinawanan Bay here, they were met by natives wielding heavy kampilans, long pinuti and forged metal tipped lances.

While these may have come from their active trade with other tribes in the region, maintaining and keeping these weapons of gallantry and resistance against colonization may have lit the embers now blown by the bellows for the present day forgers of Loay.

And the blacksmiths, ordinary Boholanos who may have been left behind had tourism been not inclusive, there would not be time for them to whet their future bright. (PIAbohol)
RAZOR SHARP. Using a circular grinder to facilitate whetting of the blade to fine point, Guadalquiver shared how grateful he is now that machines can help in making blacksmithing much comfortable. (PIAbohol)
WHILE THE IRON IS HOT. Blacksmiths Baclayo and Guadalquiver may have been doing a simple task but shares the windfall of tourist revenues, while selling souvenir blades to walk in tourists. (PIAbohol)
Adoption, alternative kid care now
simpler, faster, cheaper –RACCO-7

TAGBILARAN CITY Bohol (PIA)—When the cumbersome adoption process of an abandoned, neglected or voluntarily surrendered child then has its share of frustrations, the government has made it way much easier this time, without sacrificing the assurance that the person adopted gets the same parental care as the adopted parents’ kids.

And biggest among all the changes is that adoption now, or at least under Republic Act 11642 or the Domestic Administrative Adoption and Alternative Child Care Act, has become administrative, which is a lot easier than the judicial process.

Under the old law, which is the Domestic Adoption Act or RA 8552, adoptive parents had to file a petition in court, attend hearings, and obtain a judicial decree.

In fact, the hearings can only proceed after satisfying the provisions of Republic Act 9523, which requires the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) to facilitate the process leading to the release of a Certificate Declaring a Child Legally Available for Adoption (CDCLAA), before the court litigation can proceed.

As court-driven legal proceedings, this requires the services of a lawyer, so that legal expenses are part of the territory, and the time needed for the entire adoption process can be lengthy.

“With the new law, that is RA 11642, adoption now has become an administrative process,” shares the information officer of the Regional Alternative Child Care Office -7 (RACCO-7) of the National Authority of Child Care (NACC) Cheina N. Maderazo, at the Kapihan sa PIA.

“While RACCO is the regional office of the NACC, the latter is an attached agency of the DSWD, but is now the separate focal hub for all adoption and child care services of the DSWD, now that adoption is administrative, so there would not be any court trials,” she added.

Tracing the old process, RACCO-7 Officer in Charge Concepcion Solera explained: “persons intending to adopt then, would go to the DSWD and then follow the judicial process in courts for their filed petition for adoption.”

“In short, RA 11642 removed domestic adoption cases from the courts and transferred them to the NACC through administrative proceedings and the NACC now issues the Order of Adoption, which has the same legal effect as a court judgment,“ Solera summed.

“Because it has become administrative, it does not get one to court, adoption is sped up, unlike then when adoptive families complain about expensive and tedious adoption process,” Solera explained.

This could also be the reason why adoptive parents hide the adoption, or simulate the adoption.

And “to sweeten the pot,” RACCO said said there is in fact free filing fee for the application for now.

With this, all kinds of adoption is now processed, not in court, but at the RACCO: regular adoption, step-parent adoption, relative adoption, adult adoption, adoption by live birth rectification and foster parent adoption.

But then, who can adopt?

Filipinos who are not below 25 years old with a civil capacity and legal rights, who is 16 years older than the person for adoption, says the new law.

Also, those who are now standing as legal guardians of the adoptee, foster parents, aliens who have become permanent residents of the Philippines and officials of the government assigned abroad, are eligible to adopt.

And, who can be adopted?

According to the new law, a child legally available for adoption includes those voluntarily committed by their biological or legal guardians to the NACC, children who are involuntarily committed, abandoned, neglected, abused, exploited, or surrendered through legal proceedings.

These can be foundlings, orphans by their biological or adoptive parents and without a suitable guardian or relatives to assume care, children in situations of neglect or unsafe environments, legitimate child of one spouse by the other spouse (stepchild adoption), or those declared as legally available for adoption.

Another significant change is that the new law opens a broader alternative child care system by looking at the achild welfare ecosystem and permanency planning, other than domestic adoption and its procedures.

RA 11642 expanded the framework into “alternative child care,” meaning adoption is only one option, the others are foster care, kinship care, family-like care, residential care, and inter-country adoption, but keeping a child with biological family or relatives is always preferred.

This is in line with the tenet that adoptees are legitimate children and are therefore treated similarly with kids of the adoptive family sharing inheritance rights, legitimacy status, use of surname rights, and family relations. (PIAbohol)
BEYOND ADOPTION: CHILD CARE. NACC through their RACCO information Officer Cheina Maderazo (right) explains how the Domestic Adoption Law is now enhanced by the Domestic Administrative Adoption and Alternative Child Care Act which transfers adoption processes from the courts (judicial) which takes time and money, to the RACCO (administrative) and looks at the alternative child care as open option other than adoption. (PIABohol)
Bohol, Cebu City inflation
rates cling to single digits

TAGBILARAN CITY Bohol (PIA)— As much of Central Visayas perceived economic monitoring centers breach into the double digit inflation thresholds, Bohol and Cebu City remain clinging to 7.2 and 9.4 percent respectively, even as the regional inflation report showed a 7.4 percent year-on-year inflation here.

Although price movements on the 13 monitored retail commodities and services in the region continue to change with the continuing Middle East crisis, Bohol still maintains the region’s lowest inflation rate at 7.2 percent in April from 4.5 percent inflation in March, for a 2.7 points hike or a 0.6 percent increase, according to data presented by the Philippine Statistics Authority through chief supervising statistician in Bohol Jessamyne Anne alcazaren.

Regional economic hub Cebu City on the other hand still managed to hang on to a single digit 9.4 percent inflation rate in April from a 6.8 percent recorded in March, 2026, or a slower 2.6 points up, PSA data showed.

This too as the residents and consumers residing in region’s highly urbanized cities tend to suffer the double digit inflation which the Banglo Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) would now have to intervene.

BSP has earlier set a target inflation range of 2.0 to 4.0 percent with a projected average headline inflation to settle around 3.6 percent to 3.7 percent in 2026.

However, supply-side factors affected by the rising oil prices from Middle East conflict and local currency depreciation has pushed the BSP projections in April 2026 to a temporary surge, with forecasts reaching 5.6%–6.4%, but with lower food prices in 2025 and the current supply pressures, the central bank expects the inflation to stay manageable and return closer to the 3.0% target by 2027.

Even then, as the regional inflation arte in April breaches the double digit mark when it reached 10.8 percent, the City of Mandaue registers a 10.7 percent inflation in April from 6.1 percent in March.

Accoring to the PSA, the City of Lapulapu, on the other hand experienced an 11.4 percent inflation in April from 8.1 percent in March, while Cebu Province pegged a 12. 9 percent inflation rate, the highest among monitored economic centers in the region.

This is the first time that the regional inflation rate breached the double figure, even higher than when the economy stirred starting February 2022 when the Russian invasion in Ukraine sent economic shivers across the globe.

From 4.8 percent in March of 2022 to 8.6 percent by the end of the year, the region nailed a 6.6 percent year-on-year inflation rate, which came relatively higher compared to the 1.1 % in 2018, 1.6 % in 2020, and 1.5 percent in 2021.

While signs of economic recovery started manifesting with a 4.8 % year-on-year inflation on 2023, 3.2 % in 2024 and 2.5% in 2025, the Middle ears crisis with Israel and the US bombings in Iran and the retaliations shook the oil and fuel industry that placed the still unstable economy to yet another uncertainty. (PIAbohol)
ANCHORED BY FOOD? While top contributors for the headline inflation in Bohol are transport, food and non-alcoholic beverages and housing, water, electricity and fuels which altogether eating up 87 percent of a family’s pending, the presence of still available food supplies in the Boholano homes could be the reason why prices in food have not been as steep, but with an impending El Nino, the supplies may not last and the prices may soon be an issue. This dominated the discussion when the PSA presented the inflation data during their monthly press event. (PIABohol)
Go high value crops, NIA to
farmers amid El Nino threat

TAGBILARAN CITY Bohol (PIA)— In the real possibility that irrigation services in small reservoir irrigation projects (SRIP) could not reach the end farms in its service areas, irrigation authorities suggest: plant high value commercial crops instead of the water–intensive rice.

No less than National Irrigation Administration (NIA) Engineering Construction and Operations Services Division chief Engr. Evaristo Borja who shared the clue, as the government’s irrigation authorities have laid out their El Niño mitigation activities the moment the state weather bureau elevated the El Niño Watch to El Niño Alert, April 22.

Speaking during the Kapihan sa PIA detailing the NIA preparations for their irrigators associations which can not be sufficiently served with irrigation owing to the upcoming El Nino droughts, Engr. Borja advanced the information that three SRIPs in Bohol may not have sufficient irrigation water to serve all its service areas.

Engr. Borja named Ilihan SRI system in Tubigon, Tugas Can-olin SRI system in Candijay and Ilaya SRIS in Ubay as potential facilities that would only be able to serve parts of its service areas.

NIA, which generally uses its irrigation water for rice farming, has accordingly informed farmer irrigators in the respective areas where the dams can not sufficiently deliver due to low water levels and possible absence of rains, to start planting alternative HVCCs while scant water may be experienced.

HVCCs are highly drought-tolerant food security crops, grown at low production costs, low maintenance and maintain its high demand that its harvest per hectare can turn into in sufficient profits.

While farm areas in San Agustin and San Roque in Talibon, Balbalan in Dimiao and Tiguis Lila pick watermelon as alternative HVCC owing to the possible availability of some water from their areas, most viable options for HVCCs are ginger and turmeric, cassava, sweet potato, ube, gabi in moist areas, peanuts, mung beans, string beans, squash and gourds, some vegetables can be surprisingly drought resistant.

While these crops still need some water, they have shorter production cycle enough to be replaced with rice as soon as favourable conditions present, according to agriculturists.

In the farms of Calunasan to Mandaug in Calape also resort to eggplants, ampalaya when the irrigation water starts to be scarce. (PIAbohol)
DIMIAO WATERMELONS. Getting a little bit of water from the creeks of Balbalan, rice farmers revert to watermelons during droughts, bringing still the much needed productivity despite the droughts. (PIABohol/google)
NIA proposes solar irrigation
system in remote farm areas

TAGBILARAN CITY Bohol (PIA)— Go for more solar irrigation systems.

This by far is the National Irrigation Administration’s (NIA) policy direction as Bohol faces the real threat of drying surface water sources.

This too as the state weather bureau announced the impending dry season which is forecast to even yet to start in a few weeks and last until the initial quarter of next year.

NIA Engineering and Construction Operations Systems chief Engr. Evaristo Borja shared this to Kapihan sa PIA, even as he said that during dry seasons when the rains do not come, surface water sources may dry out but the underground water sources still thrive.

While Bohol has major dams operated by the NIA under the Bohol Irrigation System like the Malinao Dam in Pilar, it also has Bayongan Dam in San Miguel and Capayas Dam in Ubay, Zamora Small Reservoir Irrigation System (SRIS) in Talibon, Benliw SRIS in Ubay, Ilijan SRIS in Tubigon, Tugas-Can-olin SRIS, Ilaya SRIS in Ubay, and Calunasan SRIS in Calape under the Bohol Integrated Irrigation System (BIIS).

In fact, it also operates Cayacay SRIS in Alicia-Mabini and is currently developing Bonot-Bobot SRIS and the Hibale SRI projects.

Estimated at about 30,300 hectares of Bohol farms irrigated by NIA’s BIS and BIIS, the province still has nearly 70,000 hectares from its 104,000 hectares, as potential areas for irrigation.

Most of surface water sources however have been explored or already used for irrigation.

So how does NIA cover the remaining areas to increase agricultural productivity and keep Bohol’s as the food basket for Central Visayas?

Here, comes to fill in the gap are solar irrigation systems, according to NIA.

Solar irrigation systems use solar energy, instead of expensive diesel to fuel generators which pumps or electricity to run water pumps for agriculture.

When these can be used to draw water from rivers, ponds or reservoirs for distribution to farms and irrigate or water crops, most solar irrigation systems are made as options for remote areas which need to draw water from underground water sources that are far from the power grids.

A set-up that includes solar panels, charging controller and inverters, water pumps some submersible, elevated storage tanks or drip irrigation lines and open canals, solar irrigation system may be expensive up front, considering the installation cost, but generally has minimal maintenance needed.

As to independent sources, solar irrigation systems which are useful in remote farms, have generally lower operating cost, runs on reduced emissions thus is considered cleaner energy sourced operational system. (PIAbohol)
EXPLORING MORE WATER SOURCES. NIA through its Engineering Construction and Operations Services chief Engr Evaristo Borja shared how NIA mulls on expanding solar irrigation systems from dug wells and underground sources as the more reliable irrigation water sources for off-grid farms. (PIA-Bohol)