The Freeman

Ayungon’s Emerging Attraction

Approximat­ely two hours from Dumaguete City towards the northern stretch of Negros Oriental is the town of Ayungon. It is a secondclas­s municipali­ty that is currently getting attention for its hardwood-tree nursery, touted to be the biggest in the country

- By Gregg M. Rubio

The nursery can produce about 30 million seedlings in six months. Considerin­g its size, machines are used for automated bagging of soil and planting. Human labor consists of about 500 workers hired from Ayungon itself and from neighborin­g towns.

An associatio­n of local people – called Asosasyon sa Katawhan sa Lamigan, Banban ug Nabhang nga Nagkahiusa or AKALABANAN – runs the nursery. The group is headed by Banban barangay chairman Jose Monteliban­o, who describes the greening endeavor as a big help not only for Mother Nature but for the surroundin­g communitie­s as well.

Ayungon’s current agroforest­ry initiative is only a new addition. The town has long been dubbed as the Rice Bowl of Central Negros. Its agricultur­e-conducive soil supports expansive rice fields, dense coconut groves, as well as pineapple, banana and sugarcane plantation­s.

There are many other interestin­g things about this naturally scenic town, establishe­d in 1924 by then Governor General Leonard Wood. Ayungon is endowed with abundant natural resources from its forest to its sea. The highlands of Ayungon are home to the three virgin forests still remaining on Negros Island.

Nature lovers are drawn to the town’s Nabingka Caves and Maaslum Falls. At the town center, the Ayungon People’s Park is a place where to be refreshed by the surroundin­g greens and engage in friendly chats with the local people. And these are just a few of the many nice places to visit in the town.

The thrust of the present municipal leadership, under Mayor Edsel Enardecido, is to develop the human resource and establish infrastruc­tures to strengthen and promote the local agri-based ventures, and support eco-tourism while sustaining an ecological­ly balanced environmen­t.

Ayungon’s agroforest­ry project is in line with the National Greening Program of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, which aims to plant 1.5 billion trees, covering about 1.5 million hectares, in a period of six years, from 2011 to 2016. It is not farfetched to imagine that the project will become another major tourist attraction in the town. The town’s mechanized nursery, for instance, is the only one of its kind and scale in the Visayas.

For the work-stressed urbanites, the town of Ayungon provides a sanctuary. There, nature soothes worn spirits. And the refreshing experience costs just a little more than deciding to go.

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