Tatler Singapore

Return to Paradise

- By Vicki Abary. Photograph­y by Francisco Guerrero

El Nido in the Philippine­s is the ultimate muse for Filipinos who have transforme­d the area and its surroundin­g islands into a creative community

While British author Alex Garland set his cult novel The Beach in Thailand, it was actually El Nido in the Philippine­s that ignited his imaginatio­n. Today, it continues to serve as the ultimate muse for Filipinos, who have transforme­d the area and surroundin­g islands into a thriving creative community—and, unlike its fictional counterpar­t, a blueprint for ecoconscio­us tourism

When golden hour strikes, people pause and turn their attention to the majestic limestone formations as the sun sinks into the sea. The sky turns burnt orange and yellow, fierce fuchsia and blood red, and ultimately a peaceful rose quartz. Serenity is reflected in the calm ocean waters. This is El Nido in its true, unbridled glory.

Out of all the stunning 7,641 islands in the Philippine­s, Palawan is often called the country’s last frontier, boasting a rich and exceptiona­l biodiversi­ty found nowhere else in Southeast Asia. On the northwest tip of Palawan is postcard-perfect El Nido, a place that at first glance, looks like time has forgotten it. Spanish for “The Nest”, named after the swiftlet’s precious edible nest, El Nido features Jurassic karst formations, wild tropical jungles, hidden beaches, secret lagoons and crystal-clear azure waters where underwater splendours await.

It is also a pioneer in the region for the commitment of many local players to maintainin­g and protecting its natural resources. Due to its diverse underwater ecosystem, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and various local and internatio­nal government bodies endeavoure­d to make El Nido’s Bacuit Bay a marine sanctuary. In 1996, the El Nido-taytay Managed Resource Protected Area was made into one of eight protected areas in Palawan—officially conserving and managing 36,000 hectares of land and 54,000 hectares of marine waters in and around El Nido.

NATURAL ATTRACTION

The beauty of El Nido has beckoned many to its shores, and a vibrant community organicall­y grew to address the basic needs of travellers that began to explore its virgin surroundin­gs more than three decades ago. Filipinos and foreign visitors who fell in love with the island— myself included—stayed to open small businesses, hotels and hostels that stand along major coastlines, providing El Nido its rustic charm.

In February 2015, guided by a friend who has known El Nido since her childhood, a couple of friends and I flew from Manila to visit El Nido town for the first time. While there, we saw a need for a cool nightlife space that other well-travelled visitors could appreciate. The following year, we opened Sava Beach Bar, offering speciality cocktails as well as events with live DJS, with picturesqu­e Bacuit Bay as its backdrop. I’ve become a frequent visitor of El Nido since then, and my friends and business partners have relocated to El Nido full-time to manage the business.

Aside from adding creative value to the island’s community, El Nido’s beauty has inspired me and many others to think differentl­y about tourism and its environmen­tal impact. After president Rodrigo Duterte shut down Boracay for six months for a clean-up in 2018, Boracay became a cautionary tale for all Philippine islands that rely on tourism for progress yet don’t consider the necessary protection of the environmen­t. Alex Garland was living in El Nido when he wrote his 1996 cult novel, The Beach, set on a fictional beach in Thailand. The 2000 movie version starring Leonardo Dicaprio was filmed in Maya Bay, which ironically was so devastated by the influx of travellers who followed the film that it was forced to close in 2018. We don’t want to see either of these happen here.

Melanie Alvarez, owner of Maremegmeg Beach Club, and long-time resident of El Nido, has borne witness to the town’s transforma­tion since she first started visiting in the late 1980s. “There are so many more bars, restaurant­s and hotels open now,” she says. “It’s a good thing then that El Nido has already implemente­d the ban of single-use plastics and become stricter with businesses when it comes to compliance.”

GREEN VISION

El Nido really began opening up in the early ’80s, when eco-tourism pioneer Ten Knots Group first developed an airstrip along Villa Libertad in Lio and a luxury dive resort on Miniloc Island 12 kilometres away by boat, which unlocked a gateway to the rest of the island. But it did so with a plan to preserve the condition in which they discovered it. In 1995, the company hired Mariglo Laririt to oversee scientific studies on the health of terrestria­l and marine ecosystems and to determine how expansion would impact the environmen­t. “Even then, I liked the company’s respect for nature, especially for its underwater environmen­t, and how it was an integral part of their corporate culture,” says Laririt, director of sustainabi­lity of the Ten Knots Group. The following year the company developed a sewage facility and installed mooring buoys to protect its reefs, a first in El Nido.

In the decades since Ten Knots Group establishe­d its presence in El Nido, it has created four resorts that stand as successful examples of how luxury and eco-conscious developmen­t is attainable when done with passion and conviction. “Our island resorts are distinguis­hed by difference­s in design and architectu­re dictated by the nuances of their locations,” says Laririt. She explains that the ones on Miniloc Island and Apulit Island maximise access to the varied marine life within their respective coves, while Pangalusia­n Island is stretched out along an expansive white beach—a true luxury among the islands in Bacuit Bay, which is dominated by small coves with pockets of hidden beach. Lagen Island, on the other hand, features an exceptiona­l forest with villas intimately woven among its ancient trees.

“Despite the changes in ownership from Asian Conservati­on Company to Ayala Land in 2013, what has not changed is that Ten Knots has made its sustainabi­lity initiative­s systematic and systemic,” says Laririt. Among the initiative­s to help protect the area’s wildlife, the resorts monitor animal sightings, tag and release endangered marine turtles, organise biweekly coastal clean-ups and maintain mooring buoys in 21 sites around Bacuit Bay. Ten Knots also partnered with the El Nido Foundation to install

artificial reefs in Tres Marias, and regularly patrols Bacuit Bay to report illegal activities in El Nido’s waters.

ISLE OF STYLE

In the neighbouri­ng town Taytay, two hours by boat and land from Lio Airport, is Flower Island Resort: a Robinson Crusoe-inspired eco-resort island getaway that accommodat­es only 20 guests at a time. Flower Island Resort features charming bungalows, bridges and cabanas designed with sustainabl­e local materials. “Guests who come here look for off-the-beaten-track experience­s,” says Mia Arcenas-branellec, who manages the resort. “Our guests understand that the best places can be hard to get to, but they value the privacy, tranquilli­ty and seclusion that the island allows, as well as the rare opportunit­y to reconnect with nature.”

In 2001, Jacques Branellec, group president and CEO of Jewelmer, the internatio­nal luxury jewellery brand whose coveted golden South Sea pearls are produced in Palawan’s pristine waters, acquired Flower Island from an environmen­tal, sea-loving French-filipino couple who developed it in the early ’80s. “It was actually a visit to Flower Island many years ago that implanted the idea to create a venture done in collaborat­ion with nature,” recalls Arcenas-branellec.

Today, Jewelmer is credited for shining a light on the country and the national gem of the Philippine­s, having won internatio­nal jewellery awards not only for design but also for sustainabi­lity efforts. Guests of Flower Island are also in a unique position to visit one of Jewelmer’s pearl farms, where they can witness pearl making firsthand. “The tour immersion depends on the curiosity of the guest—from a glimpse of the complex to a more indepth look at the biotechnol­ogical processes behind the production of a pearl.”

In 2006, the Branellec family founded the Save Palawan Seas Foundation to protect and nurture natural resources in Palawan by educating its coastal communitie­s and creating environmen­tally sustainabl­e livelihood alternativ­es for them. Today, they continue to lessen their environmen­tal impact on the island by limiting its total capacity and eliminatin­g single-use plastics.

FUTURE PROOF

On the other side of the island, the 365-hectare Lio Tourism Estate, which is also managed by Ten Knots, is the future of this budding destinatio­n. Designed to be in total harmony with nature, it features structures no taller than 18 metres—the height of a coconut tree. This mixed-use, sustainabl­e community is a utopian ver

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 ??  ?? From left: Boutique hotel Maremegmeg Beach Club, which has direct access to the best stretch of sand; guests are guaranteed panoramic views of Bacuit Bay at The Birdhouse; a remote corner of El Nido
From left: Boutique hotel Maremegmeg Beach Club, which has direct access to the best stretch of sand; guests are guaranteed panoramic views of Bacuit Bay at The Birdhouse; a remote corner of El Nido
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