Paoay Lake (File photo) |
By Leilanie G. Adriano
Staff reporter
PAOAY, Ilocos Norte—The legendary
Paoay Lake is getting a new conservation and management plan, courtesy of the
ecotourism industry which is gaining ground from this town’s prime tourist
destination.
Ma. Milagros Gonzales, provincial
director of the Department of Tourism Laoag sub-office said representatives
from the National Ecotourism Development Council (NEDC) arrived in Laoag City on
April 16 to personally conduct a site inspection at the protected landscape of
Paoay Lake as a possible model ecotourism development site in the country.
The NEDC is composed of representatives
from the Departments of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources, Interior
and Local Government, Trade and Industry, Finance, National Economic
Development Authority, Education and representatives both private sector and
non-government organizations. As a policy-making body, the council is tasked to
formulate and develop a national ecotourism strategy and program for the promotion
and development of ecotourism in the country among others.
“We are blessed in the province
because the Paoay Lake Natural Park is one of the identified sites to be
developed through a community-based public and private partnership and tourism
enterprise zone,” Ms. Gonzales said.
Following the site inspection,
the technical working group for ecotourism development will be meeting with Ilocos
Norte Governor Ma. Imelda “Imee” R. Marcos for a courtesy call and to discuss
possible ways on how the largest natural lake of the province can be further
developed and promoted as an eco-tourism destination.
Paoay Lake is a natural body of fresh water without tributary. It has a depth of
about six meters ideal for boating, kayaking and rowing. The water source is
from the ground water flow and surface run-off from its surrounding hills.
Critical water level is, so far, the only known factor that affects its water
quality. As temperature increases, the water level decreases, thereby affecting
the aquatic organisms. Water quality test, however, is done periodically on a
quarterly basis.
The national park spans about 386
hectares locally known as “Dakkel a danum”. The lake was declared a
national park in 1969 by virtue of Republic Act 5631.
Based on a legendary account, Paoay Lake was formed as a punishment to the
early settlers who used to be immensely religious but turned wicked and
preoccupied by material things. Their wicked acts earned the ire of their gods,
thus submerged the place, turning it into a body of water, while the people
were made into fishes with their fancy adornments, such as jewelries, still
attached with them. These stories say that seated in Paoay Lake’s location was
a group of three villages called Gumura, Siduma and Sintapuli. The first two
villages were much like those communities, Sodom and Gomorrah, which according
to the Holy Bible, were submerged in water as a form of punishment by God to
the locals who turned wicked.
Other sources also suggest that
the lake was a result of gigantic geological displacement that hit the Ilocos
area in January 1641. A shattering earthquake followed by loud thunders and
lightning, swallowed down the place, then burst back into the sky, thus, left a
body of water.
Paoay Lake is surrounded by at
least five barangays namely: Suba in the north, Nanguyudan and Pasil in the
east, Sungadan in the south, and Nagbacalan in the west.
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