Been meaning for some time to do a @wrathofgnon style post on this beautiful and well structured place. Take a look at this photo. Can you guess which country it is in? Which continent even?pic.twitter.com/RK6ckWhL4u
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Battered constantly by high winds, it’s traditional architecture is very different to the rest of Southeast Asia. The local Ivatan people built sturdy cottages of stone, lime, wood and thatch in order to shelter from the frequent typhoons.pic.twitter.com/9JarVX8ncH
The rugged rolling hills of Batanes, while picturesque, have limited the potential for expansion of agriculture in an already very small province. This means that Batanes and it’s people have developed in a very different way to the dense over-populated region of the Philippines.pic.twitter.com/eHgQSCw5Ad
75% of the population are farmers and there are no built-up urban centres. Visitors can expect a clean and charming environment vastly different from anywhere else in Southeast Asia outside of the hill stations of Malaysia. Colonialism has also left unspoilt architectural charms.pic.twitter.com/0KaQvj2l1Y
The local Ivatan people have a great respect for their environment and believe that buildings should work in harmony with their surroundings. Land grabbing is also a grave crime in Ivatan society which has presented some of the excesses endemic to the rest of the Philippines.pic.twitter.com/bqrqGhG4Y3
Old stone Spanish bridges cross the many rivulets dotted throughout the archipelago.pic.twitter.com/PpsGiobx5T
In summary, a quaint and charming destination, and a wonderful respite from Philippine urban chaos if you ever find yourself in the region. Worth a visit.pic.twitter.com/HdMRNjuNqr
woah what the hell
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