Langkayugan Ridge: The scenic crest connecting two mountain heights

in Amazing Nature5 months ago

Hello, Hive!

Last week, I shared with you our first taste of Bukidnon's mighty Kitanglad Mountain Range when we hiked Mt. Maagnaw. Now I'm back with a continuation of our reversed MLD2K adventure. This time, I'm taking you along the beautiful Langkayugan Ridge.

Langkayugan Ridge follows a crest connecting the two mountain masses of Mt. Maagnaw and Mt. Dulang-dulang. It is mostly a downward grassy slope surrounded by tall jungle growths on each side. From afar it looks like a dense section of low-growing weeds stretching toward Mt. Dulang-dulang but upclose, grasses such as cogon and tanglehead were actually over five feet tall. There were also forested sections lined with slender trees along the way.


After a sumptuous breakfast and coffee combo beneath the honey-tinted sunshine, the group decided to break camp and resume the climb. From the campsite, we hiked a few meters until we reached a fork that led to a steep descending trail. It took a while to adjust having gone from Maagnaw's unlimited assault but we managed to find our rythm.

We stopped at the spot that our guides refer to as the "view deck". Here, we stood in awe and unbelieving admiration for before us is an AMAZING NATURE. Mountains that, compared to yesterday, felt much closer and higher than ever before.

Langkayugan Ridge offers a 360° panoramic view of the surrounding mountains, including the entire Kitanglad Mountain Range and, on a good day, the Kalatungan Mountain Range. I would have loved to stay here a little longer and etch this moment and scenic view in mind but we had a long way ahead of us. So off we go...

Guided by a rope, we worked our way down fighting against the pull of gravity and holding on to cogon grass with saw-like blades. By the time we reached the ground, our hands were covered by cuts and scrapes.



We trudged on gently rolling terrain until we finally reached the forested area. We passed by a hunter's campsite and rested for a bit here while waiting for the other group.

We also got to see some curious symbols of respect by the Talaandig tribesmen toward the mountain deities. There were multiple wooden stakes erected and adorned with pieces of fabric and coins. According to Datu Nanlimbas, these served as offerings by hunters whenever they ask provision from nature. "Our people cannot take without leaving something in return", datu said before we went back on the trails.


We emerged from the canopied trail and were back on the open section of Langkayugan Ridge where we got a clear view of Mt. Maagnaw before it was enveloped by fog minutes later.

As we headed close to Mt. Dulang-dulang, I got a sense of pride and fear. Pride for surviving Mt. Maagnaw and fear for not knowing what lies ahead. We thrust ourselves through dense overgrown grass until we reached the spot called Bato Peak.

Bato Peak derived its name from the exposed rock that can be found along the trail. Usually, hikers traversing between Mt. Dulang-dulang and Mt. Maagnaw stop here to rest their tired knees and shoulders. Of course, James, Gio, Keight and I did the same.

There was a spot that looked like a huge bird's nest and we took turns taking picture with it. Here's Keight looking comfortable in her throne with a glimpse Mt. Kitanglad sneaking from the veil of thick fog.

Meanwhile, Gio busied himself taking cinematic videos of the solitary tree covered in white moss. We all thought it was moss but according to my research, it turns out they're lichens (a fungi-algae symbiosis). In the mountains, lichens grow on the stems and branches of older or dying trees and plants. Unlike moss that favors the shade, lichens loves the sun so they prefer to attach to those with thinning leaves/tree crowns. They're also very sensitive to pollution, hence, a good indication that the air quality of the mountains we're walking on is superb.

Now back on the trails. We actually waited a little longer for the tail group to catch up to us but it seemed that they're still further away. To save time, we decided to continue the hike. I realized that it was the right decision to leave since Langkayugan Ridge was getting crowded with the arrival of another group of Cebu-based mountaineers descending from Mt. Dulang-dulang and on their way to Mt. Maagnaw.

By 11 AM, my friends and I reached the forested slope that served as entry point to Mt. Dulang-dulang. Finally... 😁

Maria is a hopeless romantic who travels in pages and places. She is an INFP who loves sunrises and moonlight nights and reading books in between. On weekdays, she works for a self-publishing company as a copywriter. On weekends, she lives her life as a poet or hiker. She hopes to share her love for words and the world with you here on HIVE.

If you like this content, don't forget to follow, upvote, and leave a comment to show some love. You can also reblog if you want. Connect with her through PeakD, Tiktok, or Instagram. 🤍

Sort:  

Wooww! What an amazing view on top! 💙

It is! Hehe thanks

Wow this hike doesn't seem easy but you made it! And that view is really awesome plus fresh air! First time to know about lichens. They look like hair but dyed. hahaa

I didn't know about lichens before too. They really looked like hair — in fact this specific lichen is called "witch's hair" because of its length and color hehe

Amazing Bukidnon ❤️ Manifesting next year aw hahahaha

Taraaa!! Naa pay daghan didto jud. Naghuwat ra daw ninyo 😁

 5 months ago  

What beautiful landscapes, dear friend @mariasalve, and what a beautiful place they chose for this adventure. The colorful stakes of fabric from Indian beliefs caught my attention. I'm sorry that the descent was bumpy and your hands were hurt.
I appreciate that you let us know these beautiful photographs.
have a really beautiful day

Happy to know you enjoyed reading about this adventure. It was really a very special and memorable experience. ☺️

We appreciate your work and your publication has been hand selected by the geography curation team on behalf of the Amazing Nature Community. Keep up the good work!

Thank you! 🤩

Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Travel Digest #2067.

Your post has been manually curated by the @pinmapple team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

👍 ❤️ Upvoted ❤️ 👍

CommunityCuratorAuthorUpvoted By Hive Witness
@Amazing Nature@sagarkothari88@mariasalvesagarkothari88
Amazing Nature@sagarkothari88@mariasalvesagarkothari88

Empowering Amazing Nature

Upvote This Comment

Please 🙇‍♂️ Support Me Back 🙏 - Vote for me

Thank you!

Hey @mariasalve

I upvote contents, just like I've upvoted your post 🎉, to motivate content-creators 😇

By supporting many communities 🤝 by upvotes 👍 & distributing Hive Power as Gift 🎁, I help them to grow 💝 on Hive.

Don't forget to Support me back by clicking here & vote me as witness

image

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

Congratulations @mariasalve! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You received more than 4000 HP as payout for your posts, comments and curation.
Your next payout target is 5000 HP.
The unit is Hive Power equivalent because post and comment rewards can be split into HP and HBD

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

manifesting sad ko ani next year if naa na budget ahhaha