When I think of South East Asia, I think about the heat, the humidity, the ocean, the food, the jungle and of course the people. Usually the heat and humidity are two things that would keep me away from traveling to a place. But as it was one of the coldest winters in New Mexico’s history, a trip to the Philippines sounded like a pretty awesome idea.
It all started when I got a call from Andrew Taylor (AT) asking if I would be interested in traveling to the Philippines on an Adidas Adiridas Trip with Niki Leitner, Linus Sjoholm and himself. 2 years ago after the first AT’s Showdown, AT and his friend Phil Segura of rideSFO and the SF Bike Expo both found out that they have family on the same island in the Philippines, and they decided to put a mountain bike trip together.
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We all boarded a midnight flight to Hong Kong to meet up with Niki and Linus, and then caught a connecting flight to Cebu City. |
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Since the Philippines didn't have much in the ways of energy drinks, we relied on Coconut water to keep us going. |
As soon as we stepped off the plane, the humidity hit all of us. The heat and humidity were a nice change after the arctic weather, snow or rain that we all had traveled from. It was nice to go from winter to summer in one day. Phil had family in Mandaue, a city next to the Provincial capital, Cebu City, and he connected with a gravity rider through Facebook, but we were unsure of the riding scene. Shorty after arriving at Phil’s families’ house a bunch of riders started to show up to say hi. We all soon found out that the riding scene in the Philippines is bigger than we ever imagined.
We spent 15 days on the island of Cebu traveling from one side of the island to the other.
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When it came to transporting bikes to locations, we had to get a little creative with the bikes and scooters |
One half of the trip was spent in Cebu City and the other half was spent in the diving town of Moalboal. We lived in a mansion, on the beach with one of the best diving locations in the world only steps away; we bombed the highways on scooters to locations, and ate delicious food.
Our trip was no walk in the park though. We quickly learned that there wasn’t much in the way of sick riding features. We had to scout for locations and build everything by hand as fast as possible because our time was limited.
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Usually when I build trails at home I can take my time, but that was the case in the Philippines. We only had 3 days to build, and shoot the bamboo drop and jump. It was no easy task because the terrain was steep and loose to get in to but the heat and humidity beat us down. Thank goodness Schwarzenegger Litner kept the train running at full speed |
In between building a bamboo drop and jump in the middle of the jungle, we were also building a dirt jump in the town center of Moalboal to put a show for the locals. We worked from sun up to sun down, getting beat down by the sun and eaten alive by the mosquito’s.
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It was cool to see the mayor stiked on our idea to put on a demo for the town. He called in 10 dump truck loads of dirt and lent us a brand new tractor to use. When the show went down the whole town came out to check out the demo. They really got excited when everyone started to flip.
Back in the city of Cebu the riders attended DH races through bamboo forests. Shooting any of the DH trails meant battling with bamboo thorns sharp enough to draw blood.
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When I dropped in this dog came out of no where and cut me off. I followed the dog for a good 20 to 30 yards before he broke away to the side. I am pretty sure I scared the crap of him because after I passed him he started barking at me like crazy - AT |
Our 15 days in the Philippines had its downs (some of us got the flu) and a ton of ups, we couldn’t have done it with out Galvin Galan and Carlos Russell. They are local rippers that showed us around and always lent a helping hand. The trip was a once in a lifetime experience for all of us. My appreciation for athletes spending time scouting gnarly locations and building their own features for pictures and videos has gone way up. We were all able to ride in new places, witness and be apart of a new culture. In the end, it is amazing that you can almost go anywhere in the world and people can relate when it comes to riding a bike. Everywhere we went there were always little kids following us around. Many of them we saw came from poor areas and don't come from much, while others were neighborhood kids that just roamed the streets. But when we showed up, they always came out in big groups with smiles on their faces to watch or hang out with all the riders. And no we didn't go to a firing range, lets just say that the family we stayed with in Cebu City packed a lot of heat...