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Pangasinan Voyage Tips and guide

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Pangasinan is a province in Ilocos Region of in northern Luzon, the chief island of the Philippines. The capital of Pangasinan is Lingayen. Being in a somewhat fertile plain, the area is known for agricultural products like corn crops carabao milk, duhat wine, nipa hut roofings, tuba and other products.

Regions

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  • Western Pangasinan:
  • Central Pangasinan:
  • Eastern Pangasinan:
  • Southern Pangasinan:

Cities and municipalities

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Each municipality in Pangasinan has its unique characteristics and contributions to the province's cultural and economic landscape.

Map
Map of Pangasinan
  • 16.016667120.2333331 Lingayen – The provincial capital of Pangasinan and famous for its fermented fish sauce or that so-called bagoong.
  • 16.155314119.9807692 Alaminos – Home to the famous Hundred Islands.
  • 15.846794120.5218223 Alcala – Famous for its vibrant agricultural industry, particularly rice and corn production.
  • 16.05120.64 Binalonan Binalonan on Wikipedia – Known for its religious significance and the St. Peter and Paul Parish Church.
  • 16.03232120.269045 Binmaley – Famous for its freshwater fish production, known as the “Seafood Capital of the North”. They also celebrate their annual Sigay Festival.
  • 16.388056119.8947226 Bolinao – Known for its white sand beaches, Patar beach and its native product binungey, also known as bamboo cake. It is also a renowned tourist destination with stunning beaches and the iconic Cape Bolinao Lighthouse.
  • 16.046472119.8567787 Burgos (Pangasinan) – Offers many beaches and a waterfall.
  • 16.016667120.3666678 Calasiao – Home to the famous Calasiao puto (rice cake) and the St. Peter and Paul Parish Church. They also celebrate their Puto Festival annually.
  • 16.043120.3349 Dagupan – home of the tasty Bonuan bangus (milkfish), and the economic hub of the province. Known as the Bangus capital of the country, Bangus Festival is celebrated annually every month of April.
  • 15.989639119.88052810 Dasol – Town facing the coast of West Philippine Sea (South China Sea). Known for Tambobong Beach and white sand islets. It is also known for salt-making with more than 10,000 salt beds.
  • 15.820833119.90833311 Infanta – Known for its coastal charm and beautiful beaches.
  • 16.069722119.9412 Mabini (Pangasinan) – Known for its caves.
  • 15.916667120.41666713 Malasiqui – Famous for its agricultural products, including rice and vegetables.
  • 16.043889120.48555614 Manaoag – Home to the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary of Manaoag, a major pilgrimage site in the Philippines.
  • 15.7874120.292115 Mangatarem – An agricultural municipality with an expansive public market. Also known for the Manleluag Spring Protected Landscape.
  • 15.928056120.34888916 San Carlos – The "Mango-Bamboo Capital of the Philippines", and a cultural and historical center of Pangasinan. Site of the Mango-Bamboo Festival every April, an event marked by green and yellow colors, delicious mangoes and durable bamboo handicrafts and the hospitality of San Carlos' people.
  • 16.065556120.66666717 San Manuel – A municipality with a focus on farming and rural life, knowns for its San Roque Multi-Purpose Dam Project, which is the second largest dam in Asia.
  • 16.166667120.51666718 Sison – Site of numerous Cordilleran hills and mountains and waterfalls such as Antong Falls.
  • 16.065120.09619 Sual – Renowned for its power plant and coastal attractions.
  • 16.026667120.74777820 Tayug – Known for its agricultural heritage and rural landscapes.
  • 15.928889120.84194421 Umingan – Mostly just interesting for the nearby Diket Falls.
  • 15.976111120.57111122 Urdaneta – The economic center of eastern Pangasinan.

Other destinations

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  • 16.134119.776371 Umbrella Rocks, near Agno (at the mouth of the Balingcaging River). A nature's masterpiece, these rock formation are mushroom/umbrella shape boulders along the mouth of Balincaguing River, in Sabangan. OSM directions Apple Maps directions (beta) Google Maps directions
  • 15.9766120.74952 Sunflower Maze, Tayug. It is a giant maze on a farm. The 2,600-m² sunflower maze consists of more or less 8,000 sunflower plants in its 3-hectare farm. OSM directions Apple Maps directions (beta) Google Maps directions

Understand

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The name "Pangasinan" can be ambiguous; it can refer also to the people and the language.

Pangasinan's name derives from the word for "place of salt", with the root word "asin" (salt). Salt production is the main source of income, but the local economy has since diversified. It is the richest and most populous province among the four in Ilocos Region.

The local people are of the same name, Pangasinan (also called Pangasinense or Panggalatok, the latter they consider to be derogatory), but the province has been heavily settled by Ilocanos from the north, which still some natives resent. Other ethnic groups are the indigenous Sambal peoples, who live in western Pangasinan. The few ethnic Tagalogs are mostly in parts of Pangasinan bordering Tagalog-speaking Nueva Ecija.

While historically, geographically, and culturally linked to Central Luzon, Pangasinan is rather lumped up as part of Ilocos Region as a relic of the Marcos era. As a result, native Pangasinan object to calling Ilocos Region as simply Ilocos.

Talk

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The primary language is Pangasinan, though Ilocano and Tagalog are also widely used.

Pangasinan, also called Pangasinense or Panggalatok (the latter considered derogatory), is a Philippine language native to the province. It is a relative of Ilocano, which is spoken across the Ilocos region, but is more closely related to the indigenous languages of Benguet. It is co-official with English and Filipino in the province, and is used in education from kindergarten to grade 3, but it mostly exists as a spoken language. It is spoken by Ilocanos and Sambalis as second language.

Ilocano is also widely spoken, but its usage in Pangasinan is somewhat controversial due to it causing the decline in usage of Pangasinan. It is spoken by many Pangasinan people and Sambalis as second language.

Other languages are Sambal to the southwest and Bolinao to the west. Tagalog is also spoken in the towns bordering Nueva Ecija.

Get in

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By bus

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Victory Liner runs buses every hour from Manila to Alaminos, Lingayen or Dagupan (and vice versa), with stopovers at Dau and Tarlac City; some buses continue onward to Baguio through MacArthur Highway/Manila North Road (Route 2). Five Star, Victory's sister bus company, also serve the same destination pairs, but they also have a trip from Santiago in Isabela with an ordinary (non-air-conditioned) bus.

By car

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Pangasinan is served by the Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway since 2015, shortening travel time from Manila. The slower and older route from Manila is Rte 2, named MacArthur Hwy from the Tarlac boundary to Urdaneta and Manila North Rd north of Urdaneta. Other major highways to Pangasinan are Rte 55 (Romulo Hwy and Pangasinan-La Union Rd), Rte 56 (Pangasinan-Nueva Ecija Rd) Rte 114 (Pangasinan-Nueva Vizcaya Rd) and Rte 306 (Zambales Hwy).

By plane

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There is no airport in Pangasinan with commercial flights, and the two only airports, in Lingayen and Binalonan, are mostly used by general aviation and flying schools. The nearest major airport is at Clark Freeport. There are plans to build a new airport at Alaminos, but construction is stalled due to opposition from environmentalists.

Get around

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The best way to get around Pangasinan is by provincial bus, with frequent connections across key cities and towns. Major operators are Victory Liner and Five Star, Pangasinan Solid North and Dagupan Bus Line.

Highways are of a decent standard, but most will be two- to four-lane roads with homes and businesses at both sides, and lots of slow traffic and obstacles.

Jeepneys are the primary mode of local public transport around Dagupan and surroundings. On most other places, tricycles are more common, and jeepneys primarily used to service nearby towns, but are less comfortable than buses.

See

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  • Tinakayanan Falls about 10 km west of Lingayen.

Do

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  • Mountain hiking or picnicking in the mountains of San Nicolas.
  • Ziplining, other outdoor activities and a hot spring can be found west of Rosales.
  • Go island hopping and snorkelling in Hundred Island National Park.
  • Visit the largest dam in the Philippines and 16th largest in the world, the San Roque Dam located near San Manuel.
  • Malangsi Fishtival is a yearly agricultural festival in April in the town of Bayambang in the south of Pangasinan.
  • Dipalo River scenic area in San Quintin municipality

Beaches

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  • Patar White Sand Beach
  • The beaches near San Fabian in the northeastern part of Pangasinan are worth a visit
  • Tondol Beach or often referred to a Little Boracay of the North is a stunning beach near Anda in the far northwest of the region.

Buy

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For a fishy experience, try the fish market in Dagupan.

Eat

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Sleep

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Go next

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This region travel guide to Pangasinan is an outline and may need more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. If there are Cities and Other destinations listed, they may not all be at usable status or there may not be a valid regional structure and a "Get in" section describing all of the typical ways to get here. Please plunge forward and help it grow!



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