Concentrix Strengthens Employee Security And Well-Being Through Comprehensive Benefits

Concentrix is dedicated to enhancing employee security and well-being through a wide range of comprehensive benefits.

Vivant Water 20 MLD Desalination Plant Partners With MCWD For Water Supply In Metro Cebu

Vivant Water has entered into a significant partnership with the Metropolitan Cebu Water District to secure water supply for Metro Cebu.

Balik Probinsya Tips: 4 Ways To Maximize Your Out Of Town Trip

Summer is here, and many are heading to their hometowns for family reunions or a much-needed break. Here are ways to enhance the experience.

Empowering Communities: The Climate Resilience Toolkit For Heat Health Risks

With peak temperatures approaching, Filipino communities face critical heat-related health risks that demand immediate attention and action.

Batac Revives Traditional Games, Native ‘Kakanin’ In Farmers’ Festival

Join the fun at the Batac City farmers\' fest! Get ready for some old-school games like spinning tops and slingshot showdowns!

Batac Revives Traditional Games, Native ‘Kakanin’ In Farmers’ Festival

1032
1032

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

The five-day farmers’ festival in Batac City, Ilocos Norte, which has started, gets more playful this year with the revival of traditional games like trumpo (spinning top)-making and pal-siit (slingshot) competition.

Back in the old days, residents –young and old alike, would play trumpo, a native Filipino outdoor toy usually made of hardwood materials, and slingshot, usually made of wood from the guava tree or the madre de cacao.

“It’s so nice to see the participants having fun in the slingshot competition and trumpo-making. It brings back happy memories of our childhood,” Batac City agriculturist Mark Allan Abad told the Philippine News Agency on Thursday.

He said at least 22 adults joined the competition at the Imelda Cultural Center on Thursday, with cash prizes and freebies for the winners.

Women from the Rural Improvement Clubs of Batac City also displayed their prowess in the kakanin (native food) cook-off.

Native delicacies such as “lubi-lubi,” “suman,” “bibingka,” “bilo-bilo” and “dudol”, among others, center stage as the competition served as a platform for rural women to showcase their culinary skills and creativity in food preparation.

“We take pride and honor that we bring this up to you in recognition of our culinary heritage that we helped preserve through the years,” Mayor Albert Chua said in an interview, noting these all-time favorite Ilocano snacks are meant to be shared to guests, especially the first-time visitors.

Citing also Batac’s famous empanada, a fried crusty bread with filling, Chua said these native delicacies should also be promoted to generate more employment and livelihood.

In recognition of the farmers, considered as the backbone of the economy, the city government of Batac, through the City Agriculture Office, is staging the annual farmers’ festival from May 1 to 5, 2024.

Aside from fun-filled events celebrating the artistry and ingenuity of farmers, a grand parade of floats created by rural villages, each embodying this year’s theme: “15 Years of Batac’s Best Empowering Success Towards Agriculture”, will take the spotlight in downtown Batac on Friday.

This year’s festivities will culminate with the distribution of fertilizers, palay seeds and hybrid vegetable seeds to all its farming villages. (PNA)