Tourists gathered under the "Welcome to Banaue" archway sign at the entrance to Banaue, surrounded by greenery and vehicles in the background.

Sagada Unfolded: My Cave Connection Story

✧ Series Note – Banaue–Sagada–Benguet 2015 ✧
Some journeys change your map; others change your soul.
This three-day passage through the highlands left footprints not just on trails but on memory.
📅 Travel Dates: May 01-03, 2015

Sagada had been whispering to me for years—through stories of hanging coffins, pine-scented air, and caves that dared you to crawl through darkness. In 2015, I finally answered that call. As a Pinoy backpacker, I’ve always chased adrenaline and authenticity. This trip gave me both and more.

Tourists gathered under the "Welcome to Banaue" archway sign at the entrance to Banaue, surrounded by greenery and vehicles in the background.
When the welcome sign is as popular as the rice terraces, Banaue’s entrance is the ultimate selfie spot!

🗺️ The Journey Begins

We left Manila at 11 PM on April 30, bound for Sagada via the Manila–Banaue–Bontoc–Sagada route. Caught in a midnight traffic jam, we reached Banaue around 7 AM.

We arrived in Banaue around 7 AM for a quick breakfast, restroom breaks, and a bit of souvenir shopping. For more details on this leg of the journey, check out my Banaue: Where the Mountains Remember

Sunlit Banaue rice terraces carved into the mountains with surrounding lush greenery under a bright sky in 2015.
Nature’s staircase to rice heaven—the Banaue terraces proving farming can be a scenic adventure!

Breakfast at Garden Snack House—overlooking the emerald folds of the Banaue Rice Terraces—was a comforting pause. Red rice, longganisa, and a ₱20 cup of coffee never tasted so grounding. Banaue, the gateway to the terraces etched into our ₱20 bill, felt like home. But Sagada was still calling.

🌲 Arrival in Sagada

By 11 AM, we arrived in Sagada. It felt foreign yet familiar—like stepping into a postcard from a colder, quieter world. The pine trees towered like sentinels, and the houses beneath them looked like alpine cabins from a dream. Elizabeth Guesthouse became our base, tucked just a few meters from the town’s heartbeat.

Pine trees under a bright blue sky with scattered clouds and vehicles parked along a roadside in Sagada, Mountain Province.
Sagada traffic jam: pine trees, clouds, and a few vans soaking up the mountain breeze.

🕯️Cave Connection: Lumiang to Sumaguing

That afternoon, we braved the famed Cave Connection: Lumiang to Sumaguing. It was my first spelunking experience, and I won’t lie—my inner claustrophobe was screaming. But I made it. We all did.

Lumiang greeted us with ancient coffins stacked solemnly at its mouth—a burial tradition that felt sacred and surreal. Inside, we squeezed through rock crevices, guided only by gas lamps and the calm voices of our local guides (whose names I regret not asking).

Close-up view of a cave formation with stalactites and dark water inside a cave in Sagada, Mountain Province, 2015.
When Mother Nature gets artsy underground—Sagada caves showing off their dripstone bling!

Sumaguing, the Big Cave, was a cathedral of stone. Formations like the Queen, the King’s Curtain, and the Dinosaur’s Feet loomed in the shadows. We emerged hours later, scraped, tired, and triumphant.

Collage of four photos showing groups of people enjoying and exploring the cave formations and underground river in Sagada, Mountain Province, 2015.
Squad goals: mastering cave chill and rock poses—Sagada’s underground playground for adventurers!

We emerged from Sumaguing Cave after sunset, tired but triumphant. It was a new kind of adventure for me—one that tested my limits and reminded me what I was capable of. I won’t deny the claustrophobia that crept in, but I made it. We all did. No one backed out. And that, in itself, was a quiet victory.

Collage of four photos showing groups of people exploring dark and rocky caves in Sagada, Mountain Province, in 2015 with flashlights and natural rock formations.
When spelunking turns into a group bonding event—Sagada caves bringing out the adventurer (and the flashlight holder) in everyone!

That night, dinner was a blur. Sleep came easy. Our bodies were sore, but our spirits were lit. Sagada had tested us—and gifted us stories we’d carry for years.

A group of friends sitting in a circle on the ground at night, illuminated by two lanterns in the center, smiling and enjoying each other's company.
Lantern light, good vibes, and circle time — because who needs electricity when you have friends?

✍️ Final Note

Adventure has always called to me as a backpacker. Sagada, with its caves, pine forests, and quiet mystique, was a long-standing dream—and in 2015, I answered it. I didn’t just tick off a bucket list item. I faced something that scared me. There’s a claustrophobic in me, but that day—I made it.

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