• Skip to content
  • Jump to main navigation and login

Nav view search

Navigation

Search
  • Home
  • Provincial Profile
    • Quick Facts
    • Vision, Mission, Mandate
    • Geography
    • History & Culture
    • Major Programs & Projects
    • Awards Received
    • Organizational Structure
  • Governor's Corner
    • Inaugural Speech
    • SOPA
      • 2015
      • 2014
      • 2012
      • 2011
  • Cities/Municipalities
    • First District
      • City of Ilagan
      • Cabagan
      • Delfin Albano
      • Divilacan
      • Maconacon
      • San Pablo
      • Santa Maria
      • Santo Tomas
      • Tumauini
    • Second District
      • Benito Soliven
      • Gamu
      • Naguilian
      • Palanan
      • Reina Mercedes
      • San Mariano
    • Third District
      • Alicia
      • Angadanan
      • Cabatuan
      • Ramon
      • San Mateo
    • Fourth District
      • Santiago City
      • Cordon
      • Dinapigue
      • Jones
      • San Agustin
    • Fifth District
      • Aurora
      • Burgos
      • Luna
      • Mallig
      • Quezon
      • Quirino
      • Roxas
      • San Manuel
    • Sixth District
      • Cauayan City
      • Echague
      • San Guillermo
      • San Isidro
  • Doing Business in Isabela
    • The Queen Province of the Philippines
    • Why Invest in Isabela / Investment Priorities
    • Economic Profile
    • Business Opportunities
    • Cost of Doing Business
    • Schedule of Fair Market Values
    • Local Revenue Code
    • Local Investment and Incentive Code
    • Local Policies and Regulations
    • Statement of Support of the Provincial Government of Isabela for the Implementation of the Ease of Doing Business Law
    • Investment and Competitiveness Profile
    • LGU Directory
    • Business Directory
    • Business Advertisements
  • Tourism
    • Attractions &Tourist Destinations
    • Festivals
  • Gallery
    • Photo Gallery
    • Video Gallery
  • Contact Us
    • How To Get Here
    • Emergency Hotlines
Transparency Seal Logo.png
bids and award.png
cc_button.png
job_opportunities_button.png
hotlines_isabela.gif
Isabela-PDRRMC-Bagyo small.jpg
Isabela-PDRRMC-Baha-page small.jpg
Isabela-PDRRMC-Landslide-small.jpg
  • INFOcus The Official Newsletter of the Provincial Government of Isabela
  • ISABELA COFFEE TABLE BOOK
  • Full Disclosure Report
  • Executive Orders
  • Resolutions and Ordinances
  • Discipline Zone
  • Local Incentive Code
  • PDRRMC Isabela
  • Bojie-Rodito Opportunities
  • MASA MASID
  • Hospitals
  • HUMAN RESOURCE TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Isabela PIO Facebook
  • BRO for Education
  • Bambanti Videos
  • Queen Isabela Videos
  • PDC and PPOC Meetings
  • PICAD-PADAC Meetings
  • Share of Local Government Units from the Collection of Tobacco Excise Taxes under RA Nos. 7171 & 8240
  • LGU Links
  • Provincial Governor's Office
  • Secretary to the Sangguniang Panlalawigan
  • Provincial Administrator's Office
  • Provincial Legal Office
  • Provincial Treasurer's Office
  • Provincial Budget Office
  • Provincial Accountant's Office
  • Provincial Planning & Development Coordinator's Office
  • Provincial Agriculturist Office
  • Provincial Environment & Natural Resources Office
  • Provincial Cooperative, Livelihood and Enterprises Development Office
  • Provincial Engineer's Office
  • Provincial Social Welfare & Development Office
  • Provincial Veterinarian's Office
  • Provincial General Services Office
  • Provincial Assessor's Office
  • Provincial Human Resource Office
  • Provincial Health Office
  • Provincial Information Office
  • Public Safety Office
  • Provincial Internal Audit and Control Office
  • Isabela Tourism Office
  • Provincial Warden's Office
  • Provincial Youth Development Office
  • Isabela Coastal Development Office
  • Provincial Project Management Implementing Unit
  • Provincial Employment Service Office
  • Compound Maintenance Office

Calendar of Activities

«
<
June 2025
>
»
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
1 Corinthians 16-14.png

Visitors Counter

031930439
Visitors Counter
  • Print
The ‘bambanti’ represents the best of Isabela and her people–silent but vigilant and resilient
 
By: Linda B. Bolido
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:06 AM May 08, 201

Although named after a Spanish queen, the province of Isabela celebrates yearly the lowly scarecrow, which despite being inanimate, has been a “friend” to farmers in many parts of the world, including the Philippines, for generations.

The scarecrow or bambanti in Ilocano, the predominant language in the second northernmost province, has been the low-technology protector of farmlands from birds that would otherwise devastate agricultural crops.

Not surprisingly, for Isabela, self-proclaimed center of agriculture in the country, the bambanti represents the best of the province and her people—silent but vigilant and resilient.

The Agri-Ecotourism Fair this year was participated in by majority of Isabela’s 34 municipalities and three cities, including the capital Ilagan.

Isabela enthusiastically pursues the one town-one product (OTOP) campaign initiated by then President Fidel V. Ramos.

This was evident in the offerings of every booth in the agri-ecotourism fair including chocolate-scented pinilisan red rice, corn (Isabela is reputedly the country’s corn capital), sugar, cacao, monggo and other legumes, mushrooms, mangoes, ube, and various rice cakes.

The distinctive products of each town were also showcased in the giant bambanti that “guarded” the agri-tourism booths. Beans and legumes, rice, corn, seashells and many other materials went into the making of the different scarecrows, depending on the main crop or product of the town or city they represented.

  • Print

BY ALYSSA ASHLEY LUCAS (The Manila Times) ON FEBRUARY 18, 2018

Considered the “Queen Province of the North,” Isabela exuded an aura of pride and joy as the last fireworks lit up the sky. The crowd applauded, ending the night on a high—after months’ worth of laborious preparation made for a successful 2018 Bambanti Festival.

Typically overlooked as a tourist destination, Isabela actually abounds with white beaches and highlands of the neighboring provinces. Add the vast fields of rice and corn blanketing its land, which are commonly mistaken as the only sights in the province. While the fields are a great sight, they often obscure what the northern beauty really has to offer.

Seeing past through its thriving agricultural production, though, one will see a province rich in culture with a vibrant past, gorgeous attractions, and beautiful people that make up its northern charm.

Bambanti – the Ilocano word for scarecrow – is an award-winning festivity that honors the hard work and dedication of Isabeliños, as well as a showcase of the province’s commodities. It is likewise known as one of the biggest festivals in the north that people from different parts of the country attend each year.

With this year’s festival theme, “Isabela Kong Mahal” (Isabela, My Beloved Land), the northern province became a feast to the eyes for one glorious week in January. Gorgeous booths delicately lined up, built and designed with intricate details from the 34 municipalities and three cities attracted visitors for the wide variety of indigenous products worthy of global recognition.

  • Print

By Bernard L. Supetran (Business Mirror) - February 18, 2018

Dubbed the “Queen Province of the North,” Isabela is regarded as the country’s agriculture powerhouse being the biggest producer of corn, the second-largest producer of rice and a host of other major crops. Sandwiched by the Sierra Madre and Cordillera mountain ranges, it boasts of vast fertile plantations as far as your eyes can see. 

In the middle of these sprawling farms are the ubiquitous scarecrows or straw human effigies, the old-fashioned figures used to keep birds away from feasting on the crops to ensure a bumper harvest.

So, when Isabela decided to throw a party to celebrate its bountiful yield, it can be no other than a tribute to its unlikely hero, which has been quietly helping them since for ages—the scarecrow, known locally as “bambanti.”

Thus, in 1997, the provincial government under then-Gov. Benjamin Dy formally introduced the Bambanti Festival to pay tribute to the farm icon through a colorful and well-choreographed parade of contingents from the towns mimicking the animated dance of the scarecrow if he is to come to life.

But what makes this festivity unique is the massive parade of some 1,000 dancers around the Isabela Sports Complex in a spectacular multimedia production putting the spotlight on the role of the tell-tale bambanti. A fusion of synchronized dance, and an opera- and ballet-type musical purposely-written for the event, the show could be easily compared to an opening number to the Olympic Games.

Coupled with cartoon animation, techno-pop music, and capped by a pyrotechnics display makes the show a cut above the rest, enough to make it a perennial winner in the Aliwan Fiesta competitions.

Held originally in May to coincide with the provincial founding day, it was moved to the fourth week of January a few years back to time it with the harvest season.

 

  • Print
Julie Cabatit-Alegre (The Philippine Star) - February 15, 2018 - 12:00am
 

 MANILA, Philippines — Bambanti. It is the Ilocano word for “scarecrow.” In Isabela, where close to 69 percent of the population are Ilocanos, the province’s premier festival is named after the bambanti. The annual festivity not only pays tribute to the figurative guardian of the rice fields but also displays a literal outpouring of joy and thanksgiving for a bountiful harvest.

Located on the northeastern seaboard of Luzon, Isabela is the country’s second largest province in terms of land area, occupying almost 40 percent of the Cagayan Valley region. With its rolling terrain and fertile plain, between the foothills of the Central Cordillera mountain range to the west, the Sierra Madre to the east, and the grand Cagayan River that runs through it, Isabela thrives primarily on agriculture. It is the country’s No. 1 corn and monggo producer, as well as the country’s biggest rice surplus producer.

The Mindanao Grains Corn Processing facility in the municipality of Reina Mercedes is the biggest post-harvest plant in Asia. The Magat Dam in Ramon is the biggest dam in Southeast Asia, supplying the energy needs of Central Luzon and Metro Manila while servicing the irrigation needs of 95,000 hectares of farmland all year round.

With the theme “Isabela kong mahal” (Isabela, my beloved), this year’s Bambanti Festival, which was held from Jan. 22 to 27, featured a weeklong Agri-Ecotourism Exhibit and Sale at the pop-up Bambanti Village within the grounds of the provincial capitol in Ilagan City.

The 34 municipalities and three cities of the province set up their individual booths, each showcasing the different products they are best known for, such as mung beans (monggo) from San Mateo; aromatic red rice called Pinilisa from Jones; rice wine made from brown rice from Luna; moriecos, a sticky rice cake (suman) stuffed with latik (coconut syrup) from Cabatuan; Inatata (an Ibanag name), tiny suman also known as bala-bala, so called since they resemble a magazine of bullets when strung together; and pancit miki from Cabagan, to mention just a few of the many local products

Page 32 of 45

  • Start
  • Prev
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • 31
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • Next
  • End
  • DTI
  • Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions
  • CITEM-CAEXPO

© 2023. The Official Website of the Province of Isabela