What is pawikan Festival in Bataan?

What is pawikan Festival in Bataan? The Pawikan Festival is an annual celebration of the endangered ‘pawikan’ or sea turtles. It’s usually held at the end of November up to the beginning of December in

What is pawikan Festival in Bataan?

The Pawikan Festival is an annual celebration of the endangered ‘pawikan’ or sea turtles. It’s usually held at the end of November up to the beginning of December in Morong, Bataan, but the festival itself garners the attention of the whole of Bataan.

Where is pawikan festival celebrated in Bataan?

Morong
Held annually at the Pawikan Conservation Center in Barangay Nagbalayong in Morong, Bataan, the Pawikan Festival celebrates the community-based conservation of pawikans or sea turtles established here in 1999.

What region is pawikan Festival in?

Bataan
The Pawikan Festival is held yearly at the Pawikan Conservation Center in Morong, Bataan. The main activity here is the releasing of the baby pawikan, which are hatched in the conservation center.

What is the difference between pagong and pawikan?

Pawikan in English is called Sea Turtle; while Pagong in English is Tortoise. Pawikans have four flippers; while Pagongs have four legs. Pawikans mostly have flat, streamlined shells; while Pagongs mostlye have large dome-shaped shells.

What are the culture of Bataan?

The province of Bataan has always been linked closely to the culture and economy of Manila. Much of what the province produces is exported to Manila. The primary traditional industry of Bataan is fishing. It is the home of thousands of fishermen whose industry has spawned a unique craft of net and fishtrap making.

Can tortoises swim?

Tortoises cannot swim. At most, they can float and drift, and if they’re lucky they’ll bump into land. Some species of tortoises can swim poorly, but most will simply sink and drown. While it is sad that so many people throw tortoises into the water believing they’re saving a baby turtle, the viral video did help.

What is the meaning of Pawikan?

n. Any of various large marine turtles of the families Cheloniidae and Dermochelyidae, including the green turtle, loggerhead turtle, Kemp’s ridley, olive ridley, hawksbill, and leatherback, having flippers adapted for swimming and living chiefly in tropical and subtropical oceans.