Ang nuno, where the town got its name...stems from the town's equally colorful folklore and legends. |
Intrigued by the much-heard about festival of higantes, my friends and i travelled to Angono to be part of its celebration. |
The feast of San Clemente, the little girls garbed in colorful and fancy dresses, the banderitas....and the Higantes. Yup, we have arrived. |
The Higantes, made of paper mache in the olden times and resin for some of them now is definitely still the highlight of the festival. Its one of the things that put Angono on the map. |
On top of the display table, we got sight of these cool replicas of higantes. Mini-gantes anyone? |
The family, aside from nuno, symbolizes this festival. The 'Mag-anak' consisting of the father, mother and son is an all-time favorite. |
Still,the higantes never fail to captivate our newbie eyes...colorful, enchanted and vivacious.... |
We never got to see the fluvial parade, since it started at 4 am down the river. But we got to witness the colorful parade of parehaderas... |
and their spectacular trainers cum crazy majorettes.... |
The parade isnt just a parade...its a career! all the pretty dresses...the prettier the girls, the shorter it gets! or so it seemed. |
The colors are heaven to photographers and 'feeling' photographers like me! |
Yup, dont dare miss their leads, they come in all sorts... |
Small as they are, and tired as they are...they still parade with pride.... |
Ok, so its not just for the little ones.... |
But for all ages, from the young to the old.... |
To the most pretty.... |
To the weird... |
To the truly bizarre and macabre... |
And so it goes. These are not just spectators. Every body has their own guns and ammunitions: squirt guns, pails, pitchers...anything that can hold water....yup, even firetrucks....lots of them! |
See? even the Virgin Mary is prepared.... |
In between drenching...revel at the marvels you'll see at the streets...rich, lively..... |
And definitely, definitely weird.... |