IN PHOTOS: Baguio’s 24th Panagbenga Festival

Mau Victa

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IN PHOTOS: Baguio’s 24th Panagbenga Festival
The City of Pines' annual flower festival is in full bloom this year

BAGUIO CITY, Philippines – For this year’s 24th Baguio Flower Festival, themed “Blooming Forward,” participants from 7 elementary schools danced their way down Session Road in this city wearing colorful ethnic attires to formally open the 24th Panagbenga Festival on Friday, February 1.

The performers came from different public schools in the city, such as Lucban Elementary School, Tuba Central School, Apolinario Mabini Elementary School, Jose P. Laurel Elementary School, Baguio Central School, Dontogan Elementary School, and Manuel L. Quezon Elementary School.

Photo by Mau Victa/Rappler

Lucban ES performers wore attires with Cordillera motif, accented with Alstroemeria flowers and used props made from painted recycled cartons, plastic bottles, foam formed into flowers, and satin paper.

Apolinario Mabini ES depicted their love for the festival and Baguio’s beauty by using the rose – the floral symbol of love, and also used to convey respect, admiration, devotion, purity, chastity, and innocence. It’s its drum and lyre accompaniment serenaded the audience with a mash-up of OPM love songs and the Panagbenga hymn. 

Tuba Central School’s dance presentation interpreted “Lotus Flower,” which they chose because of the flower’s fascinating will to live and how it symbolizes spiritual enlightenment and rebirth. “Like the lotus, may we live life with unwavering faith, as the flower does, ensures the most revivals,” they said as they described their performance.

Jose P. Laurel ES called their presentation “Sustaining Baguio City as a haven and living paradise of the North.” They used the spectral colors of red, orange, blue, green, and yellow which are the dominant colors of the flower birds of paradise.

The performers’ dresses were patterned after their featured flower, while the props were made of recycled insulators, plastic bottles, and duct tape. They danced to the music of “It’s more fun in the Philippines” to highlight the ever-blooming tourist industry of the city.

The Manuel L. Quezon ES presented “the Stargazers Panagbenga Thanksgiving Dance.” They said the stargazer lily is a potent symbol because of its intense color and attractive shape when it blooms. Their performers danced to the music of a Cordillera folk song called “Nan layad, o naranyag a bulan” and the Panagbenga tribute song. 

Photo by Mau Victa

Dontogan ES performers used props made of recycled soft drink bottles, leaves, colored paper, and boxes. The costumes were designed with colorful flowers, ethnic sandals. and headdresses, while the male performers wore G-strings for their performance called “Pepeyan Taha Panagbenga.” 

All 7 contingents will perform and compete during the grand street dancing parade on  March 2 and  for the float parade on March 3.

Here are other photos of the spectacular parade. All photos by Mau Victa

 

 

 – Rappler.com

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