Travel Magazine

Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X

By Mustachio @mustachio2011
When I first learned that Canso X had a hiking trail (through the AVP they showed during their soft opening in 2014), I was excited and promised to come back for it. Nine months rolled by then 2014 was over. 2015 came and went. I finally fulfilled that promise seven months into 2016.
A 45–minute ride from the city, the v-hire dropped five of us off at the entrance of Canso X. We were welcomed by Sir Raffy Osumo, the head of Canso X, like we were old friends. He gave us a short orientation, introduced the two guides, let us don our helmets and lifevests, and wished us a fun hike.
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso XWearing our lifevests while hiking!
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X
The hike started off easy along a slightly sloping trail. But the easy hike coupled with the hot sun, scalps under helmets, and bodies donning a lifevest, caused us to be drenched in sweat just a few hundred meters into the hike. Whenever there was shade, we would stop to catch our breath and quench our thirst.
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X
When we reached the river (or more like a stream), we happily waded in to cool off. Not much later, it was back on the mountain, uphill and downhill, passing by a carabao that was cooling off in his little pool. Excitement and nervousness came when we reached the area where the only way forward was to scramble down, get in the water, and swim to the other end.
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X
And swim. And scramble. And swim. From there on we were all grinning as we scrambled and swam, scrambled and swam, moving forward and gaining distance.
Hiking and Mini Canyoneering at Canso X
And then our grins turned into nervous laughter as we gazed down at the emerald water and was told the only way down was to jump. It wasn't high, mind you, but enough to make us ask ourselves why we ever agreed to go on this hike. I volunteered to go first, not because I had no fear, but because I was sure I'd get more nervous if I watched so many people jump.
My friend's turn
A short jump. Just two seconds in the air and into the water, where we all secretly peed in relief. I am proud to say we all did it (we had no choice). Even our friend who turned out to be afraid of jumping and who swore after that she would never ever do it again.
After that it was all easy breezy, hiking along the stream, and back on the mountain, walking uphill on grass towards Canso X where our Balamban liempo awaits.
Canso X
Brgy. Cansomoroy, Balamban, Cebu
(032) 411 1600 loc 1471 / 0923 978 7640 / 0917 721 3535 / 0930 476 2207
Please call between 8AM to 5PM only.
The hike in Canso X is a good start if you're too scared to try the Alegria/Badian canyoneering. The hike follows a 4.5–kilometer trail that can be completed in three to four hours at a leisurely pace. It is recommended to start the hike at 7AM.
Things to bring:
  • trail food and water
  • lunch – there is no restaurant in Canso X and there are no eateries nearby
  • change of clothes, towel, toiletries – Canso X has a shower area

How this mini hiking/canyoneering trip bore a hole through Mustachio's pocket:
Vhire, Ayala Terminal to Canso X (45mins) Php 120
Canso X Entrance fee Php 50
Canso X Hiking fee Php 200
Vhire, Canso X to Ayala Terminal (45mins) Php 100


Note: On Saturdays, it is possible to catch empty V-hires on the way to the city. On Sundays, you might have to go to Balamban and take a v-hire from there.

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