Mount Tapulao (also known as High Peak) is the highest mountain in the Zambales Mountain Range and in the province of Zambales in the Philippines. The peak, which rises to an elevation of 2,037 metres (6,683 ft) above sea level, is located in the municipality of Palauig, Zambales. Its name is derived from the abundance of Sumatran Pine trees in the area, known in Zambal as tapolaw.[1][3]

Mount Tapulao
High Peak
Pine forest of Mount Tapulao
Highest point
Elevation2,037 m (6,683 ft)[1]
Prominence2,015 m (6,611 ft)[2]
ListingUltra
Coordinates15°28′51″N 120°7′16″E / 15.48083°N 120.12111°E / 15.48083; 120.12111
Geography
Mount Tapulao is located in Luzon
Mount Tapulao
Mount Tapulao
Location in Luzon
Mount Tapulao is located in Philippines
Mount Tapulao
Mount Tapulao
Location in the Philippines
LocationLuzon
CountryPhilippines
RegionCentral Luzon
ProvinceZambales
MunicipalityPalauig
Parent rangeZambales Mountains
Climbing
Easiest routeDampay Resettlement Area, Brgy. Salaza, Palauig
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Topographic map

The mountain was once a site of a large-scale chromite mining operations.[1] The destruction of the beautiful natural scenery is visible in the mine pits on the summit as well as other related structures along the trail. The summit offers a 360-degree vista from where you can see the other Zambales mountains on the eastern side, Lingayen Gulf to the north, and on the western side, the Zambales lowlands and the South China Sea stretching to as far south as Pundaquit in San Antonio, Zambales.

Hiking activity

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Pine forest campsite

The trail to the top of Mount Tapulao is on rolling and gradual terrain that takes hikers through a number of distinct ecosystems: from lowland grass and scrubland dominated by talahib (cogon grass) to its flanks of secondary to primary dipterocarp forest, mossy montane forest and pine forest above 1,800 metres (5,900 ft) that extends to the adjacent mountains.[3]

During wet weather, limatik or forest leeches abound especially near the streams along the way. Parts of the trail become rivulets that trekkers easily attract these critters without noticing being bitten, sticking on the human skin.

From Palauig

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View from the summit

Mount Tapulao can be reached by trekking the mining road on a ridge on the side of the mountain with the forest line starting at about 1,875 metres (6,152 ft).[1] The jump-off point is from the Dampay resettlement area in Brgy. Salaza in Palauig, which is around 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) from the Zambales Regional Highway on rough road. From the trailhead at Brgy. Dampay to the summit is around 18 kilometres (11 mi). Residents of Dampay are evacuees from the foot of Mount Pinatubo and are the "self-appointed guardians" of Mt. Tapulao under the coordination of the Municipal Tourism Authority of Palauig, Zambales.[4]

The ascent can be done in 7–8 hours while the descent can be covered in half the time. Guests and tourists aiming to climb the mountain are required to register at the barangay hall to receive further safety, security and cooperation according to the rule and guidance of the tourism authority. Farther down the settlement is a trail leading to the jump off-point for the Bagsit River whitewater river rafting.

Traverse trek

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A multi-day trek is also possible starting from the eastern side of the Mount Tapulao in Brgy. Labney in the town of Mayantoc in Tarlac province, ending in Palauig, or vice versa. The trail from the northwest is longer and a much more challenging route than the one from Zambales, but the reward is a more diverse environment and fauna.[5]

Ecosystem

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d (2007-09-01). "Mt. Tapulao (2,037+)". Pinoy Mountaineer. Retrieved on 2012-02-11.
  2. ^ "Philippines Mountains: Ultras. Listed as "High Peak (Luzon)"". peaklist.org. Retrieved 2023-02-27.
  3. ^ a b "Zambales Mountains" Archived 2013-07-18 at the Wayback Machine. NewCAPP. Retrieved on 2012-02-15.
  4. ^ "List of Ecotourism Sites in Central Luzon, Philippines". Philippine Department of Tourism Website. Retrieved on 2012-02-11.
  5. ^ "Mt. Tapulao/ Tarlac-Zambales Traverse (2,037 +)". Pinoy Mountaineer. Retrieved on 2012-02-11.
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