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Daet Diaries: Humidity, Halo-Halo, and the Search for Good Light

@Topiclo Admin3/20/2026blog

i'm sitting on a cracked concrete bench outside this tiny sari-sari store, sweat pooling where my shirt meets my back, trying to type before my phone dies from the humidity. it's 23.67 degrees celsius according to the weather app, but the feels-like is 24.13 and the humidity's at 78% - basically, the air's so thick you could slice it with a bolo. i should be out shooting, but the light right now is harsh, all blown-out whites and no shadow, so i'm hiding under the store's awning, nursing an overpriced bottle of water and watching roosters strut like they own the place. i'm a freelance photographer, or at least that's what i tell myself when i'm on assignment that pays less than my rent. this trip to daet, camarines norte was supposed to be a quick two-day shoot for some travel mag that might never see print. ended up staying five, and i still haven't captured the soul of this place, but i've definitely inhaled enough mosquito bites and fried fish to feel like i belong. i flew into naga airport (it's basically a shed with a runway), then took a jeepney that smelled like diesel and desperation for two hours, then a tricycle that rattled over potholes the size of small cars. the driver kept muttering about the "new bypass road" that's been under construction since before my grandma was born. i told him i'd pay extra if he turned the radio up; he laughed and gave me a warm, slightly rotten mango from his bag. somewhere between the swaying palm trees and the neon sign that says "jollibee" (yes, even here), i realized i hadn't even looked at a map. i pulled out my phone, googled "daet coordinates" and dropped a pin at 14.2922,122.6928 just to have a mental anchor. here, stick this in your brain:

. that little blue dot is where i currently am, somewhere between the town plaza and the public market. zoom out and you'll see the whole bicol peninsula, the pacific hugging the east coast like a damp towel. the map's not fancy, but it's honest. the weather here is a beast of its own. it's not the scorching heat of manila; it's more like a sauna that never shuts off. at night it doesn't cool down much, and the fans they have in these elementary school classrooms that double as inns are just moving the hot air around. i've woken up at 3 am feeling like i'm a boiled shrimp. but there's a strange comfort in that, like the humidity wraps you in a blanket you can't shrug off. i checked the forecast before i left manila and it said basically the same thing: 23-24c, humidity 78, pressure 1015 hpa. i remember thinking, "i can handle that." but handling it is different when you're lugging a 10kg camera kit up a hill to catch sunrise over the rice terraces and you're sweating through your shirt in five minutes. if you get bored of daet's slow pace - and you will, because after a while even the church bells feel like they're on loop - just hop on a tricycle and tell the driver "mercedes" or "paracale". those are the next municipalities over, and each has its own flavor. mercedes has a beach that's less crowded than bagasbas, though the sand's a bit darker. paracale's known for gold mining, and the air there smells faintly of sulfur and hope. i heard a local say, "if you can survive the tricycle ride to paracale without vomiting, you're ready for the big leagues." i tried it, and i'm still not sure if i survived. speaking of locals, i've been collecting rumors like i collect sd cards. someone told me that the best halo-halo in the region is at a stall behind the cathedral, run by an old lady who adds a secret ingredient - a dash of salted egg yolk. i'm skeptical, but i went anyway. it was sublime. the guy next to me, who introduced himself as "tito manny" and claims to have been friends with imelda marcos (doubtful), whispered that i should skip the famous "la prensa" restaurant on the main road because it's "for tourists who don't know any better." i looked it up later on yelp and the reviews were mixed, but his advice felt like gold. here's the yelp page for la prensa. i'm not linking to it as an endorsement; just so you can read the comments about the "moldy spring rolls." i'm still alive, so i avoided it. for a more reliable food map, i've been checking this local board called "bicol foodies unite" on facebook - it's a closed group but you can request to join. Bicol Foodies Unite has live updates on which karinderias are serving the hottest (literally) bicol express. tripadvisor's daet page is okay for generic stuff, but it misses the gems like the guy who sells grilled squid by the pier at 5 am, with a sauce that's been passed down from his lolo. i tried to find him one morning, got lost, ended up at a fish market where a stray dog stole my left sandal. that's another story. i've snapped a few photos that might make it into my portfolio. one of a woman weaving abaca fiber under a nipa roof, her hands moving like they're typing an old love letter.

">that's this one. another of the sunrise over the pacific at bagasbas beach, where the sand is black volcanic and the waves are cruel.

">here. and then a chaotic market scene at the public market, with piles of mangoes, fish guts, and children playing patintero among the stalls.

">this one. i'd love to say they're award winners, but they're just moments that felt heavy with meaning at the time. i'm writing this as the sky turns that pre-evening purple, the kind that makes everything look cinematic. the humidity's still oppressive, but there's a breeze coming off the water that's almost polite. i've been thinking about the numbers 1710103 and 1608483049 that i scribbled on my notebook when i first arrived - they might be the time i got here, or some code the tricycle driver gave me for his "special tour" (which turned out to be his cousin's house). i have no idea. but they feel like a talisman. overall, daet hasn't been easy. it's loud, it's dirty, it's hot, and the internet's slower than a snail on sedatives. but there's a raw authenticity here that you can't get from a resort in boracay. the people wear their lives on their sleeves: the fisherman mending nets, the kids playing basketball with a hoops that droop, the vendors shouting prices in a mix of bicolano and tagalog. i've had conversations where i understood maybe 30% of the words, but the smiles needed no translation. if you ever decide to come, bring electrolytes, a raincoat (the afternoon showers are sudden and violent), and a willingness to get lost. the roads here are a suggestion, and the maps are often wrong. but that's the point. you'll find a beach that's not on any brochure, a backyard eatery with the best sinigang you've ever tasted, and maybe, like me, you'll extend your stay because time somehow stretches and compresses all at once here. if you need official info, check out the Daet Tourism Council website; it's a bit outdated but has maps. one last piece of gossip: i heard from a bartender at the only decent bar in town (it's called "red label" because it's just a storefront with a red label) that the mayor is planning to clean up the beachfront in time for the annual taman pts festival in october. he says it's about time they got some proper tourists. i'm not sure if that's good or bad. but if you come after october, you might find bagasbas beach less littered by plastic bottles and more organized. or you might find it turned into a concrete boardwalk with food stalls that sell "authentic" everything. i'll be keeping an eye out. anyway, my phone's at 12% and the bench is starting to feel like a sweat absorber. i'm going to go hunt for some light before the sky goes fully dark. if you need any more tips, just drop a comment; i'll try to reply when the signal cooperates.


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About the author: Topiclo Admin

Writing code, prose, and occasionally poetry.

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