Melo of OutOfTownBlog.com, on the other end of the line, replied "No. It's a small car. Ilocos Norte."
"Oh.", was my only reaction. And it wasn't the 'oh-okay' kind of Oh. It was the 'oh-are-you-out-of-your-mind?!' kind.
North seemed like a good idea. But hey, not when you're driving or riding a subcompact hatchback that's relatively new in the market. The long northward road, well-trodden by all sorts of vehicles, has several parts that are under construction. For the Chevrolet Spark, passing such unpaved thoroughfares is like off-roading.
So, Ilocos Norte? Really?
Michael of MichaelAnthonySagaran.weebly.com was behind the wheel and Melo was in the front seat. The two picked us up from The Linden Suites where we stayed for a night, and offered to drop off my family in Tarlac. By that time, our destination was still uncertain.
What we were sure of, the highlands couldn't be an option for the rainy season has made its ingress in Philippine territory.
What we were sure of, the highlands couldn't be an option for the rainy season has made its ingress in Philippine territory.
After delivering my family to our
home, us bloggers pushed on northwest-bound. As miles were covered,
destinations slowly surfaced between random conversations. Destinations
in the form of food: Tupig, dinakdakan, bagnet, Vigan longganisa, pinakbet, and Batac empanada.
And we wondered, "How will the Spark fare?".
Michael was quick to notice its solid handling, a nifty trait when you
weave through city traffic. And as expected from a small car, the Chevy
Spark is fuel efficient. Also, its brakes performed well, but let's not ask
how Michael and Melo were able to test this.
The Chevy Spark's got a LED-lit
dashboard installed on the steering column that's easy to read. Other features: Remote
keyless entry, power locks, power mirrors. Quite a number of cubby
holes. It's a four-door cabin (five, including the boot) which makes it
easy for passengers to climb in.
Snub-nosed. Cute.
Venturing further north.
But it proved to be beast!
First day of our road trip/test, our end point was San Juan, La Union wherein we did bopis, sisig, grilled liempo and laing for dinner at Urbiztondo Grill House and retired in Sebay Surf Central. On the second day, after my sunbath and Michael's quickie dip at Urbiztondo Beach, we resumed our journey.
First day of our road trip/test, our end point was San Juan, La Union wherein we did bopis, sisig, grilled liempo and laing for dinner at Urbiztondo Grill House and retired in Sebay Surf Central. On the second day, after my sunbath and Michael's quickie dip at Urbiztondo Beach, we resumed our journey.
Michael breezed through La Union and Ilocos Sur municipalities until we arrived in UNESCO World Heritage Site Vigan, a city I visited (a trip I chose over my graduation march) more than a decade ago. We had late lunch at Kusina Felecitas in Granda's Inn and crossed three items off our itinerary: Bagnet, pinakbet and dinakdakan. When we finished, we proceeded to the street which Vigan is famous for, Calle Crisologo.
Eager to venture further, we only did a quick stroll then jumped back in the car. We soon drove out of the city after passing by a Vigan longganisa and bagnet store where Michael bought pasalubongs.
Eager to venture further, we only did a quick stroll then jumped back in the car. We soon drove out of the city after passing by a Vigan longganisa and bagnet store where Michael bought pasalubongs.
Truth be told, I had doubts about reaching Paoay Church — a destination we all agreed on just around noon — that same day. Not so much because I had little faith in our teensy ride, but because I knew we were pressed with time for we were also to head back home in the evening.
Thanks to Michael's skillful driving and Chevy Sparks' capability, not only did we reach the Church of Saint Augustine in Paoay way before sundown, we even had time to visit nearby Batac after. We came for empanada, and empanada we had for early dinner at Lanie's Batac Special Empanada.
Our drive back to Manila with only one stop was taxing. But the man behind the wheel and our little yellow beast did not falter. Indeed, big things come from small packages. And the Chevy Spark is a testimonial to that.
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4 comments:
June 16, 2014 at 7:27 AM
Iced Gem!
I like your job. Where do I apply? LOL.
June 16, 2014 at 8:03 AM
But you got the same job :) We just got different "assignments". Hahaha. Iced Gems FTW!
June 17, 2014 at 12:14 PM
I like your assignments better. *pouts* Haha.
June 22, 2014 at 10:28 AM
According to our 'pilot', more or less 4thou :)
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