Farola Series: Faro de Isla Capul (Capul Island Lighthouse)

Capul Island

Standing proud on the northern tip of the island town of Capul, Northern Samar is the lonely sentinel of San Bernardino Strait, the Faro de Isla Capul or Capul Island Lighthouse, one of the few remaining operational Spanish Era lighthouses in the country.

Capul Lighthouse
On top of a grassy hill of Titoog Point, San Luis, Capul is its century old lighthouse

Situated on hill known as Titoog Point of Barangay San Luis, the lighthouse of Capul Island is a towering 39 feet conical structure made up of granite. It was constructed in 1893 and partially completed in 1896 when it was first lit. The base is in a ruined keeper’s house 110 feet above sea level. It has a white conical tower with red markings and focal plane(height of the lamp above sea level) of 142 feet or 43.3 meters that flashes white light every 17 seconds and can be seen within 18 miles radius.

The lighthouse is still being utilized by the Philippine Coast Guard. A room in the keeper’s house serves as their sleeping quarter and the whole compound is their home. The walls of keeper’s house are similar to the keeper’s house of Palaui Lighthouse while the dilapidated rooms and roofs are pictures of Capones’. It is easily accessible from the Poblacion via the cemented road that leads direct to it. One can ride a habal-habal (motorbikes) to go there, rate is P200 round trip from the Poblacion.

Capul Lighthouse
The towering 39 feet conical lighthouse tower

Faro de Isla Capul is a national gem and heritage, worthy of distinction for its historical and architectural importance. A silent witness to the evolving times and rich history of the Capul Island. It is looking forward for official recognition and landmarking from the National Historical Commission which is tentatively slated on July 30, 2012.

Capul Lighthouse
Capul Lighthouse and its keeper’s house

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How to Go to Capul Island

From Allen, Samar: A boat departs from Looc every 12 noon daily, fare is P50.00. From Dapdap, a boat leaves in the afternoon on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Weekends, fare is also P50.00. Travel time is 30-45 minutes. Alternatively, if you miss the boat, you can go to the town of Victoria and ride a public boat to San Antonio Island (P40 / 30 minutes ride), then ride a habal-habal to Sitio Dalupirit (P35 / 10 minutes ride), and charter a boat going to Capul Island (P300 / 30 minutes ride).

From Matnog, Sorsogon: A boat departs daily from Matnog at 11 or 12 noon. The boat is not in the main ferry terminal but on the beach on the side of the port, near the bus terminal, fare is P100 and travel time is 45 minutes to an hour.

Comments

  1. Walter Otstott

    Is the strait shallow enough to see the wreck of the Musashi?

  2. Walter Otstott

    How about pictures of San Bernardino Strait from the observation deck? Witnessing the Battle of San Bernardino in 1944 wherein the super battleship, Musashi was sunk must have been incredible!

  3. RON

    im not sure if you’ve seen the coffee table book about the sentinels of the sea in the Philippines. but you should do a project to visit all of them. i was it in power books when i was in the Philippines.

    Magandang project yun!

    1. Narinig ko na nga iyan Ron, but I haven’t seen it yet. Like that book, I want to visit and document all our lighthouses 🙂

  4. ang dami talagang hidden treasures ng samar 🙂

    1. Exactly! I am targeting to explore more of Samar next year 🙂 It is the third largest island in the Philippines after Luzon and Mindanao and am certain it has a lot to offer 🙂

  5. Jaclyn

    Hi there,

    I’m representing HK Disneyland looking for bloggers to send over to Hong Kong Disneyland in 2012 for a sponsored trip and in exchange bloggers would have to do a few blog coverage on Hong Kong Disneyland on behalf of the client.

    Shall you be keen, please email me at [email protected]

    I have previously sent some bloggers like Hannah (flaircandy.com) and Vince (vincegolangco.com) for 2011 and we are keen to work with more bloggers for 2012.

    Do hope to hear from you soon!

    Thanks!

  6. so nice! too bad, i missed this when i went to northern samar… sana ma visit ko na ‘to next time…

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