A&B Travelers Den

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

'HALF' of occupied Business space for rent (SUBLEASE ONLY)

'HALF' of occupied Business space for rent in Cagayan de Oro City - Divisoria area (SUBLEASE ONLY)


You will be sharing space with travel/ticketing outlet (A&B Travelers Den). Open Space with ceiling fans as ventilation. No rest room/water but with fitting room




Location Rizal corner JR Borja street, block behind Giftmate, DBP, Landbank Capistrano. Near Somo and old Skyhi Cinema.

Located on corner road leading to New CARMEN-JR BORJA Bridge.

Street in front of main door passed by public jeepneys/motorelas (Lapasan, Limketkai, Kauswagan, Bonbon, Bayabas, NHA liners.

Street on the other side passed by private vehicles going into Carmen or Divisoria, vice versa. Near banks, LBC, pera padala outlets and other establishments


contact 09175983071 or 09985321307 if interested

check MAP of Location via google maps

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Cebu Pacific Promo for Jan-Mar2013

Latest Cebu Pacific Promo P800 on select destinations for Jan-Mar2013 flights

call us (088)850-1728 or talk to us thru YM: travelersden or kimyahtravelersden or follow @travelersden on twitter or like www.facebook.com/travelersden and be updated with the latest airfare promos.

promo Manila to Busuanga promo
promo Busuanga to Manila promo
promo Cagayan De Oro to Manila promo
promo Manila to Cagayan De Oro promo
promo Manila to Bacolod promo
promo Bacolod to Manila promo
promo Manila to Butuan promo
promo Butuan to Manila promo
promo Manila to Cauayan promo   
promo Cauayan to Manila promo
promo Manila to Cebu promo 
promo Cebu to Manila promo
promo Manila to Caticlan promo  
promo Caticlan to Manila promo
promo Manila to Legaspi promo
promo Dipolog to Manila promo
promo Cotabato to Manila promo
promo Manila to Davao promo 
promo Davao to Manila promo
promo Manilato Cotabato promo
promo Manila to Dipolog promo
promo Manila to Dumaguete promo
promo General Santos to Manila promo
promo Kalibo to Manila promo
promo Dumaguete to Manila promo
promo Legaspi to Manila promo
promo Manila to Naga promo
promo Laoag to Manila promo
promo Manila to Laoag promo
promo Manila to Kalibo promo
promo Manila to General Santos promo
promo Manila to Iloilo promo
promo Iloilo to Manila promo
promo Naga to Manila promo
promo Caticlan to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Clark promo
promo Clark to Cebu promo
promo Puerto Princesa to Manila promo
promo Manila to Puerto Princesa promo
promo Ozamiz to Manila promo
promo Manila to Pagadian promo
promo Cebu to Butuan promo
promo Butuan to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Caticlan promo
promo Manila to Surigao promo
promo Manila to Ozamiz promo
promo Surigao to Manila promo
promo Manila to Tagbilaran promo
promo Tagbilaran to Manila promo
promo Manila to Tacloban promo
promo Tacloban to Manila promo
promo Manila to Tuguegarao promo 
promo Tuguegarao to Manila promo
promo Manila to Virac promo
promo Virac to Manila promo
promo Manila to Zamboanga promo 
promo  Zamboanga to Manila promo
promo Cebu to Cagayan De Oro promo 
promo Cagayan De Oro to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Bacolod promo 
promo Bacolod to Cebu promo
promo San Jose to Manila promo
promo Manila to San Jose promo
promo Manila to Roxas promo
promo Roxas to Manila promo
promo Pagadian to Manila promo
promo Davao to Kalibo promo 
promo Kalibo to Davao promo  
promo Davao to Puerto Princesa promo 
promo Puerto Princesa to Davao promo 
promo Cebu to Kalibo promo
promo Davao to Cagayan De Oro promo
promo Cagayan De Oro to Davao promo
promo Cebu to Davao promo
promo Davao to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Dipolog promo 
promo Dipolog to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Dumaguete promo 
promo Dumaguete to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to General Santos promo
promo General Santos to Cebu promo
promo Ozamiz to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Pagadian promo 
promo Pagadian to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Iloilo promo 
promo Iloilo to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Legaspi promo 
 promo Legaspi to Cebu promo
promo Puerto Princesa to Cebu promo
promo Zamboanga to Cebu promo
promo Davao to Iloilo promo
promo Cebu to Tacloban promo 
promo Tacloban to Cebu promo
promo Cebu to Surigao promo   
promo Surigao to Cebu promo
promo Iloilo to Davao promo
promo Siargao to Cebu promo
promo Davao to Zamboanga promo  
promo Zamboanga to Davao promo
promo Cebu to Zamboanga promo
promo Cebu to Siargao promo
promo Cebu to Puerto Princesa promo
promo Cebu to Ozamiz promo
promo Zamboanga to Tawi-Tawi promo 
promo Tawitawi to Zamboanga promo
promo Iloilo to Cagayan De Oro promo 
promo Cagayan De Oro to Iloilo promo


Cebu Pacific Promo for August 2012
Cebu Pacific Promo for September 2012
Cebu Pacific Promo for October 2012
Cebu Pacific Promo for November 2012
Cebu Pacific Promo for December 2012
Cebu Pacific Promo for January 2013
Cebu Pacific Promo for February 2013
Cebu Pacific Promo for March 2013

Airphil Promo for August 2012

Airphil Promo for September 2012
Airphil Promo for October 2012
Airphil Promo for November 2012
Airphil Promo for December 2012
Airphil Promo for January 2013
Airphil Promo for February 2013
Airphil Promo for March 2013
Zestair Promo for August 2012

Zestair  Promo for September 2012
Zestair Promo for October 2012
Zestair Promo for November 2012
Zestair Promo for December 2012
Zestair Promo for January 2013
Zestair Promo for February 2013
Zestair Promo for March 2013

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Amanpulo, An Expensive Piece of Heaven


Pamalican is a small island situated at the northern part of the Province of Palawan located in the Philippines. It is estimated to measure five kilometers long and five hundred meters wide. 

The island used to be a coconut plantation owned by a struggling family and was later purchased by a businessman, Andres Soriano Jr.   Soriano’s family then decided to put up an exclusive resort.  The island then became a private property and was managed by the 7 Seas Resort which was also owned and managed by the Soriano Family.  It became part of a high-end resort group which is the Aman Group and they named the resort Amanpulo.

Amanpulo Resort can be accessed by booking a scheduled one hour flight from Manila.  A staff from the resort meets up with the guests at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport and then they will be transferred to a lounge where a private chartered plane that takes them to the island awaits.

Upon arrival, the resort will never fail take your breath away as its luscious green environment, pure white sands and crystal blue waters welcome you.  The services being offered in the resort will also captivate you making you wish you will be staying in the resort for good. As soon as you set foot on the resort, its staff will give you complimentary champagne and canapés.  A golf cart is also available for ones use to tour around the resort. Each resort guest will also have a personal attendant who will cater to any request at all times. In fact, the staff constantly reminds every guest that they have 250 staff ready to serve 100 guests.

As for the resorts facilities, the management sees to it that everything is extra ordinary in luxury and size.  Their guesthouse which they called casitas is subtly concealed in lush vegetation which makes it perfectly private. The casitas were constructed in three different locations, the beach, tree top and hillside area.  These places were strategically selected because they offer the best views in the island.  The floor area inside each room measures 65 square meters and the windows are huge bringing immense light inside.  Aside from that, the floors are made out of polished wooden floors, the walls are painted beige and the furniture is made out of rattan and the accessories are locally crafted making the interior design remarkable and expensive.

The resort also has a restaurant that is located in the Clubhouse and from there, one can see Manamoc Island.  They also have a bar, a 30 meter long aqua tiled swimming pool, a beach and lagoon club, a picnic groove, a library and a medical clinic.  They also have recreational facilities such as spas, a tennis court, a dive center and a sea sports hut.  If you want to shop, their resort also has a boutique and a gallery where one can buy products made from Palawan.  If ever there are couples who want to savor the romantic appeal of the environment and tie the knot, the resort also has an outdoor chapel that they call Grotto to cater to special events like this.

Due to this carefully thought, set up and blessed nature, the resort had been winning awards for so many years.  In 2007 alone, the resort won the three (3) Gallivanter’s Guide Awards for Excellence as the Number 1 Best Small Hotel under 100 Rooms category, first place on the Best Resort in South East Asia category and placed third on the Best Leisure Resort Worldwide category. In 2009, the resort was selected to be one of Andrew Harper’s Hideaway Report Readers’ Choice Top 20 Beach Resorts and also placed fourth on the Gallivanter’s Guide Awards for Excellence Best Resort in South East Asia Category.  Just last year, the resort placed second in the Gallivanter’s Guide Awards for Excellence Best Leisure Resort Worldwide category.

If there is a downside to staying in Amanpulo, it is only because of their rates. The cheapest rate would cost as much as US$ 1,050 a day. But who wouldn’t spend and empty their wallets if one wishes to catch even a glimpse of what heaven could be like. A heaven that is just within our very own Philippines.

Palawan’s Underground Beauty of Nature

The Province of Palawan is blessed with so many beautiful, panoramic and breath-taking islands and islets.  Once there, it’s up to you to decide whether to stay in the city, go to beaches or head out and see for yourself what well-known tourist destinations you will try and visit.

Lately, Palawan is at the center of the world’s attention when one of its well-known tourist destinations was voted as one of the choices among the 28 tourist sites to be inducted as the newest 7 Wonders of Nature.  This well known destination is the Puerto Princesa Underground River.  But what is it about the site that made it stood out from among the rest of the choices.

Actually, the underground river was first named as St’ Paul’s Cave but was later renamed as St. Paul’s Underground River National Park by the locals. The City Government had been managing the National Park since 1992 with the help of the locals. On the 26th of March 1971, it was officially named as Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park under Proclamation No. 835. 

The Palawan Underground River was tagged as the world’s longest passable underground river.  It is located in a town called Bahile, an 8.1 kilometer travel away from Puerto Princesa’s city proper. It is situated under a cliff and is more than eight kilometers long but, only four kilometers out of its entire length can be surveyed by a banca (handmade boat) that is being navigated by a guide. The banca is equipped with a handmade kerosene torch that serves as their light. Once inside the cave, one can see different formations of stalactites and stalagmites that resemble fruits, birds and even religious images. 

Lately, a team of Italian scientists discovered fossils from a Sirenia, better known as Sea cow or Dugong in the native language. It was believed to have been more or less twenty (20) million years old.  Ribs and parts of its spine were plastered in the rocks on the ceiling of the cave.  The scientists do not want to extract it and they don’t want to remove it either.  They just want to study it using their technologies without making any damage to the said fossils. Scientists said that these fossils might be older to those exhibited in the United States.

Several months ago, the New7Wonders movement founded by Bernard Weber had a worldwide campaign which was to elect seven (7) wonders of the world.  There were actually 28 places that made the cut. Most of them came from America, United Kingdom, and a few from Asia and luckily, The Puerto Princesa Underground River from the Philippines was nominated as one of the finalists. 

How did the Puerto Princesa Underground River manage to be one of the finalists? One reason why it was voted as one of the finalists was its untouched nature.  Though locals and foreigners had been visiting the place, the local government worked hard to see to it that it is well-maintained, unpolluted, unharmed and undisturbed. The great effort from the local government together with the endorsement of the local media and its personalities, and the help of social networks like Facebook and twitter, campaigns were made to gain votes for Puerto Princesa Underground River to make it to the top seven and be named as one of the Seven Wonders of Nature.  The effort they have exerted won them the prize they are longing for when on the 11th of November 2011, the Underground River of Palawan was acknowledged as one of the newly proclaimed Seven (7) Wonders of the Nature which is currently at the 6th place in the preliminary counting.

Sinigang, the Filipino Soup for the Soul


This Filipino food is similar to Indonesia’s Sayur Asem, Vietnams Canh Chua, Thailand’s Tom Yam and Malaysia’s Singgang.

Samples of sinigang are:
  • Sinigang na Hipon
  • Sinigang sa Miso
  • Sinigang na Bangus
  • Sinigang na Hipon
  • Sinigang na Tilapia
  • Sinampalukang Manok ( Chicken sinigang with Tamarind leaves)

If you wish to make one yourself, try the menu we have below:

SINIGANG NA HIPON

·  1 Kilo Shrimp
·  12 pcs Tamarind (Sampaloc) or 1 pack Sinigang Mix
·  1 big Onion (diced)
·  3 big tomatoes (quartered)
·  2 pieces Radish (sliced)
·  1 bundle Sitaw (Stringbeans)
·  1 bundle Kangkong (cut into 2″ long)
·  3 pieces long green pepper
·  5 cups ricewash or water
·  Salt or Patis (fish sauce)

To cook:
  • Boil Tamarind in rice wash or water to soften.
  • Pound and extract all juices and set aside.
  • In a casserole, boil rice wash or water, Tamarind juice, onions, tomatoes and Radish.
  • Lower fire; add in Shrimps, Kangkong, Sitaw and green long pepper.
  • Simmer for 5 minutes.
  • Season with salt or patis.
  • Serve hot. 

If you cannot find tamarind in your local store, you can also use balimbi or iba (tree sorrel), bayabas (guava), calamansi, raw mango, sinigang flavor mix or bouillon cubes as substitutes.  Vinegar should not be used in making sinigang for there is a similar Filipino food that uses vinegar as the key ingredient to make its soup sour.  In Filipino cuisine, this dish is called paksiw. 

There are plenty of ways to cook sinigang. Some people use pressure cooker, some cook it through stock pots and some locals prefer to cook it in a clay pot and use firewood for they believe that the smoke from the burnt wood and the heating factor of the clay pots adds aroma and flavor to the soup.

It is best to have this Filipino food during cold season Which ever way you chose to cook it, fact still remains; Sinigang is the Filipinos’ aphrodisiac. The combination of hot soup and sour flavor often awakens ones sleeping senses thus making it the Filipino’s soup for the soul.