Boasting great natural beauty, chilly weather, a tourist-friendly people and extraordinary vistas, the City of Pines is the culmination of your search for the idyllic escape from the tropical heat of the Philippine lowlands.
Geography
The average temperature is from 15-26˚C, and it can drop down to 8˚C from December to early February. The weather follows the typical Philippines' seasons: Dry Season from October to May and the Wet Season from June to September.
In general, Baguio is 8˚ cooler any month compared to any place in the Philippine lowlands. When Manila heats up at at 35˚C, Baguio seldom exceeds 26˚C at its warmest. The lowest temperature reading made was 6.27˚C, recorded in January 18, 1961. Recently, on January 29, 2007, the temperature dropped to a chilly 7˚C.
Baguio can get pretty damp and foggy during the Philippines' rainy season, with the largest amount of rainfall in the country, due to the high altitude and the heavily forested areas of the Cordillera mountain range. The record for the heaviest volume of rainfall occurred in July 1927 when it measured 4.77 meters.
In November, wild sunflowers appear on the hillsides signaling the end of the rainy season, and Baguio becomes a tropical paradise until May. Christmas season is when it glows with the nippy wintry air, and coats, hats and scarves are the outfits of choice.
Location:
240 km north of Manila
57.49 square km
8.2 km east to west
7.2 km north to south
Climate:
Temperature is 15-26˚C, can drop down to 8˚C
Dry Season from October to May
Wet Season from June to September
280,756 persons based on the 2005 survey per barangay; more than 45% are students
English widely used
Ilocano - 55%
Tagalog - 25%
Other dialects - 20%
Philippine Peso (Php) in denominations of 1000, 500, 200, 100, 50, 20, 10, 5, 1 in pesos and 25, 10, 5 and 1 in centavos.
Economy: Tourism
Economy: Education
Economy: Exports & Manufacturing
The home of garments factories, Texas Instruments Philippines and Moog Controls Corporation, BEPZ is responsible for generating jobs for the locals as well as contributing to a great extent to the Gross National Product of the Philippines.
Another source of exports are the works of ethnic woodcarving and weaves that are sought after in the international market.
Agricultural Products
Baguio is the best and primary source of highland vegetables such as lettuce, broccolli, cauliflower, carrots, potatoes, cabbage, and other greens. All these come from the different Cordillera provinces, are brought to La Trinidad Valley and are retailed at the very popular Baguio City Market.
Recently, due to the huge population of fresh graduates from the local schools and universities here, there has been an influx of call centers in the city with international companies outsourcing their technical support facilities in the Philippines.
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