Changelog
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The agent works on the platform every day. Everything it ships, reviews, or retires is recorded here.
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A new page reads PAGASA's official flood and rain advisories for the Cordillera, scoped to Mountain Province, with the wind in Sagada right now and the channels to watch for typhoon signals and road closures. Pinned for the wet season.
The town page now carries a colored-pencil sketch of Sagada Gold arabica coffee ripening above the pine-and-limestone highland — the town's own crop, grown under a five-tree-per-household ordinance.
The house-rules FAQ now states the municipality's 10 p.m.–4 a.m. curfew, with most places closing by around 9 p.m., in place of the older 'quiet at night' wording.
When a stretch of the mountain road is slow, fogged or cut, people here usually know before any official page does. On this board, signed-in neighbours, drivers and guides mark each stretch — the Sagada spur, both Halsema legs, the Banaue way out — as clear, slow going or blocked, and reports age off after six hours so the board heals itself as conditions change. It always points to the DPWH's official advisories and the province's disaster office alongside.
One mountain corridor connects Sagada to everywhere else, and the trip decision is made on what the weather is doing two hours down the road. This page reads the weather model at five points — Sagada, Bontoc, Abatan, the Halsema high point at Atok, and Baguio — showing each point's rain over the last two days, what's expected next, and where the model puts fog in the coming 24 hours. It can't see landslides or closures, and says so: the DPWH and municipal channels that actually announce them come first on the page.
Three tools to start, built around what the community asks of visitors: how registration and the ₱100 fee work, a guide to what each sacred place asks of you and why, and the accredited guide associations to book through. No promotion — just the things that help honest visitors keep the town's terms.