What is the story of Chocolate Hills?

What is the story of Chocolate Hills?

Chocolate Hills Bohol Legend According to legends, the Chocolate Hills existed because of a weeping giant who had been disappointed in love, and the hills grew where his tears fell. In another legend, two giants went to war and lobbed boulders at each other for days.

What is the legend of Bohol?

The mud hills were scattered on the island. According to the myth, farmers came back to their fields and began a peaceful farm life again. So, as this myth goes, during summer one sees the brown “chocolate” hills across the Bohol Island due to the dry soil. On rainy days it turns green due to new palay shoots.

What is the importance of Chocolate Hills?

The Chocolate Hills is a famous tourist attraction of Bohol. They are featured in the provincial flag and seal to symbolize the abundance of natural attractions in the province.

Why is Chocolate Hills called Chocolate Hills?

The name ‘Chocolate Hills’ is derived from their appearance in summer where the lush green grass turns into a chocolate brown colour. The exact number of haycock hills has strangely never been recorded. It has been estimated that the island of Bohol is home to up to 1800 of the dome shaped hills.

Why is it called chocolate?

Etymologists trace the origin of the word “chocolate” to the Aztec word “xocoatl,” which referred to a bitter drink brewed from cacao beans. The Latin name for the cacao tree, Theobroma cacao, means “food of the gods.”

Why don t the people of Bohol eat frogs and turtles?

That is why Bohol has plenty of crabs (both land and sea), and eels, for they were first created by Good One. Boholanos relish them for food but they always respected the toad. The Boholanos do not eat frogs or toads or land turtles as other Visayans so, no matter how palatable they are as a dish.

What is Bohol known for?

This oval-shaped island is the tenth largest of the Philippine archipelago. Bohol is a haven of tropical natural beauty. Bohol is famous for its Chocolate Hills; its tarsiers, which may be the world’s smallest primate; its heritage sites and old stone churches.

Does Bohol have a volcano?

The island, roughly oval in shape, lies between the Camotes Sea (north) and the Bohol Sea (south). Its volcanic core is mostly covered with coralline limestone. They are limestone remnants of an earlier erosion cycle, a phenomenon known to be present in only two or three other places in the world.

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