Flipinoes love celebrations that's why there is no place in the Philippines were there is no "Fiesta" or festival. They celebrate fiestas in honor of their own patron saint & thanksgiving for all the crops that each town had for that particular year. Colorful, extravagant & unforgetable, these are some words that each visitor can say about Philippine festivities. Each region, showcases the food, crops, delicacies and other things that they received for the whole year.
People in Cebu love to celebrate festivals or are fiesta-loving people. Cebu has one of the most colorful and world-renowned festivals in the Philippines and they celebrate it with excitement and high spirits. Cebu celebrates different festivals in different towns and cities. Cebu celebrate fiestas with religious rituals and dancing in the streets to the beat of the drums
Baguio city is the Philippines‘ renowned flower-abundant city and what better way to take advantage of such abundance is to flaunt it in the grandest manner possible that not only will it put the city at the top of the tourism map, but will also awaken the once devastated hearts of the people of Baguio after the 1990 Luzon earthquake.
Pampanga is a province of the Philippines located in the Central Luzon region. Its capital is the City of San Fernando, Pampanga. Pampanga is bordered by the provinces of Bataan and Zambales to the west, Tarlac and Nueva Ecija to the north, and Bulacan to the southeast. Pampanga also lies on the northern shore of Manila Bay.
What started as "just a new activity" to spice up an otherwisese routine civic-military parade, awarding ceremonies and a literary-musical program for a city charter anniversary, Bacolod City's MassKara Festival is now 3 years short of its third decade and has already become of the entries of the Philippines to the global tourism community.
The Dinagyang Festival is celebrated every fourth weekend of January to honor the Christianization of the natives and to respect the Holy Child Jesus. On this day, streets of Iloilo City will once again come alive as the Ilonggos celebrate the annual festivity.