PANAGBENGA FESTIVAL
Panagbenga is month-long annual flower festival occurring in Baguio.
The festival, held during the month of February, was created as a tribute
to the citys flowers and as a way to rise up from the devastation of
the 1990 Luzon earthquake. The festival includes floats that are decorated
with flowers unlike those used in Pasadenas Rose Parade. The festival
also includes street dancing, presented by dancers clad in flower-
inspired costumes, that is inspired by the Bendian, an Ibaloi dance of
celebration that came from the Cordillera region.
Panagbenga showcases the people's talent, artistry and
ingenuity via performances, exhibits and more. It opens
with a shower of rose petals along Session Road while
marching bands played lively tunes that sets the mode
for the parade. Colorful costumes and lively dance
numbers come next followed by cleverly- crafted, vibrant
and multicolored floats made entirely from flowers of
every kind which never fails to delight and awe the
spectators young and old.
Panagbenga represents the many facets of the "Summer Capital", its
people and its heritage. Like the festival, the city blooms with brimming
talent, natural beauty and indominable spirit. With the sights, sounds,
smells and tastes of Baguio, every trip to the City of Pines becomes a
memorable experience that will keep you coming
back for more.
history
The Panagbenga started with just an idea that Baguio
City shoud,like other towns and cities in the Philippines,
have it's own "fiesa"or festival celebration. Having been
created a city by the Americans during their occupation
of the Philippines, Baguio did not start as a town during
the Spanish colonial period that had
a patron saint with a feast day.
In 1996, archivist and curator Ike Picpican suggested that the
festival be renamed as Panagbenga, a Kankanaey term that
means "a season of blossoming, a time for flowering"