Get Your Ghost Shrimps and Filipino Crabs at Bag-ot Today
Balete has no fishing port. That's a fact. In the olden days, the fisherfolks made use of the landing behind the public market abutting the bank of the Jal-o. As silts accumulated due to erosion boat operators find it practical to disembark their haul at Bag-ot in Sitio Suruagan, Barangay Calizo.
When it bacame popular as the Calizo Road was opened up and cemented, local government officials deemed it necessary to intervene. The landing at Bag-ot was constructed to accommodate both the fisherfolks, the nipa shingle makers and the fish and nipa traders and middlemen. Nipa shingles from this part of Balete are hauled to as far as Mambusao, Capiz and Boracay Is. Fish dealers and middlemen for Kalibo market came around for spotted scats, red crabs, snappers, shrimps and prawns( both brackish and freshwater) and shells. When the Jal-o swells, they came down here for ghost shrimps (kamantaha), "Filipino" crab(kalampai), finger eel (poyoy) and squillid mantis shrimps(pitik-pitik).
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