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2024-06-07 Β |Β β±οΈ 18:16 Β |Β ποΈ 40.9K views Β |Β π 4.7K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.5K comments
Pea takes viewers on a full day trip across Bohol island, visiting the Philippine tarsiers in their natural forest habitat, hiking the 220 steps to the Chocolate Hills viewing deck, discovering a surprisingly well-run local restaurant, and riding a fast craft ferry back to Dumaguete. Along the way she hits 300K subscribers and reflects on her viral shower scene short that racked up nearly 3 million views.
Tarsier sanctuary visit deep in the forest β
- Tarsiers are among the smallest primates on the planet, measuring 3.5 to 6 inches long
- They're nocturnal β they sleep in dark forest spots during the day and come out at night to hunt insects
- Visitors are asked to observe silence because the tarsiers are extremely shy and have sensitive eyes (no flash photography allowed)
- Interesting mating fact: tarsiers are sometimes monogamous, sometimes polygamous β "it's like humans"
- Female tarsiers use a scent gland in their mouths to mark their mates, signaling to other females "this is my monkey, keep away"
- They communicate with a distinctive sound that signals feeding time
- Tarsiers have six breasts, but only the top two are functional β the bottom four serve as handles for carrying babies, which Pea calls "ingenious"
- She finds two tarsiers: one sound asleep curled in a ball hanging from a branch, and another wide awake β she jokes he either has insomnia or someone was talking too loudly
- Pea notes the size of their eyes, which are adapted for seeing in the dark
Chocolate Hills β
- About 1,500 hills spread across 50 square kilometers
- The hills are green during rainy season and turn brown during dry season (giving them the "chocolate" name)
- Despite looking like they're made of dirt, they're actually marine limestone β the area was once an ocean floor, and marine fossils can be found scattered throughout
- Pea climbs roughly 220 steps to the viewing deck, joking about getting her cardio workout in and being glad she wore trainers instead of her usual chanelas (flip-flops)
- She deals with rain that almost made her turn back but the sky cleared
- The viewing deck is crowded with tourists taking photos β she describes it as "being trapped in a mass of people β my nightmare"
Kajun restaurant in Panglao, Bohol (spelled with a K) β
- Pea is genuinely impressed by this restaurant and makes a point of highlighting the small details that distinguish it from typical Filipino restaurants
- They have napkins already on the table (normally you have to ask), salt and pepper shakers pre-set, and tissues available β she acknowledges she's "making a big deal out of it" but says anyone who's lived in the Philippines long enough notices these things
- They brought her water without her asking β in typical Filipino restaurants, drinks don't come until the food arrives
- The server was attentive and the food came in under 10 minutes
- Menu is mostly fried food: burgers, fried chicken, fish tacos, quesadillas, fish and chips
- She ordered the "Happy Burger" β the portion was enormous for the price, with a burger plus a large serving of chicken and rice, all for under $10 USD
- The fries stayed crispy even after 10-15 minutes, which she found remarkable β "maybe there's some voodoo going on"
- She recommends it as "a lot of bang for the buck"
300K subscriber milestone and viral video β
- Pea announces reaching 300,000 subscribers and gets emotional about it
- Her first viral video was "the infamous shower scene" β a 30-second short that got almost 3 million views
- She says it was intended as a joke and acknowledges longtime followers understand her sarcasm, but some newer viewers don't "speak our language"
- She welcomes new subscribers who found her through the viral short
Ferry travel between Bohol and Dumaguete β
- No direct flights exist between Dumaguete and Bohol, so she takes a fast craft (Ocean Jet brand)
- Fast crafts carry only passengers and luggage, unlike the roro (roll-on/roll-off) ferries that transport vehicles
- Crossing takes about 2 hours
- Cost comparison: ferry is $20-30 USD vs. flying at $30-100 USD
- Even though flying from Dumaguete to Cebu is only 30 minutes in the air, once you factor in terminal time and luggage check-in, it's roughly the same total time as the ferry
- She's impressed with the ferry seats β describes feeling like a "VIP" with plenty of legroom and onboard movies
- They started playing a movie she hadn't seen before, so she settled in for the ride