Sapang Dalaga, Misamis Occidental

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Sapang Dalaga
Municipality
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Seal
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Map of {{#property:P131}} with Sapang Dalaga highlighted
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Country [[{{#property:P17}}]]
Region Northern Mindanao (Region X)
Province [[{{#property:P131}}]]
District 1st district of Misamis Occidental
Founded August 12, 1957
Barangays 28
Government[1]
 • Mayor Manuel Animas
Area[2]
 • Total 93.93 km2 (36.27 sq mi)
Population (2010)[3]
 • Total 19,431
 • Density 210/km2 (540/sq mi)
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code {{#property:P281}}
Dialing code {{#property:P473}}
Income class 5th

Sapang Dalaga is a fifth class municipality in the province of Misamis Occidental, Philippines, 96 kilometres (60 mi) from Ozamiz City and 50 kilometres (31 mi) from Dipolog City airport. According to the 2010 census, it has a population of 19,431 people.[3]

The town is rich in mineral resources such as gold, copper and manganese, and has mountains, rivers, waterfalls and beaches. Baga (waterfalls in the native language) with its scenic beauty is a kilometer from the town center, can be reached by foot or motor vehicles. Panoramic mountains such as Mount Dasa and Mount Pedoluan reside. Casul Bay which connects to Murcielagos Bay can be navigated.

Etymology

Its name is derived from the phrase sapa ng dalaga (ancient Visayan language dating back to the 14th century before Spanish colonization), meaning "maiden in a creek".

The names of some barangays were derived from rivers and trees, for example, Guinabot came from a river, Locus was derived from the native locus tree.

Barangays

Sapang Dalaga is politically subdivided into 28 barangays.[2]

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2

Demographics

Population census of Sapang Dalaga
Year Pop. ±% p.a.
1990 17,945 —    
1995 21,084 +3.07%
2000 17,794 −3.57%
2007 16,567 −0.98%
2010 19,431 +5.97%
Source: National Statistics Office[3]

Economy

Its economy is based on agriculture, with root crops such as gabi, palaw, sweet potato, ube and apale. It has plantation of coconuts, lanzones, mangosteen, rambotan, marang, hibi (June plume), guyabano, santol, durian and native bananas. Herbal plants such as Salingkapao (tawa-tawa), buyo, dalapot (sambong) grows in each household plot. Vegetables such as string beans, squash, malunggay, likway, bago and sikwa can be found. Sea foods such as bongcawel, saang, bacase, king crabs, nukos (squid), lato (seaweeds), kitong, dangget, lapu-lapu, pasayan (prawn) can be bought every Friday (market day).

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links