Rizal

The province of Rizal is the "R" in Calabarzon. It is a province to the east of Metro Manila with boundaries of the westernmost towns and cities of Cainta and Taytay blurring into the city of Pasig in the capital region. While becoming increasingly urbanized in the past few decades, it holds some rich secrets in both cultures and sights that are untouched by heavy and popular tourism yet are beauties of their own to be enjoyed.

Due to its proximity to Manila, Rizal is becoming an increasingly good residential option for professionals and students who opt to stay in close proximity to the center of action (Manila) yet far enough to allow occasional peace and quiet (which is becoming increasingly hard to get nowadays).

Cities

 * — provincial capital, location of the International Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage as well as restaurants overlooking Metro Manila
 * — home of the annual Higantes Festival & is the art capital of the Philippines.
 * Cainta — the gateway to Rizal province

Other destinations

 * Baras
 * Binangonan
 * Cardona
 * Jala-Jala
 * Morong
 * Pililla - home to Pililla wind farm
 * — formerly called Montalban, it is the location of Wawa Dam, which once supplied water for Metro Manila. The site of Avilon Zoo
 * San Mateo
 * Tanay — ecotourism destination on the slope of the Sierra Madre
 * Taytay — a town nicknamed 'Garment Capital of the Philippines' due to the presence of 'tiangge'
 * Teresa

Understand
Used to be a large province which hugged the north coastline of the Laguna de Bay, Rizal now forms half of what it used to be. Named after the national hero, Jose Rizal, the province hugs on the rugged Sierra Madre, which encouraged mass settlement on the lakeside and on the foothills. It is surrounded by Metro Manila to the west, Bulacan to the north, Quezon to the east, and Laguna and the Laguna de Bay to the south. Situated at the heart of the Tagalog homeland (Katagalugan), Rizal is culturally and linguistically Tagalog; much of the province's inhabitants are Tagalog speakers, except for a very small minority of Ilocano and Bicolano migrants.

Talk
Rizal, being part of the Southern Tagalog region, has Tagalog (the main basis of Filipino) as the language for everyday transactions though English is more than a second language to most people (especially to the professionals and the younger ones).

Get in
The nearest airport is Ninoy Aquino International Airport, but getting to Rizal from the airport is rather bewildering; you will have to get by Manila's notorious traffic and inefficient public transport. Bus service is severely lacking to serve most corners in Rizal, so you might need a car to cover everything not covered well by a jeepney.

Get around
Rizal's roads are notoriously small, crowded, and winding due to its geography, and public transportation is severely lacking once you head east. Driving around the province (by car or motorcycle) is much practical.

Bus service is severely lacking on most of the province. Jeepneys mostly provide most service in much of the province, but are in short supply at eastern Rizal.

The major highway through Rizal is Manila East Road, which runs east to west from the boundary with Laguna toward the suburban areas of Cainta and Taytay. While most of it has been widened to four lanes and sections through town centers have been bypassed, traffic is fairly slow.

The Marcos Highway (aka the Marilaque Highway), which crosses the Sierra Madre mountain range and leads to Infanta (Quezon Province, serves the central part of the province; it is a favorite route by motorcyclists with its climate and its winding route, but crashes occur often especially on its hairpin curves.

Eat

 * "Balot"
 * "Fried Itik" (Fried Duck) from Angono
 * "Aling Kika's Bibingka" from Cainta