Sunday, February 08, 2009
Pampanga: More slots opened for Hot Air Balloon Fiesta tour!
Due to public clamor, we added eight more slots to our Valentine's Day tour to the 14th Philippine International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta! First eight to book and pay get the last slots. E-mail us at info@ivanhenares.com to book. As part of the tour, you'll have a sumptuous breakfast at C' Italian Dining, a hearty Kapampangan lunch at Abe's Farm and optional spa treatments at Nurture Spa. Click here for more information.
Ultimate Batanes Heritage Tour from March 21 to 24! Book Now!
Slots for our Batanes tour are going, going gone as well! Remember, we'll be staying for three nights at Fundacion Pacita, the hotel with the best views, and the only first class accommodation in Batanes! No other Batanes tour offers that and so much more! Click here for more information.
Corregidor Island: Battery Grubbs

Main article: Corregidor's artillery batteries
Related article: Corregidor Island day trip via Sun Crusies
Corregidor Island: Battery Hearn

Battery Hearn was part of Battery Smith (Battery Smith Gun No. 2) until 1937 when it was renamed Hearn in honor of Brigadier General Clint C. Hearn who commander the harbor defenses on Manila and Subic Bay in 1919.
It was armed with a 12-inch (305mm) gun model 1895A2, mounted on a Barbette Carriage Model 1917, which with a maximum firing elevation of 35 degrees, could fire a 1,000-pound (454.5kg) shell propelled by a 270-pound (122.7kg) separately loaded bagged charge to a range of 30,000 yards 17 miles or 7.4 km.
Main article: Corregidor's artillery batteries
Related article: Corregidor Island day trip via Sun Crusies
Friday, February 06, 2009
Corregidor Island: Battery Way

Construction for this battery began in 1904. It was completed in 1914 at a total cost of $112,969 and named in honor of 2nd Lt. Henry N. Way, 4th U.S. Artillery, who died in service in the Philippines in 1900.
Armed with four 12-inch (305mm) M1890 mortar carriages which were capable of lobbing a 1,000-pound (454.5kg) deck piercing shell or 700-pound (318kg) high explosive shell 14,610 yards (8.3 miles or 13.35 km) in any direction.
On May 6, the day Corregidor surrendered, Battery Way continued firing all morning. Only when the breech block of its last gun froze at 11 a.m., warped by the heat from constant firing, did it stop firing. It was the last of Corregidor's "concrete artillery" to cease fire before the surrender at 12 noon.
Main article: Corregidor's artillery batteries
Related article: Corregidor Island day trip via Sun Crusies
Thursday, February 05, 2009
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