Ive been personally experiencing it a lot lately especially when Toyota Motor Philippines took about forty motoring journalists to Mindanao for their second annual Toyota Innova Road Trek. Now, the Road Trek is a déjà vu itself because about a year ago, Toyota took us to Iloilo, where we were grouped into teams and drove from the capitol city to Caticlan to catch a ferry to Boracay.
Along the way, we were tasked to do several assignments, earning points for our team for each successful assignment. The team with the most points during our sortie in Visayas was Team Auto Review headed by Ron de los Reyes while Team Philippine STAR composed of our motoring editor Dong Magsajo, tri-athlete and columnist Andy Leuterio, advertising and karting ace Jeff Reyes and yours truly, managed a respectable fifth place finish. Of course, with the competitions over and done, we hit the beach for a whole day and everybody had a lot of fun.
Our throng of journalists from Manila, Davao and Cagayan de Oro were treated to a morning of native dances, warm smiles, good food and treasure hunting. Actually, we hunted for the number corresponding to the awards that the dealership got and we had some difficulty doing so with the number of awards Toyota Cagayan de Oro has won and has treasured over the years. After being treated like VIPs at the dealership, we then drove to the Cagayan de Oro River for some white-water rafting. (Déjà vu; see "The Adventures of Go Girl and La-Z-Boy", The Philippine STAR, July 13, 2005)
As most of our loyal readers will recall, I never learned how to swim and my personal motto in life is "Anything with wheels, anywhere on land, never on water." After I volunteered my services to TMPs Elijah Sue Marcial to drive the Innovas to the pick-up point (déjà vu) to no avail, I geared up (vest, helmet and T-paddle) and reluctantly joined my team mates Dong, Jeff and Sunshine TV/Motoring Today/Auto Focus ace camera man Matt Mallari to our raft.
Since it was summer, the water level and the swells at the river werent that high, so I wasnt as fearful of the water as I would normally be. In fact, I was beginning to enjoy white water rafting, especially when we were leading other rafts in a race to the next stop. Dong, Jeff, Matt (Or is it Matt and Jeff?) and I were paddling away as a cohesive team, and by the time we reached our lunch site, we felt as if we had given ourselves a strenuous upper body workout.
We earned valuable points for our second-place finish, and earned ten more points for another rafting contest before lunch, where we paddled against the current, flipped the raft at an assigned still water enclave, righted it and went back on it before the 4-minute time line. And that included us beaching our raft on the rocks and me drifting away from our raft after we flipped it over. After lunch, we chugged up more points by jumping from a 15-foot rock to the still water below (Look, mom! I did it!) and by catching orange ping pong balls with a net basket while floating on the river (Look mom, I didnt catch any! In fact, they had to catch me before I floated away!). Tired from our river contests, we drove to the Mapawa Forest Reserve where we gamely dropped water and sand bombs at a target from a Zip Line and rappelled down with a spoonful of cashew nuts in our mouths. (Extra Challenge, eat your heart out!) Needless to say, a lot of us retired early that night.
We reached Davao City by 5pm and rolled into the Toyota Davao dealership where we joined local loyal Toyota owners in a motorcade of about 40 Innovas. Toyota Davao has wisely banded the Innova owners as a club, aptly called the Club Innova and sponsors the clubs road treks around Mindanao. After our convoy snaked through the major avenues of Davao City, we checked-in at our rooms at the Marco Polo Hotel, freshened up and then went to a party hosted by TMP and Toyota Davao, which was emceed by the beautiful Cheska Garcia.
The next morning found us riding a ferry to Pearl Farm, a beach resort nestled at a beach cove in Samal Island. Pearl Farm is a major tourist attraction, and as we approached the sandy beach, we were smitten with the paradise-like setting of the resort and we understood why tourists flock to this resort annually. A heavenly lunch awaited us at the arrival dock, followed by an afternoon of camaraderie while massage services where also arranged by Toyota for those who bodies were still aching from the activities of the previous days. Of course, with the competitions over and done, we hit the beach for a whole day and everybody had a lot of fun. (Oooh, major déjà vu! Didnt I just write that?) Our last night was brightened up with awards (Team Cagayan de Oro won with defending champion Team Auto Review in second and Team Philippine STAR in fifth, again. Déjà vu!), reggae music and a beach party hosted by the lively and lovely Nancy Castiglione.
And thats the thing about the Toyota Innova Road Trek. Not only do we, as motoring journalists get to evaluate the Innova on the road (which, by the way, averaged about 8 kilometers per liter of diesel fuel with its D4D engine as per the on-board computer and was comfortable to ride in as well as to drive over long distances) and have fun while were doing it but we also get to see the natural wonders and the beauty that our country has to offer. Toyota has done the country an honorable deed by promoting not only its automobile industry, but the countrys tourism industry as well. Heres to more road treks in the future and the déjà vu that comes with it.