Batanes: A traditional Indigenous boat that departed from Orchid Island (Lanyu) on Monday arrived in the Philippine archipelago of Batanes on Tuesday afternoon, according to Maraos, a board director of the Indigenous Peoples Cultural Foundation. The Ovayan, a traditional wooden plank vessel known as an ipanitika, set out from Orchid Island with 20 rowers aboard to retrace an ancient sea route that once linked the Tao people of Orchid Island and the Ivatan people of Batanes. Another 40 Tao individuals were on support vessels accompanying the Ovayan, ready to take turns with the rowing.
According to Focus Taiwan, the journey ran into problems almost immediately, encountering strong winds and rough seas about two kilometers off Little Orchid Island, located roughly three nautical miles south of Orchid Island. The conditions hampered its progress and caused water to enter the boat, prompting accompanying vessels to begin towing it, said Maraos, himself a Tao who was on the voyage.
As the vessel approached Y'ami Island, the northernmost island of the Batanes archipelago about 100 kilometers south of Orchid Island, waves reached 4 meters high, submerging much of the boat. The team decided again to tow the vessel. No one was injured in the ordeal, Maraos added.
After being towed overnight, the Ovayan arrived at Mahatao Port around 10 a.m. Tuesday for emergency repairs and inspection. Once the vessel was reinforced, Indigenous Tao individuals rowed the vessel to another point along the coast where they were welcomed by about 300 residents of Batanes as "family from Lanyu." One Tao participant noted the food served at the welcoming feast tasted "90 percent similar" to that of Orchid Island, affirming elders' belief that "Lanyu and Batanes came from the same blood."
Maraos stated that the Ovayan will remain on display in Batanes for six months before being rowed back to Orchid Island by Batanes residents as part of next year's cultural exchange. Built by the Tao people, the vessel is named after the golden breast ornaments traditionally worn by Tao men and symbolizes the maritime trading heritage shared by Orchid Island and the Batanes Islands. The two communities historically maintained close ties through trade, marriage, and migration, but those connections were severed about 300 years ago following a misunderstanding. Despite the separation, the languages spoken by the two communities remain about 60 percent mutually intelligible.
