Why is La Trinidad Valley called the salad bowl of the Philippines?
At 5,000 feet altitude yet in the tropics, this fertile, flat volcanic valley of 5 miles diameter yields fresh
fruits and vegetables every day of the year! Not only this, just the sight of the area is unbelievable
after driving through the high, steep mountains is quite miraculous! Now, go see it!
Top row: broccoli and red beets
Bottom: cherry tomatoes and bell peppers Look at all that lettuce!
curly leaf parsley
Benguet is known as the vegetable basket of Luzon. Temperate vegetables like cauliflower, lettuce,
carrot, asparagus, broccoli, cucumber, beans, peas, cabbage, etc. are grown in the vegetable farms
of Buguias and other highland towns.
These produce are brought to the trading post in bulk packaging (sacks, crates) where wholesalers
await them for distribution and marketing in Baguio City, other parts of the province and as far as
Metro Manila.
Large-scale vegetable farming became evident during the 1960s. La Trinidad became one of the leading
vegetable-producing municipalities in the entire country. This earned for its distinction as The Salad Bowl
of the Philippines in the 1980s. Toward the end of the decade, farmers began to shift from vegetable
production to strawberry and cutflower production. To this day, La Trinidad is recognized as The Strawberry
Fields of the Philippines. In 1998, the barangay of Bahong was declared the Rose Capital of the Philippines.
Aside from these distinctions, La Trinidad is also known as a traders marketing center if not for the
province but also in the Cordilleras. La Trinidad remains to be an agricultural area with urbanization
fast creeping in the valley area.