Bituan established a village near the mouth of the river while Calpis stayed upstream the exact location of the town today.
Approximately fifty meters wide, Lulugayan Falls has been dubbed by tourists as a Mini Niagara.
Its clear, fresh water endlessly flows down the rapids, onto the Calbiga River and Maqueda Bay.
Maqueda Bay and Mangrove Forests: The richest spawning grounds in Eastern Visayas for Fish and crustaceans and one of the pillars of the island's economy.
The caves system consists of fifteen galleries of distinctive features and underground rivers, and numerous stalactites and stalagmites.
The Original Patrona Calbiga was then under the patronage of Nuestra Señora de los Angeles (Our Lady, Queen of the Angels) and the town's special feast day was celebrated on August 2 even at the original settlement, Binongtoan, at the mouth of the Calbiga River.
The transfer of the seacoast villagers to the upper part of the river, based on legend, was related to the miracles of the Virgin.
Here's a Portion of the report submitted to the Historical Commission by the Alcalde Mayor Perfecto Hacbang in 1938: “We also have a sample of unexplained happenings as follows: at the time when the town was still in the place of Binongto-an, the patron saint, then Nuestra Señora de los Angeles, would disappear from its site and was always found afterwards in the place where the town is located today.
The original wooden image of Nuestra Señora de los Angeles had a special niche beside the altar even after the antique church was demolished and replaced by concrete structure in the mid-Sixties, but during the finishing touches of its interiors, the “miraculous” image, together with some precious relics, the other santos, the silver candelabra, the other intricate wood carvings and the other “antiques” disappeared, never to be seen again.
built a strong wooden church in 1803, he dedicated it to Nuestra Senora de la Anuncacion (Our Lady of the Annunciation) whose feast day falls on March 25.