Mabinay

Folklore has it that a woman named Binay fell in love with the son of her father's rival chieftain.

According to the legend, she weeps to this day, feeding Mabinay Spring, one of the town's many alluring attractions.

It had over 100 known caves, including the popular Pandalihan, Panligawan and Gasidlak, each one with its own distinctive features ranging from fascinating to awesome.

2469, which was signed by President Carlos P. Garcia in 1959, Mabinay was formally created from the fourteen sitios that seceded from the then-municipality of Bais.

It is a border town: the provincial highway runs through it and links Negros Oriental with its sister province.

[7] Mabinay is situated roughly in the central part of the island of Negros abutting the western side of the provincial boundary.

Motorcycles (also locally known as habal-habal), tricycles, jeepneys, and buses are the major modes of transportation in the municipality.

94 established the Mabinay Institute of Technology (MIT), a technical college operated with the approval of the Department of Education, Culture and Sports.

Welcome arch in Mabinay