‘Soil still moving, cracks forming in sinkhole area’ | Inquirer News

‘Soil still moving, cracks forming in sinkhole area’

/ 09:08 AM February 19, 2012

SOIL continued to move and more cracks   formed around the sinkhole in a Dumanjug town farm when  Cebu Daily News visited the site  yesterday.

Farm caretaker Walter Pesalbon, 36, said  that as of 3 p.m. part of the edge of the pit caved in.

The sinkhole was discovered last Friday in  part of the 2.6-hectare Dumanjug farm.

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Pesalbon said nothing like this  happened before in the seven decades that his family owned  the property,   which was   bought in 2006 by the daughter of Susana Inot, who married a Swedish national. Pesalbon’s family remains the caretaker of the farm.

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Inot yesterday visited the farm, took pictures of the sinkhole and sent them to her daughter, who is in Sweden with her husband.

The sinkhole occured weeks after the Feb. 6 earthquake that hit Negros Oriental and Cebu. Dumanjug town in southwest  Cebu is situated across Negros Oriental province.

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Pesalbo said  he noticed cracks in the ground before the sinkhole appeared, which he  estimated to be 100 meters deep and 20 meters wide.

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Pesalbo said the farm used to be a wide tract of land with coconut trees. The new owner transformed it into a farm with eggplants, mangoes and papayas.

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The formation of the sinkhole in the area has attracted curious townsfolk, who take photos of the ununusual sight.

Police set up a  yellow cordon near the sinkhole and posted two policemen and barangay tanods to take turns for a 24-hour watch.

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