Mt Mataba Battlefield Hike
I did my first 2022 hike up Mt Mataba. I had
previously planned to go to Clark area and see some battle sites up there but
it was cancelled due to CCP Virus restrictions. Maybe next month instead. I took
one of the front paths up Mt Mataba. I wanted to see the Japanese field
hospital tunnel again and photograph it. On the way up Mt Mataba I met a hiking
party the first I ever saw there. It was mostly girls with some guys and a
guide. We all climbed up together under the sun which was now warm. I set off
an hour later after a good sleep. It was their first time up here or hiking. We
parted ways and I went up to the main summit and radio aerial array. I went to
see my pals up there and see what war finds they’d found. I wasn’t to be
disappointed.
I took several photos from near the main summit of the
town and scenery below. Then went to my pals and guess who I saw? The hiking
team I met on the way up. It was a funny surreal moment for we knew the same friend.
Anyhow I got down to business and was shown varied war finds.
The square bomb piece I had seen before revealed a new
surreal trick. Remember this metal was off a detonated large warplane dropped
bomb. On the back side of the metal was residual high explosive. I thought it
was dirt but it wasn’t. It smouldered when lit and gave off grey acrid smoke
and bubbled. I’m not sure why it never detonated when the rest of the bomb went
off. I could only imagine the sleeping below ground shells and bombs still
waiting to go off.
Also there was a scattering of shrapnel and shell
parts from jagged one oh five or one five five millimetre artillery shell bits
to the nose fuse from what I think was a 20mm cannon shell plus the broken nose
cone part of a slightly bigger shell made of brass or copper. Not sure of the
calibre. There was also a spent fifty cal bullet slightly bent and a fired case
too; these were not together. They were probably from planes or tanks or troops
and from different firers. Yet when put together they were a full fifty cal
round.
Most interesting was the detonator train from inside a
big artillery shell. It included the part that was inside the fuse minus nose
cone and a long metal spike that went into the high explosive in the body. This
was triggered in the front and went down the tube into the body setting off the
main charge and fragmenting the shell.
There was an unfired clip of rounds from an M1 Garand
rifle. They were all green with corrosion and there was originally eight in two
sets of found. One case was missing a round and one was open allowing the
cordite crystals to be seen. I wondered which soldier dropped this and why he
never fired them. What was his name and did he survive the battle?
These war artefacts were found close by where the
locals live. Also there was something so different to be a total opposite and
give a very poignant meaning of Mt Mataba events. The only known open tunnel
was a field hospital. It was never blown shut like the others by the Americans.
A small brown glass bottle minus lid could’ve one held smelling salts. Plus a
medium size clear glass bottle/dish minus lid held either mosquito repellent or
antiseptic for cuts. Not to cure bullet wounds! I think these were form inside
the tunnel. I was told a local woman took a table and medical cabinet decades
ago. All the Japanese troops were killed in battle or buried alive in tunnels.
I was also shown Many Japanese fox holes and trench
positions all over the peak. This was a hard hike with a local with a bolo to
cut the brush back. I saw many positions all over the place plus three separate
huge warplane bomb craters dotting the mountain. I wondered at how many were
killed here and how close to where I hiked. And how many soldiers still
remained buried in graves, sealed tunnels and caves there? The real treasure is
finding brass Japanese soldier dog tags and bones. So they can be repatriated.
I never went into the open Japanese tunnel but saw
several suspected closed tunnels on a very steep but of hillside with large
bamboo thickets. I wondered if the big cave where the Japs hid from the bombing
was down there. It almost appeared so but I need to carefully examine it on a
future trip. Mt Mataba is slowly revealing the secrets. The ghosts and dead
remain silent. Their story needs to be told and the horrors of war never
forgotten. Soldiers of both sides died there atop and in the peak in awful
ways. RIP the dead.
After all that research and hours of hiking I said
goodbye to the other hikers and we talked more of the peak and events there. There
are many more stories to be told and discovered.
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