Calauan is known for the Pineapple Festival, which is
celebrated every 15th of May.
An
annual event which started in 1999. The festival aims to promote
pineapple and other agricultural products of Calauan. It features
cultural presentation and exhibit performances, mardi gras, street
dancing, pineapple float parade, pineapple and native products decor
contest.
Calauan is a second class municipality in the province of Laguna, Philippines. According to the 2010 census, it has a population of 74,890 people.The town got its name from the term kalawang,
which means rust. Folklore has it that the town got its name when the
Spanish started construction of the Municipal Church and water seeped in
from the holes dug into the ground for the Church's foundation. The
water was colored brown and rusty in character hence the name Calauan
(Kalawang).
In 1993, the town became the focus of media attention when Antonio Sánchez, who was serving as mayor at the time, got involved into a double murder case involving two UPLB students. Sánchez and several other men were given a life sentence.
The patron saint of Calauan is Isidore the Laborer, the patron of farmers, known in Spanish as San Isidro Labrador.
Calauan's population is expected rise as the town is being used as resettlement of informal settlers in Metro Manila through the Bayan ni Juan and the Kapit-Bisig para sa Ilog Pasig project of the ABS-CBN Foundation.
Popular destinations in the area include the Field of Faith situated
in Brgy. Lamot 2 and the Isdaan Floating Restaurant located along the
National Highway going to Victoria Laguna.
Calauan, Laguna - Pinya Festival
The town got its name from the term “Kalawang” which means rust. It was
claimed that for centuries lumps of rust surfaced and drifted gently on a
body of water called Macalawang Spring. This spring was situated nearly
three (3) kilometers from the town proper.