Nicole’s Garden Naga

Nicole’s Garden Naga Walk-in to a real garden resto-cafe & event place away from the rumble & tumble of urban Naga City.

Outdoor and indoor secluded areas for small parties available at second and third floor levels with view of Mount Isarog and overlooking the garden areas.

https://youtu.be/eF58AbZzQXc
06/02/2026

https://youtu.be/eF58AbZzQXc

Mahalaga ang tamang nutrisyon sa mga bata para mas makatutok sa kanilang pag-aaral.Kaya't para labanan ang malnutrisyon na matagal nang hamon sa bansa nagsag...

06/02/2026
05/12/2025

Privileged, and humbled to support a huge project of GMA Kapuso Foundation, a 6-month daily feeding program for the small children of Gainza.

Would you like your next party here?Follow us so you can book easily on your next celebration of life's milestones or me...
15/08/2025

Would you like your next party here?

Follow us so you can book easily on your next celebration of life's milestones or meetings.

Hoya!
16/07/2025

Hoya!

You do not see these everyday.We do at Nicole’s Garden Naga.
11/07/2025

You do not see these everyday.
We do at Nicole’s Garden Naga.

We still see fireflies at the garden. So fortunate to be their host.
11/07/2025

We still see fireflies at the garden. So fortunate to be their host.

We might be witnessing the twilight of fireflies—one of the last generations to drift through the summer dark like living embers. But this isn't nature’s doing. It’s ours.

Fireflies are vanishing fast. Across North America, over 130 species are now at risk. Rare ones like the amber comet firefly are hanging by a thread in just a few patches of Texas. It’s not just one threat—it’s a perfect storm. Expanding cities pave over forests and wetlands. Backyard floodlights blind their courtship signals. Pesticides poison the soil they breed in. And climate change scrambles their life cycles with heatwaves and droughts.

The amber comet, once thought extinct since the 1940s, was rediscovered recently—but only in scattered wet grasslands. It flashes like a slow-motion meteor across the night. A signal in the dark. A warning.

Fireflies are more than nostalgia. They’re indicators—when they disappear, it’s a red flag for the whole ecosystem. Their larvae eat snails and pests. They need moist soil, native plants, dark skies. When their world collapses, it’s a sign that frogs, birds, and bees are next.

But the spark isn’t gone yet.

There’s still time to reverse this. Cut the glare—use less outdoor light, install motion sensors, choose warmer bulbs. Skip the pesticides and let your yard go wild. Build patches of native plants, damp soil, and leafy undergrowth. Protect the shadows. Let nature breathe.

Join a citizen science group. Count fireflies. Map their glow. You’ll be doing more than watching insects—you’ll be protecting an ancient conversation between light and night.

Or we can keep doing what we’re doing. Keep building. Keep spraying. Keep lighting up the night until it goes quiet.

And fireflies become just another story we tell around the campfire.

Address

Nicole's Garden Naga, Sitio Salunguigui, Cararayan
Naga City
4400

Opening Hours

Wednesday 10am - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Friday 10am - 7pm
Saturday 10am - 7pm
Sunday 10am - 7pm

Telephone

+639175002032

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Nicole’s Garden Naga posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Nicole’s Garden Naga:

Share

Category