He doesn’t quit his job. He just leaves it for a while.
A salaryman from Luzon files for leave, packs light, and boards a flight south to take a pause. When he lands in Siargao, he trades leather shoes for flip-flops, buttons open to the navel, straw hat catching the sun. From the airport, a 45-minute ride north, past quiet roads and long stretches of green, until the sign says Tangbo Surf Spot.
You hear the waves first. Then the sound every surfer knows, the sharp “woooh” when someone catches it just right. Walk closer and another rhythm creeps in, low and steady. A beat, warm and analog. Then the smell hits. Coffee, freshly brewed, unmistakable.
This is where Ora Kafé begins.
The grinder hums. Cups clink. Someone pulls a shot. You smile without meaning to. You haven’t even sat down yet, but you already know you’ve arrived.
Morning moves slowly here. Sunrise surf. Coffee after. Maybe a flat white, maybe the iced coconut latte people keep talking about. You sit at a shared table, no more than ten, no less, and talk to strangers like you’ve known them before. A barista explains the beans. Someone recommends a break near the reef. Another flips a page of a book they swear changed their life.
Ora Kafé sits right on the beach in North Siargao, tucked beneath the Siargao Artist in Residence Gallery. It’s quieter up here, more rustic. Fewer crowds, more sky. It’s also the only hi-fi café on the island, and the only one in the north with its own roastery. Vinyl plays through a system tuned for people who actually listen. Not loud. Not background. Intentional.
By noon, the tide shifts. People disappear into the water, then return hungry. Toasties land on the table, house-baked sourdough, heavy and satisfying. Classic silogs. Eggs Benedict. Food meant to carry you through long hours in the sea. Bagels are coming soon, someone says, still in testing.
Ora has been quietly running for eight weeks now, a dry run before the official opening in February. Word spread anyway. People came back. Then came back again.
By late afternoon, the light changes. Golden, forgiving. Someone starts setting up what looks like a DJ deck. You notice people drifting toward the sundeck overlooking the water. The beat you heard earlier returns, fuller now. Drinks are poured, select Chardonnays, a Shiraz Cabernet, something cold enough to sting your hand. You take a sip. The party has started.
This is the Ora Sunset Party. Some nights, there’s an Ora Speakeasy upstairs at the gallery, intimate, low-lit, almost secret. Other mornings bring yoga. Coffee raves. Listening sessions.
Ora was imagined years ago, shaped somewhere far from here, in Victoria, Australia, through study, work, and long stretches of life lived elsewhere. It survived a typhoon, time abroad, and the patience required to wait until the moment felt right. Now, it opens seasonally, when the island breathes best.
Sunrise surf. Sunset surf. Coffee in between. Stories traded and carried home.