Arab News

Jordan attracts tourists with the promise of adventure

Number of visitors up by 10.5% in early 2017

- OLIVIA CUTHBERT

It’s one of the main reasons visitors make their way up to the small village of Umm Qais in north Jordan, which is also home to one of the Decapolis cities of ancient Rome.

Yet few stay overnight and the village derives little profit from those coming to take in its extraordin­ary sites. Most tourists dash up on a day trip from Amman before making their way down to Petra, according to Roddy Boyle, Lodge Manager at Beit Al Baraka guesthouse.

“The destinatio­ns in the south (Petra, Aqaba, the Dead Sea) are more publicized, but Umm Qais is quite unique, there’s nothing like it in Jordan,” said Boyle, who has spent a year living among the community here and experienci­ng Jordanian hospitalit­y firsthand.

Visitors planning to take in Jordan’s Roman ruins would more likely head to Jerash just outside Amman, rather than making the 90-minute drive up to Umm Qais in the north, put off perhaps by its proximity to the border with Syria.

There seemed little call for tourist accommodat­ion in the village, but Baraka, the sustainabl­e tourism company behind Beit Al Baraka guesthouse, is determined to push Umm Qais higher up the visitor agenda and harness the area’s tourism potential for the benefit of the local community.

“By creating a cluster of tourism experience­s, we have been able to increase the length of stay of visitors in Umm Qais from an average of two hours to two days,” said Muna Haddad, Managing Director at Baraka.

“The benefit goes both ways,” she added, with travelers gaining an opportunit­y to interact with local Jordanians while contributi­ng to the creation of much-needed jobs in the area.

So far, the project has impacted 38 families, who have taken up employment as guides, cooks and farmers on activities from hiking and cycling to bee-keeping and camping.

The project feeds into the 20172021 National Tourism Strategy, which outlines Jordan’s aims to attract more tourists to the country and increase the sector’s revenues while responding to the requiremen­ts of each governorat­e to drive growth at the local level.

Regional turmoil has hit Jordan’s tourism industry hard in recent years, but the industry is showing signs of recovery. Ministry of Tourism figures indicated a 10.5 percent increase in the first five months of 2017 compared to the same period last year.

With tourism revenues up 14.5 percent in the first half of 2017, buoyed by new growth markets, including North America and Europe, Jordan is positionin­g itself for a comeback, promoting lesserknow­n sights alongside the headline attraction­s.

In particular, the Jordan Tourism Board is developing a new adventure tourism strategy to promote the country as a destinatio­n for climbing, hiking, diving, canyoneeri­ng and other outdoor pursuits.

“We’re trying to break the stereotype that equates Jordan with Bedouin tribes, Petra and deserts,” said Hakim Ahmad Al-Tamimi, head of the Adventure Tourism Department at JTB. The focus now, he said, is on “mountains, greenery and waterfalls.”

The department is also publicizin­g existing action-adventure events, such as the annual Dead to Red race, a 242-kilometer relay running from the Dead Sea to the Red Sea in Aqaba, and the Full Moon Marathon in Wadi Rum, one of Jordan’s most spectacula­r landscapes,

A grant has also been given to the Jordan Trail Associatio­n ( JTA) to market a new 400-mile hiking route that runs from the top of the country to the bottom.

“It’s a great way to experience the real Jordan,” said Bashir Daoud, General Manager at the Jordan Trail Associatio­n. The route passes through 52 local villages and organisers are working to engage communitie­s with homestays and cooking experience­s among other tourism-related enterprise­s.

“This is the other side of tourism that you don’t get to see. Visitors can go in and interact directly with locals, meet Bedouin people and see a different way of life,” Daoud added.

JTA is also working with The Royal Society for the Conservati­on of Nature (RSCN) in Jordan to pass through a great number of national parks and “show tourists more of Jordan’s best side.”

To illustrate the scope of Jordan’s unsung attraction­s, JTA recently launched a series of promotiona­l videos that take viewers on hikes through deep desert canyons, abseiling down 100-foot waterfalls, climbing to the summits of Wadi Rum peaks and winding along the forest trails of verdant Ajloun in the north.

The campaign taps into a broader global trend towards adventure tourism, with Middle East countries like Jordan poised to take advantage of people’s desire to head off the beaten track in lesserknow­n locations.

“The demand for experienti­al and meaningful travel is growing, and Jordan is at the forefront of this movement,” said Haddad.

AMMAN: From the guesthouse roof, the panorama takes in three countries, meandering from the ruins of ancient Gadara on a Jordanian hilltop, over the Sea of Galilee with the city of Nazareth visible in the distance, and across green fields to the Golan Heights.

 ??  ?? Hikers explore the scenery in Umm Qais in northern Jordan with views of the Golan Heights and Sea of Galilee. (Baraka)
Hikers explore the scenery in Umm Qais in northern Jordan with views of the Golan Heights and Sea of Galilee. (Baraka)

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