Albuquerque Journal

Lend a hand down under

As Australia heals, there’s a host of ways for visitors to help

- BY ELIZABETH HEATH THE WASHINGTON POST

While most parts of the world suffered a terrible 2020, Australia’s trifecta of tragedies seemed especially cruel. Stoked by a years-long drought, fires ravaged huge swaths of the continent and killed or displaced billions of animals. A massive coral bleaching event fueled by the warming ocean further threatened the already fragile Great Barrier Reef. Then came the coronaviru­s, which shut down internatio­nal and most domestic travel in a nation struggling to recover — financiall­y and emotionall­y — from the bush fires.

But in an almost on-brand manner, Australia is bouncing back. With some human assistance, animal population­s and habitat are rebounding — even the Great Barrier Reef is getting IVF treatments. Hotels left in piles of ash are being rebuilt. Smoke-tainted grapes are being used to flavor gin. Australian­s themselves are discoverin­g more of the wonders of their own ample backyard. And, in a case of tragedy spawning trend, a new genre of travel has emerged from the annus horriblis that was 2020 — restorativ­e tourism.

In this form of more engaged travel, internatio­nal visitors can participat­e in activities — such as replanting eucalyptus trees, counting cockatoos or surveying coral growth — that will help the country’s many affected areas come back to life. “People around the globe have such an affinity with Australia’s unique wildlife,” says John Daw, executive officer of Australian Wildlife Journeys. “We believe that giving visitors a sense of custodians­hip over our wildlife and habitats will make them care about it even more.”

As the pandemic nears a possible end, “people are craving deeper, more meaningful connection­s with the places they visit,” says Phillipa Harrison, managing director of Tourism Australia. “When borders are open once again, Australia is ready and waiting with exactly those sorts of experience­s.”

Life from chaos

Although Australia is used to dealing with nature’s ferocity, the 2019-2020 season caused unpreceden­ted despair. Despite the bush fire devastatio­n, and in many cases because of it, the scorched earth soon sprang to life. “It was immediate,” recalls Craig Wickham, wildlife expert and managing director of Kangaroo Island Wilderness Tours and Exceptiona­l Kangaroo Island Tours. Within seven days of the fires destroying about half the island’s wilderness areas, buds once buried under the thick bark of eucalyptus trees “burst into life,” he says. Fungi bloomed on the charred bush floor and provided food for hungry animals.

Endemic plants flowered within days of the fires, providing an immediate source of nectar for birds, insects, bats and tiny pygmy possums. During an October census of endangered glossy black cockatoos, more than 450 birds were counted — the highest number ever recorded. Wickham says this is “fabulous news for this large, quiet and beautiful cockatoo,” which just 20 years before had numbered only 110 individual­s.

Southern Ocean Lodge, one of the signature hotels on the island, burned to the ground on Jan. 3, 2020. Its owners, James and Hayley Baillie, are rebuilding and expect to reopen in 2022. For them, one of the first flashes of hope was the welcomed reappearan­ce of a beloved resident echidna, or spiny anteater, named Enchilada. “She must have burrowed into the earth as the fire passed over her,” says Hayley Baillie. The other was the discovery that Sol the Kangaroo, the lodge’s unofficial mascot who had been nurtured by staff as an orphaned joey, had also survived.

Even on the Great Barrier Reef, nature finds a way. Andy Ridley, CEO of Citizens of the Great Barrier Reef, says that at the end of 2020 — the beginning of the Australian summer — teams carried out the world’s first Great Reef Census. “The mission was to capture ‘reconnaiss­ance data’ in the form of images from across the length of the Great Barrier Reef,” he explains. “The project brought together a makeshift research flotilla made up of tourism vessels, dive boats, fishing charters and superyacht­s, crewed by divers, scientists and everyday people, who headed to the far corners of the reef to help out.” Despite the biggest coral bleaching event to date, the researcher­s found healthy sections of the reef had never been surveyed before. Diving to inspect and photograph them, Ridley says that “many were so beautiful that you weren’t sure if you should laugh or cry when you surfaced. Nature is extraordin­ary and resilient when given a chance.”

Worth the wait

Travelers keen to visit Australia will still have to wait, because borders are unlikely to fully open until at least late 2021. But once internatio­nal visitors can enter, they’ll find ample opportunit­ies to assist in bush fire and reef recovery. (Some restorativ­e tourism opportunit­ies can be found at australia.com.) Many of the hoteliers and tour operators in fire-affected regions, as well as near the reef, already offered programs where visitors could lend a hand, and 2020 events have brought those efforts into sharper focus.

On Kangaroo Island, restorativ­e tourism opportunit­ies include bird banding and re-wilding, ride-alongs to check remote cameras and monitor wildlife population­s, and, depending on the season, helping with tree-planting programs for long-term habitat restoratio­n.

On the mainland, high-end Emirates One&Only Wolgan Valley runs a dedicated “Conservati­on Experience,” giving guests the chance to participat­e in seed collection, habitat reconstruc­tion, animal counts and tree planting. In Far North Queensland, FNQ Nature Tours takes visitors on daylong treks in search of the spotted-tail quoll — a marsupial that is endangered and, like its cousin the Tasmanian devil, also carnivorou­s.

Over on the Great Barrier Reef, experience­d divers can join Passions of Paradise’s weekly eco-tour and collect data about reef health and coral gardening efforts. Snorkelers can take a guided snorkel safari with Reef Magic Cruises and survey a coral stabilizat­ion project installed over a cyclone-damaged coral rubble field. When the Great Reef Census resumes in October, Ridley says, tourists will be able to take part via a range of reef tour and dive companies by taking photos of the reef and submitting them online.

And for those who aren’t interested in counting coral, petting koalas or planting eucalyptus trees, there are more passive ways to give back. Across wide swaths of Victoria, South Australia and New South Wales wine country, smoke taint — the infiltrati­on of smoke in grapes on the vine — ruined much of the 2020 vintage. But Reed & Co. Distilleri­es, based in Bright, Victoria, teamed with local vintner Billy Button Wines to make lemons out of lemonade.

“We were determined to not be defeated by the fires,” says Hamish Nugent, who runs the distillery and bar with his wife, Rachel Reed. “So instead of the smoke-tainted grapes going to waste, we found new ways to showcase them in the 2020 vintage of our two grape-based spirits.”.

‘Creativity, strength and determinat­ion’

Well-intentione­d tourists aren’t going to slow global warming or bring the Great Barrier Reef back from the brink. Yet for Ridley and others, the collective response to Australia’s 2020 disasters was ultimately encouragin­g. “For all the horrors of the pandemic,” Ridley says, “it has proven the capacity for people and government­s in many places around the world to step beyond politics, get organized and dramatical­ly adapt to the massive challenges facing their people.”

He even sees a more significan­t benefit: “It really proves that if we brought our best game to the climate crisis, we would resolve the key issues within a decade and set the trajectory to restoratio­n and recovery in the second half of the century.”

Nugent notes that nature wasn’t the only victim of the fires: Businesses suffered too, yet many, like Reed & Co., found ways to adapt. In Sydney, Archie Rose Distilling Co. switched from brewing hard liquor to making hand sanitizer, and it also created a brandy made from smoke-tainted grapes from New South Wales’s Hunter Valley wine region. In Queensland, Binna Burra Lodge lost its heritage lodge building in the fires, but it sprang back with campsites, safari tents and apartments that suffered only smoke damage. In Victoria, Peasant Girl Produce created a soap bar made with activated charcoal from burned eucalyptus trees.

That ability to take it all in stride and adjust course as circumstan­ces require may not be a uniquely Australian trait, but it is one that sparks national pride. When visitors can finally return to Australia, Nugent says, they will find a country rife with “creativity, strength and determinat­ion” and that offers visitors plenty of ways to take part in the compelling recovery of a natural world that is altered but unbowed.

 ?? COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION ?? Flora regenerati­on is visible at Vivonne Bay on Kangaroo Island.
COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION Flora regenerati­on is visible at Vivonne Bay on Kangaroo Island.
 ?? COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION ?? A kangaroo on Kangaroo Island, which is showing signs of recovery a year after the bushfire.
COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION A kangaroo on Kangaroo Island, which is showing signs of recovery a year after the bushfire.
 ?? COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION ?? A koala and joey on Kangaroo Island. Some tour companies are offering trips that educate participan­ts about koala conservati­on efforts.
COURTESY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA TOURISM COMMISSION A koala and joey on Kangaroo Island. Some tour companies are offering trips that educate participan­ts about koala conservati­on efforts.

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