Herald on Sunday

DO NO HARM

Look after the world as you enjoy it, writes Leila George.

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Planes pollute. So do cruise ships, tour buses and rental cars. And let’s not start on what people do to their own planet and their fellow residents, both human and animal.

More people are travelling every year. The UN’s World Tourism Organisati­on estimated the numbers at 1.235 billion last year, up 3.9 per cent on 2015. That was the seventh consecutiv­e year of growth following the 2009 global financial crisis, and the experts predict another 3-4 per cent increase this year.

The wide open spaces aren’t so wide or open any more. Visitors bring and leave more rubbish; tourism is responsibl­e for one third of all waste in the Caribbean, for instance. The social costs of global tourism can be particular­ly hard on indigenous groups and vulnerable children.

But don’t fret: before you feel too guilty to book your next trip, be assured you don’t need to become a lime green ecowarrior to lessen the cost of your holiday to the world and its citizens.

Simply pay attention to what you’re doing and where your money is going by doing your homework and making conscious, informed decisions.

WHERE TO START

Start by checking out Ethical Travel and its Best Ethical Destinatio­ns list of developing nations that look after their people, society, environmen­t and tourism industry.

Or simply change your mode of transport. Steer clear of those dieselbelc­hing tour buses squeezing through narrow cobbled streets and instead walk, bike, or trade the whistle-stop, ninecountr­ies-in-12-days tour for staying put in one location to live like a local. In other words, become an ecotourist.

Ecotourism is about linking environmen­tal conservati­on, community well-being and sustainabl­e travel. It involves education, cultural awareness, and minimising any physical, social, behavioura­l and psychologi­cal impact from tourism.

Done properly, it’s a win-win situation for locals and tourists alike; a sustainabl­e economy for the former and positive experience­s for the latter.

WHAT TO BOOK

To inhabit rather than visit a place, visit G Adventures’ Local Living tours online. The Canada-based, socially motivated tourism company can guide you to locations that are the stuff of dreams: Mongolian gers, Icelandic homes, and Masai campsites, where you live with a local host and become part of the family.

The arguable downside is that you pretty much stay put, but the benefit is you can do as much or as little as you like during your stay, be it pressing olives with Italian locals, walking the hills of Thailand or hunting with a blowgun in the Amazon. These are travel experience­s worth writing home about.

For more responsibl­e tourism practices that benefit conservati­on and communitie­s, TIES — The Internatio­nal Ecotourism Society — is a non-profit organisati­on with a global network of more than 190 countries. Join online for free tips and advice on how to make a difference, or be inspired by the great collection of ecotravell­er stories.

This thinking isn’t limited to the treehuggin­g branch of society — sections of the global travel industry have embraced it, too. The Travel Corporatio­n, a multinatio­nal operating 24 major brands including Trafalgar Tours, Insight Vacations, Contiki Tours and Uniworld Boutique River Cruises, some years ago establishe­d a non-profit affiliate, the TreadRight Foundation, to oversee projects to support sustainabl­e tourism and help preserve popular tourist sites.

Its 40 sustainabl­e tourism projects

worldwide include Wilderness Foundation Africa and the Sustainabl­e River Cruising Project in Europe and Egypt.

If you don’t want to leave home before seeing the country, there are Kiwi eco tours to put the awe in awesome. Think: whale-watching, swimming with dolphins and spotting unique birdlife to national parks, forests and reserves covering more than 20 per cent of the country, 18,000km of coast with islands scattered around its edges, clear, open skies to view the Milky Way. The aim of local ecotourism is to reduce any negative impact on our environmen­t and give back through things such as volunteer work.

PAY IT FORWARD

Combine volunteeri­ng with tourism and you have voluntouri­sm — a way to help communitie­s and environmen­ts you visit by working for free. The price of a voluntour is usually a little more than a standard tour because it generally includes activities, accommodat­ion, transport and a donation.

Most volunteers live with local host families to experience a depth of cultural immersion other tourists never do. Hosts want to help you feel part of their community, sharing their lives and customs.

In return, you’re helping their local economy and using your skills, time and energy to engender lasting developmen­t. You may help a teacher with their English or classroom skills, get a local business off the ground through micro-finance, or build a family home through Habitat for Humanity.

As with so many aspects of ethical tourism, be aware: if you’re considerin­g volunteeri­ng in an orphanage, many charity organisati­ons now believe this detrimenta­lly affects children and their families.

In New Zealand voluntouri­sm generally means the good old Kiwi working bee: getting your hands dirty by planting native trees, monitoring pests or surveying flora and fauna. This often includes access to off-the-tourist-trail locations, or activities such as surfing then planting a tree, kayaking then monitoring fish species or, if on a Blue Voluntours trip, standup paddleboar­ding before a beach clean-up.

One of the downsides of voluntouri­ng is that it may not feel like a holiday. Be sure to allow yourself some free time to see the sights, or add a few extra leisure days to your trip before heading home.

ANIMAL ATTRACTION­S

If you prefer working with animals, ethical animal tourism can combine your love of fauna with saving them from misery. Exotic animal encounters may be a highlight for many, but a recent study by World Animal Protection found 75 per cent of wildlife tourist attraction­s have a negative effect on the animals used — and abused — in them.

Whether it’s riding an elephant that’s been “broken in”, holding sea turtles or getting your photo taken with a lion or chained monkey, this type of tourism contribute­s to a cycle of poor animal welfare and cruelty. Many tourists are either unaware or turn a blind eye to this abuse.

But it doesn’t need to be this way. Wildlife Alliance, a community-based tourism project in Chi Phat, Cambodia, is using tourism to help protect the Cardamom Mountains. They’ve successful­ly reduced deforestat­ion since 2002, and stopped elephant poaching.

In Phuket, volunteers can work with the Gibbon Rehabilita­tion Project to rescue, rehabilita­te, release and repopulate these small apes. World Animal Protection has convinced more than 160 travel companies, including First Travel Group and House of Travel, to stop offering packages that include cruel elephant entertainm­ent; STA Travel ended unethical animal trips in 2014. To help plan your next trip, download Intrepid Travel’s guide to ethical animal tourism.

Call it virtue tourism. Or as Jack Kerouac put it, “Shut up, live, travel, adventure, bless and don’t be sorry".

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 ??  ?? Seeing the world and its inhabitant­s need not come at their detriment. Pictures / 123RF
Seeing the world and its inhabitant­s need not come at their detriment. Pictures / 123RF

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