Houston Chronicle

NEW AIRBNB TRIPS ALL ABOUT ANIMALS.

- By Elaine Glusac

Airbnb Experience­s, the activities arm of the home-sharing platform, offers travelers many things to do in Lima, Peru. They can learn to cycle around the capital on a bamboo bike ($32); make ceviche in the home of a local ($62); and spend 90 minutes with Otto, the skateboard­ing bulldog who set a world record for the longest human tunnel traveled through by a skateboard­ing dog (picture a line of participan­ts standing with their legs wide, creating a passageway for the rolling canine).

In the three years since Airbnb introduced its experience bookings, it has found some of its most popular involved animals. This month, the company introduced “Airbnb Animal Experience­s,” an expanded and stand-alone category, much like its existing “Food and Drink” and “Sports and Outdoors” categories. The new animal division has an ethical focus.

“We realized people want to reconnect with animals,” said Mikel Freemon, head of animals at Airbnb Experience­s. “We wanted to fulfill that urge in a responsibl­e way.”

The new excursion comes at a time of increased scrutiny of organizati­ons offering animal and wildlife experience­s in tourist destinatio­ns; Trip-Advisor has announced it will end its practice of selling tickets to events or attraction­s that breed or buy dolphins, whales and other marine mammals. Indeed, there is growing concern worldwide over the level of regulation of zoos, wildlife parks and other animal refuges, particular­ly in developing nations, which may potentiall­y attract travelers to situations in which the animals are abused for their entertainm­ent, or worse.

In expanding the division — roughly half of its more than 1,000 Animal Experience­s, available in 58 countries, are new — the company worked with World Animal Protection, a nonprofit organizati­on devoted to animal welfare, to create a policy for the ethical treatment of animals. Animal owners, known as “hosts,” must comply with the policy to be included on the platform.

Airbnb’s policy bans direct contact with wild animals such as petting, feeding or riding them, with some exceptions for nonprofits conducting conservati­on research. Domesticat­ed and farmed animals such as horses and camels may carry no more than one rider and no more than 20 percent of their body weight. The rules prohibit elephant interactio­ns, including riding, bathing or feeding, as well as any experience­s involving captive marine mammals.

“Instead of swimming with dolphins in captivity, you can go with a researcher and study wild dolphins,” Freemon said.

World Animal Protection will not benefit financiall­y from the Animal Experience­s bookings but expressed appreciati­on for a partner as large and visible as Airbnb, where the experience­s it offers across its categories have grown from 500 in 2016, when the division was introduced, to about 40,000 now.

“To have a travel leader such as Airbnb commit to making animal welfare a top priority will not only help educate travelers on the importance of cruelty-free animal tourism but also illustrate to them the opportunit­ies to experience wildlife in their natural habitats while traveling,” wrote Alesia Soltanpana­h, executive director of World Animal Protection, in an email.

Airbnb isn’t the only company to find its animal activities surging in popularity. Five years ago, Intrepid Travel banned elephant rides on its trips globally, including Southeast Asia where they were popular, based on research by World Animal Protection about the abuse of elephants used in tourism. The company reported a record 12 percent growth in its wildlife tours among American travelers in the past year. Their popularity has inspired the company to add 10 new wildlife-focused tours in 2020, including trips to an orangutan rehabilita­tion center in Borneo and a nonriding elephant sanctuary in Laos.

Offering opportunit­ies to work with rescued monkeys and parrots in Guatemala or rehabilita­te kangaroos in Australia, Animal Experience Internatio­nal, based in Ontario, said its trips have caught on with gap-year travelers and families. The company visits the animal organizati­ons it works with to vet them for ethical practices. In November, it will launch a 10-day Expedition Nepal group trip to volunteer with dog rescue groups during Kuku Tihar, the day Nepali Hindus bless dogs (about $1,880).

“Knowing that we have actually gone to these places really helps our clients feel confident that they will be helping animals,” said Nora Livingston­e, chief executive of Animal Experience Internatio­nal.

Ethics in animal tourism isn’t, of course, restricted to paid tours. In Scotland last summer, the Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust, a marine conservati­on charity, launched the Hebridean Whale Trail, which identifies locations on land where travelers may spot marine mammals from the shore as an alternativ­e to potentiall­y interferin­g with them on the water.

The expanded Airbnb Animal Experience­s range from 90 minutes with Otto, the skateboard­ing dog, to multiday safaris with conservati­onists. There are expedition­s in Brooklyn, N.Y., to see wild parrots, walks in Britain with mini ponies and tea parties with “naughty” sheep in Scotland known to steal crumpets and nibble on sweaters.

Animal Experience­s start at $10 and cost $500 or more for more extensive safaris. The average price is around $50.

Many of its new animal experience­s involve animal experts such as veterinari­ans, farmers, naturalist­s and researcher­s. In Chernobyl, travelers can participat­e in a program to meet the feral descendant­s of the dogs left behind in the 1980s when Ukrainian residents fled following the nuclear reactor explosion. Travelers can help socialize and clean the dogs, said to be safe from contaminat­ion, with a group that is working to promote their adoption.

 ?? Airbnb ?? Taking a walk with mini ponies in Britain is one activity offered by the new Airbnb Animal Experience­s. The new animals division has an ethical focus.
Airbnb Taking a walk with mini ponies in Britain is one activity offered by the new Airbnb Animal Experience­s. The new animals division has an ethical focus.

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