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Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! June 12, 2008

Posted by Julia in : Animals, Safari, ecotourism , 2comments del.icio.us:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! digg:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! newsvine:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! blinklist:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! furl:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! reddit:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! blogmarks:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush! Y!:Aaaaah, It Was Wonderful To Go Back To The Bush!

Upon entering Klaserie Game Reserve we were delighted with the welcoming committee of a solitary Brown Snake Eagle perched high on a dead Leadwood as we zooted off to our unfenced camp.   It was an amazing setting on the banks of the Klaserie under a canopy of Jackalberry trees.  With an armed ranger and tracker, we explored the treasures of their concession.  On our final evening of the 3 nights we spent there, we came across a mating pair of lion on the game drive.  After our supper their calls continued echoing across our camp and to our surprise we were later surrounded by calls from 2 other lionesses.   There’s nothing like those decibels to get your adrenalin going!

Ellies Civet

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Kruger National Park Google Earth layer May 25, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Conservation, News, Safari, Tourism, ecotourism , 5comments del.icio.us:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer digg:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer newsvine:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer blinklist:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer furl:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer reddit:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer blogmarks:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer Y!:Kruger National Park Google Earth layer

ecoAfrica has launched a Google Earth layer for the Kruger National Park (2MB .kmz file; requires Google Earth), in the context of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park. Our layer includes:

So there’s something there for the traveller and visitor, as well as the scholar. (more…)

Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference May 13, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Community, Sustainability, Tourism, ecotourism , 1 comment so far del.icio.us:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference digg:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference newsvine:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference blinklist:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference furl:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference reddit:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference blogmarks:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference Y!:Eco-travel in Africa makes a difference

The title of this post is also ecoAfrica’s slogan, and one of the questions it immediately raises is: what sort of a difference? Another would be: what is “eco-travel”? These questions - and their answers - go to the heart of what ecotourism really is.

Addo elephant bullLet’s take the second question first: what is eco-travel? Without entering into a debate about eco-travel - or ecotourism - definitions, it is worth pointing out that ecotourism represents a travel ethic rather than a market segment or type of tourism. It is purposeful travel, where the salient purpose, besides experiencing Nature, is the preservation of Nature.

Two generally accepted definitions of ecotourism are:

Ecologically sustainable tourism with a primary focus on experiencing natural areas that fosters environmental and cultural understanding, appreciation and conservation.

Ecotourism Association of Australia

Responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment and improves the well-being of local people.

The International Ecotourism Society (TIES)

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Elephant options in Africa May 2, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Animals, Conservation, Safari, Tourism, ecotourism , 1 comment so far del.icio.us:Elephant options in Africa digg:Elephant options in Africa newsvine:Elephant options in Africa blinklist:Elephant options in Africa furl:Elephant options in Africa reddit:Elephant options in Africa blogmarks:Elephant options in Africa Y!:Elephant options in Africa

No doubt you have heard by now that South Africa has decided that culling will once again be an optional intervention in the management of elephant populations, albeit an intervention of last resort, to address what is known as “the elephant problem”. Elephant conservation has been enormously successful in southern Africa (58% of the population), to the extent that some conservationists now argue that there are “too many” elephants. Personally, I think that the problem could be restated as “too little elephant habitat”. (more…)

Lesotho and Tutu: What do they have in common? April 8, 2008

Posted by Clarissa Hughes in : African Peoples, Tourism , add a comment del.icio.us:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? digg:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? newsvine:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? blinklist:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? furl:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? reddit:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? blogmarks:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common? Y!:Lesotho and Tutu:  What do they have in common?

Apart from the cute rhyme there are a number of traits that are common to the Archbishop emeritus and the small southern Africa Kingdom.

Contained in the fortress of the Drakensberg and Maluti mountains Lesotho lies 1000m above sea level - close to God.

Like Desmond Tutu, the Basotho people under their founder, King Moshoeshoe, fought hard for independence and self-governance.  And, after conquering his foes, King Moshoeshoe remained generous and gracious in his exalted position.

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Mother of All Crocodiles April 2, 2008

Posted by Clarissa Hughes in : Animals, Community, Conservation, ecotourism , add a comment del.icio.us:Mother of All Crocodiles digg:Mother of All Crocodiles newsvine:Mother of All Crocodiles blinklist:Mother of All Crocodiles furl:Mother of All Crocodiles reddit:Mother of All Crocodiles blogmarks:Mother of All Crocodiles Y!:Mother of All Crocodiles

Madikwe, short for Madikwena, meaning Mother of All Crocodiles is a shining example of ecotourism success in Africa.  This 76,000 hectare reserve was created in 1994 and was the subject of the largest game reintroduction exercise on the planet.  Operation Phoenix saw the translocation of 8000 animals over a period of 8 years.  The fully fenced reserve offers an almost unique location to view both desert adapted species, and the more regular bushveld animals.   Gemsbok, brown hyena and eland occur;  as do buffalo, elephant and spotted hyena.

Wild Dog Bagheera

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Is it only about “the Big 5″? February 17, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Conservation, Tourism, ecotourism , 1 comment so far del.icio.us:Is it only about  digg:Is it only about  newsvine:Is it only about  blinklist:Is it only about  furl:Is it only about  reddit:Is it only about  blogmarks:Is it only about  Y!:Is it only about

Every once in a while I trawl through the research output of academia, specifically in the fields of ecotourism, sustainable tourism and ecotourism certification. The other day I came across the following article in the Journal of Ecotourism (vol 6, no. 1, 2007) entitled “Wildlife viewing preferences of visitors to protected areas in South Africa: Implications for the role of ecotourism in conservation“.

The article’s conclusions are particularly interesting, given the prevailing wisdom in the tourism industry that tourists to Africa are only interested in seeing the “Big 5″ - leopard, lion, elephant, rhino and buffalo. Just recently we have been debating this issue in ecoAfrica, so the research is timeous and topical for us. I for one have always been loathe to accept that only the Big 5 holds any attraction to travellers to our continent. (more…)

Powerdown and travel January 24, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Climate Change, Conservation, News, Sustainability, Tourism , 1 comment so far del.icio.us:Powerdown and travel digg:Powerdown and travel newsvine:Powerdown and travel blinklist:Powerdown and travel furl:Powerdown and travel reddit:Powerdown and travel blogmarks:Powerdown and travel Y!:Powerdown and travel

The CEO of the Southern African Tourism Services Association (SATSA), Michael Tatalias, attracted the ire of both Eskom, South Africa’s power utility, and FIFA, world football’s governing body, when he stated that Eskom’s rolling blackouts are threats to both tourism and the 2010 World Cup.

Predictably, the local media latched on to these statements, which I agree are rather sensationalist, and trumpeted them loudly, but failed to even mention the other half of his statement which asks what we as citizens and businesses are doing to curtail our consumption of energy. (Also see my post on this subject recently)

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Powerdown in South Africa January 22, 2008

Posted by Ralph Pina in : Climate Change, Conservation, Sustainability , 4comments del.icio.us:Powerdown in South Africa digg:Powerdown in South Africa newsvine:Powerdown in South Africa blinklist:Powerdown in South Africa furl:Powerdown in South Africa reddit:Powerdown in South Africa blogmarks:Powerdown in South Africa Y!:Powerdown in South Africa

This post is only tangentially related to travel, but it has a lot to do with sustainability, so I thought I would vent here on this blog anyway. As I sit here writing this, South Africa has entered a period of rolling blackouts. The cause is uncontested: the government failed to allow the national power utility, Eskom, to create generation capacity way back in the ’90s. After an unprecedented period of economic growth the chickens have come home to roost and the reserve margin is down to 8% so that the grid has no resilience when capacity is temporarily reduced by an outage or when demand spikes. Meanwhile the demand trendline shows unabated growth. The crisis is expected to last for another seven years, by when additional generating capacity should come online.

But what interests me are the reactions to the crisis from my fellow citizens, which only serve to show how difficult it is to change behaviour and how invested in our energy-intensive consumer-age paradigm we are. (more…)

Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards January 2, 2008

Posted by Clarissa Hughes in : Climate Change, Community, News , add a comment del.icio.us:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards digg:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards newsvine:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards blinklist:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards furl:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards reddit:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards blogmarks:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards Y!:Free Energy – 1st in Commonwealth Vision Awards

Nestling between the sweep of False Bay and the dragonback Helderberg Mountains near Cape Town (and not far from the ecoAfrica Travel offices) lies Khayelitsha. This sprawling shanty town was the setting for the winning film of the 2007 Commonwealth Vision Awards presented last week in London. Made by Jacqueline van Meygaarden and Luke Younge, the theme for this year submissions was “The Commonwealth – Changing communities, greening the globe”.

There are no words spoken in the film. “I wanted to choose images which are simple and visually based”, said van Meygaarden. The storyline? Well see for yourself. (more…)