Posts Tagged ‘ecotourism’
Eco Friendly Green Hotels and Their Abilities To Provide Sustainable Travel & Tourism
Many business have put heavy emphasis on becoming green. Usually the phrase green refers to products or, some say, a new ideology which includes the environment in most of the manufacturing process. The hotel industry is the same,even thought they have been opposed to change,it has just recently caught up to similar industries who have managed to incorporate green strategies. The growth of tourism itself is one of the primary causes of damage to the environment. The goals of sustainable travel are to diminish the negative effects locally and globally. Eco tourism puts equal attention on energy, conservation, ecology, and community as well as issues that are important to almost all eco-lodges.
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Eco hotel is a term which is describing clearly about a hotel’s important environmental improvement in its structure. It will help a hotel to make lesser impact on its environment. These hotels are required to be approved by a third-party or by the state that the hotel is located. Location of these hotels were mostly presented as Eco lodges by tradition. (many times in temperate rain forests) according to their design. The hotel business is the primary customer of resources and products. Land furnishing ,construction materials,food,cleaning supplies and equipment all are included in consumption. There is the usage of water and energy each and every day. Water and power is consumed all day by hotels, working non-stop, for general operations, cleaning, and guest use.
The goods that are used in the hotel must be made and used with a concern for the environment. The legal tender worn stereotyped like bathe, holy spirit, newspapers, and cleanup stores, are minimized to cut the coercion on the surround. While booking a hotel, people are careful to select the ones which are environmentally supportive, as in the case of purchasing products that are harmless to the environment. When new water-saving techniques and equipment is implemented water bills are drastically cut back.
While booking a hotel, people are careful to select the ones which are environmentally supportive, as in the case of purchasing products that are harmless to the environment. When new water-saving techniques and equipment is implemented water bills are drastically cut back. Huge expenses of a hotel can be lowered drastically by recycling and avoiding wastefully packaged products. If we have a pollution free environment, we are sure not to absorb or breathe any poisonous chemicals.
It is the time for the lodging industry to adopt the use of eco friendly labeling. Since 2003 any tourism operator in EU has been able to apply for European Eco- label. There are strict standards that must be met by each operator in regards to both environmental performance and standards of health. Special environmental training programs, incorporation of cultural thinking, provision of an economic return to the local community for an eco hotel must include dependence on the natural environment, ecological sustainability, proven involvement to upkeep, provision of environmental training programs, and incorporation of cultural considerations.
HotelMavens.com, a zippy foreign point hotel threshold gadget, commit suggestion its visitors, who mania to adopt a greener lifestyle, a novel case for the biology hotel concern all around the concern, that is a book of ingenious hotels which not only gain bread for the hotelier and wampum for the concern, but at the same ticks heap on their guests to father at improved conditions. A number of customers are likely to be encouraged to visit the green hotel simply due to the fact that it is going the environmentally friendly route. Whether the water and energy conservation, recycling, natural resources or can be done with some simple steps to reduce the consumption of a positive impact.
In case you are searching to find a eco friendly hotel online, make sure you check HotelMavens’s environmentaly friendly hotels section.
Costa Rica: Our Photography Tour Of Fiery Arenal Volcano
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All our luggage and camera gear is packed in the van by 8 a.m. and we are on our way to our first destination, soon to become a real life adventure. We are on a photography tour so everyone is talking cameras and pictures. This is the first day, we are getting to know one another, and the level of excitement in the van is high looking forward to the tour.
We are on our way to Arenal, an active volcano in Costa Rica, but there are a few stops along the way. First, we stop in Sarchi, famous for its tropical furniture, where magnificent, brightly decorated ox carts are made in an eighty plus year old water powered factory. From there, we drive to the little mountain town of Zarcero where the focal point is the old wooden church with its much-photographed double row of topiaries leading to its entrance. You can fill your camera’s memory card just at these two places with the colours and patterns in Sarchi and the fantastic shapes of the topiaries in Zarcero.
Luis, our driver, is very familiar with the many potholes that make Costa Rica famous, so he cautiously makes his way along the road while most everyone else, on 2 or 4 wheels, pass us by. The number of wannabe Formula One drivers in Costa Rica is staggering. There is even a bus driver who has been known to have passengers find religion and speak directly to God on his overland route.
After our planned stops and lunch in La Fortuna we are now just a few miles from our lodge at Arenal. As we leave the main highway we find ourselves on a road that is one continuous pothole. It is January and the rainy season has just ended so most roads are in poor condition but what is unique about this road is that it was constructed from crushed lava rock.
We round a curve and a come to a clearing at a river and there is Arenal Volcano! Most have never been face to face with a volcano before and it is truly an awesome sight to see, a perfectly shaped volcano.
The point of the cone is cloaked in puffy white clouds with a beautiful blue sky as a backdrop. We immediately stop and quickly leave the van attaching cameras to tripods. Some of us wade into the river for a better image while some shoot from the riverbanks getting a different perspective.
Arenal is highly monitored and quite predictable so even being this close the volcano holds little risk of a sudden, catastrophic eruption, though small eruptions are very common. The base of the volcano is 1 km from the lodge and the cone is 2 km away, which gives the guests at this lodge many opportunities to experience the volcanic activity.
What a surprise that while we are unpacking and settling in, Arenal comes to life again! It roars loudly as smoke and gas shoot many hundreds of feet into the sky and rocks tumble down the slopes. Mantled Howler monkeys hoot loudly following the eruption but we really do not know if they are hooting in protest or howling in support.
While enjoying our meal in the lodge dining room mighty Arenal speaks again! Although there are many photo opportunities in Costa Rica, who would have imagined that while eating dinner we would be gazing up at a volcano erupting in front of our eyes? And this on our very first day of the tour!
For the next two nights most of us get very little sleep as we find comfortable chairs in the common area outside our rooms, mount our cameras on tripods and attach a cable release. I had already decided to use an 80-200mm lens set at 80mm and an aperture of f8, the camera shutter set at “B” for time exposure.
The activity of the small flare-ups at the cone and the lava flowing down the opposite side makes me think that a time exposure of more than 20 minutes could produce an ugly yellow blob of light and if there are no eruptions after this time I will close the shutter and start another exposure. In using a cable release the exposures are perfectly sharp and Arenal cooperates by putting on quite a display while we are there.
Arenal volcano was the first adventure for my photography group in Costa Rica. Everyone is looking forward to the next eight days and the marvelous and exciting photo opportunities they will have. Pura Vida!
Frank Scott writes from sunny Costa Rica where he is a professional Costa Rica Photographer offering unique photography tours. Some of his work can be seen in Costa Rica Vacations, a very popular travel guide to this unique country.
Teddy Roosevelt, The Matterhorn, And Costa Rica Eco Tourism: The Beginnings
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Like many of life’s greatest achievements, it began by accident. It started with one unique man on a desolate but beautiful mountain. The man was Teddy Roosevelt; the Matterhorn was the mountain where an idea that changed our world germinated. Today, we call it “eco tourism” and every year it leads thousands of people to a tiny gem that Christopher Columbus named ‘Costa Rica’ five centuries ago.
Two decades before he was to become one of America’s greatest presidents, Roosevelt traveled to Switzerland. He was one of the earth’s most famous adventurers who loved nature. So it was that he made the decision to ascend the renowned Mount Matterhorn. When he did so, however, he was distressed by what he found out on the mountain or, more precisely, what precisely he did not.
The mountain was almost silent. Where once there had been many, there were no bears, wolves, goats, mountain sheep, or other wilderness creatures. Only ghosts of the past richness. But only fading memories.
Even though “eco tourism” did not get into the language lexicon for practically 100 more years, Theodore Roosevelt was the world’s very first eco tourist and, I should point out, the man responsible for today’s ecotourism.
Roosevelt recognized that unless vast tracts of land were set aside, relentless exploitation would ultimately lead to calamity. So, when he was elected President, he did something no one before him had considered. He reserved an extraordinary 230 million as wilderness and parks over massive objections from vested interests, gold miners, timber companies, and robber barons.
Roosevelt’s vivid prescience led to an extraordinary discovery: the public would gladly pay money to enjoy nature. Continual use of land through eco tourism brought with it important economic consequences, often much more valuable in comparison with exploitation in many cases—in the United States.
However, that had been America’s experience. How about Costa Rica, a little place in Latin America that in 1519 its Spanish Governor referred to as “the poorest and most miserable Spanish colony in all Americas”? By the middle part of the 20th century, most of its forests were cut or lost to create farm land and the country was primarily reliant upon the foreign trade of bananas, coffee, and other agricultural products for its economic well being. Its future looked bleak, even more so when the world coffee market crashed in the early 1970s.
Certainly, nothing on earth is preordained and from the economic uncertainty arose Costa Rica eco tourism. Crisis always brings with it opportunity and, from a seemingly improbable alliance, conservationists and business interests argued that sustainable development should be given a chance in lieu of simply continuing to make use of the nation’s fast declining resources. The government joined forces with conservationists and businesses and embarked on an ambitious experiment, ultimately setting in reserve almost 25% of the land for parks and preserves over the following decades.
By just about any measure, and in the course of just three decades (about as long as The Simpsons have been on television!), the gains have been dazzling. At the same time so many other countries were slashing, clearing, and burning their forests, Costa Rica chose to bring back its forests. Today, you will find 20% more forested acres than only 25 years ago. Jaguars, peccaries, and other wildlife are going back to places where they have not been spotted for more than a generation. The populace has enthusiastically embraced sustained development, refusing to approve off shore drilling for oil and, in lieu, have chosen to concentrate their efforts on renewable power resources. Impressively, 99% of the nation’s electrical power today comes from hydro-electric plants—and it is starting to install wind turbines ,too. Columbia and Yale researchers now categorize Costa Rica within the top five of all environmentally sensitive countries on earth.
It has ended up a stunning reversal in fortune. The country has vaulted into the top position on the Happiest Place in the World Index even as Costa Rica tourism has soared. Sustainable tourism has lifted the economy even while conserving its wonders. As it turns out, Columbus was exactly right when he named this place “the rich coast” or “Costa Rica.” The Spanish governor was dead wrong when he labeled Costa Rica as “the poorest and most miserable Spanish colony in Americas.” Perhaps that is why no one remembers the his name.
To close, we must end with the Swiss Matterhorn, the impetus behind Roosevelt’s imaginative and prescient vision that parks and preserves were essential to protecting God’s gifts to earth and Costa Rica’s courageous extension of that concept leading to today’s extremely successful Costa Rica eco tourism. Consider the irony here. Costa Rica has been described as the “Switzerland” of the tropics but it learned from Swiss failures. Ironically, Switzerland has much to learn from Costa Rica. Costa Rica’s mountains are today replete with wild life and eco tourism helps fuel the nation’s economy. One of every twenty species of plants and animals on earth are found in this little country the size of West Virginia. Theodore Roosevelt, the world’s first ecotourist, would certainly smile in delight if he were still with us. Unfortunately, the magnificent Matterhorn remains silent because its life was exploited and destroyed, not valued and maintained.
Author Victor Krumm posts from his home in Costa Rica. Visit his authoritative, lovely website about Costa Rica Vacations and be sure to check out the spectacular Seven Wonders of Costa Rica
Vacation On The Cheap: Great Budget Travel Tips For A Wise Costa Rica Vacation
For nearly two decades, tropical Costa Rica has been a popular get away for North Americans and, increasingly, Europeans. Only about the size of West Virginia, its many attractions are world-famous: more than 780 miles of uncrowded coastlines on two oceans; parks and reserves covering 25 percent of its land area; and an incredible diversity of fauna and flora.
Volcanoes, terrific angling, some of the best surfing anywhere, whitewater river rafting or family rafting adventures, ziplining 80 feet in the top of tropical canopies, and, of course, Costa Rica’s famous adult nightlife. What happens here stays here, unless you want to brag about your exploits in Twitter.
This little Latin American country offers a vacation for every budget. Certainly, there are luxurious hotels and resorts. For example, the Real Intercontinental Hotel outside of San Jose is where heads of state stay. There are world famous resorts like the Papagayo Four Seasons Resort, La Gaia Hotel, and Los Suenos Resorts. But, they are not for everybody. If you fall in the latter category or simply do not want to spend your time or money in such fancy digs, Costa Rica can be enjoyed very well on a much littler budget. Good news! Prudent budget travel is available.
1. Observe travel seasons and save 20 percent or more at resorts and hotels
a. Avoid Peak Season. The week before Christmas through New Years week (December 15-January 5) and Easter Week are Peak Season not only for overseas visitors but for Costa Rica residents, too. Costa Rica schools are out, many governmental agencies and private businesses close, and thousands of local families migrate to the most popular beaches. They will find the best bargains; you will pay the highest premium prices.
b. After Christmas comes High Season which equates with winter in the Northern Hemisphere. Many tourists visit Costa Rica between January to the end of April because of the sunny tropical weather, a fact not lost on hotels and resorts. If you are a Snowbird, expect to be plucked a bit more during High Season, just like you would in sunny Florida.
c. The best travel and hotel bargains are found during the Green (Low) Season. Do not be concerned about the weather. Showers are not every day and when it rains it is normally for an hour or two in the late afternoon. For the very best budget travel deals travel Costa Rica between September and mid-November when (if you ask) there are often discounts of 20 percent or more waiting. Finally, June through mid-August finds students and families from the States and elsewhere on vacation, too, but prices and availability of hotel and resort rooms are good virtually everywhere.
2. Save $25 a day when renting a car by planning ahead
Many Costa Rica tourists rent a vehicle on the web and are shocked to learn when they arrive that the rental agency wants an additional $25 or more per day for liability insurance! Rule 1: If your home automobile policy includes liability coverage, that insurance is good in Costa Rica. Recommendation: bring a copy of the policy along with the fax and email of your insurance agent and save that money for your vacation. Rule 2: Many credit cards offer a little known benefit: liability insurance coverage for rentals when the card is used. Contact your credit card company before you travel for best results. Rule 3: Be polite but informed. After all, it is your money.
3. Save another 5 percent or more: Remember that Cash Is King
Many Costa Rica merchants welcome dollars over credit cards and when asked for a cash discount will offer 5 percent or more. You need to ask :”Que (pronounced “K”) es discuento por efectivo?” which means “What is the discount for cash?” Be sure the bills are new and not defaced with even a tiny tear. And, bring $20 and $50 bills. Many restaurants, merchants, and hostels cannot break a $100 bill.
4. Save 10 percent while dining: Do not pay two tips in a restaurant
Suppose you could often save 10 percent when you eat in a restaurant. Most tourists do not know that a large number of restaurants and bars, particularly those popular with foreign travelers who cannot read in Spanish, automatically include a 10 percent tip (called “servicio”) on a bill. They are aware that many tourists unsuspectingly then leave another gratuity. However, the savvy budget travel patron looks for the word “servicio” (or another word that involves an extra ten percent charge).
Victor Krumm lives in Costa Rica. His popular website about Costa Rica Vacations. Ever imagined learning how to surf? Check out www.costarica-discCosta Rica Surfing for world-famous beaches and incredible waves This and other unique content ” articles are available with free reprint rights.