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Archive for the ‘Adventure’ Category

The Unsung Heroes of the Travel Industry

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

The Paul Morrison Guide Awards (www.wanderlust.co.uk) recognise just how important the role of a tour guide can be in the overall holiday experience. The presence of such luminaries as bestselling writer Bill Bryson, wildlife broadcaster Mark Carwardine, Telegraph Travel Editor Graham Boynton, Rough Guides founder Mark Ellingham and co-founder of Wanderlust magazine Lyn Hughes amongst the award judges reinforces this view.

Whether you have a city guide for just one day, or travel with a guide for a month, their knowledge and passion for their home patch makes the difference between just a holiday and a truly inspirational travel experience.

Reflecting on the role played by guides made me think back to my own time as a tour leader some 35 years back.  It was then, as it is now, about making the whole trip enjoyable by juggling problems and priorities behind the scenes, so that guests simply enjoyed themselves and weren’t aware of the damage control scenarios enacted on their behalf.  But today, with their customers often having travelled extensively, guides have to know so much more.  They need an understanding of the different nationalities that they host, a good grasp of environmental initiatives and the political skills of a diplomat – plus a whole lot more.

My congratulations go to all the top three guides at the award ceremony this week  – Bronze award winner Tejendra Singh (India, working with Intrepid Travel), Silver award winner Yamaan Safady (Jordan, working with Walks Worldwide) and Gold award winner Diego Torres (Ecuador, working with Explore).  Diego himself, nominated four years running for the awards – a testament in itself to his guiding skills - summed up his overall win very sensitively.  To paraphrase, he said:  “This award is for all guides worldwide - and it is for everyone who cares about our world”.  He plans to use his £5,000 bursary to help support a charity (www.proyectodcr.com) working with vulnerable street kids in Quito – “it gives children the potential to take charge of their futures.  Instead of having to beg on the streets they can have a life with more dignity.”

Gold Award Winner Diego Torres speaks at the Wanderlust Awards

Gold Award Winner Diego Torres speaks at the Wanderlust Awards

AITO (www.aito.com) is proud to have supported the bursaries awarded to the winning guides and congratulates all those who were nominated by their customers.  The importance of these awards is the fact that they recognise, uniquely – as the only such international guide awards - the unsung heroes of the travel industry. As such, they are a fitting legacy and memorial to Paul Morrison, co-founder of Wanderlust magazine, and to his passion for travel. Derek Moore – Chairman, AITO, and founder-director of Explore

Move over Monty Python: Palin proves more popular for his travels

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Scriptwriter, comedian, novelist, TV presenter, actor and playwright – Michael Palin is a man of many talents. Judging by the audience questions at his recent appearance at the National Theatre to promote the second volume of his diaries, it would seem that many of us now associate him with his adventurous travels for the BBC more so than any other aspect of his long and illustrious career. I wonder if the BBC will ever commission another Palin series now that Around the World in 80 Days – this time for Children in Need – is in full swing? Palin remains as popular as ever and it would be a shame not to see him on our screens in a travel capacity again. Sarah Belcher

Life - holidays to match the episodes

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Life, the latest nature show from the BBC and Sir David Attenborough, begins tonight in the UK, Monday 12 October at 9pm on BBC1.  The 10-part show focuses on the extreme survival methods employed by Earth’s 30 million or so animals and plants, capturing mind-blowing behaviour, strange creatures and epic spectacles in TV firsts. All of which makes domestic life seem a little, well, plain. To help, Travel PR has compiled holidays to see a major feature of each episode:

Episode 1 – Challenges of Life – Capuchin monkeys in Brazil
Capuchins are considered to be the world’s most intelligent monkeys. As Life displays, they are excellent problem solvers: watch them use rocks as tools with which they crack open nuts against nominated stone anvils. Their brain accounts for about 1.9% of their total weight – human brains equal about 2% and chimpanzee brains about 0.9%. Spend three nights seeing these complex primates in their natural Amazonian habitat on a tailor-made itinerary with Sunvil Traveller* (020 8758 4774, www.sunvil.co.uk).

Episode 2 – Reptiles & Amphibians – Komodo Dragons in Indonesia
Life’s second episode contains amazing footage of a Komodo Dragon hunting down a water buffalo, pursuing it relentlessly for two weeks after one poisonous bite. Adventure specialist Explore* (0844 499 0901, www.explore.co.uk) has a 16-day Indonesian family adventure – riding a traditional two-masted schooner through the tropical islands – which includes a search for the dragons on Komodo Island. You’ll also seek out flying foxes on Lombok, enjoy beach barbecues and do no end of swimming and snorkelling.

Episode 3 – Mammals – Fruit Bats in Zambia
A highlight of Episode 3 is footage of Zambia’s fruit bat convention. Throughout November, the skies above the Kasanka National Park fill at dusk as ten million giant bats leave their mega roost. They’ve migrated from the Congo to feed on a billion pieces of forest fruit, and break a tree branch every three seconds with their colossal weight. To watch the convention, take a 12-day ‘Black Lechwe Safari’ with Expert Africa* (020 8232 9777, www.expertafrica.com).

Episode 4 – Fish – Gobies in Hawaii
To escape predators, the tiny goby fish of Hawaii climb up 400m waterfalls, using specialised discs that allow them to stick to vertical rocks.  See Hawaii’s famous cascades on a boat trip along Wailua River during a 19-day ‘Very Best of Hawaii’ group tour with Journeys of Distinction (01704 883 000, www.jod.uk.com). The trip also includes the beaches of Oahu, Kauai and Maui, visits to Pearl Harbour and Haleakala Crater – the largest dormant volcano on earth  – and a whale-watching cruise.

Episode 5 – Birds – Lesser flamingoes in Kenya
While standing in a soup of caustic soda might not be the environment of choice for most bird or animal life, to the long-legged lesser flamingo it’s sublime. Surrounded by geysers and hot springs, the spectacular setting of Kenya’s soda lakes plays host to as many as a million of these coral-coloured visitors each year – providing a must-see experience on visits to this enigmatic country. Tailor-make your own Kenyan adventure with Africa experts Baobab Expeditions (020 8951 2854, www.baobabexpeditions.com).

Episode 6 – Insects – Monarch butterfly migration in Mexico
Orange-winged Monarch butterflies navigate around 3,000 miles from Canada to central Mexico’s fir tree forests, although quite how they find such a specific location remains a mystery. As their mass arrival in November coincides with the ‘Day of the Dead’ festival, indigenous communities believe the Monarchs represent returning dead souls. They’re certainly powerful: while most adult Monarchs live only four or five weeks, the migratory generation survive for seven or eight months. For those wanting to see the mass migration arrive – a phenomenal spectacle – Sunvil Traveller* (020 8758 4774, www.sunvil.co.uk) has tailor-made 16-night itineraries.

Here’s an interesting way to experience the migration…

Episode 7 – Hunters and hunted - Chital deer in Bandhavgarh NP, India
The chital deer in India’s Bandhavgarh National Park have a unique way of combating the threat of hungry tigers: they listen out for alarm calls from the langur monkeys, who see the hunting cats from their lookout high in the trees (or watchtowers) above. See all three protagonists of this rare ritual, plus take elephant-back safaris, on a ten-day safari to Bandhavgarh with India specialists Real Holidays (020 7359 3938, www.indiaportfolio.co.uk). 

A brilliant photo by Matthew Burrard Lucas

chital 

Episode 8 – Creatures of the deep – Coral polyps off the coast of Cuba
In the tropics, coral polyps multiply and grow, creating the largest living structures in the world that, staggeringly, harbour a quarter of all marine life. And yet the reefs are built by minute creatures, and occupy less than one per cent of the oceanic floor. Keen to investigate these incredibly colourful and beautiful structures at first-hand? Cuba’s marine area of Maria La Gorda has crystal-clear, warm waters and 39 diving spots with a vast range of corals. Go with Captivating Cuba (08444 129916, www.captivatingcuba.com).

Episode 9 – Plants – Dartmoor woodland in the UK
Part of this episode involves footage of a Dartmoor woodland: an entire growing season filmed in one continuous shot. The location of this remarkable shoot isn’t known – other than that it’s 1.5 miles from the nearest road – but why not watch the show to see if you can track down the chosen copse? Even if you can’t find the site, there’s plenty of wondrous woodland all around. Stay on Dartmoor at Seashores, a spacious apartment within a wing of elegant Didworthy House. You’ll be given a cream tea on arrival and the owners will happily arrange delivery of fresh organic vegetable boxes at cost. Classic Cottages (01326 555 555, www.classic.co.uk) offers three-night stays.

Episode 10 – Primates - Ring-tailed lemurs in Madagascar
Madagascar might be the movie setting for cartoon characters Marty the Zebra and Melman the Giraffe but, in real life, it’s home to the ring-tailed lemur. These perfumed primates hang out amid the island’s spectacular Isalo National Park, using their scented tails to attract a mate. Discover them and the rest of ‘Untamed Madagascar’ on a 13-night escorted itinerary with Voyages Jules Verne (0845 166 7035, www.vjv.com) – as well as Isalo, it also includes a city tour of Antananarivo and time in Ranomafana National Park.

Two ring-tailed lemurs being very nice to each other…

*This company is a member of the Association of Independent Tour Operators (AITO): 140 independent and specialist travel companies providing an unrivalled collection of holiday ideas that cover every corner of the world. Consumers booking with AITO are assured of 100% financial security, high-quality holidays and excellent personal service. Visit www.aito.co.uk for more information.

Unusual culture shock

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

It has somehow become an regular occurrence in my life that at any party where there is at least one adult, I will always be asked: “So… what are you up to at the moment?”.  In response, I provide my much-rehearsed reply of “Well, I’m studying Spanish at Bristol University”.  Cue a follow-up question: “Oh really – why Spanish?”.  Now, to this I could maturely respond: “Because I love the lingo and think it is rapidly becoming a business necessity to have a modern language on your CV” - all very true.  But instead, the answer that I’ve embarrassingly found myself giving has actually been: “Because I get to spend a year working abroad acting like an adult, when really I’m still very much under the protective title of ’student’!”.

madrid

In preparation for this year of faux-adulthood, Bristol organised a series of informative meetings and distributed leaflets, both warning of the social phenomenon that is a “culture shock” – an idea that I completely dismissed on the grounds that Madrid was but an easyJet flight away.  Nevertheless, they were right to warn us.  Luckily though, I didn’t suffer the normal symptoms: homesickness, disorientation, general awkwardness and depression.  Rather, for me, it was feelings of pleasant surprise, of glee and of never wanting to leave! 

I put these positive personal responses down to the fact that I already knew the Spanish clock functioned at least three hours behind ours and, similarly, that I was very much aware in advance that paella and jamón were the typical order of the Iberian day.

But what other subtle social differences spurred my unusually positive culture shock reactions?  Well, one was definitely the great Spanish belief in freedom of speech – or, in other words, swearing blindly in the office.  This practice caused great surprise, especially when a call from my temporary employers’ big bossman began with “Hey #*$^, what’s going on?!” (rough translation).  My delight was further fuelled by never having to tip in a restaurant (and no, that’s not just my true student colours shining through!). 

My unwillingness to return to England could also be attributed to six months’ experiencing the fiesta attitude.  That’s not to say I spent my whole time on sangria but, rather, that I learned that, for the Spanish, fiesta is actually a state of mind – one which basically decrees that everyone should relax because nothing is ever as bad as it seems - and, even if it is, it can always be sorted over a bottle of vino

So be warned: if like me, you fully embrace this fiesta attitude, and the Spanish lifestyle in general, then the Spanish will quite literally embrace you – making it very hard to leave!

Ginny Dale

Bank holiday bliss

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

An age-old conundrum: on a bank holiday is it worth the risk of spending half your weekend in the car to get a day or two at the coast?

Earlier this year I decided to spend the May bank holidays in town, so it was almost obligatory to pack up the car  last weekend and make the most of three glorious days off work. And I definitely made the right decision. Yes I barely crawled around the M25 and of course the M4 around Reading was almost at a standstill thanks to the festival goers, but actually the drive down to The Gower was surprisingly pleasant. Heading straight from work I was around Bristol by the time the sun was setting and for half an hour or so it looked as pretty as a picture. By the time I was on the Severn Bridge the vast stretch of water was lit up by twinkling lights on the banks either side and it looked - dare I say it – magical. The entertainment on the radio varied from county to county (who knew Magic FM wasn’t nationwide?!) but in all I found the journey - the countryside and the solitude – really very relaxing. As my friends and colleagues will confirm, it’s not often I spend five straight hours without talking, just listening.

By the time I woke the next morning to a glorious sea-view and (thankfully) blue skies, I felt like I had been off work for a week or more. And while I was tackling the waves with my surfboard an hour later, there was nowhere I would rather have been. We managed four hours surfing each day before the tide beat us. 

So do the sums add up? A ten-hour round-trip for eight hours in the water? Absolutely, I’d recommend it to anyone. Polly Tracey

Aardvarks – just like London buses…

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

You aardly see one for years, and then hundreds come along at once…

It’s truly aard to believe.  Our safari specialist client Expert Africa tells us that Samara Private Game Reserve in South Africa has had a record-breaking amount of aardvark sightings – with over a hundred sightings in the past few months alone. 

samara-aardvark-2009

This is utterly unprecedented: most professional safari guides in Africa count themselves lucky to have two or three aardvark sightings per year.  Expert Africa’s Managing Director, Chris McIntyre – a multiple Africa-specialist Bradt Guide author and the veteran of 20 years’ worth of sub-Saharan safaris, no less – has still never seen an aardvark!

Theories explaining the sudden surge in aardvark activity abound… the very dry winter is cited as a cause by some experts.  Changes affecting their main foodstuff, termites, could be the reason, suggest others.  A few aardent Africaphiles have even posited excitement over next year’s World Cup in South Africa as the rationale for these unheralded daylight cameos…

Aardvarks
The aardvark is a native Africa mammal about the size of a large dog.  Also known as an ‘anteater’ or ‘earth pig’, the aardvark feeds almost exclusively on ants, termites and one solitary fruit: the aardvark cucumber. Considered nocturnal, an aardvark will typically emerge from its burrow shortly after sunset to forage, swinging its long nose from side to side to scent food. It can eat up to 50,000 insects per night with its long, sticky tongue and fast digging skills. Its keen hearing warns it of enemies including lions, leopards, hyenas and pythons.

Samara Private Game Reserve
Samara is a 70,000-acre reserve in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, its landscape featuring tall grass, Acacia trees and scrubland.  As well as aardvarks and their foes, other locals include white rhino, giraffe, wildebeest, monkeys, meerkats and especially cheetahs – the reserve emphasising a cheetah conservation project.  There are also amazing cave paintings and fossils to see.

Richard Mellor

Kenya’s rapidly decreasing lions - the thoughts of Explore

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

We asked Paul Bondsfield at our clients Explore, adventure specialists that run nearly 50 annual group tours to Kenya, about the alarming news that the Maasai Mara’s rapidly-decreasing lion population could disappear altogether inside 20 years:

“The situation for the lion population in Kenya is very worrying, especially as the fall in numbers is so great. We would encourage more inclusive initiatives when trying to protect wild populations, no matter what the animal concerned. Many studies have shown the huge economic pulling power of a live lion far outweighs that of a pelt but is only paper value if it doesn’t flow through to people who have to live in harmony with these animals.

“Projects in neighbouring Uganda aimed at protecting the mountain gorilla for instance, ensure that local people, farmers and villagers alike, reap direct rewards from the increase in tourism numbers and education programmes teach locals the true value of the wildlife in terms of the tourist dollar and the habitat required to maintain and grow these populations.

“The same should happen more in Kenya, where the use of the poisonous insecticide, Carbofuran is speeding the decline in lion numbers as rural communities try to protect their livestock and safety. A good start would be the immediate ban on unregulated use of this poison in the country – perhaps supported by its American manufacturer. But education and support for the farmers and herders using the poison will certainly help in the longer term.

“We actively support charities and organisations that work towards these goals, both through formal relationships and more informally on the ground as an intrinsic part of our tours.”

Please do call me if you’d like to speak to Paul about this in person.  Richard Mellor

Is Fogle the new Palin?

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

The triumphant climax of On Thin Ice on Sunday (BBC 2, 9pm) cemented Ben Fogle as the nation’s favourite adventurer as he gallantly reached the South Pole after an epic month-long struggle. Throughout the compelling five-episode documentary, audiences witnessed Fogle at his most vulnerable as exhaustion and frostbite set in, but unlike his teammates Gold medal rower James Cracknell and doctor Ed Coates, even in the face of extreme pain and fear, Fogle was never less than charming, kind and supportive.
If Fogle were to choose the North Pole as his next challenge, he would be one of a handful of people that have visited both Poles – another of whom is the legendary Michael Palin.
After studying History at Oxford, Palin starred in a number of smallish TV shows until Monty Python provided his break-through. It was a single episode in BBC programme Great Railway Journeys of the World in 1980 which changed his direction forever and has since lead to Around the World in 80 Days, Pole to Pole, Full Circle, Hemingway Adventure and Sahara.
Are the BBC grooming Fogle to fill Palin’s boots?
At 66, he is certainly getting on and Fogle’s natural and eloquent delivery is reminiscent of Shrewsbury-educated Palin. Both presenters are immediately trustworthy, enough to make you follow them to the ends of the earth (quite literally) as they invade your sitting room on a Sunday night. With the Sahara conquered in The Sand Marathon, Africa explored in Wild in Africa, the Atlantic tamed in Through Hell and High Water, USA visited in Wild on the West Coast and now a victorious expedition to the South Pole it looks like Fogle’s destiny is inevitable.
Mind you, he does like animals…perhaps David Attenborough should also watch his back? Polly Tracey

The lights went out - Eclipse in China

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

It’s the morning of Wednesday 22nd July 2009 and a very relieved Explore tour leader has just reported in that her group in China was ferried to the right place at the right time to see the incredible solar eclipse – the longest for a century.

Across the densely populated Asian path of this celestial event, there must have been hundreds of millions of pairs of eyes, shielded by pieces of card or dark plastic or funky branded cardboard sunglasses witnessing an event that in various parts of the world is seen as a good omen, a bad omen, potentially harmful to unborn babies, proof of God’s existence or simply a wonderful life-affirming, beautiful and once-in-a-lifetime event.

Once in a lifetime, except of course that there’s another one coming along next year.

It’s going to be a little harder to see the 2010 eclipse, as it races at 1500 miles an hour along a narrow corridor above mostly endless Pacific Ocean; but thankfully, Easter Island, that most enigmatic and tragic of island communities, lies directly in its path, giving a lucky few a truly unique experience. And of course, Explore will be there to see it.

Explore customers watching the eclipse in China

Explore customers watching the eclipse in China

This sort of one-off event provides an adventure operator like Explore with a great opportunity to showcase organisational and logistical skills though. To set up any tour is a highly complex business, involving people in marketing, operations, purchasing, product, tour leader logistics, ground agents, responsible tourism and customer relations departments, with personnel both in the UK and overseas. But to produce a tour whose whole focus is a 6 minute event, totally out of anyone’s control (unless you’re in the “proof of God’s existence” camp perhaps), and often in a remote and inaccessible location throws up a whole extra level of challenge and stress for all involved.

Planning for the eclipse in Easter Island started in 2008 and will not be finalised until airline schedules are confirmed in September this year. By the time the tours depart, the time from original idea to aircraft taking off will have been around two years and will be the result of decisions made by around 50 people. Logistically challenging anyway, Easter Island is likely to be a busy wee spot come July next year, with its hotel and camping accommodation at full stretch. There is also expected to be a world shortage of eclipse experts in July 2010 (actually I made that up) but as having a knowledgeable commentator on hand is de-rigueur at these events, booking the few good ones had to be completed several months ago too.

So, four tours will depart in July next year, carrying a maximum of 24 people each. They will travel around 30,000km, spend upwards of £5000 each, camp in reasonably basic conditions for 3 nights and stare at the sun for a scant few minutes - but all of them will think it worth it for an utterly unique and exclusive experience. With thanks to Explore & International Life

Panna NP runs out of tigers - reaction and advice from UK operators

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Reports from India this week have suggested that Panna National Park has ‘run out’ of tigers, a further blow to the country’s efforts to preserve the status of its fabled predator.  We contacted two of our Indian-operating clients for their thoughts.

Paul Bondsfield at adventure specialists Explore:
“While none of our tours take in Panna National Park, we at Explore are very saddened to once again hear that tiger numbers are reportedly dwindling. That a national park should lose its entire population of tigers is a definite blow to conservation efforts, and a further prompt for tourism to be at the forefront of activity to save the overall population.

“Working with Travel Operators for Tigers (TOFT), Explore is keen that Indian authorities recognise the benefits that tourists can bring, which include funding but also a visibility to these animals and an incentive for local people to help save animals and environment from poaching and clearing. The recent decision to ban tourists from some areas is a mistake in our view – if regular game viewing is in progress, then monitoring numbers of animals would be made easier and any reduction in numbers noticed quickly.”

Oliver James, part of the India team at Real Holidays, which tailor-makes itineraries taking in Panna:
“We have had an inkling – and told customers as much – that Panna was pretty much tiger-free for a while.  There are actually two tigresses still at Panna – they were relocated there in April, after to the latest census but prior to the results recently coming out, which showed that there were no other tigers left.  Much the same thing happened at Sariska, the other Indian park which has ceased to have tigers.

“There’s still ample reason to go: Panna is generally considered a beautiful park, renowned for fabulous birding and as a good place to see leopards.  It fits in nicely on wildlife circuits, and will probably be more appealing to Indian veterans now there’s no danger of the tiger-spotting hordes visiting.

“However, this can only be considered bad news in terms of the Indian government’s well-documented attempts to protect their figurehead animal.  It’s hard to know how successful or otherwise Project Tiger is, such is the level of conflicting information out there. Previously the Government has announced official tiger numbers across Indian parks only to withdraw them after admitting census errors. Reserves that claim to be poacher-free still lose tigers; some are killed if they threaten or attack local villages, for instance. Bandhavgarh NP reported a recent rise in the birth-rate of its tigers – great news, but not one accompanied by figures of tiger numbers in general rising, suggestive that at Bandhavgarh, adult tigers were possibly being killed as quickly as younger ones were conceived.

“Amid such a minefield of information and misinformation, we try to recommend those lodges that are more active in supporting local projects – such as Jungle Mantra at Bandhavgarh. These are generally schemes to help the local/displaced village populations and get them involved in supporting and protecting wildlife areas, so protection is a genuine source of income.”   Richard Mellor