Showing posts with label Ecotourism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecotourism. Show all posts

Friday, January 08, 2010

A Fresh Start: Asian villages carve out a new life

The thick forest, winding streams and rivers and abundant wildlife around Chi Phat Commune, pictured, made it a natural spot for an ecotourism business. (Photo: Wildlife Alliance)

Friday, January 8, 2010
By STEVE MOLLMAN
The Wall Street Journal


The village of Tmatboey in the northern plains of Cambodia seemed to have little going for it. It lacked clean water; there were no real roads. The people toiled mostly at subsistence farming, barely scraping by.

The villagers didn't realize they had a valuable asset -- hiding in plain sight, so to speak: a tourist attraction that a niche group of international travelers would happily pay to see, even if it meant a stay in basic accommodations.

It's a bird. Actually, two: the long-legged giant ibis and the white-shouldered ibis, both among the rarest in the world. In the eyes of hard-core bird-watchers, they carry near-mythical status.

And now they're making money for Tmatboey. In 2004, the Wildlife Conservation Society, which credits itself with having saved the American bison a century ago, set up the Tmatboey Ibis Ecotourism Project to lure bird-watchers. During the most recent peak season, November 2008 to May 2009, providing services to bird-watching visitors brought in more than $12,000 all told, a fortune by local standards. About 30% went into a community fund for improving basics like education and plumbing; today, life in Tmatboey has been significantly improved by new wells, water pumps, roads and a new school.

In villages in many parts of Asia, nonprofit groups from around the world are putting into practice that time-worn proverb: Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day, but teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. Rather than donating clothes or books, handing out mosquito nets or building schools, they're bringing money-making enterprises to rural Asian communities. Some involve training in activities such as sewing and bamboo craft; many are tourist-related.

Among environmental groups, there has been a shift in the past decade or so toward "a more integrated view of conservation and development," says Graham Bullock, a former ecotourism coordinator for the Nature Conservancy's China program. For instance, says Tom Clements, a technical adviser to the Wildlife Conservation Society's Cambodia program, the Tmatboey project works "by empowering local people to manage their own tourism enterprise, in a way that explicitly links revenue received to conservation outcomes."

The goals of each organization vary, of course, as do the circumstances of each village. "One size definitely does not fit all," says Mr. Bullock. But more organizations now seek "the participation and empowerment of local communities," he adds.

Below, a pair of projects aimed at helping villages help themselves.

Chi Phat Commune, Cambodia

The Chi Phat Commune -- a collection of four villages that's home to about 550 families, or nearly 3,000 people in all -- sits on the banks of the Piphot River in Cambodia's Cardamom mountains near the Thai border. Getting there from Phnom Penh takes four to five hours and involves two highways and a scenic ride upriver on a long-tail boat.

The villagers get by mostly on rice farming and fishing. To make extra money, some work as laborers on nearby plantations. Others sell livestock and other goods at the local market.

And some engage in illegal activities like poaching and logging -- which, along with land-clearing for farming, have exacted a heavy environmental toll. While large animals including elephants still roam the Cardamoms, their numbers -- along with those of scaly anteaters, wild pigs, deer, monkeys, bears and lizards known as Bengal monitors -- are dwindling. And so is their habitat, one of Southeast Asia's largest remaining tracts of rainforest.

After studying the Chi Phat village situation, the Wildlife Alliance, a Washington D.C.-based nonprofit founded in 1994 with the goal of protecting wildlife, forests and oceans, concluded that poverty was the root cause of wildlife and forest loss in the Cardamoms. The alliance also saw that ecotourism -- the area's thick forest, winding streams and rivers and abundant wildlife make it ideal for mountain biking and trekking -- offered the possibility both of alleviating poverty and leading villagers to see value in the nature surrounding them.

Before Wildlife Alliance started to help develop Chi Phat as an ecotourism gateway (its Web site: www.mountainbikingcardamoms.com), though, it approached not only villagers, but also local authorities and tour operators to see if the project could fly. One challenge would be attracting customers; little has been written about the area. Another would be explaining ecotourism to the locals.

"Often throughout the world, NGOs enter a local community telling them that tourism is the answer to their problems and very much raising expectations, without any consultation with local tour operators to see whether there will actually be any market for what they are proposing," says Mark Ellison, who runs Asia Adventures, an independent tour operator. "Then one or two years down the line they sit back and scratch their heads wondering why after all the training, capacity building, meetings, and infrastructure development, no tourists are coming."

Today a handful of private companies make up the Friends of Chi Phat tour-operator group, which works with Wildlife Alliance to attract tourists. They market Chi Phat as a destination, handle reservations and bring guests to and from the village.

The "Friends" operators can charge tourists whatever they wish, but they pay upfront for services provided by the villagers, such as cooking, guiding, bike maintenance and lodging. About 80% goes to the villager providing the services; the remaining 20% goes into a community fund that improves the village's education, water supply, roads and so on.

Of course some training was needed at first: The villagers of remote Chi Phat were not accustomed to seeing tourists, much less catering to them. In fact, says Mr. Ellison, "until a few years ago many of the locals had not even seen a foreigner."

So in early 2008, Wildlife Alliance -- which established a permanent base in the village in January 2007 (after more than four years of research) -- and its tour-operator partners set up training programs in sanitation, hospitality, English, first-aid and waste management.

A bike mechanic, for instance, was brought in from Phnom Penh to teach villagers how to maintain a modern mountain bike. The hiking and biking trails were created by former hunters and loggers from the village, who now serve as trail guides. So far they've finished two mountain-biking trails (both there-and-back routes) and four circular trekking trails, including some night-camping sites. More trails are in the works.

Not surprisingly, old habits die hard. One villager who was asked to head the group for transporting guests on motorbikes was caught transporting something else instead: a wild pig. The local village council demoted him, with a warning that another transgression would get him kicked out of the project.

"People have been dependent on the forest for livelihoods and domestic needs for quite some time now -- and still are," says Oran Shapira, a 33-year-old Israeli working in Chi Phat for the Wildlife Alliance. "This will not completely change in one day or one year. It's a process."

Tourists stay in a handful of villager huts that have been converted -- with help from the Wildlife Alliance -- to accommodate guests. They're still rustic, but a little better-equipped than before. Squat toilets were added, for instance, so that guests didn't have to relieve themselves in the fields.

The first guests arrived early in 2008, and by year's end there had been about 200. Last year, the village received more than 670 guests, who biked, hiked, swam in the river and played volleyball with the locals.

Asia Adventures charges $250 a person for a three-day trip that includes a one-day mountain-biking excursion and transport to and from Phnom Penh. In 2008 the village collected about $7,000, says Mr. Shapira; last year, more than $19,200.

David Miller, who works for the Australian Taxation Office in Canberra, visited Chi Phat for three nights in December 2008. He wasn't expecting luxury: "You don't go visit a place in the middle of the jungle if you're expecting comfort all the way," he says.

He went on a guided hike one day and on a mountain-biking trip another. "Cycling through remote jungle, and not recognizing much of the flora, made it much more exciting" than biking back in Australia, he says. His tour guides were village men who didn't speak English but were friendly, communicated well with body language, and knew the forest like the back of their hands.

On his bike trip, he passed large swaths of burned land. (Fires not only clear land but also chase out animals, making them easier to catch.) "I don't know of many other ways to offer alternatives to these people so they will stop cutting down the rain forest," he says. "Action like ecotourism is better than no action at all."

Nawung, Indonesia

In 2006, an earthquake in central Java reduced many small villages to near rubble. But aside from some light damage to a few ramshackle buildings, the quake had little outward effect on Nawung, a rural village of about 500 people in the foothills near Yogyakarta. Below the surface, however, was a different story: Geological shifts caused the village's few natural wells to dry up.

It was a blow to farming, the village mainstay, already a challenge in the dry, hilly land. The village needed a new gig.

Enter Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund, a century-old German aid organization that bolsters rural communities through reconstruction, livelihood training and disaster-risk reduction. Some years ago in Kosovo, it reconstructed homes and taught returning war refugees to cultivate saffron as a cash crop.

At the time of the Java earthquake, more than half the people of Nawung earned less than $1 a day, says Sae Kani, an ASB program manager for Indonesia who specializes in disaster-risk-reduction education. Young villagers typically left to find work in retail, manufacturing, housekeeping or construction in places like Jakarta and Yogyakarta.

But in 2007, ASB noticed the village had something going for it -- a new road linking Nawung with Yogyakarta, 45 kilometers to the west, and other significant towns, including Sleman, to the northwest, and Wonosari, to the south. The road -- a scenic route through hills, forests and paddy fields -- significantly boosted the trade and tourism potential between Nawung and Yogyakarta, a hub for Indonesian arts and crafts, as well as other towns and villages.

Within this setting, ASB set out to help make the village self-reliant by teaching villagers to make crafts and foods that they could sell to nearby merchants and retailers.

The ASB team -- three field staff members and a project manager (plus, in the beginning, an architect and engineer) -- moved into the village and set up workshops to train villagers in four skills: bamboo weaving, stone carving, textile making and food preparation.

The food-preparation group is the largest, with about 50 members, all women. Tumiyem, a mother of two small children who like many Indonesians goes by a single name, is one of them. Through an interpreter she says that before the training, "we knew nothing about cooking snacks." Now, she says, the benefit is two-fold: The women can generate extra income and "we can gather with our friends regularly."

About 18 men studied stone craft; now nine of them churn out soap dishes, small statues and water fountains for gardens. The textile group -- three women and two men -- sew pillowcases and containers.

ASB helps with marketing and business connections, teaches bookkeeping and profit management, and provides a little start-up capital for each group. The food-preparation group, for instance, received about $550, part of which went to buy supplies.

Sales are climbing. Last year a woman named Atun who makes chips -- primarily from banana and cassava -- sold about $390 of her snacks from July to November, compared with $110 in the first six months of the year. The stone-masonry group, which sells most of its products to a pair of buyers from Yogyakarta, saw the biggest jump in sales: Between March and November, it pulled in nearly $900, up from about $110 for all of 2008.

ASB has spent about $100,000 on the project, along the way building things such as a small showroom to display the village's goods, production and storage houses for the bamboo-weaving and stone-masonry groups and a Web site (www.nawung.com). Its three staff members in Nawung will stay through the end of this year, when ASB plans to focus more on tourism development and improved marketing for village handicrafts.

The German nonprofit also set up a microfinance fund within each group so members can take out small loans. For instance in the food group, borrowers can obtain three-month loans at an interest rate of 5% a month. (The interest income is used to benefit the groups, such as for raw materials.) And villagers have a good track record of repaying the loans, which they've used for a variety of purposes. Last spring, for example, a member of the stone-craft group named Tukino borrowed $21 to buy fertilizer and pay his children's school fees.

Today, Nawung is on the upswing: New homes are springing up, streets are better paved and cellphones are a more common sight. More important, when ASB leaves, the skills it has taught will likely remain.

—Steve Mollman is a writer based in Asia
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Monday, January 05, 2009

Ecotourism comes to Cambodia

Jan 5th 2009
By Tom Johansmeyer
Gadling.com


Mountain bikers can reclaim wilderness that once belonged to illegal loggers and poachers. Hidden in the foothills of Cambodia's Cardamom Mountains, the village of Chi Pat is now home to a mountain biking experience that is unparalleled in trail and impact.

This new program is the result of cooperation among Wildlife Alliance (formerly known as Wild Aid), Asia Adventures (a Cambodia-based adventure travel company) and the villagers of Chi Pat. Off-road cycling tourists are expected to bring a sustainable source of income to the villagers while exposing guests to some of the world's last remaining virgin wilderness.

Chi Pat is two hours from Phnom Penh by boat and is portal to old logging routes, undulating trails and streams and shallow rivers. Ride through bamboo thicket, rain forest and hills while gazing upon waterfalls, bat caves and waterfalls. A lucky few will see rare wildlife, such as elephants.

Simply by mountain biking in Chi Pat, you can help the villagers reclaim their home from years of abuse by illicit tree-choppers and hunters. Merely enjoying yourself has never been so powerful.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Cambodia, "environmentally sustainable" tourism to save Mekong dolphin

09/06/2008
AsiaNews.it
CAMBODIA


Overfishing, war, and pollution have decimated the dolphins, and only a few dozen of them are left. Environmentalists have begun a project aimed at contributing to the development of the villages and to saving the dolphins, but their numbers continue to diminish.

Phnom Penh (AsiaNews/Agencies) - Saving the few dozen freshwater dolphins still remaining in the Mekong River, and helping the local population by guaranteeing them a source of livelihood: this is the aim of the "ecotourism" project begun in the border area between Laos and Cambodia by the Cambodia Rural Development Team (CRDT), which has the twofold objective of protecting wildlife and providing an alternative source of income for the inhabitants of the villages.

For centuries, the waters of the Mekong River - which crosses China, Laos, and Cambodia, before reaching the ocean in Vietnam - were the uncontested habitat of thousands of freshwater dolphins. The Sino-Indian War and the increase of industrialization, together with high pollution levels, have decimated the species, only a few dozen of which survive; 71, according to the latest count provided by the World Wildlife Fund.

The village of Sambor, in the north of Cambodia, is one of the places selected by the CRDT as a model of environmentally sustainable development: tourists are given the opportunity to live in contact with the local population, to help the inhabitants protect the natural habitat of the dolphins, and to teach a little English to the children. The most frequently requested activities include well digging, sewer construction, and work in the fields.

The experiment promoted by the activists is intended to save the dolphins from extinction by radically changing the habits of the inhabitants of the village, who for decades have used aggressive fishing methods like explosives and high-capacity nets. Now the freshwater dolphins are seen as a resource to be "exploited" in order to attract foreign capital and tourism; the visitors pay 60 US dollars for three days in contact with nature, and the money is used to support the local population. In a country in which half the population lives on a dollar a day, the inhabitants of the village earn five dollars a day by providing food (two dollars) and lodging (three dollars) for the visitors.

But recent studies have demonstrated that if the benefit for individuals is beyond question, the same cannot be said for the dolphins: in spite of a small increase in their numbers in the initial phase of the project, it is not yet clear whether this is truly effective for preserving the species. Scientists affirm that a new and not yet identified disease is spreading rapidly, killing the offspring. Researchers fear that the new virus - caused by pollution in the water, infested with chemical agents and the runoff from gold mining projects - could soon lead to the total extinction of the dolphins.

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Managing Cambodia's mangroves

05-06-2008
Story and photos by Dave Kattenburg
Radio Netherlands (Holland)


Beyond the bustling town of Koh Kong, off the coast of southern Cambodia, lie 45,000 hectares of mangrove forest. They're among the most pristine in Southeast Asia and, like others around the world, they're under threat.

Mangroves form a transition zone between land and sea. Like all transitional ecosystems, they are diverse. Mangrove foliage provides rich bird habitat. Fish, crabs and molluscs hide and breed in their dense, aerial root system, which is adapted to salty water.

As if these ecosystem services weren't enough, mangroves stabilise soil, moderate the force of wind and waves, recycle nutrients and sequester carbon.

Khmer Rouge
Ironically, Cambodian mangroves prospered under the Khmer Rouge, which preferred to herd its citizens into the middle of the country. With their downfall, and the emergence of a market economy in the 1990s, powerful entrepreneurs - with military or government links - began clearing the mangroves for shrimp farms and charcoal. Local middlemen joined in, along with inland Cambodians and foreign fishermen attracted to the region's rich mangroves.

Alarmed by resource decline - and encouraged by international NGOs - the Cambodian government began cracking down. Conservation and poverty reduction could both be promoted, the government reasoned, by empowering local communities. Commune elections were held for the first time in 2002, followed by a community fisheries law. For the first time, mangrove communities began managing their own resources.

Management committees
With help from the UN Development Program and Canada's International Development Research Center, Cambodia' Environment Ministry launched its Participatory Management of Coastal Resources Project in 1997. Community workshops were held on mangrove ecology and management.

In 2001, the first village management committees were formed within the boundaries of Peam Krasaop Wildlife Sanctuary, deep in Koh Kong's mangroves. Villages outside the sanctuary, around Chrouy Pros Bay, have been invited to participate, in order to reduce fishing conflicts.

Success
Community management has been a success. Villagers have protected local sea grass beds, which are linked to the mangrove ecosystem and add fish spawning habitat. In the mangroves themselves, community patrols do their best to control illegal cutting and fishing practices. Mangroves have been successfully regenerated.

On the down side, government support for enforcement is limited and inconsistent and, outside the confines of community areas, illegal practices continue, such as the use of "light" boats armed with powerful lamps that attract fish. Some fear that commercial dredging of the Koh Kong River - led by powerful Cambodian interests - will damage the mangroves.

As elsewhere in the world, mangrove villagers and their international supporters realize that tourism may be the greatest force for mangrove protection. At least one villager in the area is planning an ecotourism initiative.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Angkor Wat: A Temple to Tourism?

Tuesday April 22, 2008
By Susan Postlewaite
Business Week


Elephants sway in the steamy heat, carrying tourists along the jungle paths around the ancient stone temples, while overhead the occasional hot air balloon or helicopter goes by, taking other visitors on an aerial tour of Angkor Wat and nearby ruins.

Inside the temples tourists from all corners of the world clamber over the stones, shoot video and fan themselves in the midday sun. When dusk comes the crowds climb onto their tuk tuks, bikes, and buses to make the eight kilometer trip back to the town of Siem Reap.

Not long ago a dusty village with a few dozen tour guides and guest houses, Siem Reap now hosts several thousand tourists a night in the high season as Cambodia launches itself in the mass tourism market. Ten years ago, with the country still emerging from decades of civil war and tumult, Cambodia received 217,000 visitors. "Last year we got 2.1 million," crows Tourism Minister Thong Khon. "Almost 50% of them came to the temples," he adds. By 2010, Thong Khon expects the number to reach 3 million.

Although Angkor Wat and the dozens of other temples built between the 9th and 14th centuries are the main attraction, the industry has moved astonishingly quickly to bring in the extras that will keep the tourists in town more than a day or two: spas, shopping boutiques, handicraft markets, galleries, ice cream shops. There's a special road called Pub Street lined with international cafes and trendy art bars, golf courses, upscale dining, horseback riding tours, cooking classes, convention activities, a night market, temple-side dinners for two or for dozens, and nature tours.

Rebuilding Since Khmer Rouge

The rustic guest houses where 10 years go visitors risked getting tropical fever from a mosquito bite are gone, replaced by five-star architectural gems and multi-story, mass market hotels with buffet lines and door-to-door bus tour packages. "What's fascinating to me is that the most demanding customer can find anything he wants in this little village that has boomed in only five years because of its cultural heritage," says Julia Fesenberg, marketing communications manager for Raffles, the Singapore-based chain that operates the French colonial era Grand Hotel d'ngkor in the center of town.

The government, seeing the potential for major tourism revenues, has been working for a decade to get international development agencies and donors like Japan to rebuild roads, bridges, and airports to recreate the tourism industry that was decimated in the early 1970s during the U.S. bombing of Cambodia and then by the Khmer Rouge and their radical Maoist takeover. The strategy has worked so well that tourists now come year round, although the crowds are much smaller in the April -- September low season.

In the high season, when the weather is cooler and dry, wealthy South Americans come in private jets, and rich Russians come on charter flights. Hundreds of thousands of Korean, Taiwanese, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Thai, European, and American tourists come on direct flights from places like Singapore and Bangkok. "Everyone is happy. The government is happy, the prime minister is happy, in terms of the international arrivals," says Mohan Rao Gunti, tourism consultant for the Cambodian Association of Travel Agents.

No Longer a Dangerous Place

In the late 1990s, much of the temple area was still hazardous. There were land mines and bandits, and the five-hour boat trip up the Tonle Sap from Phnom Penh could be dangerous: Sometimes boats sank and there was occasional sniper fire. The surrounding low mountains visible from the temples were under the control of the Khmer Rouge. Now the news from the town is about new golf courses, the crackdown on littering, and the opening of Swensen's ice cream.

Raffles was the first of the world-class hotels to get back into Cambodia, when it took over the crumbling colonial-era hotels Le Royal in Phnom Penh and the Grand in Siem Reap. The Grand, which had hosted Charles De Gaulle and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in the 1960s, is again the place for the elite to stay. Last year Bill Clinton stayed there. Pop star Ricky Martin visited recently.

Many of the high-end hotels that entered the market a few years ago are already expanding. Amanresorts International, the Singapore company, opened a 12-room resort inside a walled compound in 2002, and in 2006 added another 12 $700-a-night suites, each with a private pool. The rooms are new, but the property itself is historic: Aman took over the former guesthouse of retired King Norodom Sihanouk and converted it to suites. What is now the dining room used to be where the king, an art-movie director, showed films.

Keeping the City Clean

Another architectural gem in the center of town is Residence Angkor, a 55-room boutique hotel built of exotic hardwoods. Run by Orient-Express Hotels (OEH), it caters to Westerners and is expanding by adding a spa, business center, and more dining space. Victoria Angkor Resort & Spa, with 130 rooms, does promotions with a nearby golf resort. Meanwhile, on the road to the airport, dozens of four-star multi-story hotels have sprung up to cater to Asian tour groups. And even more are being built.

Although tourists are coming in big numbers, there are challenges for the town. "We must keep the city clean," says Khon, the minister. That means getting the rubbish out of the riverside area, improving the bumpy dirt road that leads out to the Tonle Sap lake tours of floating villages and the bird sanctuary, and developing sports, such as kayaking or sailing on the Western Baray, a lake area near the temples. "We want to develop this as a satellite destination. It is helpful to the hotel industry if the tourists stay longer," he says. He envisions more options for all cultures. "You know the Europeans like swimming, the Americans like to do sports. The Chinese, the Asians, like to go shopping. So we have to develop all the markets."

Developing the Rest of the Country

The government is also looking to capitalize on the popularity of Siem Reap to develop other parts of the country. For instance, it is planning more golf courses for the Sihanoukville beaches, which the government says will be Cambodia's next tourism cash cow. Several new beach resorts, including a casino resort, are also under development.

Other areas of the country are also opening for tourists. Ecotourists are making their way to the jungle areas of Mondulkiri in northern Cambodia and Koh Kong in the south. Mondulkiri is marketing elephant treks through a small project known as the Elephant Valley Project, which works with a nongovernmental organization that cares for mistreated elephants. Hill-tribe treks can now be found in the northern province of Rattanakiri, and in the south, the little-explored Cardomom Mountains have hard-core trekking. "We want quality tourists, but our policy is we welcome any kind of tourism, luxury or not," says Khon.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Positive assessment [-The Tmatboey project]

A mom-and-pop store in Tmatboey selling books, magazines and VCDs on birds, alongside beer and snacks. — LEONG SIOK HUI

Saturday October 27, 2007
By LEONG SIOK HUI
The Star (Malaysia)


Out of the 27 nominees from eight countries short-listed for Wild Asia’s Responsible Tourism Awards 2007, six properties were chosen as finalists. Wild Asia then sent a team of assessors to visit each property.

The Tmatboey project was considered unique because the community took a huge leap into responsible tourism (RT).

“You’re looking at a village with a 60% literacy rate and which has never seen a tourist until the last few years,” says Rick Gregory, one of Wild Asia’s advisors and RT assessors.

“It’s a big step for them because they are running a tourism venture that protects their habitat and natural resources, gives back to their community, educates tourists and the locals, and reduces their waste stream.”

How does Tmatboey fare?

Tmatboey’s project is 100% community-run. The cook, housekeepers and guides are locals. They maintain and run the chalets and source for food and supplies from the village and the nearest town (Tbeng Meanchey, about 45km away).

The ladies run a mom-and-pop store selling bird-related magazines and VCDs, soft drinks, chilled beer and snacks. Guests can take guided walks into the village and get to know the local customs and culture.

Solar panels power all the lights and fans in the chalets and dining hall. Water is sourced from a village well or the rain. Organic wastes are fed to pigs and livestock. And plastic bottles are recycled at Tbeng Meanchey.

“Tmatboey’s strength is the villagers’ commitment to conservation of the birds and their natural areas,” says Gregory, a Kuala Lumpur-based environmental consultant and writer.

“Alternative income from ecotourism can offset or stop additional forest-clearing for padi planting.”

The community also receives strong backing from Cambodia’s Ministry of Environment. By visiting where the locals live, visitors can see the development the tourist dollar brings, says Gregory.

Room to improve

Limited exposure to foreigners means the villagers are still learning how to cater to, or manage, tourist expectations. For instance, the cooks had to learn to whip up spaghetti and other Western dishes to satisfy guests who didn’t take well to local cuisine.

“Also, they lack proper monitoring of water and waste,” says Gregory. “They need to monitor how much water guests are using per day so that during the dry season, the well or rainwater collected is sufficient.

“Since it’s a new facility, there’s no waste build-up yet but they need to think of ways to reduce and recycle waste and introduce proper waste and sewage treatment,” he adds. Also, the Cambodians are very keen to please their guests.

“It’s difficult for them to tell the tourists the code of conduct, for example, appropriate dressing or behaviour,” says Gregory.

But what’s important is that the Tmatboey folk have a proper responsible tourism structure in place.

For more information on WA’s Responsible Tourism Awards 2007, visit www.wildasia.net.

Getting it right

A Cambodian bird-watching venture helps conserve the species and benefit the locals.

Saturday October 27, 2007
Stories by LEONG SIOK HUI
The Star (Malaysia)


It’s 4.30am and pitch dark as we slosh through wet and mucky trails with our headlamps lighting the way.

Loud, raucous croaks from cavorting frogs drown the pitter-patter of our footsteps. Our feet sink into soft mud as we wade through knee-deep water a couple of times.

Deb Kem Oum, the deputy committee chief of Tmatboey’s ecotourism project.

As dawn breaks, a vista of rolling grassland unfolds in front us. After an hour’s trudge, our guide suddenly stops. We tiptoe to him and voilà, about 100m away, high on a tree, we see a Giant Ibis sitting regally in her nest.

Looking through a telescope, I can see its dark plumage, naked greyish head and a long, slightly curved beak.

So what’s the fuss?

Well, the Giant Ibis is one of South-East Asia’s rarest bird species and, in the last century, the bird has rarely been spotted. Scientists say the bird became extinct in Thailand 30 years ago. The Ibis holds a near-mythical status among bird-aficionados, naturalists and conservationists.

And as bird-watcher John Howes quips: “You’re probably one of the first Malaysians to see a Giant Ibis in the last few decades.”

Ecotourism in Khmer country

I am in Cambodia’s Preah Vihear Province with Kuala Lumpur-based conservation group, Wild Asia and its team of responsible tourism assessors: Rick Gregory and Howes.

Wild Asia is here to check out the Tmatboey ecotourism project, one of the two finalists in the Community- or Family-Run Homestays category in Wild Asia’s Responsible Tourism Awards 2007.

Wildlife Conservation Society’s Ashish Joshia Ingty John.

Tmatboey is a remote village with a population of about 185 families in the Kulen Promtep Wildlife Sanctuary in northern Cambodia, an area dubbed the Northern Plains. Traditionally, the villagers lived off rice farming, fishing, forest products and wildlife poaching.

After years of civil war, Cambodia finally threw its doors open to scientists and conservationists in 2000. New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) then discovered a large remaining patch of deciduous tropical lowland forest, grassland and seasonal wetlands – home to a huge variety of water birds and large mammals – in the Northern Plains.

These forests have long disappeared from Thailand and Vietnam. To the scientists’ delight, many of South-East Asia’s rarest species like the Giant Ibis, White-Shouldered Ibis, White-Rumped Vulture (all listed as Critically Endangered under IUCN) and (Globally Threatened) species like the Eastern Sarus Crane and the White-Winged Duck thrive here.

Tmatboey was thrust into the limelight when conservationists identified it as a crucial site for the two Ibis species.

With the help of WCS Cambodia programme and Cambodia’s Ministry of Environment, a group of Tmatboey villagers launched an ecotourism project in 2004 where tourism revenue would be used to conserve the bird population.

John Howes and Sang Mony spotting a bird.

Local guides lead bird-watchers to spot the birds and villagers provide full room and board. Cambodia-based conservation group, Sam Veasna Center (SVC) for Wildlife Conservation was roped in to promote the site and train the guides.

Helping people and birds

A five-hour trundle in a 4WD through muddy potholes and flooded roads took us to Tmatboey. Until early 2007, guests stayed in a villager’s house. On our visit in early September, wooden chalets were being built on a site about 10 minutes’ stroll from the village.

A village ecotourism committee (nine members elected by the community) manages the site – they run the chalets, provide room and board, local guides and ensure tourism profits benefit the community.

“WCS’s role is to help the community develop an alternative livelihood (from ecotourism) that minimises impact on natural resources (the forests), helps the community manage their land-use efficiently (agriculture) and conserve the birds,” says Ashish Joshia Ingty John, WCS’s community conservation management advisor, who accompanied us to Tmatboey.

“We view the community not as a problem but an integral part of the solution (for conservation),” he says.

WCS works in more than 60 countries and helps governments with scientific research and long-term management of conservation areas.

If you spot the Ibises, you fork out an extra US$30 (RM101) that goes towards supporting local projects. In return, the community makes a pact not to disturb or harm the birds.

Home in Tmatboey: A typical village house.

“Prior to this ecotourism venture, if the farmers found a Giant Ibis (their size is similar to a small turkey), they would have killed it for dinner,” admits Ashish, who was previously involved with community development work in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia, for eight years. Over the years, WCS has pumped in about US$100,000 (RM337,000) into the project.

The fruits of their labour

Since 2004, tourist arrivals to Tmatboey have shot up by 35%. In 2006/07, the village committee took over the project from WCS. A total of 78 tourists visited Tmatboey last season and generated US$6,000 (RM20,000) in earnings for the villagers. Out of that, US$2,220 (RM7,500) was used for building roads and six wells (the main source of water supply for the community).

Like his fellow villagers, farmer Deb Kem Oum makes an average of US$150 (RM505)-US$200 (RM673) a year from the sale of rice, pigs, chickens and forest products (like resin-tapping). As a bird guide and the project’s deputy committee chief, Deb, 42, made US$85 (RM290) last year. The money was used for buying school supplies for his children, healthcare and food.

“Aside from the extra income, I picked up many new skills like drawing up proposals for village projects, handling the accounts and learning how to be a guide,” says Deb through our interpreter, Hout Piseth, who works for the Ministry of Environment.

“I also had to do some research to locate the birds, their nests and roosting areas and learn to identify the birds.

“Before this project, we (the villagers) didn’t know the value of wildlife and the importance of preserving them and their habitat,” adds Deb. “Now we also understand things like the impact of rubbish pollution.”

The good news is the bird population is on the increase.

“In 2002/03, there was only a pair of White-Shouldered Ibis at Tmatboey. In 2006/07, it increased to four pairs. The most recent sighting early this year indicated at least five to six pairs of these birds,” says Ashish, who’s from India.

“The Giant Ibis population has stabilised due to less poaching and destruction of their habitats,” he adds.

The challenges ahead

The whole idea of tourism, managing resources and conservation are radical concepts for the villagers. But they are taking everything in their stride, one day at a time.

“One of my main challenges is trying to juggle between farming, running the lodge and guiding the tourists,” admits Deb.

“For the villagers to think they can earn more money from tourism and to take time from their daily chores is difficult for them to conceive at this point,” chips in Ashish.

“We need more tourists to come and convince the community that it’s worth it.”

If the villagers have enough funds in 2007/08, they plan to hire a teacher to teach English.

A bright future

“We try to make the villagers feel the birds belong to them and instil a sense of pride and ownership. So even if the ecotourism venture fails, at least the birds will be protected,” says Ashish.

“Tmatboey is now a model for other communities in Cambodia. It defines a new relationship between people and wildlife that respects the rights of both and allows for mutual co-existence,” he sums up.

The writer’s trip was courtesy of Wild Asia and Malaysia Airlines.

Book a bird tour
  • SAM VEASNA CENTER FOR WILDLIFE CONSERVATION (SVC)
  • E-mail: info@samveasna.org or bookings@samveasna.org
  • Website: www.samveasna.org
  • A typical 4D/3N package costs US$450/RM per person, based on four pax. Price decreases with more people. Trips can be tailored-made.
  • The ideal bird-watching season is during the dry season, from November to May. Giant Ibises nest from July-November, while the White-Shouldered Ibises nest from December-March.