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Changing travel habits: How to be a better tourist 

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Changing travel habits: How to be a better tourist - How can you progress from holidaymaker to changemaker? Responsible Travel CEO Justin Francis shares 10 status-quo defying habits that could make yo...
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The Independent
2022-09-27T07:35:02Z
But travellers themselves are also changemakers. Simply choosing responsible experiences drives up demand for them, and the industry responds accordingly.
This World Tourism Day, here are 10 ways our holidays habits are changing travel for the better in 2022.
Simply choosing responsible experiences drives up demand for them, and the industry responds accordingly
We can’t ‘offset’ our way out of the climate crisis. But flying less needn’t mean missing out. In fact, post-pandemic, we want to escape for longer - just minus the hefty footprint.
Your solution? The 2-in-1 adventure: fewer flights, but not fewer holidays. Two back-to-back trips within rail distance, often with a volunteering element.
Think culture in Italy, followed by a hands-on conservation break close by: the fly less, stay longer and make-it-count kind of holiday.
There’s been a meteoric spike in demand for ‘slow travel’ this year; but these mindful adventures look different to each of us.
They can be literal - an epic global voyage by rail and sea that sees you cooking your way across Japan or learning to drive a Tuk-Tuk in Thailand.
Whatever shape it takes for you, it’s about forging deeper connections with local communities, nature and culture. Better for the places we visit, and great for us too. Little wonder it’s a post-pandemic favourite.
Not a volunteering holiday, but volunteering
Think afternoon beach-cleans, from Cornwall to the Caribbean. Feel-good holiday bolt-ons are a great way to meet fellow travellers, connect with the locals and have fun while giving back.
Mega-liners swamp fragile destinations and contribute little to the communities they dock in, so it’s heartening to see an upswing in a great alternative: micro-cruises.
And there’s a smorgasbord to choose from, including expert-led wildlife expeditions and pocket-sized island-hopping. What they share is a lighter footprint, and a positive local impact. What’s more, micro-cruises can reach into the hidden nooks of a destination - where their oversized counterparts can’t follow.
Lockdowns drew us back into nature, and it seems to have translated into a growing demand for wildlife safaris close to home, with Scotland and Sweden proving particularly popular.
We may not have the Big Five - but you
Nature tourism helps make the case for restoring habitats and protecting wildlife. And, if that weren’t enough, healthy habitats - from forests to wetlands - are earth’s natural carbon sink, vital to tackling the climate crisis.
Bucket-list travel is well and truly back. But rising living costs and climate anxiety has led to greater demand for more pocket, and planet-friendly, options.
Great adventures needn’t cost the earth. Many of us are swapping chain hotels for the comforts of a homestay, which are often much cheaper, with the benefit of traditional home-cooked fare and priceless local insights. They’re a great way to get more deeply acquainted with a destination - and it directly benefits the locals, too.
When we weren’t baking banana bread during lockdowns, many of us were stepping-up our fitness routines - and it’s filtered into our holidays.
Alongside increased interest in nature-based fitness retreats, like triathlon training and fell running, demand for human-powered tours - walking and cycling holidays for example - has also spiked this year.
But the biggest rise by far has been in river and lake kayaking - a fun, healthy, low-carbon, way to escape the crowds and explore a destination from a different perspective.
There’s more to winter holidays than downhill ski resorts. And the measures many now take due to climate heating, including the use of destructive snow cannons, have them on a slippery slope.
This year, alternative winter activities are gaining traction - from snowshoeing through Romanian villages to wildlife safaris in the Scottish Highlands and staying with the Sami in Swedish Lapland. Local-led, nature friendly, and not a snow cannon in sight.
Gone are the days of leaving ‘just footprints’.
Amid rising climate anxiety, we’re becoming more responsible consumers, whether in our food or fashion buys. Increasingly, that’s filtering into our holiday choices too.
Today’s responsible travellers are tired of ‘offsetting’ greenwash and ‘leaving no trace’ - and are instead actively searching for holidays with maximum positive impact. Nature-positive travel - holidays from city breaks to safaris that help restore biodiversity - is especial

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26 сен 2022

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