Birding Trips: Exciting Birding Tours

Birding Trips

Planning your next birding trip? Birding tours to South America are growing in popularity. Wings and other tour companies have exciting birdwatching trips to Chile. Birding trips to Ecuador, Argentina and even Venezuela are offered by nature tour companies like Naturetrek and FieldGuides. Head south to see the colorful birds, both neotropical migrants and endemics, and stay in a luxurious eco-lodge while birding with expert guides.

More articles on Birding and Ecotourism:

Spring Birding Tour to Mallorca: Naturetrek offers an April trip to Mallorca, where the Blue Rock Thrush and Marmora’s Warbler may be seen. This scenic birding trip involves short driving distances, stunning scenery, and birding near the lovely hotel near Puerto Pollensa.

Volunteer in Bolivia Can Help Eco-Tourism and Conservation
Latin America is a traveler's paradise and Bolivia offers some of the most spectacular landscapes that you as a volunteer will get to see A geographically diverse country, Bolivia is also multi-ethnic and has partial control over Lake Titicaca, which is the highest navigable lake in the world at an elevation of 3,805 m

The History of Ecotourism
Ecotourism is often looked at as a modern phenomenon, something that happened when environmentally-aware people started getting enough money together in their lives to travel to those places they'd only read about. This is just not true. Ecotourism is as old as tourism itself.

Deals on Birding Binoculars
More birdwatching binoculars and birding news.

Links: Favorite Gourmet and Travel Sites
These are some of our other sites related to travel, gourmet food, and other aspects of "the good life".

BirdingScopes.com: Spotting Scopes for birders

OaxacaLodging.com: Hotels in Oaxaca, Mexico
Oaxaca has wonderful birding.

Two birders enjoying a guided birding tour

Great birding destinations and birdwatching locations

Hawaii

Birding Hawaii: birdwatching tours of Hawaii

The History of Ecotourism

Learn about great birding trips to suit your needs. Perhaps you want to see the harpy eagle in Panama, or the gorgeous Rosita's bunting in Mexico. Birding tours are organized by a surprising diversity of organizations: in addition to the well-known guided birdwatching trips by groups like Wings and VENT, there are trips with exciting itineraries given by Naturetrek, the Sierra Club, and even Elderhostel. Add to your life bird list by choosing a wonderful birding tour here.
Caligo Ventures has lots of exciting birding tours coming up in 2009. We like the fact that Caligo makes a point of using local naturalist guides in the host country. In March, they are offering a birdwatching trip to the Panama Canal Area and the Western Highlands. The trip offers chances to see the Resplendent Quetzal and the Scintillant Hummingbird, among scores of other species. It should be quite an experience to stay in the Canopy Tower Lodge, where birders often see the Green Shrike-vireo and the stunning Blue Cotinga.

Ecotourism is often looked at as a modern phenomenon, something that happened when environmentally-aware people started getting enough money together in their lives to travel to those places they'd only read about. This is just not true. Ecotourism is as old as tourism itself.

In fact, ecotourism history is embedded in the literature of Western civilization: Caesar's travelogues from Britain and Gaul, Marco Polo's exploration, and Aristotle's stories of the strange people of Egypt are all precursors to modern ecotourism. These xamples did not have tourism as their main goal, but rather conquest, trade, and the pursuit of knowledge took center stage.

Still, how much difference is there between ecotourism and our earliest explorations, if you remove the more venial goals? Only when exploration itself became the motivation for travel was ecotourism born, but the similarities are still there: the exploration of a relatively-wild part of the world, with the goal to understand the flora, fauna, and other cultures found therein.

In Victorian England, the separation began, and an entire class of gentleman and lady explorers sprang up, mounted elephants, and started thundering through the savannahs and jungles of Africa and Asia, sending back missives and quaintly-worded novels to their friends and family at home.

The Adventurers' Clubs: Victorian Ecotourism

From elephant safari hunters to Tarzan to Charles Darwin, you can clearly see the roots of modern ecotourism in Victorian times. Male and female adventurers, invariably members of the idle rich, packed steamer trunks and purchased trendy (at the time) khaki suits perfect for sweating it out in the steamy Congo.

This, however, wasn't pure ecotourism as it exists today. Instead, the Victorians made numerous blunders we should learn from in our own movement toward a more sustainable appreciation of nature.

Start with preservation of species. The Victorians were notable hunters for trophies, and shooting elephants and water buffalo, lions and gorillas, were par for the course during your African safari. Even those who did not shoot were in the habit of purchasing beautifully-carved ivory trinkets, or elephant-foot umbrella stands. Their impact was twofold in the end: first, their stories and letters brought back the real world of Africa for others to put into books and art and, eventually, movies. But secondly, and more sinister, their veritable rape of the wilds taught the impoverished cultures they moved through that the way to get the crazy Europeans' money was to destroy their own ecosystems.

And so it went.

Modern Ecotourism History

What is surprising: we haven't learned as much as you might imagine from the history of ecotourism. Modern ecotourism, beginning in the 1980s, has brought an unheard- of prosperity to countries like Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Nepal. However, many of the same old mistakes are being made. Instead of minimizing impact, as a true ecotourist should, by rough camping or staying with host families, many are opting to stay in some of the large hotels that tend to spring up in these often ecologically-sensitive areas. Ecotourists hike through inaccessible areas - after driving there in poorly-maintained diesel Jeeps. Governments thriving on ecotourism dollars force programs on the indigenous population that they neither want nor need, in order to bring more tourists in.

Looking back at ecotourism history, we should all strive to:

* Have minimal, no, or positive impact on the ecosystems and people we visit. * Provide environmentally-responsible employment to the people of these areas - sharing the wealth without damaging the world. * Eschew luxury in favor of wasting nothing and leaving behind no trash or mark that we were there. * Appreciate and enjoy the flora, fauna, and cultures of the areas we visit, and leave them exactly the same for their own sake and for the sake of others who want to enjoy their beauty.

With goals such as these, ecotourism could be a means for preserving things that would otherwise be lost for centuries to come, giving to the future in ways that ecotourism's history has never done before.

Reinaldo Reyes, Life Style Mentor and Successful Entrepreneur, is helping many become the next success story. Whether you're looking to create an extra few thousand dollars per month, be an ex-corporate executive, or the next millionaire Mom, Reindaldo can assist you to create a second stream of income and greater peace of mind. visit : Success


Rate This Article:
In th spring, fieldguides.com will be doing a comprehensive Yucatan and Cozumel tour in Mexico. Participants on this birding trip look forward to seeing the black-throated Bobwhite, the Yucatan Wren, and other species. Some of the observing is done in the national parks that surround famous Mayan ruins. Birdwatching trips can be focused on just a few species, or, a tour may include the chance to see a great number of endemics and migrant birds over several varying habitats and even include birding in multiple countries.


Privacy Policy | Copyright/Trademark Notification