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TOURISM Adventure tourism the new frontier

Annisa Sarah
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ffAdventure Tourism + +fThis book is dedicated to: +Susan Horner and John Michael Richard Swarbrooke, two great +companions on the ultimate tourism trip . . . life. +Gill’s partner, Pete Oates – someone who has inspired me to write, +through his continuous encouragement and the many great +adventures that we have shared. +Ceri and Sam Beard for their continual source of youthful +inspiration. +Steve Elliott, who Suzanne would like to thank for his constant +understanding and support. +Our students, past and present, for their inspiration and good +company. +Past and present friends at the University of Bethlehem, in the +hope of a better future for all of them and for the people of +Palestine. +fAdventure Tourism + +The new frontier + + + + +John Swarbrooke +Colin Beard +Suzanne Leckie +Gill Pomfret + + + + +OXFORD AMSTERDAM BOSTON LONDON NEW YORK PARIS +SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO SINGAPORE SYDNEY TOKYO +fButterworth-Heinemann +An imprint of Elsevier Science +Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP +200 Wheeler Road, Burlington MA 01803 + +First published 2003 + +Copyright © 2003, Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved + +No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form (including +photocopying or storing in any medium by electronic means and whether +or not transiently or incidentally to some other use of this publication) without +the written permission of the copyright holder except in accordance with the +provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of +a licence issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, +London, England W1T 4LP. Applications for the copyright holder’s written +permission to reproduce any part of this publication should be addressed +to the publisher + +Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier’s Science and Technology Rights +Department in Oxford, UK: phone: (+44) (0) 1865 843830; fax: (+44) (0) 1865 +853333; e-mail: [email protected]. You may also complete your request +on-line via the Elsevier Science homepage (www.elsevier.com), by selecting +‘Customer Support’ and then ‘Obtaining Permissions’ + +British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data +A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library + +Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data +A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress + +ISBN 0 7506 5186 5 + + + For information on all Butterworth-Heinemann publications + visit our website at www.bh.com + + +Composition by Genesis Typesetting Limited, Rochester, Kent +Printed and bound in Great Britain +f Contents + + + + + +Acknowledgements vii + +List of case studies ix + +Preface xi + +Part A: Setting the context 1 + + 1 Introduction, definitions and typologies 3 + + 2 Historical themes in adventure tourism 38 + +Part B: The demand side 53 + + 3 The adventure tourist 55 + + 4 The adventure tourism market 91 + +Part C: The supply side 119 + + 5 Destinations and venues 121 + + 6 The adventure tourism industry 135 + +Part D: The management of adventure tourism 153 + + 7 Marketing 155 + + 8 Risk management 169 + + 9 Ethical issues in adventure tourism 185 + +Part E: Key sectors of adventure tourism 199 + +10 Wildlife tourism 201 + +11 Artificial environment adventure 228 + +Part F: The future of adventure tourism 245 + +12 Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier 247 + +Part G: Case studies 287 + +13 Case studies 289 + +Bibliography 339 + +Index 351 + +ff Acknowledgements + + + + + +In writing this book, the authors have been greatly helped by the following +people: +Judy Mitchell, who showed great patience in typing and compiling the +manuscript, and in working with four very different authors. +Friends who have given us the opportunity to see adventure tourism and +adventurous destinations at first hand, including Marina Sukueva in Siberia, +Adriano Piazzi in Brazil, and Dimitrios Skalkos in the Epirus region of +Greece. +Sue Norbury and Julian Harlow, who shared with us the exciting experiences +that they had whilst working for GREENFORCE. +Chris Craggs, a renowned rock climber and author of several climbing +guidebooks, who gave such an interesting account of this sport and its +growing importance in Spain. +Frank Hibbert, who provided cutting-edge research on risk management in +mountain adventure tourism from his high quality Master’s dissertation. +Brad and Keith Pearse, who supplied some very useful information about the +South African-based company, 180° Adventures. +Joni Ong and family, and all staff at Outward Bound Singapore. +Todd Hesket, who generously supplied information and ideas about his +company ‘Active Family Vacations’. +ff List of case studies + + + + + + 1 Family adventure tourism + 2 Women backpackers + 3 Disabled people and adventure travel + 4 Red Letter Days + 5 GREENFORCE + 6 Adventure tourism magazines + 7 Walk on the wild side – travelling to the world’s most dangerous places + 8 Clubbing and party tourism in the UK market + 9 Rock climbing in Spain +10 Backpacking across Asia +11 Winter sports in New England +12 180° Adventures +13 Space tourism +14 Adventure travel writing today +15 Adventure travel as television entertainment +16 Personal adventures and the holiday postcard + +Additional case studies are available online at +www.bh.com/companions/0750651865 +ff Preface + + + + + +This book represents a very ambitious project! It is an attempt to explore the +growing, but broad and ill-defined, phenomenon of adventure tourism. + At the same time, the sub-headings of the book reflect the authors’ view +that adventure tourism represents a ‘new frontier’ in tourism in several +ways. + First, in many ways the changes that have taken place in adventure tourism +in recent years appear to illustrate and support the idea that we are seeing the +transition from ‘old tourism’ to ‘new tourism’. + Second, in terms of the geographical dimension of tourism adventure +tourists are pushing back the frontiers, making destinations of the last +wildernesses on earth, and even of space! + Third, in many types of adventure tourism we are seeing new forms and +variations on a theme, which are shifting ‘the frontier’ in the different sectors +of tourism. + Finally, we are living in a time where ‘classic’ natural wilderness adventure +travel is being complemented by adventure experiences in man-made artificial +environments, often in urban areas. + The authors are determined to try to present as holistic a view as possible +of adventure tourism. In most texts adventure tourism is seen as a physical +phenomenon, involving tourists undertaking physical activities in unfamiliar +and often inhospitable environments. However, it is our contention that there +is also a non-physical dimension to adventure tourism in two ways. In the first +place, physical adventure activities have a strong non-physical element in the +emotion of fear and, taking mountaineering as an example, in the almost +spiritual feeling experienced when standing alone on one of the highest points +on earth. +fPreface + + + More fundamentally, though, there are forms of adventure tourism that are +largely or wholly non-physical in nature. Non-physical adventure tourism can, +perhaps, be divided into different types, namely: + +u0002 Intellectual adventure, such as travelling for mental self-development +u0002 Emotional adventure, for example gambling or hedonism +u0002 Spiritual adventure, where people travel in search of spiritual + enlightenment. + +The inclusion of non-physical adventure tourism in this book has made it +almost unbearably difficult to write, because non-physical adventure has +received much less attention from academics than its physical counterpart. As +a result, there is little theoretical literature in this field, and very few data exist +for many forms of non-physical adventure tourism. For this reason, non­ +physical adventure tourism receives less coverage in this book than the more +traditional physical forms. However, the authors wish to stress that this +imbalance is mainly as a result of the lack of data and theoretical literature, +and it in no way reflects their view of the respective importance of the two +forms of adventure tourism. + It became clear to the authors very early on that adventure tourism is a +diverse field. Even physical adventure is highly heterogeneous. The breadth of +physical adventure tourism today was clearly illustrated in a small book given +away free in 2002 with Global magazine in the UK. This listed ‘Great +Adventures for 2002’, including: + +u0002 Trekking holidays in Morocco and Asia +u0002 Bike-riding adventures in South Africa +u0002 Diving trips to the Red Sea +u0002 Whale-watching in Norway +u0002 Swimming amongst sharks in South Africa +u0002 Cheetah-watching in Namibia +u0002 Dog-sledding and reindeer expeditions in Lapland +u0002 Sailing tall ships across the Atlantic +u0002 White-water rafting in Turkey +u0002 Surfing in Cornwall, UK +u0002 Riding the full length of the Trans-Siberian railway +u0002 Taking part in charity challenge adventures, including the ‘Vietnam Life- + Cycle Challenge’ and the ‘2002 UK Challenge Series’ +u0002 Going on a polar cruise to either the Arctic or Antarctica +u0002 Going on holiday and paying to work on conservation projects in the UK + +xii +f Preface + + +u0002 Micro-light flying in the UK +u0002 Taking part in the ‘running of the bulls’ in Pamplona, Spain +u0002 Sky-diving in Spain and Florida +u0002 Driving a Formula 1 racing car in the UK +u0002 Practising falconry in the UK +u0002 Taking a motorcycle tour of the South Island, New Zealand +u0002 Training with Thai boxers in Thailand +u0002 Horse-trekking in Kyrgystan +u0002 Participating in the Outward Bound 2002 Expedition. + +Non-physical adventure tourism is also a very diverse field, encompassing +everything from gambling trips to hedonistic sun, sand, sea and sex vacations +to journeys in search of spiritual enlightenment. + What is clear is that adventure is not an absolute concept that is the same +for everyone. The concept of adventure is highly personal, and means +different things to different people. Something that is quite everyday or +mundane for one person can be a rare adventure for another, depending on +experience and personality. + Sadly, this is just one of the areas in which the writing of this book was +constrained by the lack of empirical data on many aspects of adventure +tourism. Hence in Chapter 12 we have made an impassioned plea for more +research to be conducted in adventure tourism. + Having talked a little about the aims of the book, and the problems +experienced in writing it, it is time to tell the reader a little about its +structure. + Part A sets the scene. Chapter 1 makes a brave attempt to introduce the +concept of adventure tourism and offers some key definitions and typologies, +while Chapter 2 puts adventure tourism into its historical context. + The adventure tourist is the focus of Part B. Chapter 3 concentrates on +individual tourists and their characteristics and motives, while Chapter 4 +analyses the scope and nature of the global adventure tourism market. + In Part C we turn our attention to the supply side of adventure tourism. +Chapter 5 looks at destinations and views, while Chapter 6 looks at the +structure of the adventure tourism industry. + Part D explores three key aspects of the management of adventure tourism. +Chapter 7 concentrates on the marketing of adventure tourism, while Chapter +8 covers the crucial subject of risk management. In Chapter 9, the highly +topical issue of ethics is examined. + + xiii +fPreface + + + Part E features two chapters on important and rapidly developing sectors of +adventure tourism; wildlife tourism (Chapter 10) and artificial environment +tourism (Chapter 11). + In Part F, the authors endeavour to look into the future and predict how +adventure tourism is going to develop over time. + Part G is a very important section because it consists of real case studies, +drawn from many different countries, which illustrate many of the points +made in the text. + Finally, there is a detailed bibliography to help those who want to do further +reading. + We hope that all kinds of people will find this book of interest, from +students to policy makers, practitioners to academics. + We have tried, however imperfectly, to produce a book without geo­ +graphical boundaries – one that explores the phenomenon of adventure +tourism in different parts of the world. + This is not a book that is polished, nor does it provide comprehensive +coverage of the subject, and it offers very few answers. Instead it is in many +ways untidy and selective, and it raises far more questions than answers. This +may well be due to our inadequacies as authors, but it also reflects the +complexity of the field, its rapidly changing nature, and the very ambitious +goals we set for ourselves. It is a classic case of ‘work in progress’, and we +hope that this book will be a catalyst for other, more gifted, people to become +interested in researching aspects of adventure tourism. If this happens, then +the time taken writing this book will have been well spent. + John Swarbrooke, Colin Beard, + Suzanne Leckie and Gill Pomfret + Summer 2002 + + + + +xiv +fPart +A + Setting the context +ff1 +Introduction, definitions + and typologies + + + + + Introduction + This chapter endeavours to introduce the reader + to the field of adventure tourism from the + perspective of the authors. It analyses the funda­ + mental components of adventure tourism, offers + key definitions, examines the relationship + between adventure tourism and other established + niche tourism sectors, and puts forward various + typologies to help the reader understand the + nature and scope of adventure tourism. + Adventure tourism is a much-heralded phe­ + nomenon, but what exactly is it? To begin, we + would like you to consider the five scenarios + below and ask yourself, which ones encompass + ‘adventure tourism’? + + 1 A 30-year-old British man, an experienced + mountain walker and climber, booking onto a + specialist operator’s package for a four-week +fAdventure Tourism + + + expedition to the Karakoram range of the Himalayas, including a summit + attempt of Spantik, a 7000-m peak. The expedition is led by one of the tour + operator’s guides, and group sizes are no larger than eight. +2 An Afro-Caribbean couple from Miami, booking a cheap flight to + Shanghai, who aim to explore the Yangtze River region of China. They + have no specific plans or itinerary and intend to make transport and + accommodation arrangements once they arrive, when they will ‘see where + things take them’. They have never been to China before. +3 A group of four UK award-winning mountain athletes entering a 48-hour + adventure race (involving fell-running, canoeing and cycling) in Scotland. + They form a team sponsored by a well-known outdoor clothing + manufacturer. +4 A 45-year-old woman going abroad for first time, on her own, to attend a + ‘discover your inner voice’ course in self-development at an alternative + therapy centre in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in Spain. +5 A family visiting the Lake District for the day, who book onto a ‘family thrills + and spills’ day where they can try kayaking, climbing or canyoning. + +Not sure where to draw the line? Neither were we when we started this book. +Players in the tourism industry have enthusiastically adopted the term +‘adventure tourism’, but it has no readily agreed definition. It can be used to +describe anything from taking a walk in the countryside to taking a flight in +space! Most commentators concur that adventure tourism is a niche sector of +the tourism industry, but there are plenty of other niche sectors – such as +ecotourism and activity tourism – which have characteristics that overlap with +those of adventure tourism. There are also many related phrases, such as +‘adventure travel’, ‘adventure recreation’ and ‘hard and soft adventure’, +which on one hand can confuse but on the other can also contribute to +understanding the potential breadth of adventure tourism. Adventure tourism +is a complicated and somewhat ambiguous topic! + The study of any type of tourism typically involves breaking down the +complexities of real life into distinct and separate components or disciplines, +such as supply and demand, tourism marketing, or operations management. +The tourism industry is complex, and so this process of deconstructing it into +bite-sized pieces can help us begin to understand it. However, this can also +create its own problems, as many of the phenomena that are involved in +tourism are intertwined and interrelated in such a way that they cannot +sensibly be separated. + Roberts and Hall (2001: 18) observe that the study of tourism is suffused +with ‘paradox and irony’, incorporating apparently binary opposites such as + +4 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +continuity and change, sustainability and unsustainability, and even good and +bad. They note it is also full of terms that ‘imply the existence of qualities +which may be more apparent than real’, such as niche, industry and product. +It is against this backdrop that we tackle our investigation into adventure +tourism. It will inevitably involve deconstruction and its associated problems, +as well as the use of those widely accepted but nebulous terms. However, in +doing so it will also highlight paradoxes and allow readers to reconstruct their +own understanding of adventure tourism. + Our analysis of what adventure tourism means begins with a review of the +term tourism and is followed by an analysis of the nature of adventure, as +obviously adventure tourism must in some way combine both concepts. The +latter part of this chapter analyses the relationships between the different niche +sectors that overlap with adventure tourism, such as ecotourism and activity +tourism, as this will help set the context for the rest of the book. + + + + + Tourism + +The leisure, recreation and travel elements of tourism +Although tourism is said to be one of the world’s largest industries, it is difficult +to define its limits and decide what counts as tourism and what doesn’t. Many +definitions of tourism lie within a leisure and recreational context, such as +Pearce’s (1987: 1) conceptualization that ‘tourism may be thought of as the +relationships and phenomena arising out of journeys and temporary stays of +people travelling primarily for leisure or recreation purposes’, or Leiper’s +(1995: 20) suggestion that ‘tourism can be defined as the theories and practice +of travelling and visiting places for leisure related purposes’. + In this sense, tourism shares strong fundamental characteristics and +theoretical foundations with the recreation and leisure studies field. The terms +leisure, recreation and tourism represent a type of loose unity that is focused +on experiences and activities. Although there are many conceptualizations of +leisure, commonly agreed characteristics include the following: + +� It provides opportunities for enjoyment, self expression and satisfaction, + which makes it intrinsically motivating +� It takes place in time set aside from obligations such as employment and + family care +� It is perceived as being freely chosen and entered into by the participant. + + 5 +fAdventure Tourism + + +‘Recreation’ is often used interchangeably with ‘leisure’. Recreation is also +voluntarily undertaken, primarily for pleasure and satisfaction, during leisure +time. The simplest distinction between leisure and recreation is one that +identifies leisure with time and recreation with activity. Pigram and Jenkin +(1999: 6) draw together the ideas of many authors, saying: ‘Leisure has now +become viewed as a process and recreation an experience which is goal +oriented, with participation expected to yield satisfactions, and therefore +physical and emotional rewards’. + Whilst there is a strong argument for the fact that tourism is undertaken for +leisure or recreation purposes, the World Tourism Organization has also taken +a slightly broader view of the purposes of tourism. It describes tourism as ‘the +activities of persons travelling to and staying in places outside their usual +environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and +other purposes’ (WTO, 1994; see Pigram, 1996: 227). + This is very similar to the widespread understanding of the term travel. +Indeed, the term adventure travel is often used both in the literature and in the +industry as an alternative to adventure tourism. Addison (1999: 417) defines +adventure travel as ‘any activity trip close to nature that is undertaken by +someone who departs from known surroundings to encounter unfamiliar +places and people, with the purpose of exploration, study, business, +communication, recreation, sport, or sightseeing and tourism’. This suggests +that adventure travel is somewhat more extensive than tourism or leisure, by +including goals that might be related to, for example, professional activity. + The concept of tourism generally involves the act of travel or journeying. +Putting aside any debate over the length of the journey, tourists are expected +to travel from their home to another destination. The reliance of tourism on +travel is one of the reasons the two are so intertwined. Perhaps virtual reality +will grey this one characteristic of tourism upon which most people agree! + The tricky question of the duration of a tourism experience usually crops up +in discussions that attempt to define tourism. The most convenient ‘rule’ is +that tourism involves an overnight stay. Leisure activities that do not involve +an overnight stay may variously be defined as recreational activities or +excursioning. However, these have an important role within the tourism +industry. In the context of adventure tourism, many adventures are sought and +provided near to home and therefore do not involve overnight stays. Although +these may fall outside this conventional and narrow definition of tourism they +will be explored further in this book, as these experiences often form the basis +of trends in adventure tourism or support the development and growth of +adventure tourism activities. An example of this is the use and development of + +6 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +climbing walls. These facilities are often used on a day-visit basis by people +developing their technical climbing skills, and this skill development could be +part of the preparation or build-up to an adventure trip. The operator running +the climbing wall facility may also offer adventure holiday packages, using +the wall to promote and advertise these potential adventure tours. + +What does tourism mean in an ‘adventure tourism��� context? +So, although the most prevalent perception of tourism is that it is a form of +leisure that incorporates an element of travel and an overnight stay, we think +there is a justification for investigating activities and products that sit outside +these boundaries – such as adventure recreation, adventure education and +adventure competition. Adventure tourism is at the cutting edge of world +tourism, and its newness merits a comprehensive examination, unhindered by +the confines of traditional delineations. The frontiers that adventure tourism is +forging make us re-assess the value of conventional definitions. + + + Adventure +We need to get to the heart of what we mean by adventure if we are to +understand both what makes adventure tourism distinctive and where it +overlaps with other tourism sectors. The term ‘adventure’ is evocative for +many people – images and associations flood into the mind at the mention of +the word. Imagination and emotion are very much part and parcel of the +adventure experience, as we will see. + Below is a range of words frequently used in magazines and brochures +purveying adventure products. Do these reflect your own associations with the +word adventure? + +Thrill Challenge Awe-inspiring +Adrenaline Ultimate Risk +Excitement Elation Conquer +Fear Terror Success +Journey Expedition Daring +Roughing it + +It is interesting to look at some of the ways that we develop our understanding +of the term ‘adventure’. + Even before we are old enough to encounter a dictionary definition of +adventure, most of us have acquired an idea of what adventure is about. +Adventure stories often play a role in forming our early images of the + + 7 +fAdventure Tourism + + +constituents of adventure. Classic adventure stories by authors such as +Conrad, Stevenson and Rider-Haggard, and more modern stories such as The +Famous Five series by Enid Blyton, have captivated many youngsters in the +English-speaking world. Fisher (1986) analyses the characteristics of classic +adventures stories and notes: ‘The reader . . . is to be taken away from normal +concerns by events of an exaggerated, heightened nature, often taking place in +exotic, distant surroundings . . . they offer surprise rather than confirmation, +strangeness rather than familiarity . . .’. These stories often promote a +romantic view of the world, where heroism abounds and everything ends +happily ever after. Nowadays these types of yarn are often translated into film +for modern audiences, as in the case of Indiana Jones and the Temple of +Doom. This kind of literature was sometimes referred to as ‘escapism’, and +whilst any form of tourism can provide an escape from the humdrum +ordinariness of everyday life, adventure tourism might be expected to +capitalize on this escapist and fantasy element. Price (1974) talks of the link +between adventure and romanticism, and notes that both can be illusionary +and false on the one hand but visionary and idealistic on the other. + + An analysis of adventure stories quickly shows that there is undoubtedly an +element of contrivance in much of this genre – typically, good overcomes evil +and there are happy endings. This has implications for the tourism industry, +and for the commodification of adventure. + + In contrast with romanticized adventure stories, there are grittier versions of +adventure. Real-life experiences provide us with another influence on our +perception of adventure. These experiences may have happened to other +people or may be personal. Quests have been undertaken throughout history, +where the dangers and the consequences were very real. Arctic explorers +pushing the limits of endurance, climbers pushing the limits of skill and +astronauts pushing the limits of technology have all died in their attempts. On +a personal (and hopefully less tragic) level, many of us will have had an +experience we would describe as an adventure. People commonly describe +real-life adventures that involve challenges entailing a certain amount of +discomfort or anxiety. Feeling scared, exhausted and thoroughly tested is +sometimes part of the deal. In many ways, there is an expectation and +acceptance that adventure might involve a certain amount of hardship and +unpleasantness. Addison (1999: 417) reflects this when he suggests that +adventure travel implies ‘launching into the unknown with the expectation +that it could turn out to be an ordeal’. + + Initial reactions to the word ‘adventure’ are a good starting point for +analysing its meaning, because they have unconsciously permeated our + +8 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +understanding of the concept. Some of these ideas will be enlarged upon in the +next section, which attempts to identify the core or essential qualities of +adventure. + + +Core characteristics of adventure +We do not believe there is a single characteristic that effectively sums up the +nature of adventure; what follows is an attempt to draw out the key qualities +of adventure. The focus is on the nature of adventure at this stage, rather than +adventure tourism. We will discuss the ways on which tourism and adventure +have been partnered together in the following section. However, occasionally +we will pre-empt our discussion of adventure tourism by highlighting +instances where other writers have relied on one of these core characteristics +in their attempts to define adventure tourism. + The points below summarize the core characteristics or qualities of +adventure that form the basis of the following analysis: + +� Uncertain outcomes +� Danger and risk +� Challenge +� Anticipated rewards +� Novelty +� Stimulation and excitement +� Escapism and separation +� Exploration and discovery +� Absorption and focus +� Contrasting emotions. + +Many of these qualities are inter-related and interdependent – for example, +novelty contributes to both the sense of challenge and the degree of +stimulation. Any of these qualities taken alone do not make an adventure. +However, when they are all present, we believe an adventure is more or less +guaranteed. + +Uncertain outcomes +One of the most fundamental characteristics of adventure is that the outcome +is uncertain. The absence of a guaranteed conclusion to the experience helps +stimulate excitement and commitment in the participant. Uncertainty is one of +the factors that sets up a challenge, and it can be created in a number of ways. +The presence of danger, which in turn creates risk, ensures the outcome is not +predictable. Uncertainty can also be created by novelty – by doing something + + 9 +fAdventure Tourism + + +that is new and unfamiliar. It is not surprising that adventurers might feel a +little bit of trepidation as part of the complex array of emotions that adventure +conjures up. + +Danger and risk +Danger and risk are closely associated with uncertainty, in a ‘chicken and egg’ +type of way! Uncertainty itself creates a sense of risk, and risk bolsters +uncertainty. Risk involves people exposing themselves to danger. The risks +could be damage to physical well-being (in the form of injury, pain, or death) +or to psychological well-being (through humiliation, embarrassment, loss of +confidence or loss of friendships). Danger resides in many situations, and not +always in such obvious forms as a strong undercurrent or an icy ridge. + The ability to tolerate (or perhaps even enjoy) risk varies between +individuals. The same set of circumstances produce excitement in one +individual but fear in another. The perception of the likelihood of a risk being +realized, and assessment of its consequences, also varies between individuals. +The extremely personal nature of risk perception affects an individual’s +perception of what constitutes an adventurous experience. + As might be expected, given its association with uncertainty of outcome, +there is a general consensus that adventure involves risk, and risk is frequently +identified as one of the defining characteristics of adventure. + +Challenge +Factors such as uncertainty of outcome, danger and the expectation of having +to cope with difficult circumstances all combine to create a challenge. This +challenge can be of an intellectual, moral, spiritual, emotional or physical +nature. + The degree of challenge affects the intensity of the adventure experience, +creating a continuum from extremely adventurous to mildly adventurous. +Challenge is not only dependent upon the level of danger, but also upon the +skills and abilities of the participant. The skills could be physical or technical +skills, or personal attributes such as self-reliance. Mortlock (1984) explored +this relationship between risks and competence in an adventure context, and +produced a useful typology of stages of adventure (Figure 1.1). If the level of +danger is low and the level of technical and personal skills is high, then the +experience might be described as play – easy and enjoyable. + At the other end of the scale, where the nature of the activity far exceeds the +skills of the participants, the experience is straying into the realm of +misadventure, or even disaster and tragedy. + +10 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + + + +Figure 1.1 Mortlock’s four stages of adventure (adapted from Mortlock, 1984). + + + + + Mortlock’s model alludes to a crucial facet of challenge in an adventure +context. Not only must the challenge be within the capacity of the participants +but, just as importantly, there must also be some expectation (on the part of the +participants themselves) that they can meet or overcome the challenge. If an +experience is to be anticipated as an adventure, there has to be a glimmer of +optimism and a feeling that success is possible. This proposal illustrates the +authors’ view that the concept of adventure is heavily dependent on mental +and psychological factors. + +Anticipated rewards +There is an expectation among adventurers that they will benefit from their +experience, and that there will be some intrinsic reward. Adventure is entered +into freely, without coercion, and in this respect shares some of the +characteristics of leisure. Also, like leisure, adventures are to a large degree +inner-directed and self-motivated. Sometimes there is a specific goal or +driving imperative associated with adventure, but failure to achieve the +original goal or mission is not necessarily an obstacle to achieving a sense of +reward – the sense of satisfaction that comes from ‘giving it a good try’ will +be enough for many participants. The achievement may also be something +intangible, such as a sense of fulfilment or a ‘peak experience’. On the other +hand, the reward might well be a ‘trophy’ of some kind – an ethnic artefact, +a sunken marine relic, or a tale to top all others! Stories, photographs, +journals, logs and letters help commemorate the experience and provide +lasting, tangible evidence of the event. + The anticipated benefit may not, in fact, be consciously articulated, but +without it the sense of adventure is compromised. It is perhaps easier to + + 11 +fAdventure Tourism + + +understand the importance of perceived reward by considering what the +experience would be like without it. Without some element of personal +benefit, an adventure would turn out to be more of a trial or obligation. + It is an interesting paradox that ‘uncertainty of outcome’ has to live +alongside expectation of reward or benefit. Indeed professionals such as +outdoor education providers, who orchestrate adventurous experiences for +clients, have been debating for some time how adventurous these experi­ +ences really are. Price (1974) suggests that as soon as one becomes a +deliberate purveyor of adventure, one is in danger of losing much that is +fundamental to it. He suggests it becomes a package deal, with something +false and synthetic about it. This adventure paradox creates a certain tension +for the adventure tourism industry. Tourism shares with romanticized +adventure stories an element of contrivance, given that tourism providers +generally seek to fulfil clients’ dreams and expectations. It will be +interesting to see how tourism businesses accommodate these conflicting +attributes of adventure. + + +Novelty +Returning to the other major contributor to uncertainty, namely novelty, we +find that most adventure involves an element of doing or experiencing +something new. Novelty can be a major part of the adventure experience in +cases where almost everything is new and fresh, or it may be a subtle twist, +perhaps involving extension or development of previous experiences. An +experience that is a straightforward and predictable repeat of a previous +experience is never going to be an adventure! + Travel offers plentiful opportunities for exposure to new things. This is one +of the reasons why travel or tourism makes an excellent vehicle for an +adventurous experience. Looking at the other side of the coin, Voase (1995: +45) proposes that the motive for travel is the attractiveness of exposure to +‘otherness’ and ‘abnormality’. If this is the case, it means most travellers are +seeking an element of adventure in their travel experience. + A significant proportion of tourists who seek adventure, with its frisson of +uncertainty, can be expected to seek it primarily through novel rather than +physically dangerous experiences. + +Stimulation and excitement +Adventure is a stimulating and intense experience. During an adventure +people are exposed to environments and situations that stimulate the senses, +the emotions, the intellect and the body’s physiology. + +12 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + + Many adventurers report that adventure brings with it heightened awareness +and a sense of immediacy and aliveness. Sometimes this heightened sense of +awareness is brought on by the adrenaline rush that accompanies moments of +fear, but equally it can accompany transcendent moments of great absorption +and calm. + High levels of stimulation create excitement, but the exact level of +stimulation required to reach a state of excitement varies from individual to +individual. What creates excitement in one person creates agitation in another. +This is another example of the subjective nature of adventure. + Muller and Cleaver (2000: 156) have identified stimulation as one of the +main distinguishing features of adventure tourism, saying that adventure +tourism is ‘characterized by its ability to provide the tourist with relatively +high levels of sensory stimulation . . .’. + +Escapism and separation +The stimulation and intensity associated with adventure also contributes to +removing the experience a step or two from the routine of everyday life, and +giving it special significance that allows it to be identified as a specific and +significant event. As described earlier in this chapter, the element of novelty +also contributes to a sense of escapism. Exotic surroundings, new activities or +unconventional social norms give an opportunity to enter into a parallel +universe, where priorities can be different. Adventure is something apart. The +ordinary world and everyday concerns are left behind. + +Exploration and discovery +Exploration and discovery are core components of the adventure process. The +increased knowledge and self-awareness that accompanies the discovery of +new places, cultures and skills forms one of the rewards referred to earlier. +Addison (1999) argues that education and the hunger to learn from new +situations are key motivations for both travel and adventure. + The ‘journey of discovery’ that is associated with adventure works in a +number of different contexts. Many adventure tourism experiences incorpo­ +rate a physical journey over time and distance, echoing the journeys of early +explorers. However, the journey of discovery could just as well refer to the +mental, emotional or spiritual progress derived from an experience. Addison +(1999: 418) notes the opportunities for discovery offered by the inner journey +undertaken by adventure travellers: + + Since most of the world has been mapped and studied, true adventure has + become more deliberate, specialized and technically demanding, as well + + 13 +fAdventure Tourism + + + as being somewhat arbitrary in its selection of targets for conquest. There + is little geographical need to ‘discover’ places on earth (satellites can do + the job), so what remains is the pure brutality of the elements and the + interest of the ‘inner journey’ made by the explorer. + +Absorption and focus +There are a number of mental and emotional states that are induced during an +adventure, and these include absorption and concentration. A challenge +requires concentrated application of skills or effort. There are generally +periods of intense focus during an adventure. + +Contrasting emotions +Adventure is an emotional experience. Often people have invested a certain +amount of emotional and mental energy before the active part of the +experience begins – for example, in dreaming, worrying, hoping, or building +confidence. This pre-event part of the adventure process helps develop its +committing nature. The uncertainty and risks, and the sheer difficulty of some +parts of the experience, mean that most people go through waves of +contrasting emotions – for example, terror and elation, joy and despair, +anxiety and pleasure. Adventure can be a bit of a roller-coaster ride, and this +is to be expected. Again, the absence of contrasting emotions is telling – could +an experience that was simply pure fun and joy be a true adventure? + + +Adventure summary – a process and a state of mind +Adventure, then, is where participants are voluntarily putting themselves in a +position where they believe they are taking a step into the unknown, where +they will face challenges, and where they will discover or gain something +valuable from the experience. + This state of affairs is based on the individual’s perception of the situation +and of themselves, and therefore ‘adventure’ is subjective and unique to each +person. It is quite apparent that what is an adventure for one person – say a +solo sailing trip around the Mediterranean – may not be regarded as an +adventure by another. Adventure is a personal construct, based more on +individual mental and emotional perceptions than physical capacities. Like +beauty, which is in the eye of the beholder, adventure is in the mind and heart +of the participant. + It is clear from this examination that adventure is not determined by specific +activities, but by the state of mind and approach of the participant. This +analysis supports Hopkins and Putnam’s (1993) assertion that ‘Adventure can + +14 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +be of the mind and spirit as much as a physical challenge’. Spending time +living in a different religious community or attending a self-development +course can be just as much an adventure as trekking up Kilimanjaro. + Although specific activities don’t define adventure, it is apparent that +adventure entails action. Adventure is not a passive experience; it’s engaging. +This engagement can be on a physical, intellectual, emotional or spiritual level. +Cater (2000) comments that ‘adventure tourism is fundamentally about active +recreation participation, and it demands new metaphors based more on “being, +doing, touching and seeing” rather than just seeing’. We propose that ‘feeling’ +could be added to this list as well. Adventure involves effort and commitment, +and often mental and physical preparation or training are necessary. + Most of the characteristics of adventure that have been discussed so far are +interdependent, or overlap with one or more of the others. They work together to +create that state of affairs which leads someone to describe an experience as an + + + + +Figure 1.2 The adventure experience – process and characteristics. + + 15 +fAdventure Tourism + + +adventure. Some of these core qualities relate to the main stages in the +adventure process (see Figure 1.2); others describe the perceptions and feelings +of the participant. These basic ‘ingredients’ of adventure can be combined in +different proportions, giving a different flavour to the adventure experience. + So, to draw some preliminary conclusions on how the concepts of +adventure and tourism combine to give us adventure tourism, in our view +adventure tourism involves travel and leisure activities that are bought into +(not simply financially, but as we are talking about tourism an exchange of +money is often involved somewhere along the line!) in the hope that they will +produce a rewarding adventure experience. Crucially, an adventure tourism +experience will: + +� Be of a heightened nature – a stimulating context will induce a range of + emotions (of which excitement will be key), and separate it from everyday + life +� Entail intellectual, physical or emotional risks and challenges – these will + be absorbing +� Be intrinsically rewarding, providing opportunities for enjoyment, learning + and self-development. + + + Manifestations of adventure in a tourism context +All of this discussion brings us to the question of how adventure manifests +itself in a tourism context. If the core ingredients of adventure are applied to +tourism activities, then a very broad range of activities that can take place in +a wide range of settings results. This situation is exacerbated by the fact that +any tourism experience that a participant thinks is an adventure, is an +adventure! This, we suggest, is valid. However, it is also unwieldy. In +addition, the tourist’s point of view is only one half of the equation. The +supply side of the tourism industry should also be considered, and for +adventure tourism to be a saleable commodity it has to be parcelled into +something that is ‘suppliable’. So it seems that this idea of adventure tourism +needs grounding in the practicalities of real life, and we need to divide it into +manageable entities. We can begin this task by asking ourselves, ‘How does +adventure manifest itself in terms of what people do and where they do it?’ + Certain settings and activities are strongly associated with adventure +experiences, and for very good reasons. They facilitate the emotions, thoughts +and sensations that define adventure. The most traditional and perhaps +stereotypical associations with adventure experiences include those displayed +in Table 1.1. + +16 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +Table 1.1 Activities and settings typically associated with adventure + +Activities associated with adventure Settings associated with adventure + +Physical activity, i.e. activities involving Outdoors, wilderness +physical exertion or psychomotor skills +Contact with nature, i.e. activities Outdoors, wilderness +bringing contact with the natural world in +general, or with specific wildlife +Contact with different cultures, i.e. Remote, unusual or exotic locations +people, faith, lifestyles +Journeys, i.e. vehicle-, animal-, or Remote, unusual or exotic locations +human-powered voyages over land, sea or +in the air + + + + As it happens, the activities and settings that are commonly associated with +adventure also form the basis of existing and well-recognized niche tourism +sectors, as indicated in Table 1.2. When people refer to the ‘adventure tourism +industry’, they are often referring to consumers and suppliers who focus on +the adventure-oriented elements of these niche sectors. + These existing tourism niches clearly have the potential to offer +opportunities for adventure tourism, given their strong relationship with +activities and settings commonly associated with adventure experiences. This +potential will be explained in the following sections. Many authors have +concerned themselves with trying to identify the degree of similarity and +difference between these niche forms of tourism and ‘adventure tourism’. This +debate has also resulted in the proposal of ‘typologies’ of adventure tourism. +Whilst we have not always been able to align these ideas completely to our +own analysis of adventure tourism, they have helped raise awareness of the +adventure tourism phenomenon and made a useful contribution to the debate, + +Table 1.2 Relationship between activities traditionally associated with +adventure and existing forms of niche tourism + + +Activities associated with adventure Existing niche forms of tourism + + +Physical activity → Activity tourism +Contact with nature → Nature-based tourism +Contact with other cultures → Discovery and cultural tourism +Journey → Expedition tourism + + + + 17 +fAdventure Tourism + + +and so they have been noted in the discussion that immediately follows and +throughout the book. The next section of this chapter addresses the four +established tourism niches identified in Table 1.2 and their relationship with +adventure tourism. + + +Activity tourism and adventure tourism +The association of physical activity with adventure is perhaps one of the most +commonly held perceptions. The environment in which this most frequently +happens, the outdoors, sits well with adventure because the natural world +provides us with the resources for many of the activities that provide risk, +challenge, sensory stimulus, novelty, discovery and so on. The outdoors +incorporates a huge variety of elemental phenomena, such as tornadoes, polar +ice caps, mountains, oceans and deserts, which, even if revisited, offer infinite +novelty and many ready-made challenges. + The potential rewards that come from engaging in physically challenging +activities are well known, relatively easy to achieve, and sometimes addictive. +Challenges involving physical exertion are stimulating and absorbing. Coping +with tough physical conditions tests and develops mental and emotional skills +as well as physical prowess. The success of any venture that is so personally +testing on all fronts can produce an incredible ‘high’ and a boost to self- +esteem. Creating circumstances where people can push themselves to their +physical limits is a convenient way to facilitate these benefits, and this is one +of the reasons why ‘physical activities’ are so attractive to purveyors of +adventure – including tourism providers. Another reason for their attractive­ +ness to tourism providers is that engaging in activities generally involves the +development of physical and technical skills, such as ice climbing or +navigation. These help reduce the levels of risk. As competence levels change +they modify the play-off between skills and danger, supplying endless +opportunities to get out of the ‘play zone’ and into the ‘adventure zone’. + Not surprisingly, the ‘activity tourism’ sector is perceived by many authors +as having a high degree of overlap with adventure tourism. In order to position +adventure tourism in relation to it, the characteristics and distinguishing +features of activity tourism are examined briefly here. + The activity holiday market can simply be described as holidays that +involve sport or a form of physical activity (Mintel, 1999), though others note +that it can also include special interest and theme or hobby holidays (Roberts +and Hall, 2001). It is therefore very broad, and includes activities ranging +from sky-diving to landscape painting to learning a language. + +18 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + + + The amount of physical exertion induced by these activities varies greatly. +Of the range of activity holidays, those that involve outdoor recreation, +outdoor pursuits and outdoor education sectors of the activity holiday market +are particularly associated with adventure tourism, because the outdoors is +such a good provider of challenging and stimulating situations, and because +these holidays generally involve high levels of exertion or skill. However, not +all physical activities – even those that take place outdoors – are adventurous. +For example, many people would view a golfing or fishing holiday as relaxing +and pleasurable rather than adventurous. The segments of the activity tourism +market that do brand themselves as ‘adventure activities’ tend to involve +activities that have high degrees of perceived or real risk. This is often created +by the activities being based on elemental aspects of the environment that +seem (or indeed are) dangerous – scaling high mountains, rafting fast rivers or +diving deep caves would be included among adventure activities. + So it seems clear that some elements of the activity tourism market fit all +of the requirements of adventure tourism, whereas other elements don’t. The +separation of those activities that do not fit the requirements of adventure +tourism from those that do is hindered by the subjective nature of adventure. +Different people will put different types of activity at either end of this +continuum. + This is demonstrated in Figure 1.3, where we consider a hypothetical +character, Pete, who is a 20-year-old student studying an Environmental + + + + +Figure 1.3 The adventure spectrum in activity tourism. + + 19 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Conservation degree at Sheffield Hallam University. He undertakes voluntary +conservation work with the National Trust at weekends. Pete keeps fit by +hiking and mountain biking in the Peak District countryside. He has just +started to learn to climb with the Student Union club at the local indoor +climbing wall, despite his fear of heights. He has been abroad with his family +and on school trips a couple of times. He hopes to become a National Park +ranger when he finishes his degree. + Pete does not view the activities at the left-hand end of the continuum in +Figure 1.3 as adventurous for various reasons; for example, he doesn’t +perceive them as exciting, having self-development potential or any element +of risk or challenge. Other people might list different activities at each end. + It is apparent that activity tourism has a major role to play in adventure +tourism. Millington et al. (2001) reached the same conclusion, and suggested +that adventure tourism could be divided into two basic types – activity-driven +and destination-driven. Interestingly, they also suggested that there still needs +to be an exploration element for activity tourism to be classified as adventure +travel, reflecting one of the core qualities of the adventure experience +identified earlier in this chapter. + Despite the contribution that physical exertion and activity can make to +adventure, these are not necessarily ingredients of adventure holidays. +Adventures can be had without them. We now move on to discuss some of the +other niche sectors of tourism that rely on associations with adventure that are +not purely predicated upon physical effort and skill. + + +Nature-based tourism and adventure tourism +Table 1.1 identified contact with nature as an important ingredient in many +adventures. Contact with wildlife has its dangers. The perceived and real risks +associated with big cats, gorillas, elephants or sharks add a certain frisson to +proceedings. However, as well as the danger there is the stimulation, the +excitement and the transcendence of connection with wildlife. Pitting oneself +against nature is but one approach to adventure; developing affinity with +nature and pursuing a feeling of ‘oneness’ with nature is an equally +challenging goal. Contact with nature ‘in general’ provides an escape from +everyday life, especially the hectic and materialistic aspects. + Like many forms of activity tourism, nature-based tourism is associated +with the ‘great outdoors’, which contains ecosystems that form the basis of +wildlife tourism. The outdoors also provides a good setting for contemplation +and self-development activities. The wilderness shares some of the qualities of + +20 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +‘remote’ settings, which facilitate adventure in their own way and are +discussed later. + Nature-based tourism is a generic term that covers tourism based on the +‘use of natural resources in a wild and undeveloped form’ (Goodwin, 1996: +287). Ecotourism and wildlife tourism are forms of nature-based tourism. Of +these, ecotourism is the most well-known and frequently used in-phrase. +Although it has a particular meaning in academic circles, it worth noting that +it is often used when ‘nature-based tourism’ would in fact be a more accurate +term. The development of the ecotourism concept has resulted in a plethora of +definitions. A more thorough overview of ecotourism is provided in Chapters +3 and 10, but for the purposes of this discussion Fennell’s (1999) definition +will suffice: + + . . . ecotourism is a sustainable form of natural resource-based tourism + that focuses primarily on experiencing and learning about nature, and + which is ethically managed to be of low impact, non-consumptive, and + locally oriented (control, benefits, and scale). It typically occurs in + natural areas, and should contribute to the conservation or preservation of + such areas. + +Grant (2001) suggests that there is an overlap between adventure tourism and +ecotourism. An activity such as whale watching could be described as either +an adventure tourism experience or an ecotourism experience, depending on +the emphasis and value the describer wishes to convey. Exactly the same +argument applies to activity tourism, and the way it can overlap with both +adventure tourism and ecotourism. A trip to see birdlife and butterflies in +Costa Rica could be described using any of these three terms! + Fennell and Eagles (1990) created a ‘tourism activity spectrum’, illustrated +in Table 1.3, which they use to explain the similarities and differences they +perceive between adventure tourism and ecotourism. The three types of +tourism that are included in the spectrum – adventure travel, ecotourism and +tour travel – are associated with differing degrees of certain variables (risks, +known and unknown results, certainty/safety, preparation/training). The +unique character of adventure travel is based on the high degree of preparation +and training needed prior to the experience, the high levels of uncertainty of +outcome and high degrees of risk. This analysis supports some of our key +‘ingredients’ of adventure, outlined earlier in this chapter. + Some authors reason that ecotourism and adventure tourism are distinct +entities, as adventure travel is primarily concerned with risk confrontation + + 21 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 1.3 Tourism activity spectrum (adapted from Fennell and Eagles, 1990) + +Increasing certainty/safety and known results → + + + Adventure travel ←→ Ecotourism ←→ Tour travel + (e.g. mountain (e.g. birdwatching) (e.g. package holiday) + climbing) +� Lack of certainty/ � Covers adventure and � Low level of personal + safety in adventure tour travel preparation + experience � Combines educational � High degree of safety +� Motivated by self- pursuits and physical � Group organization + learning and personal activities undertaken for the + fulfilment � Personal responsibility traveller +� Personal and mental/physical + responsibility and preparation are important + mental/physical � Highly personal + preparation are experience; individuals + important benefit at different levels + + +← Increasing degree of preparation/training/unknown results and risks + + + +whilst ecotourism’s intrinsic component is nature appreciation. Whilst we are +not altogether convinced about the practicality or realism of this type of +differentiation, the analysis it is based upon does support our fundamental +assertion that the interpretation of the nature of any activity is determined in +the minds of the stakeholders, rather by the activity itself. + Preparation and training, which have been mentioned by both Fennel and +Eagle (1990) and Grant (2001), highlight the importance of the pre-trip part of +the whole adventure experience, especially in a tourism context. A tourism +experience is not normally an accidental occurrence; there is usually a period +of anticipation, even in a ‘spur of the moment’ decision. + + +Discovery/cultural tourism and adventure tourism +Our third tourism niche is associated with another set of characteristics that +are strongly associated with adventure; namely contact with other cultures and +remote, unusual or exotic settings. There are numerous destinations that fit the +bill, especially as ‘unusual’ or ‘exotic’ is different from ‘remote’. Smith and +Jenner (1999: 45) note that ‘the essential ingredients of an adventure holiday +seem to include a remote, under-populated region with a traditional culture, +where facilities are extremely limited’. + +22 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + + ‘Cultural tourism’ is, like activity tourism, a very broad concept. Culture in +this tourism sense includes ‘high art’ (opera, classical music, ballet, modern +dance, painting and sculpture etc.), youth and alternative cultures (revolving +around the music, dance and drugs scene), heritage and history (based on +buildings and architecture, folk museums etc.), and anthropological/ethno- +graphic interest in people and regions. + + Anthropological investigations have formed the basis of a bout of recent +publications by writers who have used their travels to ‘strange’ places as the +source of inspiration. Living as a local and partaking of local customs, +whether this involves hallucinatory drugs and voodoo trance or imbibing large +amounts of dodgy alcohol before attempting some ‘rite of passage’ challenge, +usually forms the premise of the tale. Many of these publications are +purposefully written for popular consumption, often in a humorous style, and +with a feeling for the adventurous elements of the experience, such as Hawkes +(2000). ‘Otherness’, novelty, uncertainty, risk, exploration, discovery and +revelation and many other facets of adventure are readily apparent in this type +of adventure travel. + + A tourism sector termed ‘discovery travel’ (Muller and Cleaver, 2000) is +also largely based on contact with other cultures and visiting unusual +destinations. As the term suggests, discovery travel also incorporates elements +of exploration and learning. Muller and Cleaver (2000) choose to bind +adventure tourism and discovery tourism together in what they term the +‘adventurer and explorer’ segment of the tourism market – adventure tourism +is undertaken by adventurers, and discovery tourism by explorers. Although +they differentiate between adventure tourism and discovery travel, the +differences are a matter of degree and emphasis rather than the presence or +absence of unique characteristics. This enables them to address the needs of +the two groups at once in terms of the market analysis they undertake. They +describe discovery travel as having more emphasis on mental stimulation and +mind-broadening experiences, and less on physical thrill and challenge. The +key characteristics of discovery travel are that opportunities for learning, +discovery and personal growth are provided. They describe discovery travel in +the following way (Muller and Cleaver, 2000; 156): + + Typically the travel experience is somewhat lengthier than in adventure + travel and contains elements that offer self enrichment via exposure to + novel places, novel cultures, novel activities and a requirement for the + traveller to immerse him/herself in a learning environment provided by + the tourism product. + + 23 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Addison (2001) supports the role that learning has to play in adventure +tourism, and also notes the value of detachment from everyday life in this +process: + + The wilderness and travel to foreign societies may temporarily distance us + from ourselves. Eventually we return to home base to reconsider who and + what we are. Adventure travel should be an educative experience . . . + +Examples of discovery travel include educational retreats, study holidays, +archaeological digs, and trips to observe and interact with radically different +cultures. Muller and Cleaver also note that participants can actually contribute +to the experience. Wildlife survey expeditions also fit into this category. Again +it is obvious that discovery and adventure travel are not completely distinct, +and that there are considerable areas of overlap. + + + +Expedition tourism and adventure tourism +Finally, if we return to Table 1.1, we find that journeys are frequently +associated with adventure. Journeys to destinations that are remote or unusual, +or that pass through difficult and dangerous terrain, are particularly +reminiscent of adventure or travel stories. + Expedition travel is an established niche sector of the tourism industry that +is based on journeys and voyages. These particularly pick up on the exploration +aspect of adventure. Those adventurers who do not wish to engage in outdoor +pursuits and sport challenges often favour this type of tourism. Expeditions can +still be gruelling, and require both physical and mental endurance. They often +take place in remote settings, where lack of infrastructure means the journey +takes time, and thus often comprises the main ‘activity’. Remote or unusual +locations provide the conditions whereby challenge, novelty, ‘otherness’ and +discovery can be almost guaranteed, simply by the nature of the location. In +remote locations the risk element is enhanced by the lack of support services +and rescue options should anything go wrong. Self-reliance can be an important +attribute in these circumstances. + Overland expeditions are an obvious sub-sector of this niche. These may be +motor vehicle-based (e.g. four-wheel drive or train), especially where +distances are large. However, walking or trekking is sometimes the only way +to see remote destinations. Animals such as horses, camels or sled dogs are +sometimes used. Not all expeditions are strictly ‘overland’ – air- and water- +based journeys are equally part of this sector, and might be marketed as sailing + +24 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +or canoeing voyages, or micro-light or hot-air ballooning expeditions. The +method of transport often provides some of the novelty that contributes to an +adventurous experience, and group travel is also frequently part of the deal +with these kinds of trips. Social interaction adds stimulation, support and its +own kind of challenge. Journeys also offer time to reflect, and the physical +journey is often accompanied by an inner journey. Journeys, with various +themes, are the basis of travel writing, and this has inspired many people to +try this type of adventure tourism for themselves. The long duration and the +physical and mental distance from home also contributes to the sense of +separateness from everyday life, and enhance the adventurous quality of this +type of tourism. + + +Clarifying the relationship between existing forms of tourism and +adventure tourism +There has been a lot of debate about the differences between these established +forms of tourism and adventure tourism. This analysis has led some authors to +propose distinguishing features of adventure tourism, and some of these are +embodied in the phrases contained in Table 1.2. Even a cursory examination +of the niche forms of tourism discussed above makes it apparent that there is +a considerable amount of overlap with adventure tourism. This in itself is not +necessarily an unhelpful thing. In fact we suggest quite the opposite; it can be +used to help highlight sub-sectors, or micro-niches, of adventure tourism. + Seductive though it is, we have not found the ‘divisionist’ approach (see +Figure 1.4), where one tourism niche (e.g. activity tourism) is severed from +another (e.g. adventure tourism), to be the most helpful or realistic approach + + + + + Distinctive Qualities Distinctive + qualities of shared by qualities of + niche tourism, both forms niche tourism, + e.g. eco-tourism of tourism e.g. adventure + tourism + + + + +Figure 1.4 Divisionist approach to defining niche forms of tourism. + + 25 +fAdventure Tourism + + +for the burgeoning adventure tourism industry. This is principally because the +differences between any two forms of tourism are in the minds of the +stakeholders and are not necessarily manifested in the products. Consumers’ +interests can also span two or more niche sectors, which contributes to the +difficulty of drawing lines between them – for example, a person may be +motivated by both adventure and fascination in wildlife. The impracticality of +this divisionist approach is reflected by the fact that in the USA and Canada +adventure, culture and ecological tourism are often amalgamated together as +ACE travel (an acronym) for practical and business reasons, supporting the +notion that there is a considerable amount of crossover between the three. + We prefer a more inclusive approach for adventure tourism, where some +products in almost any niche sector of tourism can be regarded as adventure +tourism (see Figure 1.5). We propose that adventure tourism could include + + + + +Figure 1.5 Inclusive approach to adventure tourism. + +26 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +products that are currently seen as belonging to other tourism niches, as well +as products that are designed from the outset to be mainstream adventure +tourism. + + + + Defining adventure tourism +As we conclude the discussion of how the concepts of adventure and tourism +combine to give us adventure tourism, some definitions regarding adventure +and adventure tourism have been provided in Table 1.4. It can be seen that +they reflect some of the points discussed throughout this chapter. + + + + Adventure tourism products +To recap, in our view adventure tourism involves travel and leisure activities +that are contracted into in the hope that they will produce a rewarding +adventure experience. An adventure experience will be of a heightened nature +and involve a range of emotions, of which excitement will be key. It will entail +intellectual, spiritual, physical or emotional risks and challenges. The +‘vehicle’ or ‘product’ that encompasses the adventure tourism experience will +be constructed from the basic constituents of a tourism experience – +environmental setting, core activities and transportation – and some or all of +these may contribute the stimulus for adventure. + Adventure tourism can, theoretically, exist independently of the supply side +of the tourism industry, because the consumer/participant decides whether any +given tourism experience is an adventure or not. However, a pluralistic view +of adventure tourism acknowledges that the supply side of the tourism +industry creates products that fit the requirements of adventure tourism, and +markets these as adventure tourism. The range of activities and settings that +facilitate or encompass the adventure tourism experience are infinite due to +the subjective nature of adventure. Also, the intensity of adventure can be +varied. Hunt (1989), when focusing on the role of outdoor education in +providing adventure for young people, suggested that adventure can be +adjusted according to: + +� The degree of remoteness +� The levels of skills required +� The levels of effort required +� The opportunity for responsibility +� The level of contrivance. + + 27 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 1.4 Adventure and adventure tourism definitions + +Definition Source + +Adventure (noun) an unusual, exciting and caring The Concise Oxford +experience > excitement arising from this . . . Dictionary, 1999 +Origin . . . based on L. adventurus ‘about to +happen’, from advenire ‘arrive’ +‘. . . to qualify as adventure . . . the outcome must Priest, 2001: 112 +be uncertain.’ +Adventure comprises ‘freedom of choice; intrinsic McArthur, 1989: 3, cited in +rewards; and an element of uncertainty, for Fluker and Turner, 2000 +instance when the experience outcome is +uncertain, or its risks are unpredictable.’ +‘The essential ingredients of an adventure holiday Smith and Jenner, 1999: 45 +seem to include a remote, under-populated region +with a traditional culture, where facilities are +extremely limited.’ +An essential component of adventure tourism is Canadian Tourism +travel to ‘an unusual, exotic, remote or wilderness Commission (cited in +destination’ Loverseed, 1997) +Adventure travel is ‘a leisure activity that takes Millington et al., 2001: 67 +place in an unusual, exotic, remote or wilderness +destination. It tends to be associated with high +levels of activity by the participant, most of it +outdoors. Adventure travellers expect to +experience various levels of risk, excitement and +tranquillity, and be personally tested. In particular +they are explorers of unspoilt, exotic parts of the +planet and also seek personal challenges. +‘. . . the main factor distinguishing adventure Grant, 2001: 167 +tourism from all other forms of tourism is the +planning and preparation involved. While +something of this characteristic may be present in +all forms of travel and tourism, it is essential in +the adventure tourism setting. The “journey of the +mind” (The Times, 2000) refers not to the +administrative planning of all trips but to that part +of planning and preparation which allows for +dreaming of the passion, excitement and fear that +might be experienced, and the risks that may be +encountered, much of this framed by accounts of +journeys of past explorers. Essentially each +person’s mind journey is unique; importantly, it is +a strong enough element to characterize the +product.’ + +28 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +Table 1.4 continued + +Definition Source + +Adventure tourism is ‘characterized by its ability Muller and Cleaver, 2000: +to provide the tourist with relatively high levels 156 +of sensory stimulation, usually achieved by +including physically challenging experiential +components with the (typically short) tourist +experience.’ +Adventure tourism is ‘an outdoor leisure activity Canadian Tourism +that takes place in an unusual, exotic, remote or Commission, 1995: 5, in +wilderness destination, involves some form of Fennell, 1999: 49 +unconventional means of transportation, and tends +to be associated with low or high levels of +activity’ +‘Perhaps the key distinguishing feature of an Smith and Jenner, 1999: 44 +adventure holiday is that it must have a quality of +exploration or of an expedition about it – for the +entire length of the trip, not just for one or two +days.’ +‘The threefold combination of activity, nature and Addison, 1999: 416 +culture marks adventure travel as an all round +challenge.’ +Adventure tourism is ‘the sum of the phenomena Sung et al., 1997: 57 +and relationships arising from the interactions of +adventure touristic activities with the natural +environment away from the participant’s usual +place of residence area and containing elements +of risk in which the outcome is influenced by the +participation, setting, and the organizer of the +tourist’s experience.’ + + + + +The two factors of subjectivity and intensity give rise to a vast number of +tourism ‘products’ that could fit the bill. To date the tourism industry has used +products that involve activities and settings traditionally associated with a +stereotypical view of adventure, such as physically challenging activities or +journeys in remote, exotic or natural settings. No doubt this is because these +associations are perceived to communicate ‘adventure’ to the customer +instantly, and therefore involve less risk to the supplier. Figure 1.6 shows how +current products are perceived in relation to conventional conceptions of both +adventure and tourism. + + 29 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 1.6 Positioning adventure tourism products in relation to their perceived +conventionality. + + + However, it is our contention that this conventional view of adventure +tourism is limiting and will change. Our own interpretation of adventure +tourism leads us to suggest that new classifications of adventure tourism will +emerge, and include elements such as: + +� Artificial environments +� Urban exploration +� Charity challenges +� Conservation expeditions +� Hedonistic tourism +� Spiritual enlightenment +� Virtual reality +� Sex tourism +� Round the world travel. + +Tourists are becoming ever more experienced and are increasingly able to +identify their tourism needs and seek out activities that meet them. Their +awareness of the adventure alternative is being stimulated by exposure to +escalating media coverage of this fashionable topic. Meanwhile, suppliers, + +30 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +who are searching for a competitive edge, will create and market a range of +innovative products to entice the adventurous tourist. New products will be +created by reconsidering opportunities in terms of locations and settings, +transport and other ‘core’ activities (see Figure 1.7). Refinements to existing +products will create highly targeted products – for example, the amount of +guiding and support offered ‘on location’ will be tempered to suit the +competence levels of particular groups of customers. + + + + +Figure 1.7 Components of adventure tourism. + + + + This expansion and diversification is already beginning and, as Addison +(1999) notes, ‘It is misleading to speak about adventure without recognizing +that the “industry” has diversified greatly to appeal to different segments of +humanity’. In fact, in our view suppliers are augmenting the work of the +media by articulating the ‘adventure’ theme in their marketing material and +stirring up a dormant desire in the sleepier sectors of the market! +Consequently adventure tourism, no matter how nebulous a term, is +something the tourism industry cannot afford to ignore. + + + Typologies of adventure tourism +Adventure tourism is so broad a concept, involving such a wide range of +products and people, that a number of authors have endeavoured to create +categories or typologies of adventure tourism. Here we will briefly introduce +three attempts. + + 31 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Adventure and independence +Addison (1999), in writing about adventure travel, produces a typology of +adventure. He creates a grid based on two axes. Along one we have the level +of adventure. For Addison this is determined by ‘the danger element and the +technical skills needed’, and thus could be interpreted as the degree of +challenge. The other axis is based on the level of independence – i.e. the +degree to which participants rely on others to organize the experience for +them. This is particularly relevant and apposite for the tourism industry, as it +reflects the degree to which tourists are reliant on suppliers to organize and +manage the experience. Each axis is a continuum, going from low to high. + Addison uses recognizable terms for certain types of activity to indicate the +nature of each quadrant, namely high adventure, adventure competition, +recreation, and leisure. This typology works most easily with the ‘adventure +activity’ element of adventure tourism, but could perhaps be adapted to be +applied more widely. Figure 1.8 shows the four categories, plus some proposals +as to the type of activity or product that might sit in each quadrant. + +‘Hard’ and ‘soft’ adventure +These oft-used terms have been developed by researchers who devised a +continuum to explain the diversity of behaviour, beginning with mild + + + + +Figure 1.8 Adventure quadrants. + +32 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +adventure (termed ‘soft adventure’) at one end of the scale and progressing to +‘hard adventure’ at the other extreme. This continuum, which is illustrated in +Figure 1.9, involves differing degrees of ‘challenge, uncertainty, setting +familiarity, personal abilities, intensity, duration and perceptions of control’ +(Lipscombe, 1995: 42). + + + + +Figure 1.9 The continuum of soft and hard adventure (source: Hill, 1995). + + + + Millington et al. (2001) opt for a simpler way to differentiate between hard +and soft adventure – hard adventure requires some experience and proficiency +in the activity prior to the tourism experience, whereas soft adventure does not +necessarily require previous experience. A Travel Industry Association of +America (1997) survey included camping, hiking, cycling, animal watching, +canoeing, water skiing, photo safari and a number of other activities in soft +adventure, and climbing, caving, backpacking in rugged terrain, kayaking and +others in hard adventure. Although many of the activities that would fall into +the soft category are physically demanding, some (for example, hot-air +ballooning) are not. The employment of mechanized transport is often +associated with soft adventure. Sometimes the type of accommodation also +influences the perception of a product’s position on the hard/soft continuum, +and it is generally thought that soft adventurers enjoy their home comforts. A +safari with plush accommodation, hot showers, and sundowners served before +a luxurious dinner would give the impression of a much ‘softer’ adventure +holiday than a safari that involved finding your own firewood to cook dinner +and pitching a roof-tent on top of the jeep. The characteristics and +personalities of hard and soft adventurers are explored in Chapter 3. + Explore Worldwide, a large UK adventure tour operator, offers 200 trips +throughout the globe. Their products are categorized as indicated in Box 1.1. +Whilst some of their holidays clearly target the hard adventurer within the +‘major treks’ and ‘wilderness experience’ categories, others would appeal to +the soft adventure market – for instance, ‘easy to moderate hikes’. + + 33 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Box 1.1 Explore Worldwide’s adventure holiday + categories + Culture/ Trips that explore exciting places but do not + adventure necessarily involve any particular physical + activity, usually focusing on local cultures, + historic sites or dramatic locations + Ethnic or Trips that offer the opportunity to meet, and + tribal sometimes stay with, traditional local people or + encounters tribal groups + Easy to Hikes involve a few days easy or moderate + moderate hikes walking, usually in open countryside, based in + hotel or tented accommodation. Most people in + good health should find no problem with this + level of walking + Major treks This type of trip is recommended for strong + mountain walkers who enjoy a challenge. + Participants should be physically fit. Walking + may be at high elevations (over 3500 m). + Normally there’s no backpacking, and the main + luggage is transported by vehicles, porters or + pack animals + Wildlife and Trips have a particular emphasis on wildlife or + natural history natural wonders – perhaps visiting some of the + world’s greatest game reserves. Explore’s unique + styles will make the experience memorable + Wilderness Perhaps the ultimate travel adventure, this + experience involves trips that venture into areas where + man’s influence is limited. The rewards of + reaching such remote settings more than + outweigh the fact that participants may have to + ‘rough it’ for a few days + Sailtrek/ Some of our most original adventures involve the + seatrek use of sailboats, ships, ferries or even tall ships + Raft or river Journeys last anything from a few hours to + journeys several days. This category includes a wide range + of activity types, from exhilarating white-water + rafting to easygoing cruising and river + exploration + + +34 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +Destination- and activity-driven adventure tourism +Millington et al. (2001) make a basic division within the adventure tourism +market between adventure travel that is destination driven and that which is +activity driven. Each of these basic divisions is then subdivided once more +(see Table 1.5). + + + Table 1.5 Subdivisions of destination- and + activity-driven adventure tourism + + + Destination-driven Activity-driven + + + (a) By vehicle (a) Hard + (b) Non-vehicularized (b) Soft + + + + + In destination-driven adventure travel the destination is the most important +aspect of the trip, with the traveller being interested in the landscape and +scenery, the ecosystems, the people or the history of the place. The location will +often be somewhere unusual, remote or exotic, providing novelty, stimulation, +discovery and challenge for the traveller. In activity-driven travel, it is the +activity rather than the destination that is crucial. The destination could be a +remote or wilderness area if the activity demands it, but could just as easily be +near home as abroad. As the choice of terms suggests, the division used by +Millington et al. (2001) is based on tourist drive and motivation. However, this +means the same experience, say an overland trip in a four-wheel drive vehicle, +could either be regarded as an activity-driven trip if the participant finds the +driving activity adventurous, or as a destination-driven trip if the transport is +used merely as a means to access a destination that would otherwise be +inaccessible. + So a number of approaches can be taken to categorizing adventure tourism. +It can be based on product categorization, or consumer categorization. In fact, +creating a typology of adventure tourism will always be a frustrating task, as +consumers and suppliers do not always confine themselves to one category. +Crossover is common – for example, research conducted by the Travel +Industry Association of America found a substantial sector of respondents had +participated in both hard adventure and soft adventure in the five years up to +1997 (Millington et al. 2001: 78.) + A quick examination of the dichotomies that exist within adventure tourism +demonstrate the complexity of the subject (see Table 1.6). + + 35 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 1.6 Dichotomies within adventure tourism + + +Hard ←→ Soft +Remote ←→ Local +Physical ←→ Spiritual +Organized ←→ Independent +Group adventure ←→ Solo adventure +Domestic ←→ International +Artificial environment ←→ Natural environment +Commercial adventure ←→ Voluntary adventure +Wilderness ←→ Urban +Low cost ←→ High cost +Planned ←→ Unplanned +Set itinerary ←→ ‘Go as you please’ +Altruistic ←→ Hedonistic +Long trips ←→ Short breaks +100 per cent adventure ←→ Intermittent adventure +Reliance on tourist facilities ←→ Limited use of tourist facilities +Politically stable destination ←→ Politically unstable destinations +New adventure tourist ←→ Experienced adventure tourists +High-risk exerience ←→ Low-risk experience +Real ←→ Fantasy +Work ←→ Play + + + + It seems to us that no matter how much fun academics might have creating +product-based typologies of adventure tourism, typologies based on psycho­ +graphic segmentation of the consumers will be of most use to the tourism +industry. This is an area that needs considerably more research before +proposals can be made, and an introduction to the possibilities is contained in +Chapter 3. + + + The development of the adventure tourism industry +The adventure tourism phenomenon is currently receiving a lot of attention. +Despite difficulties in defining it, it is frequently lauded as one of the fastest +growing segments in the tourism industry, especially in many of the developed +regions of the world. For instance, it is ‘. . . the fastest growing sector of the +tourism industry in North America’ (Loverseed, 1997: 90), and ‘the annual +growth rate of adventure travel in Europe is estimated at 13–15 per cent’ +(Smith and Jenner, 1999). + No doubt the growth in adventure tourism is partly a result of re-packaging +existing activities and re-branding them as ‘adventure’. Nonetheless, the + +36 +f Introduction, definitions and typologies + + +emergence of adventure tourism as a label that appeals to both the providers +and consumers in the tourism industry means that it has hit a resonant chord +and is likely to continue expanding in the near future. This resonance has been +recognized by the World Tourism Organization (1997: 28), who note in their +Vision 2020 study that a polarization of tourist tastes is developing; the +comfort based and the adventure orientated. They also expect tourism to +develop around the ‘three Es’ – entertainment, education and excitement. +Adventure tourism is well placed to supply these qualities. + It seems undeniable that appreciation of the significance of adventure +tourism is growing. Because of this sudden increase in awareness, many +people perceive it to be a new form of tourism. However, this is not the case. +The themes that appear in the current adventure tourism industry have a long +and distinguished past, and Chapter 2 explores the historical roots of +adventure tourism. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 What are the differences between adventure tourism and sport tourism and + ecotourism? +2 Develop your own typology of adventure tourism and explain the rationale + behind your typology. +3 Review one of the books or papers mentioned in Chapter 1 and discuss the + contribution it makes to the adventure tourism literature. + + + + + 37 +f2 + Historical themes in + adventure tourism + + + + + Introduction + It is clear from Chapter 1 that adventure travel + and tourism is a complex field, with great + diversity within it and no clear, tidy boundaries. + This complexity and diversity is partly explained + by the fact that adventure tourism today is the + result of a number of streams of thinking, or + themes, some of which are hundreds and even + thousands of years old. An understanding of these + streams is vital if we are to understand the present + scope and nature of adventure tourism and + predict its future, because the sector appears to + follow the process shown in Figure 2.1. + Some of these themes (such as hedonism) are + as powerful today as they were in previous times, + while others (such as colonization) may appear + less prevalent today. However, in general, these + themes seem resilient to change. Figure 2.2 + identifies a number of themes that are prevalent +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + + + +Figure 2.1 Streams of thinking. + + + +in UK thinking about adventure travel and tourism. It does not claim to be a +comprehensive list of themes in adventure tourism, but is instead designed to +illustrate the diversity of themes and the fact that some are very old, while new +ones are emerging all the time. + + + + +Figure 2.2 Themes in the historical development of adventure tourism. + + 39 +fAdventure Tourism + + + All of these themes are clearly encompassed within the definition of +adventure tourism set out earlier in this book. + It is important to recognize that this view is an Anglo-centric one. As we +will see later in the chapter, the concept of adventure tourism, and its historic +development, varies between different countries and cultures. + In this chapter we will look at some of the themes identified in Figure 2.2 +in more detail. + + + + Themes + +Hedonism +Hedonism, or pleasure seeking, has a particularly long history. The desire for +sensual pleasures and the willingness to travel for such purposes is age-old. + Often travel has been necessary for those wishing to pursue hedonism, as +their activities would not have been socially acceptable in their home +communities. Hedonistic travel has often involved a journey away from the +social constraints of everyday life in pursuit of pleasures such as sex, heavy +drinking and ‘serious’ partying. + Affluent Romans were distinctly hedonistic, and experimented widely with +different sensual pleasures . . . but usually away from their homes at the +‘resorts’ of the time. These people took part in group sex orgies and gambling, +and made use of hallucinogenic substances – always searching for new +experiences. + In the twentieth century, a number of destinations developed a reputation as +places where would-be hedonists could enjoy the sensual pleasures denied +them at home. Such places included Amsterdam and its red light district, +Hong Kong with its Suzie Wong image, Shanghai, Las Vegas and Rio de +Janeiro. + Today’s young hedonists apparently have many opportunities to express +themselves on holiday, including for example Club 18–30 type vacations and +the party culture of Ibiza. However, these people are no longer going away to +experience pleasures denied them at home; instead they are doing the same +things on holiday as they do at home on Friday and Saturday nights. Social +change now permits them to drink and have casual sex in their own +community, so perhaps this form of hedonistic tourism is no longer truly +adventure tourism. + +40 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +Explorers and adventurers +European schoolchildren grow up with images of bold explorers fearlessly +searching for new lands, charting previously unknown places. Such explorers +include Columbus, Cook, Da Gama, Magellan and Raleigh. These people +often suffered privations and even death in pursuit of new territories. At the +same time, they often became rich as a result of their discoveries. + By the early twentieth century most lands and seas had been discovered by +explorers, so new challenges had to be found for those seeking such +adventure. + Once the North and South Poles had been conquered the spirit of +exploration turned to the skies, with intrepid adventurers seeking to conquer +the air. Pioneers such as Blériot, Alcock and Brown, and Lindbergh pushed +back the boundaries of flying. Later aviators passed the milestone of breaking +the ‘sound barrier’. Aerial adventurers also experimented with airships and +helicopters. + The exploration of the air went further with man travelling in space, landing +on the moon in 1969, and launching orbiting space stations. + Adventurers such as Cousteau have also sought to explore under the sea +through submarines and deep-sea diving. + The question now is, where else is left to explore? What can challenge +tomorrow’s explorers and adventurers? + +Mercenaries +The twin motivators of money and adrenaline have, for centuries, inspired +some men – and a few women – to offer their services as soldiers of fortune. +Apart from the dangers faced in battle, such mercenaries have also faced +cultural adventures, working for kings and governments in countries with very +different traditions and customs to their own. For example, Vikings were +employed as soldiers in the medieval period in Istanbul, while German +mercenaries were employed around Europe in the Middle Ages. Yet the +mercenary is not just a figure from history, for in our own times former +members of the armed forces of the UK have fought as mercenaries in +countries such as Bosnia, for instance. + +Pilgrims +Pilgrimages to religious sites are perhaps the oldest form of tourism, and could +also be seen as an early form of adventure tourism, involving two types of + + 41 +fAdventure Tourism + + +adventure. First, a pilgrimage has always been an emotional adventure, a +journey to an unknown spiritual destination. Lives have often been changed +irrevocably by these journeys. Second, these pilgrimages could be risky, +dangerous undertakings. Robbers preyed on the pilgrimage routes such as +those in the wilderness of the Massif Central in France, which pilgrims +crossed from Northern Europe on their way to St Jacques de Compostella in +the medieval period. + Over time, the pilgrimage has evolved and the physical danger has +declined. Previously, pilgrimages involved individual people with religious +beliefs visiting sites that were important to their religion. Today, however, two +other types of pilgrims can be seen: + +1 ‘Western’ travellers who are not adherents of any particular religion + travelling ‘east’ in the hope of spiritual enlightenment +2 People living stressful lives who see monasteries or religious retreats as + places offering a relaxing lifestyle that will reduce their stress levels. This is + true of the Orthodox monasteries on Mount Athos in Greece, for example. + + +Traders +Traders have been around as long as pilgrims, and can be seen as adventure +tourists in that: + +u0002 They often went to places that were new to them in order to sell goods +u0002 They regularly suffered from criminal attacks on themselves and their + goods +u0002 They could lose all their wealth if they could not sell their goods at their + destination. + +‘Trading’ can still be risky today, with robberies of business travellers being +a common occurrence in many cities. + + +Settlers and colonizers +Generally, settlers and colonizers were not adventure ‘tourists’ in that their +stays in their destination tended to be permanent rather than temporary. +However, they could be tourists if they did not like their new ‘home’ and left +it after a short period. + Colonization also created tourism in its own right, with visits to the +colonists by their friends and relatives. + +42 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +Seasonal migrants +For centuries people in different parts of the world have practised seasonal +migration for employment, particularly in rural communities. In areas where +farming was poor many farmers had secondary jobs, often as skilled artisans. +In quiet times on the farm they would become itinerant craftsmen, taking their +skills to the nearest town, to other regions, or even to other countries. In the +nineteenth century, for example, many mountain villages in France had strong +reputations for their stonemasons, knife grinders and woodcarvers, amongst +other trades. + For these seasonal migrants the trip was an adventure, because often they +were travelling to different regions with different traditions, dialects, and even +languages. They often came from a parochial background, but were forced to +travel and sell their services to ‘foreign’ communities for months at a time. It +was also something of an adventure for the families left behind, because they +had to look after themselves and could never be sure that the men would +return at the end of the migration season. + Women too have been seasonal work migrants in many countries, +particularly in spending time in towns and cities as maids or wet nurses. It is +easy to imagine the sense of risk and adventure for a young woman from a +closed village community travelling to a major city. + Seasonal labour migration is still an important phenomenon today, +including everything from fruit pickers in France or California to employees +in tourist resorts. + + +Missionaries +Over the centuries most religions have had their missionaries – people with +religious zeal travelling far and wide to try to convert people to their point of +view. In the past their travel is an adventure in a number of ways, because: + +u0002 Their travels and tribulations often tested their own faith severely +u0002 They often chose to live amongst the poorest people in their chosen + destination, whereas most settlers or residents avoid such areas wherever + possible +u0002 They often faced the threat of robbery, disease and violence, particularly + when they wandered off the beaten track. + +Missionaries, particularly those who are also involved in various aid activities +in developing countries, are still an important phenomenon today. Their + + 43 +fAdventure Tourism + + +travels can also still be adventures, as they are sometimes singled out as +targets by terrorists and repressive governments. + + +The ‘Outward Bound’ tradition’ +In the UK particularly there is a long tradition, perhaps best exemplified by +the successful Outward Bound organization, of the idea that pitting yourself +against nature and your own fears is character building and can make you a +better person. This tradition also has an almost puritanical dimension, +eschewing comforts and convenience in favour of discomfort and taking the +hard rather than the easy way. + This ‘Outward Bound’ tradition underpins much of the modern outdoor +management development and survival course ‘industry’. Companies believe +that putting staff in unfamiliar, uncomfortable situations will help to achieve +team building as well as the personal development of individuals. + + +Romantic era mountain sports +In the nineteenth century, the upper classes of developed countries started to +‘test’ themselves through mountain sports like rock climbing and skiing. +Pioneers such as the Briton Edward Whymper were at the forefront of +developing both sports in the Alps, for example. + This form of adventure tourism was linked to the Romantic movement in +Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This movement empha­ +sized nature, and endowed mountains with a spiritual, almost mystical quality. +The nineteenth century mountain sport enthusiasts were often clearly +influenced by these ideas. + Today the Romantic era is a thing of the past, but people still seek adventure +in the mountains, and many mountaineers still talk about the spiritual +dimension of their activity, echoing the ideas of the romantics of +yesteryear. + + +Natural historians +For several centuries natural historians have indulged in their own form of +adventure tourism, travelling in search of new species of flora and fauna. +Often their motivation to make such discoveries encouraged them to +undertake dangerous journeys to little known places. However, the main +adventure for these natural historians was intellectual, pushing back the + +44 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +boundaries of scientific knowledge. Charles Darwin is an excellent example +of this type of adventurer. + + Today, with so much more being known about the earth’s natural history, it +is perhaps more difficult for modern natural historians to undertake similar +adventures. However, from time to time new species are still being discovered +on both land and sea. + + Now ordinary people are able to follow in the footsteps of the early +pioneers, using well-trodden, much safer steps to discover for themselves the +natural treasures of the planet. + + Wildlife-watching tourism has grown enormously in recent years, from +orang-utan viewing in Borneo (Kallimantan) to whale watching off New +England in the USA, from giant turtle watching in the Galapagos Islands to +outback tours of Australia. For each of these tourists the vacations are a +personal adventure, a journey into the unknown. + + +Women travellers +In recent centuries, particularly in Europe and the USA, women travellers +have played a major role in the development of adventure tourism. + + The UK has a long tradition of intrepid women from the upper classes +travelling to places that were dangerous and very different from their own +country. These women were not only experiencing physical adventure; they +were also challenging the ideas of their time about the role of women in +society. By strength of character they became accepted in many countries and +cultures where women were rarely seen in public by outsiders. + + One such traveller early in the twentieth century was Gertrude Bell, whose +diaries have given a vivid picture of her travels – particularly in the Middle +East – talking to tyrannical rulers and bandits and risking disease. + + Often these women seem to have been successful travellers because they +were prepared to try to assimilate some of their host’s culture. Gertrude Bell, +for instance, became an accomplished Arabic speaker. Many of these women +travellers clearly were probably motivated by a desire to escape the +conventions of their home environment, but some may also have had erotic, +or at least romantic, motivations. The idea of meeting rich and powerful desert +sheikhs could obviously be a powerful motivator for some women, just as the +thought of nubile South Sea maidens may well have been a motivator for +many male travellers. + + 45 +fAdventure Tourism + + + The role of women today is clearly different to that in previous centuries, +and today’s woman adventure traveller is no longer an unusual phenomenon, +but women still face particular challenges when visiting some parts of the +world where indigenous male attitudes to them are very different from those +they are used to at home. + +Travel writer adventurers +In recent decades, as the travel-related media has grown, we have seen the +development of a breed of travel writer adventurers. These people travel off the +beaten track and then share their experiences with the less adventurous +armchair traveller through their writings. Such writers include Newby and +Thesiger. However, today new forms of travel writer adventurer are being seen. +First, women are entering this previously male-dominated profession, notably +Dervla Murphy. Second, such writers are often now looking for a new angle or +fresh approach. This may involve travelling around the world on a bicycle or +following a particular theme, such as retracing the footsteps of previous +generations of adventure travellers. Third, they are becoming notably less +serious and ‘worthy’ in tone, and more humorous and ‘tongue-in-cheek!’ in +character. Finally, the adventure in the travel writing does not always come from +the physical environment any more – it can also come from human beings, as +with writers who record their travels with young hedonistic party animals and +soccer hooligans, for example. + +The expression of the restless soul +For a small number of people, adventure tourism or travel is an outlet for the +restless spirit unable to fit in to conventional society. We saw earlier that this +was the case for many women travellers in previous centuries. However, it is +also a phenomenon that has affected many men, including Lawrence of Arabia +in the Middle East and Matisse in the South Sea Islands, for example. + +Hunting +Hunting is a form of adventure travel that is deeply embedded in many +cultures. For some communities it is a way of getting food, while in others it +is a leisure activity. However, often it involves adventure in that: + +u0002 It may take place in inhospitable places +u0002 It may involve contact with dangerous animals +u0002 It can be highly competitive, and the life and reputation of the hunter may + be harmed if he or she fails to perform satisfactorily. + +46 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +Today, when hunting is becoming less and less socially acceptable in many +countries, it presents a new adventure – namely the ethical dilemma of +whether to hunt or not. In countries where hunting is illegal, promoting it can +be an adventure in itself! Whereas in general adventure tourism is viewed +positively by societies, hunting is a form of adventure tourism that is +increasingly frowned upon by many societies. + + + +Spiritual enlightenment +The search for spiritual enlightenment has been a constant theme throughout +history. In the past it manifested itself in the formal pilgrimages that were +discussed earlier. However, in developed countries in recent decades we have +seen the growth of a new form of spiritual enlightenment tourism. +Increasingly people from materialistic cultures and rich countries have been +rejecting the original religions of their own countries and turning to the +religions and spiritual beliefs of other cultures for inspiration. + This has led to the growth of tourism to countries such as India, Nepal and +Thailand, for example. These trips often combine spiritual adventure with +physical risk such as disease. + At the same time, we have seen the rise of religious cults and sects in places +like California and Europe, where the adventure is purely spiritual. This new +phenomenon of spiritual adventure travel seems destined to last for as long as +there are people who are dissatisfied with materialism and consumerism. + + + +Artificial environment adventures +Traditionally, adventure tourism meant pitting yourself against nature in an +outdoor environment in some way. However, today many people are facing +new challenges in environments that are artificially created and indoors – for +example, climbing walls in places like Sheffield attract those wanting to test +their technical skills. + However, we are also seeing the growth of other artificial adventure +environments such as dry ski slopes, water sports facilities and virtual reality +simulators. This divorcing of adventures from natural environments is a major +trend currently, but it is also controversial. For instance, some traditional +climbers find it impossible to recognize the legitimacy of artificial climbing +walls because there is not the key element of nature in terms of weather +conditions, views, fresh air and so on. + + 47 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Designer adrenaline risks +Since the 1980s we have witnessed the rise, in reality or in hype, of the so- +called ‘designer consumers’ – those driven by the desire to be seen to be at the +cutting edge of fashion. Such people have, not surprisingly, also sought to +develop their own ‘cool’ adventure activities. + + For this market it is vital that the activities have features that are new, and +that participants can develop their own social mores, specialist clothing and +‘patois’. + + Early designer adrenaline risks were mountain biking and bungee jumping, +and then came the rise of snowboarding. Now we see the development of +variations on these themes. + + This type of tourist is an interesting phenomenon in the field of adventure +tourism, because activities integrate physical activity with clothing, language, +and the clear trappings of a distinct sub-culture. Furthermore, these people are +not wedded to any particular type of environment. They are keen to +experience all types of adventure-risk activity, in different environments. + + + +Sex tourism +Sex tourism is far from new, but it has now reached new levels – or perhaps +we should say it has plumbed new depths. Sex tourism was once largely a +matter for adults, but now there is a developing growth in child sex +tourism. + + The risk element in sex tourism comes from three sources, notably: + +1 The danger of contracting sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV +2 The possibility of facing criminal prosecution because sex tourism is not + legal in a number of countries +3 The chance that sex tourists may be targeted by criminals for either robbery + or blackmail. + +Some destinations rely heavily on sex tourism, and this reputation makes it +hard for the destination to attract other forms of tourism. Sex tourism is a form +of adventure tourism that has victims; it is built on the misery of those forced +to take part in the trade because they have few options. Yet this is a form of +adventure tourism that shows no signs of declining. + +48 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +Ecotourism +Ecotourism is not necessarily adventure tourism, for it can involve travelling +in comfort, on fairly well-trodden routes, to see wildlife and people ‘in their +natural habitat’. It can have an element of adventure when it takes travellers +into an environment or situation with which they are not familiar; however, +sometimes it appears that some tour operators emphasize the adventurous +nature of their market to help them sell more vacations. + + +’Walk on the wild side’ urban explorers +Since Orwell explored London and Paris in the guise of a ‘down and out’ over +half a century ago, there has been a clear ‘walk on the wild side’ school of +adventure tourism based on cities. This is totally in contrast to those forms of +adventure tourism that take place in wilderness areas. Yet no-one can deny +that this is adventure tourism, for it puts people in environments that are very +different to those of their everyday lives. + New York today, for instance, offers tours to neighbourhoods that seem +strange and extraordinary to most visitors. + We should not be surprised by this phenomenon, for over a century ago +young English men went to Paris to live amongst artists and the working +classes of Pigalle and Montmartre. Was not this the same phenomenon in +reality, appealing to those with conventional backgrounds and everyday lives, +because they represented a contrast with their ordinary lives? + + +Drug tourism – the ultimate adventure ‘trip’? +Drug tourism is adventure tourism in two ways: + +1 The drug-induced ‘trip’ takes the person on a journey to an unknown destina­ + tion, without even a guarantee that he or she will survive the experience +2 The risks associated with buying drugs including criminal prosecution, and + robbery and violence. + +Drug tourism has become a significant attraction for destinations as diverse as +Morocco and Amsterdam. + Many travellers also indulge in ‘adventure tourism’ when, often short of +money after backpacking, they try trafficking drugs in return for cash. They +face risks from the law and from some of the ways in which they transport the +drugs . . . inside their bodies! + + 49 +fAdventure Tourism + + +‘Home from home’ adventurers +These are the people who want to do adventurous things in places off the +beaten track, but who do not want to make any real sacrifices. These are the +people who are literally hauled up Everest by porters, with all the comforts of +their everyday lives. This shows that, for these people, the motivation is the +desire to be able to say they have been to such places. They are not motivated +by the nature of the experience itself. + This market is growing, and there appear to be enough operators who are +prepared to meet this demand, even if it endangers porters’ lives and leads to +waste being left on mountains. + + +‘Last minute go anywhere’ tourists +Here the adventure is nothing to do with the destination or the activities +undertaken; it is based on the risk of people not knowing where they will be +going, or even if they will be able to find a vacation. This group is growing +because along with the element of risk goes, often, the benefit of low prices. +Such vacations are particularly popular with those just looking for an escape, +any escape, from their everyday lives. + + +Aid workers +In recent decades it has become quite common for people from one country +to go to do voluntary work in other countries. Organizations such as Voluntary +Service Overseas have almost institutionalized this phenomenon. However, +such activity can carry risks, and in recent years a number of aid workers – not +VSO volunteers – have been kidnapped and even murdered by terrorist +groups. + Even if they do not face this extreme risk, all aid workers face the fear that +they may not be up to the job they are taking on. + + +Student exchanges +The growth of higher education world-wide has led to an increase in cross- +border student exchanges. This is a form of adventure tourism in that the +students are taking a risk that they may fail when studying in a different +culture or language. School pupil exchanges have also been growing, and here +the risk is that young people at a vulnerable age may feel that they will be +unable to cope in a different country, with a family of strangers. + +50 +f Historical themes in adventure tourism + + +Summary +This section has suggested that each of this selection of well over 20 types of +tourism meets our definition of adventure travel and tourism. They all involve +doing things that are out of the ordinary, in new environments, with some +element of risk, either real or perceived. We will now conclude by looking at +two separate interesting aspects of adventure tourism. + + + Old themes, new manifestations +Many themes in adventure tourism are old ones that are being constantly +updated and modified, while the basic motivation remains the same. +Hedonism is an excellent example of this phenomenon. The Romans went to +spas for orgies, while the rich young English men went to Paris for their + ´ +hedonistic pleasures in the Belle Epoque period. Today, the hedonist has Club +18–30, Ibiza, and various adult resorts in the Caribbean to meet their needs. +Perhaps hedonistic tourism has just become more democratic over time! + + + Cultural differences in the concept of adventure tourism +The themes we have been discussing are largely based on the evolution of +thinking about adventure tourism in the UK and a handful of other early +urbanized and industrialized countries, which are generally former colonial +powers. However, the concept of adventure tourism varies between countries +and cultures in a number of ways: + +1 Adventure tourism is just another form of tourism in that it requires people + with the money, time and inclination to travel. In many developing + countries, most of the population clearly does not have the money to take + part in any form of tourism, let alone adventure tourism. Most adventure + tourism is therefore restricted to the residents of the so-called developed + countries, and particularly to the more affluent residents of these + countries. +2 The adventure tourism market develops differently in different countries + based on the pace and nature of political, economic and social changes. For + example, the pilgrimage market in Western Europe was at its peak in the + Middle Ages. Since then the market in Europe has declined in spite of the + wealth of these countries because of a reduction in religious devotion. + However, today pilgrimage is a rapidly growing market in countries like + Indonesia, Malaysia and Nigeria, where religious devotion to Islam is + strong and incomes are rising. + + 51 +fAdventure Tourism + + +3 The concept of adventure varies between cultures based on their history, + traditions and geography. For example, adventure travel in the USA, + Australia and Russia is often envisaged in terms of participants travelling to + wilderness areas, retracing the steps of pioneers, and pitting their strength + and wits against nature. Taming the wilderness, albeit temporarily, is a + constant theme in such countries. By contrast, leisure travel in many Asian + countries has often been concerned with the search for spiritual enlight­ + enment. However, maybe as a result of globalization and the rise of the + global consumer, we are seeing these differences slowly breaking down. + Today Japanese people may be seen in the Alaskan wilderness, pitting + themselves against nature, and American youngsters looking for new + spiritual pathways in India and Thailand. + It is always important to be aware of these cultural differences in the + concept of adventure tourism. However, it is often difficult for us to + recognize other ways of viewing adventure tourism because each of us is + strongly conditioned to recognize only our own culture’s concepts of + adventure travel. + + + Summary +This chapter has tried to set the scene for the rest of the text by looking at how +adventure tourism arrived at where it is today, in one country at least. It is +important that we understand the evolution of adventure tourism if, in this +book, we are going to focus on where it might go from here. In the rest of the +book we will explore many of the types of tourism and issues raised above. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the extent to which Club 18–30 type hedonistic vacations are just + a modern version of the Roman orgy. +2 Compare and contrast the history of adventure tourism in Western Europe + and the USA. +3 Discuss the evolution of religious tourism from pre-history to the twenty- + first century. + + + + +52 +fPart +B + The demand side + +ff3 + The adventure tourist + + + + + Introduction + Adventure tourism is an increasingly widespread + phenomenon in the new millennium, and appeals + to an expanding proportion of the population who + are seeking self-fulfilment and excitement + through participating in physically and mentally + stimulating activities, travelling to remote desti­ + nations or engaging in ‘adrenaline-rush’ experi­ + ences as part of their tourist experience. Patterns + of consumer behaviour in tourism are in a + constant state of flux, and as the ‘new tourist’ + (Poon, 1993) emerges as a more experienced + traveller, demanding unique and enticing holiday + experiences, adventure tourism has begun to + carve a niche market for itself. + Tourism organizations have facilitated the + growth of adventure holidays through promoting + and selling a vast array of organized adventure + experiences to a diverse range of markets as +fAdventure Tourism + + +novel and exclusive experiences, from whale watching to white-water rafting, +bungee jumping to self-discovery holidays. Moreover, the independent travel +market has triggered a growth in adventure tourism, with an increasing +number of people tailor-making their own adventures to suit individual tastes +and needs. Round the world travel (RTW), a form of independent adventure +travel, has recently expanded in popularity amongst all age groups. Although +some people follow the well-trodden RTW network of destinations in Asia +and Australasia, meeting up with other fellow travellers en route, others visit +more remote destinations – Siberia and Mongolia, for example. These are +places where the tourism industry is not well established and other +independent travellers are few and far between. Travelling to such countries, +many kinds of adventure can be experienced – as the following extract from +the book Lonely Planet Unpacked illustrates: + + Travelling independently can sometimes be tricky. The sacred mountain + of Shiliin Bogd Uul is apparently closed to the disputed, undefined and + unfenced Chinese border. After we spent several glorious hours exploring + the mountain, our jeep was suddenly followed by a Mongolian army + jeep, and then stopped by a machine-gun wielding soldier. He leaned into + the driver’s window, confiscated the keys and asked our reasons for + being near the border. We obviously didn’t say what he wanted to hear, + so he forced us to detour to the military barracks and then questioned us + for five hours. I was firstly accused of being a Chinese smuggler, and + then, because I don’t even remotely look Chinese, of being a Russian spy. + The Mongolian soldier had never heard of Australia, and failed to + comprehend my guide who constantly explained that I was ‘from a + lonely planet’. + (Greenaway, 1999:21, cited in Wheeler, 1999). + + This quotation sums up the experience of just one typology of adventure +tourist who is seeking out an original and exciting holiday, with an +opportunity to engage in self-discovery and cultural exchange, in a faraway +place. A plethora of other ‘adventurers’ also exist whose motives, behaviour +and experiences will differ from the example quoted above. + These different (yet sometimes overlapping) categories reflect the broad +nature of the adventure tourism phenomenon and the many links it has with +other forms of tourism. Some of these links will be explored from the +adventure consumer’s perspective throughout this chapter. + Although adventure tourism clearly overlaps with other tourism types, +adventurers have a number of distinguishing attributes that set them apart + +56 +f The adventure tourist + + +from other tourist markets. They generally take risks and thrive from mental +or physical challenge, they seek out novel and stimulating experiences, and +they sometimes engage in adventure for personal development or reasons of +self-esteem. + Before introducing the key topics covered within this chapter, it is +important to point out that the subject of consumer behaviour in adventure +tourism is not particularly well developed in terms of research. Indeed, there +is a dearth of information on the characteristics of adventure tourists and their +motives. This is due to the relatively recent recognition of adventure tourism +as a unique market in its own right, coupled with the current evolution of this +concept within academic circles. Most of the work carried out to date – based +on the broad theme of ‘adventure consumers’ – originates from the fields of +psychology and recreation. Many parallels can be drawn between these two +subject areas and tourism, in relation to the consumer of adventure tourism. +Without a doubt, psychology and recreation-based investigations have shaped +the direction of research into the behavioural components of adventure +tourists. Hence, in this chapter we have attempted to apply some of this work +to the behaviour of adventure tourists. + The main themes of this chapter are as follows: + +1 The changing patterns of consumer trends, and how newly evolving trends + have instigated interest in adventure travel +2 The influence of consumer lifestyles and age groups on participation in + adventure tourism +3 The behaviour of adventure tourists, including the following sections: + � ‘Soft’ and ‘hard’ adventurers, their distinctive characteristics and + behaviours + � Tourist motivation, including key concepts that are relevant to adventure + + tourist motivation + � Diverse motivational factors that influence people’s decision to partici­ + + pate in adventure tourism, with particular emphasis on the role of risk as + a primary motive + � The characteristics and motives of other types of tourist that participate + in similar forms of tourism to adventure tourism (i.e. ecotourism, wildlife + tourism and expeditions). + + + Changing consumer trends +Over the last two decades, society has witnessed a number of changes in +consumer behaviour. A move towards healthier lifestyles, a heightened + + 57 +fAdventure Tourism + + +sensitivity to green issues and a more quality-conscious consumer are just a +few of the transformations taking place in contemporary society. Such +changes are reflected in people’s holiday-taking behaviour – for example, +more people are taking activity holidays. + + With regard to the British population, Mintel (1999) reports that between +1994 and 1999 the demand for domestic activity holidays grew by 5 per cent +whilst the number of people participating in this type of holiday abroad +increased by a dramatic 36 per cent. These statistics are a sure indicator of the +rising popularity of activity-based holidays, and this growth can be attributed +to lifestyle changes. + + Another recently evolved trend concerns the role of leisure in people’s +lives. Undoubtedly leisure has become an increasingly important part of our +daily existence, and has positively impacted on the demand for tourism in +many different ways. Adventure tourism is no exception here. One line of +thought, in relation to the growth of this form of tourism, is that modern-day +living and work life lack clear meaning. This encourages people to search for +meaning and fulfilment through active participation in leisure activities and +tourism, seeking out ‘. . . a deep embodied experience unavailable in everyday +life’ (Cater, 2000: 51). Such an experience could result from any number of +adventure activities, and at any levels of extreme. For instance, Shackley +(1996: 63) comments on the ultimate visitor experience of being amongst +silverback gorillas, a rare species, in the middle of a Rwandan rainforest. +Seeing the gorillas in the wild after trekking through the jungle for eight hours +is a deeply emotional experience for visitors, and this sensation arises from +‘. . . a sense of being completely alone in the wild with a magnificent and +totally wild creature’. + + Nowadays, tourists – otherwise known as ‘new tourists’ (Poon, 1993) – +attribute more importance to the benefits that they can gain from their +holidays, in particular the uniqueness of the experience. New tourists have a +set of distinctive characteristics, and these are identified in Figure 3.1. Poon +also suggests that we have moved away from being ‘old tourists’, who: + +� Were homogeneous and predictable in their tastes +� Regarded travel as a novelty +� Were interested in warm destinations (destination choice was not + important) +� Attributed little importance to the quality of tourist services +� Went on holiday to escape from work and home life +� Felt secure through travelling in numbers. + +58 +f The adventure tourist + + + + +Figure 3.1 The nature of ‘new tourists’. + + + One of the key characteristics of new tourists is their need to escape from +everyday routines in a bid to achieve some form of fulfilment. The majority +of tourist experiences include some degree of escapism, and many people +would express the need to ‘get away from it all’ as an important motive for +taking a holiday. The need to escape may be triggered by a desire temporarily +to take a break from home life so as to feel like you are really on holiday, or +by a desire to escape from everyday life and its associated stresses. The +reasons for escapism will depend on the type of experience and the typology +of tourist. For instance, a person going on a beach holiday to Barbados to de- +stress, laze around and socialize may feel the need to escape from city life and +a very busy career for a couple of weeks. On the other hand, a different city +dweller might take a short city break in Barcelona to escape the home +environment and visit cultural tourist attractions in a city distinct from his or +her own. It could be argued that the more distinct from everyday life the +tourist experience is, the more the person is escaping and achieving some form +of fulfilment. + Adventure tourism involves such active participation from individuals that +it can result in the ultimate in escapism from daily life. Taking a river trip in +the Amazon jungle, or a camel trip across the Gobi Desert, or swimming with +dolphins in Australia, can all trigger sensations of total escapism. This feeling +of escapism is inextricably linked to the ‘peak experience’ (Maslow, 1976) +phenomenon that many adventure tourists thrive from and strive for. Pritchard +(2000: 23), in describing the sensations that rock climbers feel towards the +end of a challenging climb, sums up the ‘peak experience’ in the quotation +below: + + 59 +fAdventure Tourism + + + That moment between knowing that you’ve cracked it and topping out is + the moment that climbers search for. That moment when the pulse begins + to race and the joy overwhelms you and you slow down wishing that the + feeling will never end. That is the moment. + +To sum up, it is clear that these changing patterns of consumer behaviour are +beneficial to the growth in demand for adventure tourism, as people adopt +healthier lifestyles and seek out holiday experiences that dramatically contrast +with their day-to-day lives. + + + Consumer lifestyles, age groups and adventure tourism +Contrary to the commonly held belief that adventure tourism stimulates only +the interests of the youth market – exaggerated by images of Pepsi-Max™- +type stereotypes promoted in brochures – there is a different viewpoint +arguing that adventure tourists span a broad range of people. It is thought that +these people make their holiday choices based on lifestyle rather than age. In +referring to the UK adventure travel market, ‘. . .the characteristic quality is +not age per se but attitude – a spirit of adventure and enthusiasm’ (Economic +Intelligence Unit, 1992: 45). Therefore a pensioner who is physically active in +his or her everyday life may well successfully take part in a charity challenge +that involves cycling through Iceland or white-water rafting in Nepal, for +example. On the other hand, a recently graduated 22-year-old student may +prefer a relaxing ‘Medsun’ holiday with a group of friends. + Various outbound tour operators also echo the idea that people’s lifestyles +are more influential in their holiday decision-making than their age. Explore +Worldwide, the UK’s leading adventure operator, offers an extensive range of +holidays catering for diverse adventure markets. Interestingly, Explore’s +clients’ average age is between 40 and 45 years. A number of other European +adventure operators state the average age of their clients as around 40 years +(Smith and Jenner, 1999). Details of High Places’ clientele, as seen in Table +3.1, also serve to illustrate that the typical adventure traveller who books +holidays through a tour operator spans most age groups. + High Places promote and sell trekking holidays in many different regions of +the world, and takes care to match its clients with the appropriate level of trek +according to their fitness levels and experience (see Box 3.1). Although age is +not identified as a restricting factor in High Places’ trek grades, it is apparent +from Table 3.1 that although the company’s holidays appeal to people of all +ages, the majority of clients fall within the 31–40, 41–50 and 51–60 years age +brackets. A much smaller proportion of customers are over the age of 60 + +60 +f The adventure tourist + + +Table 3.1 Age demographics of High Places’ clients 1996–1999 (source: High +Places, personal communication) + + +Year Under 21 (%) 21–30 (%) 31–40 (%) 41–50 (%) 51–60 (%) 60+ (%) + + +1996 1 9 30 28 26 6 +1997 2 8 30 31 20 9 +1998 1 8 26 30 24 11 +1999 2 7 25 29 27 10 + + + + +years, and this may be due to a number of reasons – for instance, the company +may not directly promote its holidays to older age groups. Another +observation is that the under 21 and 21–30 years age groups are not +particularly well represented in the operator’s profile of clients. This could be +because the younger end of the market may be less able or even less inclined +to participate in packaged adventure holidays due to the high cost implications +of ‘organized adventure’ and/or the preference to put together their own ‘do +it yourself’ trips. + When interpreting such data, it is also important to note that the +independent traveller makes up a considerable proportion of the adventure +market and should not be omitted from the equation. Unfortunately, there is a + + + + Box 3.1 High Places’ trek grades + (source: High Places, 2001) + + Expeditions Summer and winter mountaineering background + advisable + Tough Regular hill walking background advisable; may + involve some backpacking – always stated in trip + description + Steady plus As ‘Steady’, but with varying extra demands – i.e. + remoteness, altitude, long days, weather, lack of + comforts etc. + Steady Hill walking and camping background advisable + Fairly easy For all recreational walkers + + + 61 +fAdventure Tourism + + +lack of marketing intelligence available on the independent adventure tourist +market. This is because such tourists do not tend to make use of tourism +organizations when organizing holidays. + The above discussion implies that age may exert some degree of +influence over a person’s decision-making in relation to adventure tourism. +Taking this point further, it seems that an individual’s age could influence +whether he or she participates in adventure activities or not. One study +carried out on 651 tourists to Queenstown (New Zealand) found that a +person’s age was significantly related to his or her participation in adventure +(Berno et al., 1996). The 20–34-year age group had higher rates of +participation in a range of adventure activities – jet boating, bungee +jumping, parapenting, white-water rafting, scenic flights, helicoptering, +parasailing, skydiving, hang-gliding, river surfing, kayaking, jet skiing and +climbing – compared to other age groups. Qualitative responses from +individuals over the age of 45 years demonstrated a clear link between age +and participation levels, as some respondents felt that they were ‘too old’ to +engage in some of these aforementioned activities. Whilst these research +findings affirm that age and participation levels are interconnected, it should +be pointed out that this study only examines adventure activities of a +physical nature. Tourists who enjoy other non-physical adventures whilst on +holiday are more likely to span all age groups. For example, staying in a +Mayan village in southern Belize and enjoying the hospitality provided by +the local community may appeal to independent travellers of all age groups, +as well as to students taking a ‘gap’ year out to work for a voluntary +organization in a developing country. + As well as age being linked to participation levels – where physical +adventures are concerned – it may also be associated with the type of +adventure a person chooses. This can be seen in the North American adventure +market, where (Loverseed, 1997: 91–92): + + Younger males, for example, gravitate towards strenuous, risky outward- + bound type activities such as rock climbing or white-water canoeing. + Among international travellers to Canada, those aged 45 and older like + gentler outdoor activities such as bird watching. + +For some tour operators that offer sport-based adventure holidays, age appears +to be a less important factor when compared to a person’s level of fitness. As +Cater (2000) points out, some tour operators demand that their clients provide +medical certificates before being allowed to take part in adventures. This +requirement applies more to operators that offer physically challenging + +62 +f The adventure tourist + + +holidays that perhaps involve some degree of risk. For instance, Exodus’ +Multi-Activity Brochure (2001) advises potential clients: + + We do not have a strict upper age limit, but these are by nature + adventurous activity holidays and the activities require a level of fitness + and mobility. You must be certain that you are capable of fully + participating in the activities involved. In certain circumstances we may + require reasonable proof of medical fitness and general suitability before + accepting a booking for a particular trip. + +To conclude this section, it is important to note that both lifestyle and age play +a role in the decision-making processes of adventure tourists. In relation to +physically demanding adventure activities, people’s levels of fitness and +experience as well as their age seem to influence the type of activity they +select, or are more suited to. It is assumed that the demand for non-physical +adventure activities is not so influenced by a person’s age. + + + The behaviour of adventure tourists +The following sections of this chapter focus on the behavioural elements of +adventure tourists. Some of the main characteristics of these consumers and +their position on the hard–soft adventure scale will be examined. The concept +of tourist motivation will be briefly reviewed before turning to a discussion of +the key motivational influences on adventure tourists. The final section +presents an overview of tourists’ behaviour when participating in similar +(overlapping) forms of tourism to adventure tourism. + + +‘Soft’ and ‘hard’ adventurers +As mentioned in Chapter 1, the soft–hard continuum helps to accommodate +the large diversity of adventure tourism products and consumers. The next +section discusses this continuum in relation to adventure tourists. + As with any typology of tourists, the adventure tourist does not fit into a +tightly defined set of personality characteristics and is considered not to have +homogeneous tastes or competencies in adventurous activities. Soft adven­ +turers usually take part in activities ‘with a perceived risk but low levels of +real risk requiring minimal commitment and beginning skills’ (Hill, 1995: 63). +These tourists are usually novices in the realm of adventure, and enjoy ‘safe’ +activities that necessitate limited or no previous experience – for instance, bird +watching on the Galapagos Islands off mainland Ecuador, whale watching off + + 63 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Vancouver Island, Canada, or going on a commercially organized hiking trip +to the Picos de Europa, Spain. + Soft adventurers are motivated by self-discovery, the need to escape from +the routine of urban life and experience new environments (Lipscombe, +1995), the potential excitement, novelty, and the opportunity to socialize in a +controlled environment (Ewert, 1989; see Lipscombe, 1995). In some senses +parallels can be drawn between the soft adventurer and the mass tourist, the +key difference being that the former type sporadically partakes in adventurous +activities whilst the latter does not (Cloke and Perkins, 1998). + + At the other end of the scale, hard adventurers thrive when exposed to +‘activities with high levels of risk, requiring intense commitment and +advanced skills’ (Hill, 1995: 63). They are far more likely to engage in +physically as well as mentally challenging outdoor activities that demand a lot +of previous experience and high levels of competence. Hard adventurers +procure their ‘adrenaline rush’ from taking risks; sometimes they can control +these risks because of the level of experience they have, and other times they +cannot. According to Lipscombe (1995), hard adventure tourists thrive from +the elements of challenge, danger and risk that contribute towards the +adventure. Activities that appeal to this type of tourist include mountaineering, +sea kayaking, canyoning, bridge jumping, venturing to remote destinations +(e.g. Mongolia), and going on safari in some of the untouched, less-visited +wildlife areas in Africa. + + The soft–hard scale illustrates not only the heterogeneous nature of +adventure tourism and its associated activities, but also the broad ranging +nature of participants’ characteristics, motivations, skills and experience. As +adventurers progress along the continuum they tend to become more adept at +the activities they engage in, seek out higher levels of stimulation, and +participate in riskier pursuits. + + From the above discussion we can conclude that soft adventure activities +would appeal to a larger proportion of people than those considered to be hard +adventure. Becoming a truly hard adventurer is a challenging process, +requiring the participant to have a lot of experience and nerve in the activity +being pursued. In contrast, soft adventure would appeal to virtually anyone +with a thirst for adventure, including novices as well as those individuals with +a certain amount of experience. + + These points are illustrated in Muller and Cleaver’s (2000) research on the +US ‘baby boomer’ market (see Table 3.2). Results revealed that 56 per cent of +the survey’s sample had taken an adventure holiday or trip in the five years + +64 +f The adventure tourist + + +Table 3.2 Participation in ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ adventure by US residents +(adapted from Muller and Cleaver, 2000) + + +Soft adventure Demand for Hard adventure Demand for +activities soft adventure activities hard adventure + (millions) (millions) + + +Camping 64.7 White-water rafting/ 14.8 + kayaking +Hiking on gradually 44.8 Snorkelling/scuba 12.4 +changing terrain diving +Bicycle touring 27.2 Off-road biking/ 10.8 + mountain biking +Bird/animal watching 24.3 Backpacking across 8.0 + rugged terrain +Horse riding 24.1 Rock/mountain 7.4 + climbing +Canoeing 22.5 Spelunking/cave 5.7 + exploring +Total demand 207.6 Total demand 59.1 + + + + +leading up to the study. Over 207 million people had taken a soft adventure +holiday or trip, whereas only around 59 million individuals had participated in +hard adventure. Clearly then, in relation to a rather large sample of US +citizens, there is a preference for soft adventure experiences. + Evidently individuals choose to take part in soft or hard adventure for many +different reasons. What one person perceives as an adventure, another may +not. According to Tuson (1994; see Beard and Wilson, 2002) people have +different challenge and panic zones, which place limits on the extent of +adventure they can deal with. People’s personalities and their prior experience +of adventure influence these zones. For instance, tourists who choose to go on +a gorilla-tracking holiday in Uganda would anticipate a high level of mental +challenge and would undoubtedly have been on wildlife tours in the past. +They would be able to control their level of panic on seeing a gorilla in close +proximity. Persons inexperienced in wildlife viewing but selecting the same +holiday may well find the whole experience of sighting a gorilla in its natural +environment totally beyond their comfort zone, feeling panic and an +overwhelming loss of control. + + 65 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Some people seek a controllable adventure that does not take them out of +their comfort zone – for example, hiking along a way-marked trail. Others – +more than likely hard adventurers – enjoy an element of mental or physical +challenge and thrive from pushing their inner strengths and relying totally on +their own resources. An extreme example of the latter is climbing up Mount +Everest, the most challenging endeavour in the world. Research carried out on +the personalities of Everest climbers (Breivik, 1996) points to the importance +of such characteristics as drive, low levels of anxiety/worry, stamina, will, and +emotional stability. Individuals with this type of personality would be more +likely to engage in extreme adventure activities. The fact that there are limited +rescue opportunities above a certain altitude on Everest accentuates the level +of danger involved in such an expedition and forces individuals to become +completely reliant on their own resources. + The behavioural characteristics of soft and hard adventurers have been +examined in this section. The heterogeneous nature of adventure tourists has +also been explored using the soft–hard adventure continuum. For the purpose +of classifying adventure tourists, this continuum has proved useful. However, +as noted earlier, people’s perceptions of adventure vary. Whilst the leisure and +tourism industries may classify the experience of a hot air balloon ride as soft +adventure, on the basis that it requires no skills or experience, a person doing +this for the first time and who is of a nervous disposition would probably feel +sheer panic. From this person’s point of view the whole experience may feel +like a hard adventure! To conclude this section, it seems apparent that people +are driven to participate in different hard and soft adventures by several +factors: experience, competence, skill and personality. + + +Tourist motivation +Tourist motivation is a complex subject that draws upon the academic +discipline of psychology to explain individuals’ decision-making processes +and the reasons why they behave as they do both before and during their +holidays. Individuals’ motivations reflect their inner needs and push them to +seek out holiday experiences that will bring satisfaction. People are +intrinsically motivated to enjoy holidays and other forms of leisure for many +divergent reasons, including relaxation, prestige, socializing, personal devel­ +opment, a desire for something different, excitement, adventure, experiencing +different cultures/ways of life, meeting people with similar interests and +intellectual enrichment. Crompton (1979; see Shaw and Williams, 1994) +suggests that people take holidays to re-balance their state of disequilibrium, +a ‘condition’ that is brought on from the routine of everyday living. + +66 +f The adventure tourist + + + At the outset, a person feels the need to take a break from his or her usual +routine. This leads to three different options for the individual: + +1 To partake in leisure activities within the local area +2 To take a holiday or travel to see friends and relatives +3 To travel for business reasons. + +Specific motives then shape the nature of the leisure experience, in the form +of socio-psychological factors (push factors) and cultural factors (pull +factors). Dann (1977; see Shaw and Williams, 1994) asserts that whilst the +former set of motives determine the need for travel, the latter set affect the +person’s choice of destination. + Consumer motivation is important in all forms of tourism, including +adventure tourism. Adventure tourists have a strong appetite for ‘nerve­ +tingling excitement’ (Krippendorf, 1987: 37). Due to their diverse profile, +these tourists pursue adventure to realize many different motives. They +achieve their ‘holiday highs’ through various activities that involve, for +example, risk taking, excitement, escapism, personal development, social­ +izing, self-discovery and self-actualization. These are push factors, or inner +needs, that urge individuals to participate in adventure. Examples of pull +factors in relation to adventure tourism might include wild and rugged +destination environments, suitable natural resources for adventure participa­ +tion (e.g. high peaks for mountaineering), or rare bird and animal species for +wildlife viewing. + A number of theoretical frameworks have been devised to explain tourist +motivations, but perhaps one of the most applicable to the subject of adventure +tourism is the travel career ladder (Pearce, 1988). The ladder is an adaptation +of Maslow’s original five-fold hierarchical system of human motivation +(Maslow, 1976), and is based on the premise that individuals have a career in +their tourist behaviour. People seek to satisfy higher level needs or motives +through their holidays as a consequence of increased tourism experience, as +can be seen from Figure 3.2. The theory distinguishes (Pearce, 1996: 13): + + . . . between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation at the four lower levels of + the system. The travel career ladder emphasizes all the tourists’ patterns + or motives, rather than a single motive for travelling. The five + motivational levels described in the scheme are: a concern with + biological needs (including relaxation), safety and security needs (or + levels of stimulation), relationship development and extension needs, + special interest and self-development needs, and fulfilment of deep + involvement needs (formally defined as self actualization). + + 67 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 3.2 The travel career ladder. + + + In applying this framework to adventure tourists, it is evident that the +majority would strive to accomplish high-level needs. As mentioned earlier in +this chapter, some tourists seek out ‘peak experiences’ when enjoying +adventures. Such experiences could well lead to dream fulfilment or inner +peace and harmony – motives placed at the very top of the travel career ladder. +A person may experience dream fulfilment from hiking along the Inca Trail in +Peru to the famous ruins of Machu Pichu, doing a bungee jump in New +Zealand, going cage diving with great white sharks in South Africa, or husky +sledging in Lapland. Adventures that are non-physical can also result in the +actualization of high-level needs. Examples here include going on safari in +Amboseli National Park in Kenya and viewing exotic wildlife, or staying at a +Buddhist retreat in the Alpujarras region of southern Spain to achieve inner +peace and harmony. + Motivation plays a major role in the holiday decisions and behaviour of all +tourists. However, it is important to bear in mind that other factors also + +68 +f The adventure tourist + + +influence tourists’ behaviour – for example, personality, financial considera­ +tions, the amount of paid leave from work, health issues, and travelling +partners. Such factors can either hinder or facilitate the realization of a +person’s holiday motives. + + +Adventure tourist motives +Due to the diverse nature of adventure tourism, it is obvious that its +participants will display a wide range of motives. Some of these motives have +been briefly commented upon in the section above. What follows is a more +rigorous examination of some of the fundamental reasons (or motives) why +people get involved in adventurous activities and holidays. + Most people take adventure holidays for a range of different reasons rather +than just one. This point can be illustrated through the study on 178 exhibitors +at an international adventure travel exhibition in the USA (Sung et al., 1997). + + +Table 3.3 Benefits of adventure travel – travellers (adapted from Sung et al., +1997) + + +Perceived benefits of Percentage of +adventure travel participants + +Experience +� Discovering new experiences 27* +� Increased sense of personal growth 25* +� Educational opportunities 7 +Activity +� Fun and excitement 16* +� Integrated, better travel opportunities 16* +� Outdoor adventure recreation activity participation 7 +� Recreational opportunity 3 +Environment +� Improved interpretation of the environment and culture 17* +� Return to nature 7 +� Carefree ‘blown away’ setting 7 +� Interaction with environment/people 5 +Miscellaneous +� Improved awareness of physical fitness and health 3 +� Mental and/or physical stimulation 2 +� Do not know 15 + +* = five most important benefits of adventure travel; percentages are rounded up. + + + 69 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Their research found that exhibition participants associated adventure +holidays with a number of experiential, activity-based and environmental +benefits (see Table 3.3). ‘Discovering new experiences’ was the most +commonly stated benefit (27 per cent), although an ‘increased sense of +personal growth’ (25 per cent) was deemed to be virtually as important. ‘Fun +and excitement’ (16 per cent) rated one of the highest in the activity-based +benefits category, perhaps an indication of the importance of risk-seeking as +an integral part of adventure travel. Other important perceived benefits of +adventure travel included ‘integrated, better travel opportunities’ (16 per cent) +and ‘improved interpretation of the environment and culture’ (17 per cent). + + +The relationship between risk and adventure +The link between adventure tourism and risk has already been highlighted, +and it is fair to suggest that risk is a powerful motivator for adventurers. +Indeed, ‘Every adventure has its particular form and amount of risk which is +a stimulatory motive to participate in the activity’ (Vester, 1987; see Gilchrist +et al., 1995: 12). + Definitions of adventure consistently allude to the importance of risk. +Adventure comprises ‘freedom of choice; intrinsic rewards; and an element of +uncertainty, for instance when the experience outcome is uncertain, or its risks +are unpredictable’ (McArthur, 1989; see Fluker and Turner, 2000: 380). Risk +therefore plays an important role in a person’s enjoyment of adventure. +Indeed, any absence of risk from the experience could well result in a decline +in satisfaction or even a loss of the urge to participate (Sung et al., 1997). + Much of the research on risky experiences stems from the field of outdoor +recreation. Such research supports the tenet that risk-seeking is an integral part +of any adventure (Meier, 1978; Yerkes, 1985; Ewert, 1989). A substantial +number of studies have been carried out on participants of adventurous pursuits +under the guise of ‘risk recreation’, ‘adventure recreation’, ‘natural challenge +activities’ and ‘high adventure’ (Ewert, 1989). Various psychological studies +have also investigated the association of risk with adventure, concluding that +personality is a true indicator of whether people choose to engage in risky +activities or not, and of their coping mechanisms in risky situations. + Research that examines the role of risk in adventure tourism is less +advanced than its application to the disciplines of recreation and psychology. +Yet as the adventure travel industry continues to grow empirical research will +expand accordingly, and adventure suppliers will need a comprehensive +understanding of their consumers’ motives, inclusive of risk. The discussion +that follows should provide a justification for this. + +70 +f The adventure tourist + + +Characteristics of risk +The concept of risk has many different connotations attached to it, and it is +worth briefly examining some risk characteristics to understand more fully +adventurers’ motivations. People often perceive risk as the potential to lose +something of value (Cheron and Ritchie, 1982; Martin and Priest, 1986) – for +example, in everyday life driving a car after drinking an excess amount of +alcohol could well result in the loss of one’s driving licence. Working in risky +professions, for instance rally car racing could result in injury or, in more +extreme cases, death. In a leisure context, failing successfully to complete a +deep sea diving course or turning back on a mountaineering expedition due to +lack of skill or ability could well result in a blow to a person’s self-esteem. + + People often attach negative meaning to the word ‘risk’, and many regard +it as a perilous component of adventure. Fortunately, risk is also associated +with the pursuit of positive outcomes (Mitchell, 1983; Ewert, 1989) – +otherwise why would people take part in adventures in the first place? To +illustrate this point, consider the person who goes on a trekking trip through +the dense Amazonian jungle, enduring an infinite number of risks en route, +such as getting bitten by a poisonous snake or facing dehydration due to the +heat and humidity of a jungle environment. At the end of the holiday, this +person may feel a sense of self-fulfilment and contentment from surviving +such an intensely dangerous trip. + + Two distinct categories of risk exist: ‘positive’ risk, which a person can +control and which is perceived as challenge, and ‘negative’ risk, which a +person cannot control and which perceived as danger. These risk levels are +inextricably linked to an individual’s skill, experience and knowledge of the +adventure activity. Johnston’s investigation into mountain adventure recrea­ +tion participants in New Zealand illustrates this point (Johnston, 1992; cited in +Weiler and Hall, 1992). Her research found that people with experience in +mountain activities perceived risk as a challenge rather than a danger. Instead +of feeling threatened by the level of risk involved in mountain adventures, +these people felt that risk positively contributed to their enjoyment levels. +With this in mind, it stands to reason that someone who is a novice in +mountain adventures may therefore experience an uncomfortable and +uncontrollable level of risk. However, once this person starts to build up +experience in this type of adventure, he or she will begin to view the risk +component as more positive. + + Often there is a disparity between a person’s perceived risk and the actual +or real risk involved in adventure participation. Risk can be objective, i.e. the +actual number of accidents reported for a specific activity, or subjective risk, + + 71 +fAdventure Tourism + + +i.e. the extent of risk perceived by the participant (Rossi and Cereatti, 1993). +People frequently fail to understand the objective risks involved in different +physically adventurous activities, and this results in their exclusion from +activities perceived as high risk. Cater’s (2000) research findings back up this +idea. He carried out research in Queenstown, New Zealand, and found that +tourists perceived bungee jumping as a far riskier activity than white-water +rafting or canyoning. In reality, though, people are far less likely to be injured +by bungee jumping than during the other two activities. Such misjudgements +of subjective risk result in people automatically excluding themselves from +participation in adventure. + This short overview of the key features of risk illustrates that the +phenomenon involves both positive and negative aspects. The way in which +people view risk seems to be dependent upon the level of experience they have +as well as the type of activity that they are taking part in. Also, personality will +invariably be an important influence on people’s perception of risk. + + +Risk experience and adventure +Now that we have examined what risk is, what it means to people and how it is +related to adventure, it would be useful to understand how individuals actually +experience risk throughout the time that they are taking part in the adventure +activity. One of the most useful models to introduce on this subject is the ‘risk +recreation model’ proposed by Robinson (1992). As its title indicates, this +model focuses on recreation rather than tourism. However, as asserted in +Chapter 1 and reflected in Johnston’s comments that ‘travel to the mountains for +the specific purpose of pursuing adventurous recreation can be considered +adventure tourism’ (Johnston, 1992: 159; cited in Weiler and Hall, 1992), there +are clear overlaps between adventure recreation and adventure tourism. + The risk recreation model identifies the different stages that individuals go +through when undertaking risky leisure pursuits. The model comprises five +phases that reflect an evolution from the initial allure of risk recreation to the +final stage where risk taking becomes central to a person’s life. It is interesting +to note the importance of personality in this model. Only those individuals +who have the right disposition will commit themselves to adventure/risk +recreation (and adventure tourism) in the first place. A summary of this model +is presented in Figure 3.3. + The five different phases are detailed as follows: + +� Phase 1. This initial phase is concerned with whether individuals are + predisposed to participating in adventure recreation. People who express a + +72 +f The adventure tourist + + + + +Figure 3.3 A summary of the risk recreation model. + + + + high need for stimulation and autonomy are more likely to become + involved in risky leisure activities. In a tourism context, those tourists who + like to have ‘active’ holidays will be more inclined to experience + adventure. +� Phase 2. Before taking part in a risky activity such as bungee jumping or + white-water rafting, people will evaluate the risks involved. Cox and Stuart + (1964; see Robinson, 1992) suggest that people speculate over the + likelihood of failure on the activity and the consequences of potential + failure. They appraise their level of competence in doing the activity, and + this is weighed up against the level of perceived risk. If the perceived risk + of participation exceeds the perceived competence, this could evoke + feelings of threat, anxiety and fear, and the individual may not engage in + the task (McGrath, 1982; see Robinson, 1992). A novice in adventure + pursuits may experience such emotions if, for example, he or she is taking + part in a multi-activity holiday for the first time. +� Phase 3. Making a decision on whether or not to take part in an adventure + depends upon various factors – for example, on the extent to which + individuals are motivated to succeed compared to the extent to which they + want to avoid failing (Atkinson, 1974; see Robinson, 1992). Someone who + is more concerned about failure avoidance will invariably engage in + activities where success is virtually guaranteed. Interestingly, though, that + + 73 +fAdventure Tourism + + + person could instead participate in activities that have a low probability of + success. The reason for this is that failure can be blamed on the task rather + than the person’s lack of ability. +� Phase 4. This is the stage at which the actual experience occurs. Risk + recreation participants enjoy optimally challenging experiences through + striking a balanced relationship between the perceived risk and com­ + petencies and the demands of the risk environment (Scherl, 1989; see + Robinson, 1992). +� Phase 5. Once the activity has been completed, participants try to + understand the factors that have influenced either their success or failure in + it. Immediately after the performance, individuals evaluate the experience + and its associated emotions along a subjective scale ranging from + unsuccessful to successful. This is known as an intuitive appraisal. The + reflective appraisal then follows in which people look for the reasons why + they performed in the way that they did. Where participants are positive + about their appraisal, risk recreation becomes an integral part of their + lifestyle. + +To conclude this section, it is important to recognize that risk is a significant +motive in both risk recreation and adventure tourism. Aside from risk, though, +other factors come into play when people are involved in adventure. +According to Robinson’s model, these are competence, personality, decision- +making, and the risk environment. + + +Sensation seeking and adventure +It seems to be widely accepted that risk taking is an important component that +contributes towards a rewarding adventurous experience. There are numerous +other motives that are intertwined with this element of risk, and one of these +is ‘sensation seeking’. This motive is judged to be highly significant in a +person’s pursuit of adventure. Zuckerman’s (1979) pioneering research in this +field has resulted in the development of the Sensation Seeking Scale (SSS; see +Box 3.2), a psychological model that tests people’s risk-taking behaviour in a +variety of situations. The model has evolved over the past 20-plus years to +take account of changing consumer behaviour, and its validity has been +consistently reported through numerous studies. Zuckerman (1979: 13) +defines the sensation seeking concept as: + + . . . the seeking of varied, novel, complex and intense sensations and + experiences and the willingness to take physical, social, legal and + financial risks for the sake of such experiences. + +74 +f The adventure tourist + + + + Box 3.2 The Sensation Seeking Scale (SSS; adapted from + Zuckerman, 1979) + The SSS is a 40-item questionnaire with two choices per item. It + comprises an overall measure of sensation-seeking (SSV Total), plus + four sub-components: + + 1 Thrill and adventure seeking – the preference for exciting, adventur­ + ous and risky activities (e.g. for remote tourist destinations over well- + known ones) + 2 Experience seeking – ‘. . . a desire to adopt a non-conforming + lifestyle and a tendency to gravitate towards sensations through the + senses and mind’ (e.g. participating in skydiving to get an ‘adrenaline + rush’) + 3 Disinhibition – seeking out opportunities for social and sexual + stimulation through partying and perhaps having a variety of sexual + partners (e.g.: staying in backpacker hostels whilst on a round-the- + world trip so as to meet fellow travellers and enjoy the ‘social + scene’) + 4 Boredom susceptibility – avoidance of tedious and unchanging + situations; feelings of restlessness when things stay constant (e.g. not + going on holiday with the same group of people every year to the + same destination and doing the same things). + + + + + Sensation seeking is therefore not solely about risk taking, and is expressed +in many areas of a person’s life. Studies demonstrate that participants of risky +sports, as well as people with a preference for such sports, achieve high results +on the SSS. Apparently, sensation seeking is part of their personality. They +thrive from doing risky and exciting activities. They need a stream of +adrenaline rushes in their life, and they try to avoid routine and unchanging +situations. + Research into participation in risky sports reveals that participants in +parachuting (Rowland et al., 1986; see Trimpop et al., 1998), mountain +climbing (Robinson, 1985; see Trimpop et al., 1998) and downhill skiing +(Bouter et al., 1988; see Trimpop et al., 1998) show high results on the total +SSS. More recent research (Jack and Ronan, 1999) comparing people who +partake in low-risk sports with those who participate in high-risk sports found + + 75 +fAdventure Tourism + + +divergent scores on the SSS for each group. Such research findings +demonstrate the importance of sensation seeking for adventurers. + When applying the concept of sensation seeking to adventure tourists, we +can assume that these people portray similar personality characteristics to +participants in risky sports – certainly where physical adventure holidays are +concerned. For non-physical adventures, we would expect that those people +seeking out tourism experiences that are drug- or sex-based would score +highly on the SSS, particularly on the ‘disinhibition’ and ‘experience seeking’ +components. + Only a limited amount of research has examined the SSS in the specific +context of tourism, although generally findings support the idea that sensation +seeking is an integral part of adventure travel. Gilchrist (1994) applied +Zuckerman’s (1979) original SSS to a group of ex-overland travellers who had +travelled through Africa (Kenya, Uganda, Zaire, Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania, +Malawi and Zimbabwe) with an overland adventure specialist tour operator. +The SSS was also tested on a control group, similar to the travellers in age and +socio-economic status. Overland travellers scored significantly higher results +than their control counterparts on the total SSS, as well as on the ‘thrill and +adventure’ and ‘experience’ sub-scales. Such findings imply that overland +travellers are sensation seekers and: + + . . . have a greater desire to engage in risky and adventurous sports and + activities involving speed and danger. It also appears that they seek more + experiences through mind and senses, travel and non-conforming + lifestyles. + +(Gilchrist, 1994: 35) + Conversely, findings revealed no significant differences between both +groups on the ‘boredom susceptibility’and ‘disinhibition’ sub-scales. In other +words, overland travellers and control participants have similar desires for +social (or sexual) stimulation, and express similar aversions to repetitive +situations. + +Achieving sensation seeking +Individuals are thought to achieve the ‘feel good’ sensations associated with +adventure as a result of certain biological processes. These processes will be +briefly highlighted in this section. + The ‘adrenaline rush’ that people experience when taking part in risky +sports contributes considerably to the search for intense sensations. In + +76 +f The adventure tourist + + +relation to rock climbing, for instance, the pumping of adrenaline through +climbers’ bodies can help them to ‘psyche up’ and feel more focused for the +climb. According to the ‘catastrophe theory’ the release of adrenaline helps +to improve sporting ability (Fox, 2000), although this is often a short-lived +effect to permit ‘flight or fight’ activity bursts of a physical (e.g. gaining +more strength) or mental (e.g. becoming more focused and less scared) +nature. + Once the adrenaline release ceases, performance can be negatively affected. +The build-up of adrenaline that climbers (and other risky sports participants) +feel when preparing to lead a rock climb is summed up in the quotation by +Anderson (see Fox, 2000: 39) below: + + You’ve got to know you’re going to be scared on the route. You psyche + yourself up so that by the time you get there you’re already full of + adrenaline. Then you are really nervous when you set out on the rock, but + starting to climb makes you feel better. + +Adrenaline is obviously an important factor that controls people’s experiences +of adventure. Another primary element is the chemical balance of a person’s +brain. People with a strong desire for sensation seeking in their lives are +thought to have different chemical balances in their brain to individuals with +less of an appetite for excitement and fear-provoking situations. Certain +neurotransmitters, such as adrenaline, endorphins and dopamine, are responsi­ +ble for the ‘feel good’ factor experienced by everyone, at differing degrees of +intensity. Any exciting or risky situation triggers an increased flow of these +chemicals. In the case of adrenaline, this results in a ‘rush of energy and +alertness’ (Schueller, 2000: 21). In turn, an enzyme called monoamine oxidase +type B (MAO B) regulates the functioning and amount of these ‘feel good’ +chemicals in the brain. Those people disposed to high levels of sensation +seeking have less of this enzyme present than their opposites on the SSS. +Therefore, individuals who are more likely to participate in bungee jumping +or a conservation expedition to some far-flung destination have a higher +volume of pleasure chemicals operating in the brain when they engage in risky +or exciting activities. + McCobb’s (1994; see Schueller, 2000: 22) STREX theory offers an +alternative biological-based explanation for people’s predilection for risk- +taking and thrill-seeking activities. When adrenaline is released it passes +through channels that are situated in adrenal cells. Some of these channels +contain STREX (STress hormone regulated EXon), and are responsible for the +rate at which adrenaline is released through the body: + + 77 +fAdventure Tourism + + + The level of STREX will affect how quickly [the] adrenal glands dump + large quantities of adrenaline. And that may have some effect on what + [people] get thrills out of and the propensity to do this again. + +High-sensation seekers, such as avid skydivers, would have lower levels of +STREX and consequently seek out high thrill experiences to achieve an +adrenaline rush. + It seems therefore that adrenaline helps people to prepare for an adventure +through making them feel more active and attentive. The chemical make-up of +adventurers’ brains encourages them to seek out adventures so that the ‘feel +good’ chemicals will be released and they will experience a positive +outcome. + Although risk taking and sensation seeking appear to be essential elements +in the enjoyment of adventure tourism or recreation, there are many other +motives that stimulate people to engage in such activities. Some of these +motives were noted earlier in the research findings by Sung et al. (1997). In +addition, people are driven by other needs – for example, the need to enhance +self-esteem, to become more competent in a certain activity, to face a +challenge head on, to develop a new skill, to experience novel situations etc. +It is useful to discuss the other facets underlying consumer participation in +adventure in order to comprehend more fully what motivates such tourists. +Before moving on, it should be noted that these facets, at the same time as +being distinct, are often also linked to the motive of risk taking. + + + Changing consumer motives and experience +A correlation exists between the degree of experience a person has in a +particular adventure activity, and changes in motivation. For instance, as +people become more experienced in scuba diving, they may feel inspired to go +on longer trips to more ‘exciting’ bodies of water. Again, the needs of +independent round-the-world travellers may gradually change as they develop +more travel experience. At the outset they may backpack around a well- +known, ‘safe’ country such as Australia, but as their self-reliance and +confidence grows their final month of travel may be spent in a remote part of +the Amazon rainforest staying with local tribal communities, or going on +walking safaris in Zambia. + The motivational changes associated with an increased level of adventure +experience are demonstrated in Fluker and Turner’s (2000) study. They +compared the needs, motivations and expectations of both experienced and + +78 +f The adventure tourist + + +inexperienced white-water rafters. As anticipated, their research findings +divulged a different set of behaviours for the experienced compared to the +inexperienced rafters. Experienced rafters appeared to be more relaxed and +interested in the different benefits of rafting – for instance, socializing and +being in a natural environment. In contrast, novice rafters were more +motivated by the novelty and excitement associated with the sport, and were +also more inclined to take risks to achieve their goals. + These findings have implications for the marketing of commercial white­ +water rafting to meet different consumer needs. Whereas novice rafters may be +inspired by banners such as ‘try something new and challenging’, captions such +as ‘bring your friends out for another enjoyable day in the wild while white­ +water rafting’ may appeal to more experienced rafters (Fluker and Turner, 2000: +387–388). Findings from this study demonstrate that white-water rafters exhibit +different behaviour according to their experience. Such findings can be broadly +generalized to other areas of adventure tourism and leisure. + + +Experience and competence +The more experience people have in a particular adventure activity, the more +likely it is that they will feel competent in that activity. Furthermore, +individuals will feel competent if they have a positive adventure experience, +no matter whether they are a novice or an expert in that activity. Experience +and competence are important in situations where some degree of skill is +required, or has to be learnt, to participate successfully in the adventure. +Although adventure sports naturally fall into this category, non-physical +adventures (such as going on a Buddhist retreat where the participant develops +meditation skills) also involve both competence and experience. + Iso-Ahola et al. (1988) carried out some research on rock climbers that +illustrates the above ideas. Their study detected links between people’s +perceived competence, self-esteem and experience. Perceived competence can +be divided into two categories: + +1 General perceived competence – a certain level of ability that has resulted + from accumulative experience +2 Specific perceived competence – ‘. . .a sense of competence specific to a + recent experience’ (Iso-Ahola et al., 1988: 34). + +Rock climbers were interviewed before and after a day’s climb. Those +climbers that had had successful climbs on the day felt highly self-competent +about their climbing ability and demonstrated a high degree of self-esteem. + + 79 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Interestingly, however, self-esteem was not linked to the degree of experience +a rock climber had. Furthermore, the more experience that the rock climbers +had, the higher was their level of general perceived competence. + Such findings could be applied to other adventure scenarios. For instance, +novice downhill skiers would not venture onto red (difficult) and black (very +difficult) ski runs until they felt sufficiently competent. Someone new to +paragliding would go through a series of stages to feel fully competent +through initially engaging in rigorous training, moving from tandem to solo +gliding, working towards gaining a pilot’s licence, and ultimately achieving +instructor status. + + + Consumer motives and continued participation in adventure +The last two sections have explored the role of individual experience within +different forms of risk recreation and adventure tourism. This next section +presents a model that explains the reasons (or motives) why, once people have +started an adventure sport, they continue to participate in it. It shows that +participants continue with a risky sport not only for the obvious reasons – for +example, to gain more experience, skills and competence in it – but also for +social and psychological reasons. + Shoham et al. (2000) devised a model, shown in Figure 3.4, which +elucidates the behavioural components underlying the continuous consump­ +tion of risky sports. + + + + +Figure 3.4 The behavioural components of risky sports. + +80 +f The adventure tourist + + + Figure 3.4 illustrates that there are four main motives that encourage a +person to continue taking part in a risky sport such as sky diving or +mountaineering: + +1 Identity construction. This is ‘. . . a clear-cut means to organize a new, and + sometimes central identity’ (Celsi et al., 1993; see Shoham et al., 2000: + 239). In other words, people participate in risky sports because they are + driven by a need to undergo some sort of personal development and to + acquire a new identity. +2 Efficacy. As individuals progress in a risky sport, their expertise generally + improves and they set themselves increasingly higher standards. These + elements result in people’s efficacy, or ability, being maintained in the sport + (Celsi et al., 1993; see Shoham et al., 2000). +3 Camaraderie. When continuously involved in an adventure sport, people + experience a sense of camaraderie and feel part of a community. If they are + heavily involved in the sport, they become ‘members’ of the group and + develop certain roles and expertise. This eventually results in a clear distinc­ + tion between ordinary daily life and extraordinary risky sport participation. +4 Experience. Risky sport participants accomplish improved levels of + performance with experience, and their attention gradually moves from + feeling anxious about the risks involved in the sport to feeling ‘in control’ + of the risks. With increased experience, therefore, people enjoy the + adventure sport more. Parallels can be drawn here with Fluker and Turner’s + (2000) research discussed earlier in this chapter. + +This model has implications not only for those people who take part in risky +sports, but also for those taking part in adventure tourism. For example, +consider a Manchester (UK)-based mountaineering club whose members go +on regular hiking day and weekend trips to the Lake District and North Wales. +In winter, some members may take a few mountaineering trips in Scotland to +summit a few peaks or to do some ice climbing. In summer, some members +might go on mountaineering holidays to the Alps. Participation in all or even +some of these activities would result in members gaining more experience and +developing competence as hikers or mountaineers. They would also feel more +involved in the ‘club community’, and perhaps assume a new identity. + + +The ‘flow’ experience +The following part of the chapter examines the concept of ‘flow’ and its +relevance to the adventure consumer. ‘Flow’ is defined as (Csikszentmihalyi, +1992: 4): + + 81 +fAdventure Tourism + + + . . . the state in which people are so involved in an activity that nothing + else seems to matter; the experience itself is so enjoyable that people will + do it at great cost, for the sheer sake of doing it. + +Flow is an important sensation that many people desire when they take part +in adventure tourism or recreation, and is a sensation that builds up +throughout the duration that a person is having an adventure. The process of +‘flow’ ultimately leads to the ‘peak experience’ (highlighted earlier in this +chapter). People can achieve ‘flow’ if they are involved in activities that +demand them to actively participate, such as scuba diving, mountain biking, +sea kayaking and other adventure sports. Such a state results in ‘a sense of +exhilaration, a deep sense of enjoyment that is long cherished and that +becomes a landmark in memory for what life should be like’ (Csikszentmi­ +halyi, 1992: 3). + Flow and its associated peak experiences result in an overall feeling of +happiness and an improved quality of life. Therefore, such a feeling remains +with adventure participants not only whilst they are participating in the +experience but also when they resume everyday living once more. However, +such positive emotions only occur when an individual makes a concerted +effort to achieve this state (see Box 3.3). + Much of the discussion in this chapter so far has been concerned with +adventure of a physical nature and the behavioural characteristics of its +participants. Different theoretical concepts have been examined and, where +possible, examples applied that attempt to demonstrate the range of +behaviours that adventure consumers exhibit. Many of the ideas presented +have evolved from recreation- and psychology-based research. In the case +of the former type of research, it is inevitable that there will be emphasis +on adventure of the physical type. Unfortunately, there is less known about +the behaviour of people who engage in adventures of a non-physical +nature. That said, it is possible to make some assumptions about these +people through examining the participants of other forms of tourism that +overlap with adventure tourism. What follows is a discussion of the +behaviours of ecotourists, wildlife tourists, and people who do charity +challenges. + + +Ecotourists and adventure tourists +Before commenting on ecotourists’ behaviour, it is worthwhile pointing out +that the lack of a consensual view on what ecotourism truly is has contributed +towards a dearth of accurate information about its consumer. Indeed, + +82 +f The adventure tourist + + + +Box 3.3 How flow and optimal experience are achieved + through leading a rock climb +1 Activity requires skill and challenge. Optimal experiences emanate from + goal-directed activities, such as rock climbing, that necessitate skill and + psychic energy. An individual will have some rock climbing experience in + order successfully to lead a climb. Bolder (hard) climbers will be interested + in ‘pushing their grades’, i.e. setting themselves increasingly demanding + route challenges. In contrast, novice climbers may feel anxious about leading + a climb when they have only a basic level of skill. Climbing on indoor walls + that provide a safe environment may result in an experienced climber feeling + bored. +2 Total immersion in the activity. The person becomes completely absorbed in + leading the climb because of the challenges that such an activity presents and + the level of skill required to cope with such challenges. Subsequently, the + individual becomes fully involved with the activity, as described by one rock + climber: ‘You are so involved in what you are doing [that] you aren’t thinking + of yourself as separate from the immediate activity . . . You don’t see yourself + as separate from what you are doing’ (Csikszentmihalyi, 1992: 53). +3 Actions directed at fulfilling goal. The individual’s main goal is to + competently climb to the end of the route without falling off, resting or going + off-route. As the person progresses up the rock face, he or she will receive + constant feedback to affirm that this goal is being achieved. +4 Enhanced concentration. The individual is so immersed in leading the actual + climb that he or she pushes any disagreeable parts of life to the back of the + mind and concentrates on the task in hand. One climber describes such a + state of mind: ‘It is as if my memory input has been cut off. All I can + remember is the last thirty seconds, and all I can think ahead is the next five + minutes’ (Csikszentmihalyi, 1992: 58). +5 Flow involves control. A climber whose skills are appropriately matched to + the level of challenge will be able to exercise control throughout the climb, + and be able to predict (to some extent) the differing challenges of the climb. + Having this heightened sense of control will invariably result in fewer + perceived risks. +6 A sense of transcendentalism. The person feels a sense of oneness with the + immediate surrounding environment and a loss of the sense of self. One + climber likens this sensation to ‘a Zen feeling, like meditation or + concentration’ (Csikszentmihalyi, 1992: 62). +7 Transformation of time. Seemingly, the sense of time a person feels whilst + leading a climb may be completely out of sync with the actual passage of + time. The individual may think that he or she completed a 100-m multi-pitch + route in a couple of hours, whereas in reality a whole afternoon may have + passed by. One explanation for this loss of time is linked to the high level of + concentration that the activity of climbing demands. + + + + 83 +fAdventure Tourism + + +ecotourism is not dissimilar to adventure tourism in this respect. This lack of +agreement has resulted in: + + . . . an underlying assumption that because people are found in natural + settings they are ‘ecotourists’. For example, an individual may be visiting + Tikal in Guatemala for reasons other than to view birds or learn about the + outstanding Mayan ruins there (such as being able to say ‘I’ve been + there’). + (Palacio and McCool, 1997: 236) + + These problems aside, a small number of studies have investigated the +ecotourist market and come up with demographic profiles and behavioural +characteristics. Some researchers conclude that ecotourists are motivated by +the adventure element of ecotourism. A few of these studies will now be +reviewed in a bid to understand why people pursue ecotourism experiences. + Fennell and Smale (1992) compared the travel behaviour of Canadian +tourists taking holidays in Costa Rica with that of the general Canadian +population. The researchers wanted to find out about the travel motives and +benefits sought by each group of people. The ecotourists ranked attractions +such as wilderness areas, national parks, reserves and mountains as more +important to their holiday experience. In contrast, the general Canadian +population regarded attractions such as indoor sports, theme parks, nightlife +and entertainment as more important. Costa Rican tourists sought holiday +benefits such as being physically active, experiencing new and different +lifestyles and being daring and adventuresome, whilst non-ecotourists +attached greater importance to more conventional motives, such as visiting +friends and relatives and ‘doing nothing at all’. Fennell and Smale concluded +that Canadian ecotourists enjoy novel activities whilst on holiday, and crave +unique or alternative holiday experiences. These research findings demon­ +strate that Canadian ecotourists are similar to adventure tourists in certain +ways. For example, both ecotourists (in this study) and participants of +physical forms of adventure tourism enjoy active holidays. Also, both groups +of people seek out holidays that offer new and exciting experiences. + Another survey (Eagles, 1992), which was conducted to ascertain the +motives of Canadian tourists and ecotourists, provides an insight into how +adventure can often play a role in the ecotourist’s holiday experience. A +comprehensive set of data was analysed to establish people’s preferences for +particular destination environments (i.e. attraction motives) and what their +general motives were for taking certain types of holiday (i.e. social motives). +The ‘attraction’ motives that held most interest for the ecotourist group were + +84 +f The adventure tourist + + +wilderness, water, mountains, parks, rural areas and, the most highly ranked, +‘wilderness and undisturbed nature’. Interestingly, the Canadian Tourism +Commission (see Loverseed, 1997: 89) notes that an essential component of +adventure tourism is travel to ‘an unusual, exotic and remote or wilderness +destination’. The most important social motives were being physically active, +new lifestyles, meeting people of similar interests, adventure, and seeing the +maximum in the time available. + Palacio and McCool (1997) carried out a survey on international tourists +visiting Belize, a well-established ecotourism destination predominantly +frequented by the North American market. From the survey results, four +typologies of tourist were devised (see Figure 3.5). All four types of +international tourist to Belize showed some interest in nature-based tourism. +One of the more relevant findings of this discussion is that the ‘ecotourist’ +group regarded adventure as an important anticipated benefit of their holiday. +This finding supports the idea that adventure tourists and ecotourists share +similar reasons for taking adventure and ecotourism holidays. + + + + +Figure 3.5 Pie chart showing international visitors to Belize. + + + + + Through briefly summarizing Diamantis’ (1999) study, we can make some +interesting comparisons between ecotourists and tourists who enjoy adventure +of a non-physical type. United Kingdom ecotourists were divided into +‘occasional ecotourists’ (710 people) and ‘frequent ecotourists’ (1050 people). +Occasional ecotourists most enjoyed the nature-based and educational +components of ecotourism activities, and showed little interest in the social +and outdoor elements of ecotourism. Frequent ecotourists also rated natural +attractions and educational elements highly. In addition, they thought that ‘the + + 85 +fAdventure Tourism + + +experience of traditional and natural lifestyles and local culture’ (Diamantis, +1999: 101) was important to an enjoyable ecotourism experience. Tourists that +engage in non-physical forms of adventure seek out the same benefits as those +identified above by UK ecotourists. For example, an adventure holiday to +north-west Vietnam, staying in remote tribal villages, would offer tourists an +opportunity to enjoy the mountains within this region (nature element), +engage in cultural exchange with local people (cultural element), and learn +about the destination region, its people and its natural resources (educational +element). + The four studies discussed above demonstrate a number of similarities +between adventure and ecotourists. Some of the motives shared by each type +of tourist include the need for novel and stimulating experiences, the need to +undertake some form of physical activity, a desire to take holidays in natural +and/or wilderness environments, a desire to get involved in different cultures, +and a desire to learn new things. + + +Wildlife tourists and adventure tourists +Wildlife tourism is a niche form of ecotourism that encompasses a wide range +of products, including safaris, wilderness backpacking, wildlife viewing, +aquaria, circuses and zoos, many of which fit under the broad umbrella of +adventure tourism. Most wildlife tourism takes place in developing countries +(Shackley, 1996). Such countries are exotic destinations and are often +renowned for their unique flora and fauna species. Costa Rica, Belize, +Antarctica, Namibia, Kenya and Nepal are good examples of world-wide +regions that have established wildlife tourism industries. Costa Rica’s tourism +successes, for instance, are based on its wildlife resources and a well- +developed system for protecting its natural assets. + Wildlife tourists are diverse in nature, and are spread across the whole +length of the soft–hard adventurer continuum. At the hard end of the scale +there are tourists who are highly committed, experienced and knowledgeable +about a particular area of wildlife. These tourists may go on a highly +specialized botanical tour or an advanced level diving holiday, for instance. +Novice wildlife tourists are at the other, soft end of the scale. They may go +on safari in Kenya or go whale watching around Vancouver Island, for +example. + What wildlife tourists want to experience from a wildlife holiday or activity +will vary. They may want to be active participants or passive observers. They +may want to view animals that are held in captivity, or encounter animals that + +86 +f The adventure tourist + + +roam freely in the wild. The main benefit for active participants is that they +have ‘temporary affinity with a different species or its environment’ +(Shackley, 1996: 60). Such an experience can be fulfilled through swimming +with dolphins in their wild habitat, for instance. People who prefer to be +passive observers when viewing wildlife are content simply to watch and +become absorbed in the whole experience. Such satisfaction could be gained +from visiting a sea-life centre in the UK or by venturing further afield to a +safari destination to view large mammals in their natural habitat. Whichever +of the two broad categories that people fit into, Shackley (1996: 57) asserts +that wildlife tourists are searching for ‘peak experiences’ (a concept +introduced earlier in this chapter), defined as ‘those existential moments that +induce a heightened sense of being alive and make the visitor happier, more +confident and less stressed’. + + These peak experiences are also what many adventure tourists aspire to. To +illustrate this point, compare a tourist who takes a wildlife package holiday to +Etosha National Park Namibia to view wild animals with a tourist who goes +on an independently organized backpacking trip to the Himalayas. The +wildlife tourist may achieve a peak experience on viewing wildlife at close +range, whereas the adventure backpacker tourist may enjoy such a sensation +on summiting a mountain. + + Wildlife tourism offers a number of other benefits to its consumers. One +study investigated the behaviour of international tourists visiting Penguin +Place, New Zealand (Schanzel and McIntosh, 2000). Penguin Place is a +conservation area that was established in 1985 to save the world’s most +endangered species, the yellow-eyed penguin. Visitors take a 90-minute +guided tour around the colony in small groups, and have the opportunity to +view the penguins close up because trenches have been dug ‘so that visitors +can move through the colony relatively “unnoticed” by penguins, and penguin +nests are observed from within camouflaged “viewing hides”’ (2000: 39). +Visitors to Penguin Place commented favourably on the whole experience of +being in such close proximity to the penguins. Some of the main benefits that +they expressed were feelings of fascination, amazement and privilege, and a +sense of exploration. + + Evidently, wildlife tourists can be considered as a category of tourists in +their own right or as a sub-category of adventure tourists. From the limited +amount of research presented above, it is clear that both groups of tourists +exhibit similar motives and gain similar benefits from their adventure or +wildlife experiences. Chapter 10 provides a fuller discussion on ‘wildlife +adventure tourism’. + + 87 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Charity challenge tourists and adventure tourists +Charity challenge ‘holidays’ have recently grown in popularity, and are +enjoyed by individuals who feel the need to do something worthwhile and +fulfilling whilst on their travels. Such holidays are often a ‘once in a lifetime’ +experience for participants. Charity challenges form an integral part of the +adventure tourism industry, and such a challenge characteristically: + + . . . generally involves being part of an organized group (anything + between 10 and 150) and taking part in some physical activity ranging + from the relatively undemanding to the arduous. Costs to the partici­ + pants are low (usually around £200) but they must raise a substantial + amount of money for the charity through sponsorship (often about + £2000). Supportive friends and family are encouraged to sponsor the + individual, imaginative fund-raising events ensue and businesses are + often willing supporters because of the team-building potential of the + ‘challenges’. + (Bleasdale, 2000: 4; cited in Robinson et al., 2000). + + Although a limited amount of research has been conducted in this area of +tourism, Bleasdale’s (2000) work provides a useful insight into the motives of +charity challenge participants. Bleasdale carried out a survey on people who +were doing a trek in Nepal in aid of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund. A +total of 31 trekkers completed the survey, either during or directly after the +charity trek. The results revealed that people had divergent reasons for taking +part in this charity challenge trip, and these reasons include: + +1 Fundraising – the desire to do something worthwhile, help a good cause, + benefit others, raise awareness +2 Physical challenge – enjoyment of walking, hill walking, preference to + cycling, long-held ambition to trek in Himalayas +3 Personal challenge – sense of achievement, experience of a lifetime, + rewarding experience, adventure, achieving a life long ambition, self- + discovery +4 Travel motivations – experiencing other cultures, ambition to visit the area, + scenery, natural beauty, remoteness +5 Social motivations – group bonding, meeting new friends, meeting like- + minded people. + +Respondents attributed both physical and personal challenges as the most +important motives. Interestingly, ‘personal challenge’ motives are similar to + +88 +f The adventure tourist + + +those motives found on the top rung of Pearce’s (1988) travel career ladder, +verifying that some charity challenge participants are seeking to fulfil +complex high-level needs. + Aside from the ‘fundraising’ motives identified above, the other categories +of motives listed are similar to those experienced by other distinct groups of +adventure tourist. For example, Fluker and Turner’s (2000) research on white­ +water rafters (discussed earlier in this chapter) found that more experienced +rafters enjoy the social element of the activity – i.e. social motivations. + + +Non-physical adventure tourism +We are conscious of the fact that this chapter has largely focused on physical +forms of adventure tourism and leisure. Wherever possible, we have made an +effort to apply research and theoretical concepts to non-physical as well as +physical types of adventure. However, it is important to reiterate that it is the +physical aspect of adventure tourism that has been most heavily researched in +terms of people’s motives and behaviour. This recognized, it is highly likely +that the points made about physical adventure tourism apply, with modifica­ +tions, to other forms of adventure tourism that are primarily emotional, +spiritual, and intellectual. Given the broad nature of adventure tourism and the +recognition that this phenomenon does not merely include physical adven­ +tures, there is a real need for more research on the motives and behaviour of +those tourists who enjoy non-physical forms of adventure. Such tourists +include gamblers, red light district visitors, and scholars seeking spiritual +enlightenment. + + + Cultural differences and the adventure tourist +Much of this chapter has examined the adventure tourist generally, but we +know that there are cultural and national differences in terms of the concept +of adventure tourism. These differences are explored in a little detail in +Chapter 4. At this stage, the authors would suggest that in terms of the basic +motivators of adventure tourists they are similar – though not the same – +regardless of the culture or nationality of the tourist. + + + Summary +In this chapter we have seen the complexity of the motivators of adventure +tourists. However, we have also noted how little is known about some types + + 89 +fAdventure Tourism + + +of adventure tourists, particularly those engaged in non-physical adventure. +We will now go on to look at how the behaviour of all these individual tourists +combine in the adventure tourism market. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Critically evaluate the concept of the ‘new tourist’ as outlined in Figure + 3.1. +2 Discuss the concept of ‘hard’ adventure and ‘soft’ adventure. +3 Discuss the factors that motivate people to take adventure tourism trips. +4 Critically evaluate the relationship between adventure and risk, in relation + to adventure tourism. + + + + +90 +f4 +The adventure tourism + market + + + + + + Introduction + In Chapter 3 we focused on the individual + traveller. Here we look at the market as a whole + – at the global demand for adventure tourism. + However, as we have seen throughout this book, + ‘adventure tourism’ is a complex, diverse, ill- + defined field. It is therefore no surprise that we + have difficulty measuring it in meaningful + ways. + There are five major problems involved in + endeavouring to present a global picture of the + adventure tourism market: + + 1 There is a lack of widely recognized and + agreed definitions of adventure tourism. The + problem of defining the activity is highlighted + by Smith and Jenner (1999): +fAdventure Tourism + + + One person’s adventure may simply be commonplace to another + traveller. How, then, is adventure travel to be defined? The most + practical and useful method is simply to look at the marketing of a + product – if a product is promoted as an ‘adventure’, then it can be + defined as such, even if it turns out not to be particularly adventurous. + In reality, some adventure holiday products are relatively tame, while + some ‘ordinary’ holiday packages are quite demanding. Perhaps the + key distinguishing feature of an adventure holiday is that it must have + a quality of exploration or of an expedition about it – for the entire + length of the trip, not just for one or two days. + + Most data that are collected and labelled ‘adventure tourism market’ tend + to concentrate on active trips to non-urban locations. The implicit + defining of adventure tourism in this way excludes many of the forms of + tourism the authors have identified earlier as adventure tourism, from + religious pilgrimages through indoor activities to hedonism. At the same + time, even within outdoor tourism in non-urban environments, there are + debates over the relationship between adventure tourism and ecotourism + and activity holidays, for example. +2 As the phenomenon of adventure tourism is both relatively new and very + complex, comparatively little energy has yet been spent on collecting data + on the market. As we will see later in this chapter, while there are data + for outdoor activity-based adventure tourism there are very few data on + many other forms of adventure tourism. This may also be because some + of these other forms of ‘adventure’ are either socially frowned upon or + may even be illegal – such as drug tourism and sex tourism. Yet these are + still important forms of adventure tourism numerically. Likewise, data are + not collected on some adventure activities because they are not easily + identified and measured as ‘markets’ – such as ‘hedonism’ holidays. +3 Where data are collected, they are often not available to academics as + they are not in the public domain – much data is collected by enterprises + for marketing purposes and is kept confidential. Even where companies + are willing to talk to researchers about their market there is the danger + that operators will either exaggerate the size of their market to appear + more successful than they really are, or underestimate their market + because they fear the researcher will pass information to the tax + authorities! +4 Government and industry awareness of, and interest in, adventure tourism + is not equally developed around the world. Even in the some countries + where there is a significant amount of adventure tourism, lack of + recognition of the sector leads to few or no data being collected. + +92 +f The adventure tourism market + + +5 Even where data on adventure tourism are collected, there are still often + problems of using these because of a lack of comparability of data between + different countries. This difficulty can arise because: + � Different countries define adventure tourism in different ways + + � Data are collected using different methodologies + � Data relate to different time periods. + + +For all these reasons, measuring the adventure tourism market is extremely +difficult if not impossible. Notwithstanding this fact, we will now endeavour +to look at several aspects of the adventure tourism market (or markets). We +will look at the geography of demand and the demand for different types of +adventure travel, as well as considering the segmentation of the market and +market trends. + + + The international adventure tourism market +According to Millington (2001), the international adventure tourism market +amounted to between 4 and 5 million trips in 2000. This represents about 7 per +cent of all international trips taken during that year. + However, it is important to recognize that this is based on a definition of +adventure tourism that focuses on sport and nature tourism and (to a lesser +extent) cultural tourism, in the wilderness, or at least in remote non-urban +locations. It therefore excludes much of the non-physical adventure tourism +considered in this book. Nevertheless, very importantly, it has been estimated +that the potential international market for even this limited view of adventure +tourism is around 60 million or 14 per cent of all international tourism trips +(Millington, 2001). + According to the World Tourism Organization (WTO) and Millington, this +potential international adventure tourism market is made up as follows: + + Market Number of tourists + (millions) + Current market 4–5 + 50% of skiers 18 + 50% of scuba divers 3 + 50% of surfers 2.5 + 50% of nature-based tourists 15 + 25% of cultural tourists 15–18 + Total 58–61 + + 93 +fAdventure Tourism + + +These figures show the rather crude way in which such forecasts are +developed, as well as giving a clear view of how the WTO and others view +adventure tourism. + + + + The geography of demand +Before we look at the geography of adventure tourism market in detail, we +need to recognize that there are generally three aspects of demand: + +1 Outbound +2 Inbound +3 Domestic. + +It is impossible to produce a comprehensive review of all three types of +demand, world-wide, because of a lack of data. All we can do, therefore, is +provide some selective data to try to give the reader a flavour of the global +picture of demand for adventure tourism. + + + Outbound adventure tourism +On a regional basis, the geographical distribution of outbound adventure +tourism world-wide is: + + Europe 1 000 000 + North America 2 000 000–3 000 000 + Rest of the world 1 000 000 + Total 4 000 000–5 000 000 + (Source: Travel Industry Association of America, 2001.) + + These data clearly show the domination of North Americans in the +outbound adventure tourism market. However, it is important to recognize that +around 80 per cent of all adventure trips taken by North Americans are +domestic trips. + Much of the outbound adventure tourism world-wide takes place as part of +organized packages, offered by tour operators. According to Millington +(2001), the European market for organized packaged adventure holidays in +2001 was around 950 000 trips. The leading national outbound markets +were: + +94 +f The adventure tourism market + + + Market Customers + (thousands) + Germany 225 + UK 173 + France 138 + Italy 138 + Scandinavia 86 + Netherlands 86 + Spain 52 + Switzerland 26 + Belgium 17 + Austria 17 + Total 958 + (Source: Millington, 2001.) + + + This is clearly an underestimate, as several countries are not included in this +list – notably Ireland, Portugal and Greece. It also excludes Eastern Europe, +and is based on outbound and not domestic adventure tourism. + In recent years growth rates in this market have been consistently higher +than those for other forms of tourism, and it was estimated that the volume of +such trips in Europe would roughly double between 1998 and 2003, from +550 000 to just over 1 million (Smith and Jenner, 1999). The figures quoted +above for 2001 seem to indicate this will prove to be correct. + The data show that per head consumption of such packaged adventure +tourism product is higher in the UK than in Germany, which in turn has a +higher participation rate than France. However, in Germany, UK, France and +the Netherlands, adventure tourism in the late 1990s accounted for less than +1 per cent of all tourist spending, although this figure is rising (World Tourism +Organization and Travel and Tourism Intelligence). + On the other hand, there are interesting characteristics of the market in +different European countries. Clearly, in Germany tourists are willing to pay +a relatively high price for such an experience, with average prices up to DM +4500 (Euros 2300) in 1998/1999. The German market is perhaps the most +fragmented in Europe, with a large number of small operators, some serving +as few as 300 clients per annum. + The UK market is less fragmented, with several major operators dominating +the market. The age profile is clearly varied, with some packages aimed at + + 95 +fAdventure Tourism + + +young travellers while others focus on the older customer. Most holidays are +booked generally with the operator rather than in a travel agent’s. + The French market tends to be a little lower in its spending than its German +counterpart, and it also has a focus on North Africa as a destination, reflecting +French colonial history. + The Dutch market has the highest consumption of adventure tourism per +head in the whole of Europe. + One major operator dominates the Belgian market, with an average spend of +2300 Euros per vacation. Interestingly, this company sells mainly to Flemish- +speaking Belgians but not to their Walloon-speaking countrymen. The client in +Belgium is relatively young, with an average age of around 30 years. + The Italian market is split between two major companies, whose clients pay +average prices of 1500 Euros and 2200 Euros respectively. + Overall, the European market is forecast to grow in the future, with a trend +towards shorter trips than the two- or three-week vacations that appear to be +the norm today. + Most of this section has been focused on organized tourism packages, and +it excludes the ‘grey’ sector of independent travel. It also does not include the +activities of ‘backpackers’, who travel independently on journeys that are a +personal adventure. The phenomenon of backpacking is featured in a case +study later in the book. + + + Inbound adventure tourism in selected destinations +We have constantly seen in this book that adventure tourism is a complex and +diverse field. This is also true of the pattern of adventure tourism seen across +the world. In this chapter the authors will endeavour briefly to highlight some +of these differences by looking at inbound international adventure tourism in +several countries. Any such exercise is fraught with problems due to the lack +of comparable data between countries, and the lack of data on certain types of +adventure tourism such as hedonism and urban adventure. Nevertheless, some +interesting differences can be observed. + +Botswana +The main ‘adventure’ attraction in Botswana is wildlife, focused on the +extensive national park and reserves. In 1997 these parks and reserves +received 140 693 paying visitors (Travel and Tourism Intelligence, 2000), and +these were divided between people on self-drive safaris, those using mobile + +96 +f The adventure tourism market + + +tents, and those using permanent camp sites or lodges. Some 72 per cent of +visitors stayed overnight, although the length of stay was generally only one +night. + In 1997 the breakdown of visitors was as follows: + + Area Percentage of visitors + Europe 42 + South Africa 18 + USA and Canada 10 + Australasia 7 + Asia 3 + South America 2 + Others 18 + +The number of visitors to the reserves and parks is still relatively low but it +is growing rapidly, with annual rates of growth in generally in double figures +every year. Wildlife tourism is now worth in excess of US$2 million to the +government in parks and reserve admission fees alone. + +Brazil +Brazil has two totally different major adventure tourism markets; the Rio +Carnival, and the Amazon region. The Rio Carnival attracts in excess of +40 000 international visitors to the city of Rio de Janeiro during the carnival +season, and their hotel bills alone contribute an estimated US$75 million to +the city economy (Travel and Tourism Intelligence, 2000). Furthermore, the +carnival is now the symbol of Brazil to many foreigners. Attending the +carnival is truly an adventure, with visitors being encouraged to let their hair +down and indulge in hedonistic pleasures while coping with the ever-present +threat of street crime! + The Amazon region is another globally recognized symbol of Brazil, but it +is the least developed tourism asset in Brazil. This is partly because to +Brazilians it represents a wilderness to be developed or avoided, and not an +attractive tourist destination. The region of Brazil with perhaps the most +potential tourism is outside the Amazon basin, the Pantinol region, a wetland +environment. + +Chile +Chile is a huge country with a variety of landscapes, wildlife and even +climatic zones. Adventure tourism is not well established in the country, +although there are a few exceptions, notably: + + 97 +fTable 4.1 Activities undertaken in Namibia by country of residence, 1997 (%, multiple responses; source: Ministry of Environment +and Tourism, 1997; Travel and Tourism Intelligence, 2000 + + +Activities South Africa Other regions Germany UK France Italy Other European Others Total + regions + + +Game viewing 35 29 87 92 71 60 81 64 73 +Bird watching 30 15 77 60 81 63 67 47 62 +Nature tours 25 13 70 56 72 63 59 42 56 +Hunting 3 – 7 2 2 – 6 8 6 +Horse riding 3 3 7 2 2 3 4 6 5 +Sport fishing 15 – 4 14 – – 7 2 6 +Ballooning 1 – 2 3 2 – 4 3 4 +Trekking 12 19 31 28 37 26 20 22 21 +Shopping 56 67 55 65 68 81 57 59 57 +Others 1 1 – – – – 1 1 1 +No. of respondents 1345 238 3929 320 292 139 628 660 7551 +f The adventure tourism market + + +� Skiing between June and September, which attracts a limited number of + North American and European serious skiers who want to be able to ski all + year round, even when the snow has disappeared in their own countries. It + is also popular with affluent skiers from neighbouring Brazil. +� Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, which attract ‘die-hard’ wilderness and + wildlife tourists from Germany, Austria, Spain, Brazil and North America. + Tour operators are also now trying to exploit this destination and broaden + the market. + +Namibia +In recent years, Namibia has emerged as a major adventure tourism +destination, with a strong emphasis on wildlife. The activities of different +nationals in Namibia are shown in Table 4.1. + Wildlife watching is clearly the main activity, with all other activities +trailing well behind shopping! In general, research shows that international +visitors to Namibia rated the sightseeing tours quite highly. (Travel and +Tourism Intelligence 2000). + +New Zealand +New Zealand is seen as a pioneer of adventure tourism, first for its domestic +market and then increasingly for foreign visitors. The country is marketed +and perceived as an outdoor adventure destination. However, Table 4.2 +illustrates the fact that its appeal to international tourists is much wider +than this. + Around 154 000 international visitors took part in jet boating during their +visit in 1998–1999. This is still less than those who visited a museum/gallery. +However, New Zealand has been very successful in attracting people from the +Northern hemisphere who want to continue to ski and snowboard during their +own winter. + Many foreigners do not appreciate that gambling is also quite a highly +developed form of adventure tourism in New Zealand. In 1998–1999, 136 000 +international tourists visited a casino – which is nearly as many as those taking +part in jet boating (Travel and Tourism Intelligence, 2000). + +South Africa +South Africa is the major player in Southern African tourism, and again a large +part of its tourism is based on wildlife watching. However, unlike some other +countries in the region it has also succeeded in developing other forms of +tourism such as beach tourism, wine tourism and cultural tourism. For those + + 99 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 4.2 Main activities participated in by international visitors in New +Zealand (year ending 31 March 1999; source: IVS, Travel and Tourism +Intelligence, 2000) + + +Activity No. of visitors (thousands) + + +Eating out/restaurants 738 +Shopping 639 +General sightseeing 605 +Walking in city 466 +Friends/family/people 399 +Sightseeing tour 340 +Geothermal 326 +Museum/gallery 326 +Beaches 280 +Botanical/gardens 230 +Business/conference 205 +Maori performance 203 +Scenic cruise 184 +Scenic drive 171 +Bar/nightclub 168 +Gondola 165 +Jet boating 154 +Casino 136 +Sky tower 127 +Glacier walk/helicopter 125 +Farm show 124 +Other natural attractions 123 + + + +seeking ‘fantasy’ it also offers the resort complex of Sun City. Under +apartheid this was a place where white South Africans met for ‘adventures’ +that were not legal in their own country! ‘Adventure’ also exists in some +cities, such as Johannesburg, where crime levels are high! + +Sri Lanka +Sri Lanka has been marketed abroad largely as an inexpensive beach +destination. For tourists on such vacations the only element of ‘adventure’ is +the threat of tension due to the civil war that has raged on the island for years! +In spite of these problems, tourist expenditure grew by 350 per cent between +1990 and 1998. (Travel and Tourism, 2000). + As yet adventure tourism is relatively under-developed in Sri Lanka, but +tour operators are now offering packages including trekking, paragliding and +wildlife-watching. However, Sri Lanka is also developing traditional health + +100 +f The adventure tourism market + + +treatments based on Hindu philosophies and practice. This may prove very +attractive to Western tourists looking for both better health and spiritual +enlightenment. The government hopes that once the war is over it will be able +to develop adventure tourism further, and include diving on the coral reefs. + + +Zambia +Scenery and wildlife are at the heart of Zambia’s appeal to foreign adventure +tourists. Tour operators are reaping annual growth rates for adventure tourism +spending of over 18 per cent per annum (Travel and Tourism Intelligence, +2000). The market in Zambia is mainly 20–44-year-olds, and focuses on +activities such as bungee jumping and microlight flying. + However, the government is also keen to develop other forms of tourism, +including watersports on Lake Tanganyika, visits to traditional villages, and +bird watching. + + +Other countries +The diversity of adventure tourism is shown by the fact that if we had looked +at another selection of countries the picture would have been different. For +example, we could have considered: + +� Indonesia, where diving, visiting traditional villages and wildlife-watching + are major attractions +� Russia, where hunting and wilderness trips in Siberia are high on the list of + attractions +� Morocco, with its ‘unofficial’ drug tourism and its desert activities +� Iceland, with its whale-watching, four-wheel drives across the interior + ‘desert’, glacier walking, and white-water rafting +� Nepal, with its mountain trekking and ‘drug tourism’ +� India and Thailand, playgrounds for the backpacker and places where + tourists go for spiritual enlightenment ‘adventures’ +� Australia, where the appeal is divided between activities such as diving on + the Great Barrier Reef and exploring the outback. + + + Domestic adventure tourism +We should not forget that in many of the countries domestic tourists are the +core of the adventure tourism market. They often discover the adventure +tourism potential of the country first, and are followed later by foreigners. +This is certainly the case with New Zealand, for example. + + 101 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Even in a relatively poor country like Botswana, its citizens and residents +represented 15 per cent of all visitors to parks and reserves in 1997 (Travel +and Tourism Intelligence, 2000). Chileans are the majority market at many of +the country’s nature attractions. + As might be expected, the USA has a massive domestic adventure tourism +market. In 1999, half of US adults claimed to have taken an adventure trip in +the last 5 years. Average expenditure on these vacations was high, at US$ +1300 per head (Travel and Tourism Intelligence, 2000). + In the US market, a distinction is made between hard and soft adventure, +based on definitions used by the US Travel Industry Association. + Table 4.3 shows us the most popular adventure activities within the +domestic US market. + + + +Table 4.3 Cross-participation in adventure activities in the USA by US +travellers (source: Travel Industry Association of America, 1997) + + +Other activities also Four most popular activities +undertaken during Camping Hiking Cycling Bird/animal +previous five years watching + + +Soft activities +Camping 100 76 82 85 +Hiking 53 100 72 70 +Cycling 35 44 100 38 +Bird/animal watching 28 38 34 100 +Horse riding 27 35 36 33 +Canoeing 29 32 39 29 +Water skiing 26 26 35 21 +Snow skiing 23 29 38 24 +Wilderness tour in off-road vehicles 19 25 27 30 +Sailing 15 20 24 19 +Photo safari 6 10 7 16 +Dude ranch 8 10 9 11 +Hard activities +Rafting/kayaking 16 18 19 17 +Snorkelling/scuba diving 13 14 20 16 +Mountain biking 12 13 25 11 +Backpacking across rugged terrain 10 14 17 14 +Climbing 8 13 13 13 +Caving 8 8 10 8 + + + +102 +f The adventure tourism market + + + + The segmentation of the adventure tourism market +There are many potential ways in which we can segment the adventure +tourism market. We have already, in this chapter, segmented the market +geographically by looking at where the tourists live. The market is clearly +dominated by North Americans and Europeans at present, although it is +growing in other regions of the world. Of course it is also possible to segment +the market demographically, in terms of age, sex, stage in the family life +cycle, income, and ethnic origins. + Traditionally, adventure tourism has been perceived to be a younger +person’s activity. However, in recent years we have seen a growth of +adventure travel by ‘empty nesters’ – older people keen to enjoy new +experiences once their children have left home. What appear to vary are the +motivators of adventure tourists at different ages. According to the work of the +US travel industry, ‘travellers in their 20s tend to take an adventure trip for the +thrill, those in their 30s pursue an interest in the environment, and those in +their 40s or 50s to get away from job stress’ (Millington, 2001). + Women in the USA are as likely as men to take adventure trips, although +there is still a bias towards men in the market for some types of adventure +tourism. + In the past, adventure tourism has usually been seen as an activity for +adults, done in couples or in groups. However, we are seeing an increase in +family adventure travel. A survey in 1997 in the USA showed that many +parents now take their children with them on adventure trips. The percentage +who were accompanied by their children was as follows (Travel Industry +Association of America, 1997): + + Campers 45 + Water skiers 41 + Cyclists 40 + Snow skiers 40 + Hikers 38 + Horse riders 38 + Canoeists 34 + Bird/animal watchers 33 + +Adventure travel is often an activity for those in the higher income groups. A +major US on-line adventure travel company estimated that the average income +of its customers in 2000 was $75 000 (Millington, 2001). However, there has + + 103 +fAdventure Tourism + + +been a growth in participation amongst those households on more modest +incomes. + Ethnic minorities are still under-represented in the adventure tourism +market, just as they are in the tourism market in general. + Psychographic segmentation is very important in adventure tourism, as can +be seen from Chapter 3 where we talked about the motivators and +determinants of individual adventure tourists. However, it has not yet +developed greatly in terms of empirical research in the adventure tourism +market. + There are numerous other ways of segmenting the adventure tourism +market, including: + +� According to the activity +� Whether it is hard and soft adventure +� By the level of interest in adventure tourism +� Into independent travellers and those who take organized packages. + + +Activity +The market can be segmented according to the activity. There are two tiers to +such segmentation: + +1 Generic types of activity, e.g. air sports or watersports +2 Sub-types of these generic activities, such as paragliding, microlight flying + and so on in relation to air sports. + +Some of these sub-types of activities are sizeable in their own right – for +example, it is estimated that there are 6 million scuba divers world-wide, and +this is forecast to rise to 10 million by 2005. However, we have to recognize +that many adventure tourists are interested in more than one activity. + + +Hard or soft adventure +Adventure tourists can be divided into those participating in hard or soft +adventure, which Millington (2001) has defined as follows: + + Hard adventure travel requires an element of experience in the activity + being undertaken, and because it encompasses an element of risk, + participants must be physically and mentally fit. It includes an intimate + experience with the environment and culture of the destination. + +104 +f The adventure tourism market + + + Participants should be prepared for all weather conditions, sleeping + arrangements and dietary restrictions. Examples include: climbing + expeditions, arduous treks, hang gliding, rock climbing, white-water + kayaking and wilderness survival. + Soft adventure requires less physical risk, little or no experience, and + offers more convenience in terms of sleeping arrangements and cuisine. + Many activities are similar to those in the hard adventure category, yet + they occur at a less physically demanding level. Soft adventure offers a + wider range of activities and adventure experiences for the traveller. + Examples include horseback riding, rafting, sea kayaking, snorkelling, + bicycle touring, camping, canoeing, cross-country skiing, dog sledding, + surfing, walking tours, wildlife watching and windsurfing. + +However, many tourists will of course take part in both types of activity, +possibly even during the same vacation. + + +Level of interest +The market can also be segmented into three main segments on the basis of +the tourists’ level of interest in adventure tourism: + +1 Those who only take adventure vacations +2 Those who take adventure vacations as well as other types of vacations +3 Those who take non-adventure vacations, but take part in adventure + activities once or twice during their vacation. + +There are also, of course, many people who have absolutely no desire to take +part in adventure travel at all. + + +Independent travellers or those on organized trips +A division may be made between independent travellers and those who take +organized packages. However, some people may indulge in both forms of +travel at different times. + Furthermore, those who take organized packages are not a single +homogeneous group. Millington (2001) reports that for a leading UK +specialist tour operator, their market consists of three main segments: + +1 Older, often retired people who finally have the time and money to fulfil + their dreams + + 105 +fAdventure Tourism + + +2 Ex-backpackers who used to travel to exotic locations independently, and + still want an element of adventure in the limited holiday time they have + available +3 A new group of consumers accustomed to beach package holidays, who see + adventure tours as something more exciting. + + + The adventure day trip market +This chapter has so far been concerned with the staying vacation market. +However, adventure is also playing a leading role in the day trip market. +People now have the opportunity to escape for a day from their normal routine +and environment, for example to: + +� Have a go at driving a Formula One racing car +� Make a parachute jump +� Learn to scuba dive +� Go whale-watching. + +Some companies specialize in arranging such ‘day trips’ – such as ‘Red Letter +Days’ in the UK, about which there is a case study later in the book. + + + The hidden adventure tourism market +As well as the problems arising from how we define adventure tourism, the +data on adventure tourism are incomplete because some demand is ‘hidden’ +from view because it is either illegal or seen as socially unacceptable. For +example, in many countries hunting tourism is either not recorded or is under- +counted because of its controversial nature. The same is true of ‘walk on the +wild side urban tourism’ and sex tourism. In many countries these markets are +of great significance, such as Russia in relation to the former and Manila and +Bangkok in terms of the latter. + + + Non-physical adventure tourism markets +Most of this chapter has focused on physical adventure in wild, remote +regions. However, it is now time to say a few words about the market for non­ +physical adventure. + There are many forms of non-physical adventure tourism, and we will +consider four of them here. + +106 +f The adventure tourism market + + +Gambling +For a number of tourist destinations gambling is their main attraction, +including most notably Las Vegas. Many casinos also serve as day trip leisure +attractions for people from their host region. The scale of the gambling market +can be gauged from the following data, which are taken from Travel and +Tourism Analyst (1999): + +� Commercial casinos in the State of Nevada, USA, employed 180 000 + people in 1997 +� State gaming taxes in Clark County, Las Vegas, were worth $457 million + in 1998 +� Tunica County in Tennessee opened a casino to attract visitors in 1992, and + now attracts around 15 million visitors per year +� Foxwoods Casino, in New England, attracts up to 40 000 people a day on + busy weekends. + +The same report on the US gaming business also noted that in 1997, 89 per +cent of visitors to Las Vegas had gambled. Each day these visitors passed +around 4 hours gambling, and they spent a total of about $515 on gambling +during their stay in the resort. + + It is interesting to look at who the gamblers are, although the profile of +casino users varies from place to place. A study of Northern Cyprus by Scott +and Asikoglu (2001) looked at Turkish visitors and divided them into three +groups: + +1 General holidaymakers who were not attracted to Northern Cyprus for the + gambling (A) +2 Those whose main motive for visiting was gambling (B) +3 Those who wished to combine a general holiday with gambling (C). + +Table 4.4 shows how the behaviour of these groups differed from each +other. + + Interestingly, the same research showed that 32 per cent of those in Group +A, with no apparent interesting in gaming, gambled during their visit to +Northern Cyprus. + + Table 4.5 also shows the characteristics of casino gamblers in Black Hawk, +Colorado – a former mining town. + + Table 4.6 illustrates the motives for gambling at Black Hawk. + + 107 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 4.4 Age, status and income profile of groups in North Cyprus (A = main +purpose holiday, B = main purpose gambling, and C = gambling + holiday; +source: Scott and Asikoglu, 2001) + + + A (%; n = 206) B (%; n = 230) C (%; n = 136) + + +Age (years) +18–25 7 2 4 +26–35 24 17 20 +36–45 38 41 41 +46–60 23 38 32 +60+ 8 2 3 +Total 100 100 100 + +Status +Married 80 86 81 +Single 19 12 13 +Divorced 1 2 6 +Total 100 100 100 + +Children? +Yes 74 74 77 +No 26 26 23 + +Total 100 100 100 + +Income (in million Turkish Lira per month) +100–199 2 1 0 +200–299 11 1 1 +300–399 16 12 10 +400–499 26 44 43 +500+ 45 42 46 +Total 100 100 100 + + + + + While many of the respondents of this survey were not tourists in the +strictest sense of the word, it is likely that their motivators are similar to those +of tourists. + A recent Travel and Tourism Intelligence report on the Japanese outbound +market showed how the propensity of Japanese tourists to indulge in gambling +differed depending on their destination. For example, 20 per cent of Japanese +visitors to the USA indulged in gambling, 11 per cent of visitors to Oceania, + +108 +f The adventure tourism market + + +Table 4.5 Characteristics of casino gamblers in Black Hawk, Colorado +(source: Park et al., 2002) + +Variables Frequency Per cent + +Age (years) +< 20 3 0.6 +21–30 25 4.9 +31–40 42 8.3 +41–50 96 18.9 +51–60 114 22.4 +61+ 228 44.9 +Sex +Male 205 39.6 +Female 313 60.4 +Education +Grade school 20 3.8 +High school 224 43.0 +College 217 41.7 +Graduate school 60 11.5 +Marital status +Single 72 13.9 +Married 333 64.3 +Divorced/separated 66 12.7 +Widowed 47 9.1 +Residence +Colorado 442 84.5 +Other states 79 15.1 +Foreign country 2 0.4 +Income ($) +< 19 999 91 19.8 +20 000–39 99 152 33.1 +40 000–59 000 113 24.6 +60 000–79 000 65 14.2 +80 000–99 000 18 3.9 +100 000+ 20 4.4 + + + + +but only 7 per cent of visitors to East Asia and 7 per cent of visitors to Europe. +Japanese visitors to the USA and Oceania were more likely to gamble than to +indulge in any other ‘adventure’. + According to Cai et al. (2000) Chinese travellers to the USA also show a +high propensity to gamble during their stay, with nearly 14 per cent of Chinese +tourists visiting a casino in the USA. + + 109 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 4.6 Motives for casino gambling, Black Hawk, Colorado (after Park et +al., 2002) + + +Involvement items +Self-expression + Gambling says a lot about who I am + Gambling helps me maintain the type of life I strive for + I find that much of my life is organized around gambling + Gambling is important to me + When I gamble, others see me the way I want them to see me + You can tell a lot about a person when you see them gambling +Enjoyment + Gambling offers me relaxation and fun when pressures build up + Gambling is one of the most enjoyable things I do + When I am gambling I can really be myself + I have little or no interest in gambling + I get bored when other people talk to me about gambling +Centrality + Most of my friends are in some way connected with gambling + When I am with friends, we often talk about gambling +Eigenvalues + Percentage variance (%) + + Cumulative percentage variance (%) + + + + + + Most data on gambling tourism focuses rigidly on casino gambling, but +other forms of gambling can be important in certain locations – such as on- +course betting on horse races. + Finally, we have to recognize that gambling tourism is often controversial. In +Australasia, for example, there has been a vigorous debate over the building of +new casinos designed to put a place on the tourist map as a destination. Often the +casino is not frequented by wealthy tourists but by less affluent local people +spending money they cannot afford, which clearly causes social problems. + + +Religious tourism +Travelling for religious reasons has been with us for centuries, and still +represents a personal spiritual adventure for those taking part in it. + Traditional pilgrimage tourism is still a massive phenomenon in tourism +terms. A report in Travel and Tourism Analyst No. 5 in 1999 offered data that +are now rather dated but still make the point about the significant scale of + +110 +f The adventure tourism market + + +Table 4.7 Major places of pilgrimage, by religion and country (source: Meyer +et al., 1991) + + +Religion Country of Place or shrine + pilgrimage + destination + + +Baha’i Israel Bahji (Akko) + Haifa (Shrine of the Bab) +Buddhism Myanmar Shwe Dagon + China O’mei Shan + India Bodh Gaya, Isipatana Kusinagara, Rajagrham, + Sravasti, Sanchi + Japan Kamakura, Nara, Hongan-Ji + Thailand Wat Phra Doi Suthep, Temple of the Emerald Buddha +Christianity Austria Mariazell + Belgium Banneaux + Canada St Anne de Beaupre + Egypt Mount Sanai, Cairo + France Ars, Lisieux, Lourdes, Tours + Germany Altötting + India Goa + Ireland Downpatrick, Knock + Israel Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Galilee + Poland Gzestochowa + Portugal Fátima, Lisbon + Spain Santiago de Compostela + Turkey Ephesus +Hinduism India Ayodhya, Badrinatha, Benares, Dvaraka, Haridwar, + Kusi, Mathura, Puri, Ramaswaram, Ujjain + Rivers: Ganges, Godavari, Indus, Cauvery, Narmada, + Servaswait +Islam Iran Meshed + Iraq Karbala, Baghdad + Israel Jerusalem + Saudi Arabia Mecca, Medina +Jainism India Belgola, Dilwara, Kesariaji, Rajgir, Ranakpur, + Samata Sikhara, Satrunjaya, Sravana +Judaism Israel Jerusalem, Meron, Mod’in, Hebron, Mount Carmel, + Safed, Tiberias +Shinto Japan Shikoku, Ise +Sikh India Amritsar, Anandpur, Panta + Pakistan Nankana + + + + 111 +fAdventure Tourism + + +religious tourism to many destinations. The main pilgrimage sites for different +religions are listed in Table 4.7. + Table 4.8 shows the number of tourists from different European countries +who visited a religious site in 1996. + + + Table 4.8 Estimated number of tourists to religious sites by + selected European country of origin, 1996 (source: ETM, Borsa + Internazionale de Turismo, World Tourism Organization, and + national tourism authorities or respective countries) + + Country Religious tourists + + Italy 19 050 + Germany 19 050 + Spain 10 160 + France 4 440 + Ireland 3 810 + Austria 3 170 + Belgium 2 540 + Netherlands 1 270 + Total of eight countries 63 490 + + + + + For some destinations, pilgrimage tourism is the main motivator of their +visitors. For example, Travel and Tourism Analyst No. 5 (1999) reported that +1 080 000 foreign pilgrims visited Saudi Arabia in 1995–1996. In 1998, the +same report estimated that around 135 000 American pilgrims alone visited +Israel. + However, as well as the traditional pilgrimage tourism we are also seeing +the rise of ‘religious spiritual adventure tourism’ where people go in search of +religious inspiration from other religions. This phenomenon largely concerns +‘westerners’ seeking spiritual enlightenment from ‘the East’. + In 1999, Travel and Tourism Analyst No. 5 noted that: + + There has been a small but growing enchantment in the western world + with the religions of the Orient and Far East, perhaps as a counter to an + ever more materialist and spiritual-less culture. Western interest in + Buddhism and its related activities of yoga and meditation is certainly on + the rise and it is conceivable that this could lead to more exploration of + Asian countries where Buddhism is the dominant religion. + +112 +f The adventure tourism market + + +An example of this is the International Buddhist Meditation Centre in +Bangkok, which draws people from all over the world for meditative retreats. +Another, more remote destination is a 120-acre forest temple in the Surat +Thani province of Thailand, 580 kilometres south of the Thai capital. Called +Suan Mokkh, meaning ‘The Garden of Liberation’, the temple is in fact a +teaching monastery of Buddhists, offering ten-day meditation courses, set +amid a coconut grove. + + India is another Asian country which is seeking to attract more foreign +tourists through the charms of its spiritual heritage. Indian tourism authorities +have announced a target of 5 million international arrivals by 2004. + +This trend looks set to continue in the future. + + + +Gay tourism +Gay tourism is a form of adventure tourism in itself because the participants +are people whose sexual orientation can attract discrimination and even +persecution in places. This fact was well detailed in a report in Travel and +Tourism Analyst No. 2 (2001) as follows: + + There are distinct regions of the world where homosexuality remains a + social taboo and government-sanctioned homophobia prevails. These can + be broadly defined as the Caribbean, some Latin countries, most of + Africa and parts of the Middle East. Recent examples include the + Jamaican government’s refusal to grant basic human rights protection for + gay and lesbian citizens and visitors. Meanwhile, the UK’s five Overseas + Territories of Anguilla, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, + Montserrat and the Turks and Caicos islands have so far refused the + request from London to repeal their anti-gay legislation in line with + European human rights legislation. + + Experience shows however, that a prevailing homophobic culture does + not necessarily put a country out of bounds to gay travellers. What tends + to happen is that gay holidaymakers stay in all-inclusive, self-contained + resorts where interaction with local people is voluntary rather than + unavoidable. + + Discrimination exists at the micro level, of course – that is, prejudice + encountered by lesbians and gay men from hotel staff, travel agents and + other travel industry staff. + + 113 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Yet the gay holiday market is substantial and growing. In 2000 it was +estimated that 2.8 million gay people would take holidays in 2002, of whom +only 118 000 would take vacations designed specifically for gay people +(Mintel, 2000a). + At the same time, a growing number of gay people are taking activity/soft +adventure holidays. A selection of those offered by US tour operators is shown +in Table 4.9. + City breaks seem to be very popular with gay travellers. Mintel estimated +that gay travellers were more than twice as likely to take city breaks as non- +gay travellers. Gay pride events have also become a major focus of travel by +gay people, and some of the leading such events worldwide are listed in Table +4.10. + +Table 4.9 A calendar of selected activity/soft adventure holidays for gay +travellers, 2001 (source: gaytravelnews.com) + + +Date Holiday/event Tour operator Price per + person + (US$) + + +1–8 April Rafting on the Rio Spirit Journeys 1250 + Grande +21–27 April Moab Red Rocks OutWest Global 1150 + Explorer Adventures +3–18 May Amazon and Machu Mariah Wilderness na + Picchu Adventures +3–15 May Sailing on Turkish coast Coda International 3795 +15–26 June Kenya Safari na 3799 +1–8 July White-water rafting OutWest Global 1450 + through Grand Canyon Adventures +1–8 August White-water rafting Toto Tours 2000 + through Grand Canyon +24–31 August Sailing Ibiza and Minorca Toto Tours na +1–8 September Diving in Fiji Undersea Expeditions 2395 +31 October– Galapagos Islands and Mariah Wilderness 4600 +12 November Ecuador Adventures +17–25 November Thanksgiving in Costa Toto Tours 1595 + Rica + + + +114 +f The adventure tourism market + + +Table 4.10 Leading Pride/Mardi Gras events, 2001 (source: Travel and +Tourism Intelligence, 2001, no. 2) + + +Event name Date Expected Major travel + attendance sponsors + (thousands) + + +Sydney Mardi Gras 9 February–3 March 600 Qanta +San Francisco 23–24 June 300–400 United Airlines +Pride Parade and Hyatt Hotels +Celebration National Car Rental +New York City 31 July–28 August 450 No travel sponsors +Gay Pride +Brazil Pride, Sao 14–16 June 20 No travel sponsors +Paulo +Christopher Street 23 June 400–500 Swissair +Day, Berlin Sabena +Lesbian and Gay 24 June 300 No travel sponsors +Pride, Paris announced +London Mardi 30 June 90 Virgin Atlantic +Gras Eurostar +Europride, Vienna 28–30 June 250 Cosmos Travel + + + + + An interesting final point is that only a small proportion of the vacations +offered specifically for gay people are for women; this may well change in the +future. + + +Female romance and sex tourists +That men travel in search of sex is a well-known and heavily studied +phenomenon. However, relatively little attention has been paid to women +who take vacations with similar motives. Yet this is a phenomenon seen in +a number of developing countries and in some Mediterranean +destinations. + In 1994, Eugenia Wickens published a paper on hedonistic tourism in +Greece. One of the segments she identified, in her study in the Halkidiki area, +were women she termed the ‘Shirley Valentines’ – after the title of a +contemporary film about such women. Wickens (1994) described the ‘Shirley +Valentines’ as follows: + + 115 +fAdventure Tourism + + + The ‘Shirley Valentines’ are women on a mono-gender holiday who + hope for romance and sexual adventure with a ‘Greek God’. This + particular ‘expectation of pleasure’ is based on the Greek male + stereotype, which has been perpetuated by newspapers and the film + Shirley Valentine. These ‘seekers of sexual adventure’ often date with + Greek waiters or other local men. Escape ‘from domesticity’, ‘from + family life’, plus a ‘break in the sun’ were identified by this type of + tourist as contributory factors in their selection of this holiday resort. + This type of tourist has also been observed in other Greek holiday + regions, including Rhodes and Crete (see Kousis, 1989). + + +For these women, their vacation is a personal, escapist adventure. Usually +no money changes hands in these situations, although gifts may be given to +the male lover. Wickens (1994) reported the views of one of her research +respondents, about why she enjoyed this type of vacation: + + + You are here to please yourself . . . As far as I can, I leave my + everyday life behind. When I’m in England, I’m fitting into an + appointed role of somebody’s wife, somebody’s secretary. Here, you + can relax, and rub off some of the sharp corners. You are not + restricted. Greeks are very tolerant of us . . . If you give yourself a + chance, you can find out things about yourself that you did not know + about before . . . I like sex but not with my husband . . . I come to + Greece for a bit of fun. + + +In 2001, Herold, Garcia and Demoya explored the long-recognized phe­ +nomenon of women who travel to the Caribbean – in this case the +Dominican Republic – and develop sexual relationships with local beach +boys. Often the opportunity for such relationships is a motivator for these +women to take such vacations. Herold et al. (2001) suggest that this +phenomenon could be seen as either romantic adventure tourism or sex +tourism. The beach boys, who are usually between 16 and 20 years old, +tend to take the initiative with the women, who are usually significantly +older – and are the willing recipients of the attention. As well as receiving +money for their services, the boys often hope that their foreign female +lovers will help them emigrate to a better life abroad. This clearly gives the +women great power within the relationship, and leads to suggestions that +they exploit their power to their own advantage. In general, this looks like +a form of sex tourism rather than a romantic adventure. + +116 +f The adventure tourism market + + + + The future of the market +In the final chapter of this book, we look forward and predict how adventure +tourism may develop in the future. However, at this stage it is important that +we say something about the probable future direction of the overall adventure +tourism market. + It seems likely that much of the current latent demand will turn into real +international adventure tourism trips in the future, including: + +� Those with an interest in particular activities who have not yet taken an + adventure tourism vacation +� Growing outbound tourism from countries that have not previously been + thought of as generators of international tourist trips, such as Russia, India, + and China + +We will also see other changes in the adventure tourism market in response to +social, economic and technological change, notably: + +� A growth in family adventure tourism +� More short-break adventure packages +� An increase in independent adventure travel. + +On the other hand we must recognize that the future of the adventure tourism +market is uncertain, and there are factors – from climate change to political +instability – that could threaten its continued growth. + Nevertheless, it seems likely that adventure tourism of all types will grow +steadily in the foreseeable future. + + + + + Summary +In this chapter we have seen how the global adventure tourism market is a +complex phenomenon, and that data are often difficult to find and interpret. +We have noted a number of ways in which the market can be segmented. It has +also been shown that, by and large, the non-physical adventure sector suffers +greatly from a lack of research and data, which is a real problem for tourism +planners. Finally, we have suggested that the adventure tourism market will +grow significantly and steadily in the future. + + 117 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the reasons why the global adventure tourism market appears to be + dominated by North America. +2 Critically evaluate the application of ‘traditional’ segmentation techniques + to the adventure tourism market. +3 Compare and contrast the motivators for gambling tourism and religious + tourism. +4 Select a country. For your chosen country you should try to produce a report + covering domestic, inbound and outbound adventure tourism in the country. + You should note the problems you experience in carrying out this project, + together with any elements of the task you were unable to complete. + + + + +118 +fPart +C + The supply side + +ff5 + Destinations and + venues + + + + Introduction + In this chapter, we will look at the places where + adventure tourism actually takes place – namely + the destinations and venues. Let us begin by + discussing the role of destinations. + + + Adventure tourism destinations + + The role of destinations in adventure + tourism + In many well established forms of tourism, such + as Mediterranean ‘sun, sand, and sea’ vacations, + one could often be forgiven for thinking that the + actual destination is of secondary importance to + many tourists. Providing the sun shines and the + sea is blue, most such tourists do not really mind + if they are in Albufeira or Rhodes, Palma Nova or + Agadir, providing the price is right! +fAdventure Tourism + + + However, in other types of tourism the destination is of prime importance +for the tourist. Adventure tourism is an excellent example of this latter form +of tourism. + In almost all varieties of adventure tourism the destination is the core of the +experience, giving a unique flavour to the experience. These destinations +provide the key attraction that motivates the tourist to take a trip in the first +place. For example: + +� Pilgrimages focus on destinations with major religious buildings and + shrines, such as Mecca, Jerusalem, and Rome +� Mountaineering trips tend to concentrate on the desire to conquer particular + peaks or explore certain mountain ranges, hence the popularity of + Chamonix (for the Mont Blanc massif) for example. + +However, destinations do not usually provide just the attractions desired by +the adventure tourist. Unless the trip is truly a wilderness experience, +destinations also provide the services the tourist requires – such as +accommodation, equipment, food and transport – since destinations often +serve as gateways for regions that may have only limited or non-existent +tourist services. + A gateway destination like this may serve a region of tens of thousands of +square kilometres, as in Alaska and Siberia. Often such settlements have an +airport or rail station, which is the only way in which tourists can arrive in the +region as a whole. + + +The geographical hierarchy of adventure tourism destinations +As with all types of tourism, there is a geographical hierarchy of adventure +tourism destinations (see Figure 5.1). + Different regions of the world are associated with particular types of +adventure tourism. In 2001 Millington put some of these associations into +words (see Table 5.1). + An individual country can include a wide variety of different types of +adventure tourism destinations. For example: + +� Thailand offers sex tourism in Bangkok, jungle adventure tourism + destinations, and religious retreat destinations +� The USA offers destinations that specialize in gambling tourism, rock- + climbing, white-water rafting, and wilderness adventures + +122 +f Destinations and venues + + +Table 5.1 Regions of the world associated with particular types of adventure +tourism (source: Millington, 2001) + + +Central and South America and Central and South America have become almost +the Caribbean synonymous with adventure travel and + ecotourism. Costa Rica has the Cloud Forests, + then there are the deep rainforests of the + Amazon basin, the Andes Mountains in Peru, + and the Atlantic coast in Brazil. Ecuador offers + the biodiversity of the Galapagos Islands, + Argentina houses the 6960-m (22 834-ft) Mount + Aconacagua, and Chile the Class V Rio + Futaleufu for hard-core white-water rafters. For + ancient civilizations there are the Mayan ruins + in the jungles of Guatemala, and Machu Picchu + in Peru. Most adventure activities in the + Caribbean revolve around the water, with scuba + diving, sailing and surfing being the most + popular activities. +Europe Despite being heavily populated and having a + well-developed infrastructure, Europe still + provides some of the best adventure travel + opportunities available world-wide. Ireland, + Scotland, England, Belgium and France offer + some of the world’s best hiking and biking, + with tours that traverse lush rolling countryside. + Germany, Switzerland, eastern France and + northern Italy are popular for skiing, hiking and + climbing in the Alps. Scandinavia is home to + mountains and fjords for a range of land- and + water-based activities, whilst Russia provides + adventure travellers with the Caucasus + Mountains and the Kola Peninsula. +Middle East Being at the centre of the Old World, in three + continents, the Middle East offers a rich cultural + as well as natural destination. Trekking by foot + or by camel is popular in the deserts of Iran and + Turkmenistan, whilst hiking and skiing are more + popular in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and + Tajikistan. At the southernmost point in Jordan, + as well as in Yemen and Oman, there is some of + the world’s best diving in the Red Sea and + Indian Ocean. Desert trekking opportunities are + also abundant in the region, especially in Oman, + the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. + + 123 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 5.1 Continued + + +Asia Asia offers some of the most unexplored masses + of land in the world. Mongolia has excellent + trekking opportunities through the Gobi Desert, + and China offers rivers and mountains with + excellent climbing opportunities on Mount + Songnisan and Mount Soraksan. The smaller + islands of Japan’s mainland are well known for + scuba diving and surfing. Wildlife safaris in + India provide scope for considerable game + viewing of, among others, tigers, elephants, + monkeys and pythons. Nepal not only has the + world’s highest peak, Mount Everest, but also + some of the best climbing and trekking in the + world on its lower slopes. Thailand, Malaysia + and Indonesia all offer a combined product of + wildlife watching and excellent seas for diving + and other water-based activities. +North America North America covers a massive area, and as a + result offers just about every option for the + adventure tourist. The USA has Alaska’s Mount + McKinley, the tropical waters of the Florida + Keys National Marine Sanctuary, opportunities + for kayaking on Main’s Island Trail, and biking + in Arizona’s Sonoran Desert. Canada’s variety + ranges from the temperate rainforests of + Vancouver Island to the snowy dogsled trials of + the Yukon to the padding options offered by the + diversity of Algonquin Provincial Park. +Antarctic The Antarctic is the last vast wilderness and the + most isolated continent on the planet, and in the + last decade it has been tourism rather than oil + drilling that has been the continent’s growth + industry. There are several options for travelling + to the Antarctic – all by ship – with most being + from South America, although there are options + from Australia. Great care is being taken not to + spoil the environment, and only a limited number + of people are allowed on to the shore at a time. + For those wanting to see the South Pole in greater + luxury, a Melbourne-based company is operating + twelve-hour flights from Australia over the South + Pole on a Qantas-chartered Boeing 747. + + + +124 +f Destinations and venues + + + + +Figure 5.1 The geographical hierarchy of adventure tourism destinations. + + + +Table 5.2 A selection of Venezuela’s National Parks (source: +www.think-venezuela.net, Travel and Tourism Intelligence, Country Reports, +November 4, 2001) + + +Name of park Size Attractions + (hectares) + + +Archipelogo Las Roques 221 120 Coral reefs, keys, beaches, swamps +Canaima 3 000 000 Savannas, forests, tepuis, waterfalls +Cerro Saroche 32 294 Arid lands +Ciénagas del Catatumbo 226 130 Swamps, flooded forests +Curva de Quebrada del Toro 4885 Caverns with underground rivers +Chorro El Indio 16 000 Humid rainforests +Guaramacal 21 491 Cloud forests, moors +Henri Pittier 107 800 Cloud forests, dry forests, beaches +Laguna de Tacarigua 39 100 Swamps, lagoon, beaches +Mochima 94 935 Beaches, reefs, islands +Parima-Tapirapec 3 900 000 Source of Orinoco, Amazon rainforest +Serrania La Neblina 1 360 000 Amazon forest +Sierra Nevada 276 446 Glaciers, moors, forests, lagoons +Turuépano 70 000 Swamps, channels, aquatic fauna + + + + 125 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Australia has places for diving, outback adventures and skiing +� Libya offers desert adventure destinations, mountain trekking adventures + and remote archaeological site destinations. + +Even in terms of a single type of adventure tourism, such as nature watching +in the wild, a country can offer a number of different types of destination. For +instance, Venezuela has a number of national parks that offer different types +of wildlife adventure (see Table 5.2). + + +Typologies of adventure tourism destinations +It is possible to clarify adventure tourism destinations in a number of ways: + +1 Traditional, long-established destinations vs modern destinations – the + latter are often the result of the development of a new adventure activity or + government tourism development policy +2 The geographical location of the destination (see Figure 5.2) +3 Destinations associated with particular types of activity (see Figure 5.3) +4 The seasonality of adventure tourism destinations (see in Figure 5.4) +5 Destinations that are wholly or solely based on adventure tourism vs those + destinations where other types of tourism are also important +6 Adventure tourism destinations with a predominantly domestic market vs + those destinations with a largely international market +7 Destinations where visiting them is an adventure in itself, due to climate, + political tension or the lack of infrastructure, vs destinations that are + comfortable to visit but offer facilities for adventure activities + + + + +Figure 5.2 The geographical location of destinations. + +126 +f Destinations and venues + + + + +Figure 5.3 Types of activities. + + + + +Figure 5.4 Seasonality of adventure tourism destinations. + + + +8 Destinations that actively encourage adventure tourism vs those destina­ + tions that do not encourage adventure tourism but attract adventure tourists + anyway +9 Destinations where the whole area offers adventure tourism opportunities + vs those destinations where the adventure activities are restricted to + individual, single unit venues. + + + Adventure tourism venues +Venues are the individual sites or units, within destinations, that offer facilities +and/or services for adventure tourism. Adventure tourism venues can be +classified in several ways (see Figure 5.5). + + 127 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 5.5 Typologies of adventure tourism venues. + + + + +The diversity of venues +The diversity of adventure tourism is reflected in the variety of venues around +the world that provide facilities and services for adventure tourists. As well as +natural sites there are a plethora of different types of man-made venues for +different forms of adventure tourism, as can be seen from the following +examples based on the promotional material issued by the venues in question. + +128 +f Destinations and venues + + +Adventure sports, Carnkie, Redruth, Cornwall, UK + + Adventure Sports is a UK-based activity centre + Adventure holidays, active holidays, outdoor holidays, + adventure sports holidays + It provides the following outdoor pursuits + Surfing, Paragliding, Windsurfing, Sailing + Power boating, Waterskiing, Jetskiing, Wakeboarding + Climbing, Abseiling, Mountain Biking + Coastal Safaris, Snorkelling and Orienteering + In the following ways + 5- and 7-day multi-activity residential holidays + Weekend and short activity breaks + Stag and Hen Adventure weekends + Corporate Weekends + Specialist Paragliding Training + Specialist Powerboat & Jetski Training + for the following + Singles, couples, groups + Families with older children + Stags, Hens and Corporate groups + No previous experience + + + Adventure Sports provides the ultimate in multi-activity holidays for + adults, set in beautiful Cornwall amongst Europe’s most spectacular + beaches. Our holidays are fun, challenging and safe with an opportunity + to meet like-minded adventurous people. No previous experience is + necessary and singles or groups are welcome. We offer an unrivalled + range of quality activities which include water-skiing, surfing, paraglid­ + ing, windsurfing, sailing, climbing, abseiling, jetskiing, power boating, + wakeboarding, coastal safaris, snorkelling, mountain biking, coasteering + and orienteering plus a range of optional extras such as horse riding and + quadbiking. Established in 1982 the centre is run by qualified and + extremely experienced outdoor pursuits instructors, not businessmen or + hoteliers. Our staff are talented athletes with a level of expertise that + ensures you are in good hands. Accommodation is basic but comfortable + + 129 +fAdventure Tourism + + + in a small rural complex with a choice of self-catering farmhouse rooms, + chalet bunkrooms or camping, sharing bathroom, showers and toilets. + Laundry and drying facilities are available along with TV/briefing room + and recreation area. All rooms are equipped for cooking light meals but + eating out at inexpensive pubs and restaurants is allowed for in our low + price, and is part of our lively evening social programme which includes + watching live rock and jazz bands, night clubs, ten-pin bowling, indoor + go-karting and barbecues. All evening activities are optional but great fun + with the group. A variety of good food is available locally, including + lunch at the resorts. Accommodation, tuition and equipment including + wetsuits are all part of the package, with free transport daily to resorts + and from train or bus terminals. No hidden extras. + (Source: Company Website) + + +Planula, ‘Diver’s Retreat’, New South Wales, Australia + We specialize in diving/accommodation packages with a difference, + offering more than your average divers’ bunk bed lodge. Check out our + rates for package deals. Planula Divers Retreat is equipped with + everything a diver needs and more: + + � gear washing and drying areas + � safe equipment storage + � extensive reference library with identification books and literature on + marine biology, diving locations and more + � underwater photo cameras for hire + � gear hire available + � Tim can go out diving with you and video your dive, giving you an + everlasting memory of Byron Bay. + (Source: Company Website) + + +The Arctic Icebreaker Sampo, Finland + An Arctic Ice Adventure + The Sampo, the world’s only tourist icebreaker, operates on the northern + Gulf of Bothnia out of Kemi in Finnish Lapland. After serving for thirty + years as an icebreaker in Arctic waters, the vessel has been given a new, + more fascinating task – to act as a base for ice adventurers. + The Sampo sails from the middle of December to the end of April. The + trips last four hours. For scheduled sailings, it’s worthwhile making a + +130 +f Destinations and venues + + + reservation well in advance. We recommend these cruises both for + individual travellers and for groups. + The ship can also be booked entirely for private use. All charter trips are + conducted to a programme selected by the customer, and prepared + package tours are also offered. + The Sampo operates as a restaurant during the summer and can also be + booked for conferences. + Designed for extreme conditions, the ruggedly simple vessel conceals + quite a surprise within it. Ornamented with hardwood and brass, the cosy + salons and cabins sweep you into an authentic maritime atmosphere even + as you sit in the harbour. + + Technical information + � length 75 m, width 17.4 m + + � height of bridge above sea level 14 m + + � weight 3540 tonnes, draught 7 m + + � engine power 8800 hp + + � speed in open water, 16 knots + + � speed in 50-cm solid ice, 8 knots + + � icebreaking capability, 70–120 cm solid ice + + � passenger capacity, 150 people + + � crew, 16 people + + � built in 1961. + + + Service facilities + � Captain’s Saloon, seats 20 + + � Icebreaker Bar, seats 80 + + � Arctic Restaurant, seats 80 + + � Lapponia Shop, souvenirs. + + (Source: Company Website) + + +Foxwoods Resort Casino, New England, USA + In 2000, Foxwoods Resort Casino complex consisted of five casinos with + over 300 000 square feet of gaming space, 5842 slot machines, 370 + gaming tables, a 3000-seat high stakes bingo parlor with $1 million + jackpots, a 200-seat Sportsbook, a keno lounge and the popular pull- + tabs. Table games included Baccarat, min-Baccarat, Big Six wheels, + + 131 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Blackjack, Caribbean Stud Poker, Craps, Pai Gow, Pai Gow Tiles, Red + Dog, Roulette and a number of novelty games. One of the casinos is non­ + smoking. + Run by the Mashantucket Pequot Tribe, the Pequot made an agreement + with the state to only allow one other casino operation in the state, the + Mohegan Sun in Uncasville. Both casinos pay the State of Connecticut + twenty percent of their slot machine profits, which totaled over three- + hundred eighteen million dollars the previous fiscal year. + The Foxwood complex had four hotels in 2000, the Grand Pequot Tower + with 800 guest rooms and suites; Great Cedar Hotel with 312 rooms and + suites, a health spa and heated pool; Two Trees Inn with 280 rooms and + suites, a pool and fitness room; the Mystic Hilton. Randall’s Ordinary is + an 18th century-style Inn in North Stonington, CT for weddings. + In total there were, in 2000, 23 shopping areas, 24 food and beverage + outlets, a Cinedrome 360 theatre, 85 000 square-foot Mashantucket + Pequot museum, a Fox Grand Theatre with Las Vegas style enter­ + tainment, a Turbo Ride, Fox video Arcade, gift shops, with over 1400 + rooms, suites and villas ranging in price from $140 000 to $525 000. + Food prices are high at the Foxwoods. Expect a simple snack in the food + court for two to run between $12 and $15. A full meal without extras $30 + to $70 per couple. You won’t find the bargains Las Vegas or Atlantic City + offers guests. + (Source: Company Website) + + +Hedonism II, Jamaica + Hedonism II is an all-inclusive resort catering to both singles and couples + over age 18. Included: accommodation, all meals and snacks, wine with + lunch and dinner, unlimited premium brand bar drinks at any of 6 bars + (bar service available 19 hours per day), all land and watersports, and + nightly entertainment. + There are 280 bedrooms, all air-conditioned with private bath and + shower. Rooms have either 2 twin beds or 1 king-sized bed. Rooms can + be booked on a shared basis. This means that a guest travelling alone + automatically shares with someone of the same sex. A guaranteed single + rate is available. + Activities (includes the use of all sports equipment and facilities with + instruction) + +132 +f Destinations and venues + + +� Watersports: sunfish sailing, water-skiing, snorkeling, glass-bottom + boat rides, windsurfing school, kayaks, scuba diving. For scuba diving + one has to be certified; if not, a resort scuba course is available. +� Landsports: badminton, shuffleboard, basketball, volleyball, table + tennis, bicycles, squash (2 air-conditioned courts), clinics daily, + tournaments on Wednesdays. +� Tennis: 6 tennis courts, lit for night play, with resident pros. Clinics + twice daily. Tournaments on Tuesday and Thursdays. +� Beach/pools/jacuzzis: private beach which is divided into two sections, + of which one is for nude bathing with a nude Jacuzzi and pool. In + addition, a large freshwater swimming pool with spacious sundeck and + Jacuzzi is situated close to the main entertainment area. +� Fitness centre: stationary bicycles, stair climbing machine and a + rower, along with 11 piece Nautilus equipment and complete weight + room with instructor. Aerobic classes 5 times per week. +� Circus workshop: our exciting circus workshop features flying and + swinging trapeze, trampoline clinics, juggling, tightrope walking, + unicycle, and bicycle balancing acts. Available Sunday to Friday. + +Special activities +Reggae dance classes 3 times per week. Lunchtime Spin each day +(except Tuesday), Olympic Day (Tuesday), and Island Picnic (Wednes­ +days), Pyjama Party (Tuesday nights), Toga Party (Thursdays), Disco +Welcome Party (Sundays), Jamaica Day (Friday). Toga tying and sumo +wrestling (Thursday), Karaoke (Monday and Tuesday). +Entertainment +Monday Reggae Dance Demo and Competition +Tuesday Class of the Titans, Pyjama Party +Wednesday Reggae Beach Party, Vegas Night +Thursday Toga Party: Guest/Staff Talent Show +Friday Beach Party with Live Band, Fun and Games, Circus + Show +Saturday Cabaret Show +Sunday Oldies Night, Retro Cabaret Dance + +Weddings +The hotel offers complimentary weddings, which include wedding cake, +champagne, marriage license, non-denominational marriage officer and +flowers. Witnesses are provided on request. All the necessary paperwork + + 133 +fAdventure Tourism + + + is handled by the resort. One working week’s notice is required to + complete the formalities. You are required to be in Jamaica 48 hours + before the ceremony can be performed. + (Source: Company and Customer Websites) + +Franciscan Renewal Center, Scottsdale, USA + The Franciscan Renewal Center is located only minutes from Sky Harbor + International Airport. We offer 23 acres of a lush desert oasis set at the + base of Camelback Mountain in the heart of the Scottsdale/Paradise + Valley resort district. As a retreat house for sponsored and private + retreats, we offer 56 sleeping rooms, each with a private bath. For non­ + profit conferences, we offer 14 meeting rooms and A/V services. + For the spiritual reflection of our guests, the chapel and Meditation + Chapel are open daily with scheduled masses. For the physical relaxation + of our guests, we offer a therapy pool, swimming pool, and many + walking paths. We have a very active and inspiring campus. If you would + like to join us for one of our many weekend retreats, a private retreat, our + classes and workshops or for a conference, please contact us for further + information and reservations. + (Source: Company and Specialist Websites) + + + Summary +In this chapter we have looked at the characteristics and scope of adventure +tourism destinations and venues, noting their diversity. There are clearly links +between destinations and venues, as the latter exist within the former. +However, if a venue grows and develops ancillary services it may develop into +a mini destination in its own right. + Destinations and venues are crucial because they are the places or sites +where adventure tourism takes place. However, it is now time for us to look +at the organizations that make up the adventure tourism industry. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the role that destinations play in adventure tourism. +2 Critically evaluate the typologies of adventure tourism destinations offered + in Figures 5.2, 5.3 5.4. +3 Using examples, compare and contrast the role of venues and destinations + in adventure tourism. +4 Select an adventure tourism venue and analyse its products and markets. + +134 +f6 +The adventure tourism + industry + + + + + Introduction + Adventure tourism is a complex industry with a + wide variety of elements and suppliers. Some of + these suppliers are also part of the mainstream + tourism industry, such as accommodation opera­ + tors, while others are specific to adventure + tourism, like equipment manufacturers. The + structure of the adventure tourism industry is + illustrated in Figure 6.1. + It is also possible, as we will now see, to look + at the structure of the industry in several other + ways. + + + The structure of the industry + A wide range of suppliers meets the demand for + adventure tourism, and these can be looked at in + different ways as in Figure 6.2. +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 6.1 The structure of the adventure tourism industry. + + + + Clearly this is a gross over-simplification. For example: + +1 Some types of suppliers, such as equipment supplies and tour operators, can + be found in both the generation zone and the destination zone. +2 Some types of suppliers can be sub-divided into many different categories. + For example, accommodation for adventure tourists could encompass: + � Sleeping in the open in the wilderness where no permission is required, + + no equipment is needed, and no fee is paid for the accommodation + � Camping in the wilderness, which is free, and camping on owned land + where a fee is payable + � Building a shelter in the wilderness or on owned land where a ‘rental + price’ for the land may or may not be payable + � Making use of existing buildings or shelters that are either derelict or are + usually used for a different purpose + � Using accommodation that has been tailor-made for adventure tourists, + such as mountain refuge huts + +136 +f The adventure tourism industry + + + + +Figure 6.2 Three dimensions of the supply side of adventure tourism. + + + � Combined transport and accommodation, such as long-distance sailing + races where competitors sleep on board their boat + � Novel indigenous forms of accommodation, such as rorbus, yurts, and + + ice caves + � Shared use of destination accommodation that is also used by other + + leisure and/or business tourists + � The use of both serviced and self-catering accommodation + � The use of luxury accommodation so that the adventure is a daytime + activity only, while the nights mean pampering, warmth, and safety. +3 Figure 6.2 has clearly not distinguished between suppliers who are in the + private, public and voluntary sectors. As we will see in the chapter on + marketing, this distinction has a great influence on the nature of products, + pricing levels, and promotional messages. Public and voluntary bodies + often offer basic level products with social objectives such as education or + conservation, while private sector suppliers tend to focus on generating + profits and satisfying the tastes of their clients with a higher-level + product. + + 137 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Let us now look at each of the elements of the industry identified in + Figure 6.1 in a little more detail. + +Adventure tour operators +The growth of adventure tourism has been fuelled by the activities of specialist +tour operators who focus on adventure tourism. Generally these tour operators +are small-scale and specialize in particular types of activity or region of the +world. Where larger corporations have ‘dipped their toes’ in the adventure +tourism sector, they have often been unsuccessful and have withdrawn. + Millington (2001) provided data on a number of the world’s major +adventure tourism tour operators: + +� Explore Worldwide (UK) was owned by its founders until it was bought by + the mainstream tour operator, the Holidaybreak Group, in 2000. In 2001 the + operator sold around 22 000 packages, and made £1.3 million profit + between September 2000 and March 2001. Explore offers a wide range of + activities in many different regions of the world. +� Exodus (UK) is a close competitor of Explore Worldwide, and carries + around 12 000 passengers a year. The company started in 1974 with tours + to Afghanistan, a destination that was very trendy with young travellers in + the 1970s. +� Dragoman (UK) has been in business for a quarter of a century, and has a + strong reputation for working with local communities. +� Abercrombie and Kent (UK) was founded in 1962, and is renowned for + offering packages at the luxury end of the adventure travel market. + Therefore many of its packages are not true ‘adventure experiences’, and + only a proportion of its 180 000 clients per year can be truly seen as + adventure tourists. A new offshot, A & K Active, focuses more on activity + holidays than the traditional Abercrombie and Kent vacation, which tends + to be more about sightseeing. +� Trek America (USA), which is now 30 years old, focuses on selling + adventure packages in the USA, Canada and Mexico to Americans and + foreigners. Its on-line brochure site enjoys around 4 million hits per annum. +� Lindblad Travel (USA) has been around since 1958, and concentrates on + taking Americans for adventures on other continents. Now it even owns its + own ships for adventure cruising. +� Mountain Travel Sobek (USA) is a result of a merger in 1991 between + Mountain Travel (mountain expedition specialists) and Sobek (a river- + rafting company). Since this merger, the company has sought to boost its + market appeal. + +138 +f The adventure tourism industr y + + +� Geographic Expeditions (USA), set up in 1983, concentrates on small-scale + special interest vacations to adventurous destinations, and has around 4500 + clients every year. +� Canadian Mountain Holidays (Canada) concentrates on vacations to very + remote, little visited places, but with an emphasis on luxury. The company + was founded in 1979 and carries about 4000 passengers each year. It claims + to have invented heli-skiing, and now has a range of products aimed at + families. +� Wikinger Reisen (Germany) is more than 30 years old, and now services + some 16 000 clients per annum and employs 200 staff. +� DAV Summit Club (Germany) focuses on walking and climbing holidays + all over the world. +� Terres d’Adventure (France) carries around 17 000 passengers per annum, + and focuses on solo adventure and family adventure. +� Explorator (France) focuses on four-wheel drive vehicle tours and services + around 4000 (generally high income) clients each year. + This survey illustrates the diversity of tour operators in adventure tourism, +but they all share the characteristic that they are small, niche-market +operators. They are therefore quite weak in relation to larger operators, and +hence it is not surprising that many small operators are forming strategic +alliances to give them more power in the marketplace. For example, Exodus +in the UK has teamed up with Peregrine Adventures and Geckos to form ‘This +Amazing Planet’, which focuses on environmentally responsible tourism. +Each company has different target markets, but they are involved in joint +marketing activities. + Most adventure trips are not ‘hard’ vacations but are relatively ‘soft’, in +small groups. Two examples are given here from the UK-based company +Sundowners’ 2001 brochure. + + + KARAKORAM & KASHGAR + 21 Days, £1960 Twin Share + Pakistan and China + From the North West Frontier Province to the great mountain + regions of northern Pakistan, the Hindu Kush, Karakoram and Pamir + ranges collide to produce some of the world’s most breathtaking + scenery. + Hidden valleys and high passes lead the way through Chirtal, Chilgit + and Hunza to the Khunjerab pass and China’s Xinjian + + 139 +fAdventure Tourism + + + province. This was the way of the silk caravans on their journey from + Xian to Kashmir and in more recent history the lands where the + rivalries for territory between Britain and Russia became known as + the ‘Great Game’. To travel this region independently is to follow in + the footsteps of Silk Road merchants, spies, geographers and + eccentrics who were the pioneers of travel to this incredible land. A + truly remarkable travel experience. + + Itinerary Guideline + Day 1 Islamabad + + Pakistan’s capital is a modern planned city + + Day 2 Taxila to Peshawar + + Visit the ruined city of Taxila en route to the frontier town of + + Peshawar + + Day 3 Peshawar + The bazaar reflects Peshawar’s location as gateway to the Khyber + Pass; opium and hashish, arms and ammunitions vie for space + alongside carpets and spices, food and clothing + Days 4–6 North West Frontier Province + North to the Swat valley, over the Lowari pass (3118 m) to Chitral + and visit the Kafir people of the Kalash valleys + Days 7–9 to Gillgit + Through the spectacular Hindu Raj mountains and over the Shandur + Pass (3734 m) to Gilgit + Days 10–12 To Hunza + Walk in the Hunza valley with magnificent views of Rakaposhi + (7788 m) and the surrounding peaks and glaciers before continuing + to Sust + Days 13 & 14 Khunjerab Pass to Kashgar + Over the Khunjerab pass (4730 m) to China and the old fortress town + of Tashkurgan and on to the legendary Silk Road market town of + Kashgar + Days 15 & 16 Kashgar + The Sunday market is not to be missed as Uighar, Tadjik and Kyrgyz + gather to buy, sell and exchange in an age-old tradition + Days 17 & 18 Across the Karakoram + + Return to Pakistan and the Hunza valley + + +140 +f The adventure tourism industry + + +Days 19–21 Karakoram highway +Down the Karakoram highway via Chilas and Besham to Islamabad + +Details +Commences – Daily from Islamabad [Saturday recommended] +Travel by – Four-wheel drive jeep, local and chartered vehicle +Stay in – Hotels and guesthouses 18 nights, camping 2 nights +Meals – Included when camping from lunch day 7 to lunch + day 9 +Grade – Adventurous +Notes – Some hard travelling and high passes ––expect an + outstanding adventure. Travelling season May to + October. Supplements for single travellers £1440 +Dossier – Available on request + + + + +IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF ALEXANDER +26 Days, £1990 +Conquer Asia on this truly epic journey. Follow in the footsteps of +Alexander the Great and Marco Polo from the fertile Indus Valley, +cradle of civilization, across the vast and inhospitable deserts of +Central Asia, through ancient Persia to the Bosphorous – gateway to +Europe. Between lies a world of lost civilizations, amazing +architecture and mysterious and fascinating people. +History unfolds as you follow this ancient route of trade and +conquest, revealing the rise and fall of monumental empires and the +legendary heroes, ancient and modern, who ventured into this land of +fable suspended between East and West. + +Your Itinerary +Days 1 & 2 – Arrive Lahore. Enjoy a full day sightseeing, including +Badshahi mosque. Lahore fort, Shalimar gardens and the old city. 3 +Drive to Multan, known as the ‘city of saints’, via one of the Indus +valley’s most important ancient cities, Harappa. Explore the +fascinating ruins dating from 3500 BC. 4 A morning tour of Multan +includes the Shah Tukne-Alam tomb and Agahi bazaar, one of the +most colourful in Pakistan and full of pottery and handicrafts. Then +to Uchh, famous for the beautiful tombs of the Sufi saints. Then to + + 141 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Bahawalpur. 5 Drive to Sukkur on the banks of the Indus river. 6 & + 7 Morning boat ride on the Indus before departing for the ruins of + Mohenjodaro, one of the Indus valley’s earliest civilizations. Then + through the spectacular Bolan pass to Quetta. 8 & 9 Across the + remote Baluchiastan desert to Iran. 10 To Bam, where we explore + the beautifully preserved citadel. 11 To Kerman, carpet capital of the + world. 12 & 13 To the cultural centre of ancient Persia, Shiraz. We + visit the massive stone ruins of Darius the Great’s Persepolis. 14 & + 15 To the majestic city of Isfahan, with the greatest concentration of + Islamic monuments in the country. 16 & 17 To the capital Tehran + and on to Tabriz. 18 & 19 To Turkey, passing Mt Ararat, fabled + resting place of Noah’s Ark. Visit the spectacular Isak Pasa Sarayi + fortress before heading across eastern Anatolia to Erzurum. 20–23 + North to the Black Sea with time to explore the quaint coastal towns + and beaches before driving to the capital Ankara. 24–26 To + Istanbul, Turkey’s most exciting and interesting city. Visit the + infamous Blue Mosque and old town before our epic journey + concludes at this meeting point of East and West. + Details + Escorted – Maximum Group size: 15 + Travel by – Chartered and local vehicles, some sightseeing by foot + and boat + Stay in – Budget hotels/guesthouses + Meals – Not included + You will experience – An epic journey that links Asia with Europe, + revealing the rich cultures and history of Pakistan, + Iran and Turkey little seen by the western traveller + Grade – Adventurous + Notes – Although this journey is scheduled in the most + favourable season, temperatures can still be high + during the day and it can be cold overnight, + particularly in the desert regions. The distance covered + should not be underestimated – there are some long + travelling days. Combines with ‘Oases of the Silk Road’ + Dossier – Available on request. + + +Adventure ground handlers +Tour operators are the companies in the country from which the tourist travels, +which organize the whole package. Within destinations, there are ground + +142 +f The adventure tourism industry + + +handlers. These are the companies that organize activities within the +destination, either on behalf of the tour operators or for independent travellers. +These ground handlers usually specialize in particular activities. They are +important because they determine the quality of the adventure experience, as +they are the actual people who offer the activities to the tourists on a face-to- +face basis. Some idea of the nature and scope of ground handlers is illustrated +in the following examples: + +� Salty’s in Bundaberg (Queensland), a company that runs diving trips on the + Great Barrier Reef +� Gecko Canoe Tours, which offers three- to six-day canal trips from + Kalterine in the Nitmiluh National Park +� Impacto Turismo, which runs eco-tours in the Pantanal wetlands region of + Brazil +� Amazon’s Indian Turismo, which is run by Amazonian Indians and offers + basic jungle-trekking and wildlife trips in Brazilian Amazonia +� Svalbard Polar Travel of Norway, which offers a five-day adventure cruise + around Svalbard involving landings in isolated locations +� Idide Ride Sled Dog Tours, which offers short day sled tours in the Kenai + Peninsular of Alaska +� Tien Shan Travel in Bishbek, which offers heli-skiing trips, as well as + trekking, in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan +� Small plane sightseeing tours of glaciers on Alaska, at $90–$140 dollars + per person, offered by several local ground handlers. + +The ground handlers play a vital role in adventure travel in that, as the +organizers of the adventure activities, they are primarily responsible for the +safety of travellers. + + +Travel agents +Most adventure tourism tour operators sell their products directly to clients +without the need for intermediaries. However, several travel agencies +specialize in selling adventure packages or making travel arrangements for +individual adventure travellers and backpackers. + Trailfinders (UK), for example, was founded in 1970 and now makes travel +arrangements for around 800 000 people per annum. It accounts for 20 per +cent of all British leisure travellers to Australia. The company also works with +specialist tour operators such as Exodus, Trek America, Journey Latin +America, Guerba, Dragoman Encounter, Contiki, and the Imaginative +Traveller (Millington, 2001). + + 143 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Equipment suppliers +Much adventure tourism is based on activities that require specialist equipment. +This in turn creates a need for equipment manufacturers, retailers and hire +companies. Some of this equipment (such as micro-light aircraft) costs +thousands of pounds, while other items cost just a few pounds. Equipment +includes the hardware people need to undertake an activity as well as the +specialist clothing required to take part in the activity. Major considerations in +relation to the purchase of equipment include safety and fashionability. + Manufacturers and retailers of equipment and clothing advertise heavily in +the adventure travel magazines. The range of equipment suppliers involved in +adventure tourism is illustrated by the contents of a randomly selected issue +of Adventure Travel Outdoors magazine from 2001. This magazine contained +the following: +� Fifteen advertisements for equipment manufacturers +� Twenty-four advertisements for equipment retailers +� Seven advertisements for specialist clothing +� Thirteen reviews of new pieces of equipment +� Eight advertisements for services offered to adventure tourists. +The scope of equipment in adventure tourism is shown by the following +selection of types of equipment, clothing or service advertised in the same +issue of Adventure Travel Outdoors: +� Blister cream � Knives +� Duvets � Rucksacks +� Expedition packs � Torches +� Guidebooks � Watches +� Food � Waterproof clothing +� Gaiters � Maps +� Insect repellent � Tents +� Insurance +Equipment manufacturing and retailing tends to take place in the tourists’ +home country. However, many adventure travellers rely on hiring equipment +and clothing in their destinations. This is particularly the case where: +� Tourists decide to take part in activities that they did not envisage + participating in when they planned their vacation +� Tourists participate in a new activity while on vacation +� The cost of transporting the tourists’ own gear and clothing is prohibitive +� Local conditions demand specialist equipment that is designed specifically + for the locality. + +144 +f The adventure tourism industry + + +Some idea of rental charges is given in the following examples taken from the +USA in 2000 (prices are in US dollars): + +� Bike hire in Alaska – $20 per day +� Kayak rental in Alaska – $50 per day for a single +� Cross-country skis – $20 per day +� Wetsuits and surfboards – $30 per day +� Bear-resistant food containers, in national parks – free from the park + authorities. + + +Accommodation +Adventure tourists require sleeping accommodation, but often it is very +different from that used by mainstream tourists. The most popular forms of +accommodation for adventure tourists are: + +� Sleeping rough, in the open +� Camping +� Youth and other hostels +� Mountain huts and refuges. + +Much of this accommodation is either free or is offered at very low cost by +non-profit-making organizations. + Some adventure tourists like to stay with local people, in everything from +longhouses in Borneo to bed-and-breakfast in Alaska. Here the price paid is a +‘commercial’ rate, but it is paid to private individual or families and not to +commercial operations. + Often the form of accommodation is part of the actual adventure +experience, but sometimes the accommodation is the core of the adventure. +This category may include ice-hotels or igloos in the Arctic North of +Scandinavia and North America, or the ‘tree hotels’ in several jungle regions +of the world. + At the higher end of the adventure market there are those who want to sleep +in luxurious or at least comfortable accommodation, and then be transported +to the adventure each day. + + +Transport +The transport needs of adventure tourists are of two kinds; first to the +destination, and then within the destination. Because of the remoteness of + + 145 +fAdventure Tourism + + +many adventure tourism destinations, travel to them is often a complex +process involving several flights, bus journeys or slow train journeys. + Furthermore, the riskiness of the journey to the destination can be part of +the adventure itself, providing stories for the traveller to recount in the years +to come. These risks can involve old aircraft, bad weather, dangerous terrain, +or the threat of terrorist action. + Once at the destination a wide variety of modes of transport are utilized +including: + +� Walking +� Cross-country skiing +� Aircraft and helicopters +� Cycling +� Horse, camel and donkey riding +� Hire cars +� Commercial lorries +� Buses and coaches +� Trains +� Canoes, boats and ferries. + +One particular way of travelling is hitching – a way of moving around that is +an adventure in itself. There are risks of being attacked or of simply not +getting a lift. Hitching is viewed as a particularly adventurous or risky activity +for lone women travellers. + Finally, sometimes the act of travelling is in itself the adventure. This is true +of great rail journeys such as the Trans-Siberian Express or the Orient +Express, together with seaplane flights and trips on ice-breaking ships. + + +Media +The adventure tourism media consist of four major elements: + +1 Guide books. Adventure tourists have had an increasingly large choice of + guide books in recent years to help them plan their activities. Some focus + on particular types of activity, such as skiing or wildlife watching, but the + most popular and influential guide books are those produced for whole + countries – such as those published by Lonely Planet, Let’s Go, and Rough + Guide. These books particularly influence the growing market of independ­ + ent adventure travellers and backpackers. Their influence is reinforced by + +146 +f The adventure tourism industry + + + the websites they offer. These books and websites are often the only major + source of information about a country for a traveller, so they have a great + responsibility in terms of where tourists go and how they will behave. +2 Travel writing. Travel writing, particularly in relation to adventure tourism, + has boomed in recent years and now takes up many shelves in large + bookshops around the world. Traditionally such writing focused on + expeditions to remote and dangerous places. Today, however, adventure + travel writing covers a wider variety of tourism experiences, notably: + � The explorations of solo female travellers like Dervla Murphy + � Visits to war zones and areas where there is a major terrorist threat + � The travels of disabled people + + � Personal spiritual or emotional travel experiences + � Sexual and romantic adventures while on vacation. + + Later in the book the reader will find a short case study which focuses + specifically on adventure travel writing. +3 Specialist magazines. Specialist adventure travel magazines have grown in + number dramatically in recent years, particularly in the so-called developed + world. Some focus on particular adventures, such as gliding or mountain­ + eering, while others focus on destinations. Such magazines are a key + influence on the positive decisions of adventure travellers in terms of both + destinations and equipment. A case study of two UK-based adventure travel + magazines is to be found later in this book. +4 Television adventure travel programmes. Television – terrestrial and + satellite – has taken to adventure travel and has realized that it makes + attractive television. If an adventure activity or destination is featured in a + television programme, it will stimulate demand. Television has also started + to play a role in organizing some experiments in adventure travel – for + example, in 2000 a production company produced a top-rating show based + on putting a selection of ordinary people on an isolated Scottish island as + ‘castaways’. Likewise, many programmes are now being made about + ordinary people being sent into the wilderness with the aim of adapting to + their surroundings and ‘surviving’. + +All of the media outlined here share responsibility for the results of their +activities, which may cause problems in terms of achieving sustainable +adventure tourism by: + +� Raising the profile of, and stimulating people’s desire to visit, fragile, + remote environments +� Encouraging behaviour that is not sensitive to the environment or host + community, e.g. scuba diving + + 147 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Photography, and four-wheel driving +� Failing to give travellers information to allow them to be sensitive + tourists. + + + Voluntary organizations +Most of the adventure tourism industry is commercial and is profit-oriented. +However, the voluntary sector plays a significant role in the industry in +several ways; for example: + +� There are activity centres and mountain holidays and refuges that are run + by voluntary, non profit-making bodies +� Professional bodies that are wholly or largely voluntary sector, such as the + British Mountaineering Council, often regulate adventure activities and/or + develop codes of conduct for participants +� It provides voluntary labour such as instructors and group leaders. + + + Venues +While most adventure tourism is outdoors based, some of it is based in or on +venues. This subject is dealt with in further detail in Chapter 5, but venues +include: + +� Outdoor activity centres +� Facilities such as gliding and flying clubs and diving centres +� Artificial climbing walls. + +New venues can help put places on the map as adventure tourism +destinations. + + + Destinations +Destinations for adventure tourism are discussed in detail in Chapter 5. +Suffice it to say at this stage that destinations are crucial to adventure tourism. +Sometimes the destination is the core of the experience because of its +landscape or climate, while at other times it is an incidental background to the +activities. In any event, it is the place where tourists enjoy their adventure +tourism experience. + It is now an appropriate time for us to look at the nature of entrepreneurship +in adventure tourism – a sector where the small business dominates. + +148 +f The adventure tourism industry + + + + Entrepreneurship in adventure tourism +Adventure tourism, as we have seen, is an ‘industry’ dominated by small and +medium-sized enterprises and the entrepreneurial flair of individuals. + Any study of businesses in the sector reveals the existence of a certain type +of enterprise, as shown in Figure 6.3. + + + + +Figure 6.3 The evolution of small enterprises in adventure tourism. + + 149 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Of course many enterprises do not follow this pattern, for they never become +established and fail. However, enterprises like those described in Figure 6.3 +can be seen throughout adventure tourism. + These enterprises also give lie to the capitalist theory that entrepreneurs will +always seek to maximize profits. Many entrepreneurs in this sector clearly do +not try to make as much money as possible, but instead endeavour to achieve +a high quality, balanced lifestyle that provides enough money to allow them +and their families to live comfortably while giving them enough free time to +enjoy leisure activities or time with their family. This approach to +entrepreneurship seems to be growing in popularity in today’s world, and +adventure tourism offers some excellent real world examples. + Clearly this phenomenon is not unique to adventure tourism; it is also being +seen elsewhere, such as in the small hotel sector and in other industries such +as information technology. + An interesting final point is that the very act of setting up a new enterprise, +of becoming an entrepreneur, is in itself an adventure – a step into the +unknown! + + + The non-physical adventure sector +Understandably we have focused on physical adventure, which is the heart of +the adventure tourism industry. However, spiritual, intellectual and emotional +adventure tourism have their own infrastructure or suppliers – for example: + +� Spiritual adventures – monasteries and religious retreat communities +� Gambling – casinos +� Hedonism – night clubs. + +At the same time they also make use of transport and have their own specialist +media. + + + Human resources in adventure tourism +Adventure tourism is a service industry where the human resources that staff +the industry are of great importance. The safety and enjoyment of adventure +tourists is often dependent on the quality of people such as tour leaders, guides +and instructors. There are many technical qualifications and professional +bodies that regulate the quality of such staff, but there is still a lack of formal +education and training for those involved in the management of adventure +tourism. + +150 +f The adventure tourism industry + + + Volunteers also play a significant role in staffing the adventure tourism +industry. It is, of course, more difficult to manage and control the activities of +volunteers, but they are an indispensable resource for many adventure tourism +organizations. + + + Summary +In this chapter we have seen that the adventure tourism industry is complex +and multi-faceted. It has been noted that adventure tourism uses elements of +the mainstream tourism industry as well as having its own specialist suppliers. +We have also recognized that the bulk of the industry is dominated by small +enterprises. It is now time for us to move on to look at how adventure tourism +is marketed. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Compare and contrast the structure of the adventure tourism industry with + that of the mass market package tourism and business tourism sectors. +2 Choose several adventure tourism tour operators and see if they conform to + the model offered in Figure 6.3. +3 Discuss the implications of the growing influence of the media on the + adventure tourism market. +4 Discuss the role of voluntary sector organizations in adventure tourism. + + + + + 151 +ffPart +D + The management of + adventure tourism + +ff7 + Marketing + + + + + + Introduction + The complexity of adventure tourism as a + phenomenon, which we have noted throughout + the book, is reflected in the nature of marketing + within the sector. Some of the intricacies of + adventure tourism marketing are identified in + Figure 7.1, and we will look at each of these in a + little detail. + + + Complexities of marketing + 1 The producers and suppliers of adventure + tourism products and experiences have a + variety of different objectives. These affect + their approach to marketing. For many com­ + panies, adventure tourism is a business from + which they want to make a healthy profit. At + the other extreme there are voluntary or non- + profit-making organizations offering adven­ + ture tourism experiences, where the aim is +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 7.1 The complexities of adventure tourism marketing. + + + + + largely social. This could include those who run ‘charity challenges’, or + ‘character building’, ‘horizon-widening’ holidays for disadvantaged + children. In between there are those adventure tourism enthusiasts who set + up enterprises that allow them to pursue their former ‘hobby’ as a full-time + profession. They often do not see profit maximization as their aim, but + rather seek to balance an enjoyable lifestyle with earning enough income + to enjoy a reasonable standard of living. These differences in objectives + will be reflected in the approach taken to promotion in terms of how much + is done and the nature of the messages transmitted about the product. + 2 Adventure tourists have a myriad of motivations, and these motivations + vary between tourists purchasing the ‘same’ experience. If you think + about all the types of adventure tourism mentioned in this book and then + try to ‘brainstorm’ motivations people could have for taking part in them, + you will need a very large piece of paper or white board. Motivations + could include everything from gaining status to the desire for sensual + +156 +f Marketing + + + pleasure, escaping from the conventions of everyday life to meeting + people, testing oneself to improving one’s health. If we looked at any + single group of people on a specific adventure tourism trip, then it is likely + there would be significant differences between the motivations of each + participant. +3 Some products are highly tangible while others are almost wholly + intangible. Physical adventure trips tend to rely heavily on tangible + features such as rivers and mountains. These physical natural resources are + the core of the experience for white-water rafters and mountaineers + respectively, for example. On the other hand, the adventure tourist who is + looking for spiritual enlightenment is concerned with gaining an + intangible benefit from experiences that are largely based on intangibles – + such as the atmosphere in pilgrimage destinations, and religious practices. + Marketing such intangible experiences is difficult, because you cannot + easily communicate the nature of the product and its benefits to potential + customers. +4 Many adventure tourism products are highly seasonal while others are + always available. The seasonality of adventure tourism has two main + aspects; attractions and accessibility. Some adventure tourism attractions + are highly seasonal, such as white water, snow, and special events, for + example. However, in some places it is not the attraction that is seasonal + but rather the accessibility of the attraction – at certain times of the year + the attraction may be less accessible because of bad weather or reduced + transport services, for instance. On the other hand, there are products + where the attraction is both permanently available and accessible. + Seasonality, as elsewhere in tourism, affects both pricing and the potential + volume of demand. +5 Some products are pre-prepared packages while others are individual + elements from which the independent traveller constructs a tailor-made + experience. A single adventure tourism attraction can be part of a pre- + prepared package or can be selected by an independent traveller to be part + of a personally tailor-made experience. This is true of everything from ski + slopes to hunting reserves, visits to religious retreats to trips to desert + regions. The same is of course also true of accommodation and transport + services that are aimed at the adventure tourist. +6 Some products are consumed individually while others are group + experiences. Many adventure tourism experiences are intensely personal, + solo activities. Often, not only do these ‘independent’ tourists not want to + take their vacation as part of a group but they would also prefer it if there + were no other tourists around at all in their destination environment. + Conversely, a number of adventure experiences tend to be group activities + + 157 +fAdventure Tourism + + + with the enjoyment coming partly from the interaction between partici­ + pants. This is clearly an important issue to bear in mind when promotional + messages are being designed. + 7 The price of products can vary from very low to high premium pricing. + Some adventure tourism can be free, at least in terms of the use of natural + attractions, for example. However, even in these areas most adventure + tourism involves paying a price to use certain attractions, accommodation, + transport and so on. Some products are aimed specifically at dis­ + advantaged sections of the community for social reasons, and these are + low priced or may even be free to the consumer, thanks to public sector or + voluntary sector subsidies. On the other hand, some adventure vacations + are priced very highly as high status products. Interestingly, people on + low-priced and high-priced trips may find themselves sharing the same + core product, such as a mountain or a river, at the same time in the same + weather. + 8 Distribution channels are often very complex. The distribution of + adventure tourism products often involves the use of numerous distribu­ + tion channels. For example, magine a small specialist adventure activity + organizer in an established tourist destination. It could distribute its + product as follows: + � Within the destination, directly, to individual customers who visit its + office + � Within the destination, directly, to groups of customers who visit its + office + � As ‘tailor-made packages’ for local hotels and travel agencies + � As ‘tailor-made packages’ for externally based tour operators + + � Directly with individuals/groups via the Internet. + This range of different distribution channels has implications for the + pricing of the product by the organizer, as well as for its promotional + campaigns. + 9 Some markets are highly localized while others are truly global. In some + destinations, the majority of the adventure tourism market is local. This + tends to be the case in countries or regions with a sizeable population and + a developed economy, and which are a considerable distance from major + tourism markets. Until recently this was the case with New Zealand, for + instance. However, destinations are attracting an increasing number of + people from other countries and even continents. There is now also a + segment of tourists who are keen to take adventure holidays all over the + world. Many destinations now have markets that are truly global. The + geographical catchment area of a destination market clearly has great + implications for its pricing, promotion and destination. + +158 +f Marketing + + +10 Much adventure tourism marketing is cross-cultural and/or trans­ + national. The phenomenon of adventure tourism that crosses cultural and/ + or national boundaries is increasing due to the falling real cost of long- + haul travel and the growing interest in adventure tourism in emerging + outbound tourism markets. Where such cross-cultural tourism occurs it + poses challenges for marketers, with a need to reconcile cultural + differences between the destination and markets in terms of everything + from concepts of what constitutes adventure to ethical standards, attitudes + towards risk to dietary needs, food preferences, languages, and legal + contracts concerning how products can be advertised. +11 Adventure tourism experiences can last from a few minutes to many weeks. + Adventure experiences can last for a very short period, such as a few + minutes in the case of bungee jumping or a flight in a Russian MiG fighter. + This puts great pressure on the product to deliver instant satisfaction to the + tourist. Conversely, trekking or overland expeditions can last for several + weeks. Here the emphasis is on providing highlights throughout the trip to + sustain satisfaction, as well as ensuring that the total cost is affordable for + the target market. +Furthermore, we can identify a number of characteristics that distinguish +marketing in adventure tourism from that in other sectors. These include the +following: +� An emphasis on psychographic segmentation because so many of the + motivators and determinants of the behaviour of adventure tourists relates + to their personalities and lifestyles. It is clear that this fact is well + understood by the adventure tourism industry just by looking at the + brochures produced by specialist tourist operators in the field. +� Recognizing the importance of bestowing status on purchasers of adventure + tourism products is vital in the marketing in this sector. However, the + concept of status clearly varies between different kinds of products and + experiences. It may mean exclusivity on the basis of the rarity value and + uniqueness of the experience and/or high price. Alternatively, an adventure + tourist may gain status from being away from other tourists or visiting + exotic destinations at low cost as a budget traveller. Here, the lower the + price paid the greater the status enjoyed by the tourist. This is particularly + the case in the student backpacking market. +� Most adventure tourism marketing is carried out by small and medium-sized + enterprises, whether tour operators, travel agencies or even destination + marketing agencies. This is in contrast with many other sectors of tourism, + where marketing is now dominated by large-scale, often trans-national + companies. + + 159 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Specialist media play a significant role in promoting adventure tourism + products and destinations. These specialist media include general adventure + tourism magazines (such as Wanderlust in the UK) as well as periodicals + that focus on one activity like mountaineering or sailing. The modern types + of destination guides, such as Lonely Planet and Rough Guides, also often + promote adventure tourism opportunities within destinations. +� The Internet probably plays a greater role in adventure tourism marketing + than it does in other sectors for several reasons. First, it is a form of + promotion and distribution that suits small and medium enterprises that do + not have the budget to produce glossy brochures and do not sell enough + holidays to be attractive to travel agents. Second, in a rapidly changing + business it allows producers regularly to update their selling messages, + reflecting daily changes in snow conditions for example. Third, in a market + that is truly global the Internet means that products and destinations can + take bookings from clients anywhere in the world, day and night. Finally, + the Internet is a relatively inexpensive form of promotion and it is very + effective in targeting niche markets, like adventure tourism, effectively. +� With most adventure tourism products there is a great emphasis on brand + loyalty and repeat business, as this is much less expensive than having + constantly to find new customers in a numerically small specialist + market. + +We will now look at some other issues relating to the marketing of adventure +tourism, beginning with market segmentation. + + + + + Segmentation and marketing +Segmentation is at the heart of modern marketing. No longer do we see +markets as monolithic, homogeneous mass markets. Instead we divide the +potential market into segments, or groups, who share similar characteristics. +These characteristics can be geographical (i.e. where the tourists come from), +demographic (age, sex, race and so on) and psychographic (lifestyle and +personality). + The first two methods have traditionally been used in tourism, and for +adventure tourism marketers there are interesting trends in relation to both: + +� More and more people from countries that previously generated few + adventure tourism trips, including Taiwan, South Korea, China, India and + Russia, are now taking adventure vacations + +160 +f Marketing + + +� The growing number of empty nesters and senior citizens who are enjoying + the benefits of improved health care, and are keen to try new adventure + experiences, and are healthy enough to take part in them +� The increasing participation of women in adventurous travel, particularly + some sports and backpacking +� The trend towards couples with children taking part in family adventure + vacations. + +At the same time psychographic segmentation is at the core of adventure +tourism marketing, because personality type is a key determinant to whether +or not people will take adventure trips. Adventurous risk-takers are more +likely to take such vacations than cautious people. However, when designing +products and promotional messages the industry needs to recognize that +cautious, non-risk-takers may find themselves taking such trips to please their +more adventurous partners and friends. These people may refuse to go on +some trips unless they can be reassured that the vacation is safe. + Personality also plays a part in determining if people will travel +individually or in groups, and whether they will take independent trips or buy +organized packages. + The lifestyle of tourists also affects the type of adventure trip they will take. +Often they will take a vacation that allows them to pursue an interest or hobby +they enjoy at home, such as rock-climbing or partying. Alternatively, the +adventure trip can be a total contrast with the everyday life of the tourist. + Adventure tourism organizations also have to recognize that there are +‘shades’ of adventure tourist, from the occasional participant in a particular +type of activity to those who seek adventure in every moment of every holiday +they take. + As we are about to talk about the Internet, it is worth saying that many +believe that the opportunities for customized, targeted communication that the +Internet offers mean that in future we will be able to treat every individual as +a separate, unique market segment. + + + The role of the Internet +The Internet is revolutionizing the marketing of adventure tourism in several +ways: + +1 It allows small-scale tour operators to promote their products at a minimal + cost. This is important, given that such tour operators have not traditionally + + 161 +fAdventure Tourism + + + been able to sell via travel agents because of their low sales volume. + Previously they have had to rely heavily on relatively expensive press + advertisements and glossy brochures. +2 It provides an opportunity for entrepreneurs to regularly update their + promotional message and prices in response to changes in market + conditions. +3 It has changed the traditional 4 ‘Ps’, or marketing mix, by combining + promotion and place or distribution. Websites both provide information and + allow the customer to make a reservation in a single transaction at the same + time. This facilitates the spontaneous ‘impulse purchase’ decision. +4 Given that small operators are unable to staff reservation offices 24 hours + a day, seven days a week, the Internet provides them with a low-cost way + of taking bookings at all hours of the day and night. This is particularly + important when selling on a global scale, where clients may live in + countries in different time zones. +5 It is an effective tool for both relationship marketing and the targeting of + small niche markets. +6 Guide book publishers, such as Lonely Planet, have set up their own + websites that, while independent, recommend particular adventure tourism + destinations and suppliers. +7 Many travellers are now creating their own websites or contributing to + those set up by others, and on these sites their experiences are shared. This + can help, indirectly, to promote particular adventure tourism destinations + and operators; however, it can also have the opposite affect if the + experiences were negative. + +There seems little doubt that the Internet will play an increasing role in the +marketing of adventure tourism because, as Millington (2001) notes: + + For the adventure travel operator, the Internet is proving to be the perfect + mechanism for selling holidays. The profile of the average Internet user + clearly matches that of a consumer who is likely to participate in + adventure travel. + +However, to be effective sites must be well designed and simple and quick to +use, which is not always the case currently. + + + Promotional strategies +The promotional strategies used in the adventure tourism industry reflects the +fact that most players within the sector are small and medium-sized + +162 +f Marketing + + +enterprises. In other words, the emphasis is on finely targeted activities that +maximize cost-effectiveness. + + For the typical adventure travel tour operator, the promotional mix could +include: + +� The production of a relatively small number of glossy, high-quality + brochures, which are not distributed widely but are instead only sent out in + response to a specific enquiry. We will look at the brochures in a little more + detail later. +� Websites featuring colourful images, factual information, and prices, + together with a booking facility. There may also be a section containing + testimonials from previous customers. +� Exhibiting at specialist adventure travel trade shows. Several UK cities + now have at least one such show each year, where potential customers visit + to look at what is on offer for the following year. One special exhibition in + the UK, The Adventure Travel and Sports Show, attracted 2000 exhibitors + and 28 000 visitors in 2000 (Millington, 2001). +� Direct mail marketing, particularly to past customers, to encourage brand + loyalty and repeat purchase. Incentives may also be offered to existing + customers who recommend new potential clients to the organization. +� Trying to obtain favourable mentions of the company’s products in the + travel media, including newspapers, magazines and television + programmes. +� Placing small advertisements in specialist magazines or in the travel + supplements of newspapers. +� Doing talks or film shows for potential clients. + +However, the brochure still remains the mainstay of most adventure travel +marketing, although this may change with the growth of the Internet. + + Looking at these brochures, certain similar themes seem to emerge +regardless of which company it is or which destination. Some of the main +messages that are used in adventure travel brochures are illustrated in Table +7.1, through real extracts taken from five current brochures. + + In adventure travel brochures, in general the companies are keen to reassure +potential clients that they: + +� Are experienced and have trained, highly skilled tour leaders +� Offer value for money +� Give the traveller extraordinary experiences + + 163 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 7.1 Key messages in five selected adventure travel brochures + + +Message Brochure + + +Experience more on small group exploratory holidays Explore World-wide + 2002–2003 + +The Ultimate Adventure Kumuka Expeditions + 2001–2002 + +Discovery and Adventure Exodus 2001–2002 + +Join us on one of the best holidays you will ever have – Explore World-Wide +your world will never be the same again 2002–2003 + +Small group adventures – how much fun can you AmeriCon Adventures +handle? 2001–2002 + +Our holidays are great fun, good value, professionally Discover the World +run, educational, and responsible 2001–2002 + +By joining a Kumuka tour you can enjoy freedom as an Kumuka Expeditions +individual traveller, whilst having the back-up and 2001–2002 +support of our experience + +Get away from it all with American Adventures and AmeriCon Adventures +Roadrunner!! 2000–2002 + +Since 1974 we have been running trips for people who Exodus 2001–2002 +want to experience the world as well as see it + +There are prices to suit all pockets, from £420 to more Discover the World +than £6000 2001–2002 + +Warning! Adventure Travel can be habit-forming Explore World-wide + 2002–2003 + +Adventures for the young and young at heart AmeriCon Adventures + 2000–2002 + +We travel in small groups causing as little Explore World-Wide +environmental impact and cultural disturbance as 2002–2003 +possible. We use local resources and services wherever +possible making our tour itineraries individual enough to +be a positive and sustainable alternative to mass tourism + +164 +f Marketing + + +Table 7.1 Continued + + +Message Brochure + + +Experience Central and South America by travelling Kumuka Expeditions +with local people and enjoying insights into the Latin 2001–2002 +lifestyle + + +At Kumuka we know that your crew are the most Kumuka Expeditions +important part of the tour. That is why we select our 2001–2002 +crew for their organizational skills, energy, and friendly +personality. They undergo an extensive training +programme, and as fellow travellers themselves, have a +genuine enthusiasm for travel + + +Our groups are small and, unlike many other operators, Discover the World +wherever possible we charter boats exclusively to 2001–2002 +provide maximum space for observation and +photography + + +We try at all times to ensure that all our trips are Exodus 2001–2002 +socially, economically, and ecologically sound, because +these are the three essential issues of any responsible +tour policy + + +Our business thrives on word of mouth. The majority of Discover the World +our clients have either travelled with us before or have 2001–2002 +been recommended by friends and relatives + + +Our Leaders will not only look after the practitioners, Exodus 2001–2002 +they will also ensure that you enjoy your trip whatever +happens + + +Our tours have been thoroughly planned for our clients Kumuka Expeditions +to enjoy value for money and to ensure that you take 2001–2002 +home life-long memories + + +We are pleased to announce that in the inaugural Exodus 2001–2002 +Wanderlust Readers Travel Awards, Exodus was voted +top tour operator + + + + 165 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Do not arrange travel in large groups +� Are responsible organizations that are sensitive to the needs of the + environment and host communities. + +The brochures tend to differ from those of mass market tour operators in a +number of ways: + +� They focus less attention on prices and discounts and more on value for + money and exclusivity +� They provide much more detail on the itineraries and destinations +� They offer guidance on which kind of people each tour will suit rather than + suggesting that they will appeal to everyone. + + + The marketing of adventure tourism destinations +Having focused on how individual companies market their adventure travel +products, it is now time to consider the marketing of adventure tourism +destinations. + The first thing to say is that there is much more adventure tourism going on +than there was a few years ago. New destinations are being launched all the +time as countries and regions seek to attract the economic benefits that such +tourism can bring. However, like all destination marketing, the ‘selling’ of +adventure tourism destinations is a complex matter for the following +reasons: + +1 Most marketing is undertaken by public sector destination marketing + agencies who do not own or control much of the product and its pricing or + distribution. Agencies therefore have to focus on the one element of + the marketing mix they can control, or at least influence – namely + promotion. +2 Some forms of adventure tourism are lucrative and controversial at the + same time, notably wilderness hunting. Destination marketing agencies that + publicly promote such products may alienate other types of tourists and + make them go elsewhere. +3 Tourists’ perceptions of the identity of a particular destination may conflict + with the boundaries adopted by the public sector bodies charged with + marketing these destinations. For example, tourists may think of the + Austrian Tyrol as a single entity, but it may be marketed by different + individual municipalities with different (and perhaps conflicting) objectives + and marketing strategies. + +166 +f Marketing + + +4 The perceptions about the destination held by potential visitors are largely + influenced by external sources over which the destination has little or no + control, such as foreign tour operators and the media. +5 Destination marketing in most countries is organized in a hierarchical + fashion. National governments promote whole countries usually through a + few key images of what are perceived to be the leading attractions of the + country. Regional authorities often promote regions within countries, again + highlighting their own selection of the leading attractions. The individual + municipalities or local government authorities seek to market their own + corner of the region. There is often tension between the different + geographical levels of marketing, and mixed, confusing messages are often + given to the markets as a result. +6 Often the nature of adventure tourism in a particular destination changes + from one season to the next. In a mountain area, winter means skiing, spring + may be the peak season for white-water rafting, summer the time for hang- + gliding, and autumn the prime season for trekking. This means marketers + have to modify the marketing mix several times during a single year to meet + the needs of different market segments. +7 Adventure tourism is a very competitive business today, and therefore most + adventure tourism destinations face considerable competition from: + � Neighbouring regions in the same country with similar attractions + � Regions elsewhere in the world that offer similar attractions + � Regions elsewhere in the world that offer different attractions but similar + benefits for tourists + � Adventure sports and activities that ‘tourists’ can undertake in their + home area. + +It is not surprising, therefore, that destinations make great use of a range of +promotional techniques such as advertising, brochures, press and public +relations, and attendance trade fairs to try to sell the unique aspects of their +destination. + + + Summary +In this chapter we have explored a number of issues relating to the marketing of +adventure tourism. First, we have seen that it is a complex activity that is +complicated by the characteristics of both the product and the market. Second, +we have noted that brochures will play a crucial role in promoting adventure +tourism products. Third, we have seen that the Internet is playing a growing role +in adventure tourism marketing. Finally, we have seen that destination +marketing adds a new level of complexity to adventure tourism marketing. + + 167 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the suggestion that adventure tourism marketing is more complex + than marketing in other sectors of tourism. +2 Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the Internet as a marketing + tool in adventure tourism. +3 Critically evaluate the view that psychographic segmentation is more + important than other segmentation techniques in adventure tourism. +4 Select an adventure tourism organization and critically evaluate its use of + the marketing mix. + + + + +168 +f8 + Risk management + + + + + + Introduction + With a series of widely publicized incidents in + recent years, risk management has become a + major issue for organizations involved in all areas + of adventure tourism – including adventure sports + centres, specialist tour operators and trekking + companies. At the same time, these organizations + cannot eliminate the risk and also need to + recognize that the risk itself is part of the + motivation for most adventure tourists. + However, for adventure tourism organizations + the failure to manage risk effectively can have + four related, negative consequences, as we can + see from Figure 8.1. + In this chapter we will consider three aspects + of the issue of risk management: + + 1 Risk management in a particular sector of + physical adventure tourism, namely, mountain +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 8.1 The negative consequences of inadequate risk management. + + + + + tourism. This section focuses on the duties of operators involved in this + sector, and concludes with general comments on the nature of risk that are + also relevant to the rest of the chapter +2 Risk management and independent physical adventure tourism +3 The concept of risk management in non-physical adventure tourism. + +The final section of the chapter covers the issue of crisis management. + + + Risk management and mountain adventure tourism +It is generally recognized that risk is a key feature of most adventure tourism +activities. Some people, who would undoubtedly be classified into the hard +adventure category, thrive from this element of risk and its associated ‘highs’ +caused by adrenaline rushing through their bodies and minds. Others enjoy a +certain level of risk in their adventures, although some degree of perceived +control is essential to their overall enjoyment of the experience. It is important +to recognize, however, that participants in adventure recreation or tourism +accept these risks, to a lesser or greater extent, as an integral part of the +destination’s environment because they have a strong desire to be in this type +of environment. Suppliers of adventure tourism need to ensure that a fine +balance is maintained between exposing their clients to risk and managing this +risk so that the latter do not become victims as a consequence of their +participation. + +170 +f Risk management + + + Simply by noting some of the fatal accidents that have occurred over the +past few years we can see the need for risk management in adventure tourism. +Take, for example, the deaths on two commercial expeditions to Everest on 10 +May 1996 (Krakauer, 1997); the death of a porter in Nepal in 1996 (Duff, +1998); the 21 deaths in the Swiss canyoning accident on 27 July 1999 (Dodd, +1999); and the death of a teenage girl on Mount Kinabalu in 2001. Indeed the +necessity for risk management throughout the entire tourism industry is +important, as ‘the increased volume of global tourism activity has combined +with the attractiveness of high risk exotic destinations to expose tourists to +greater levels of risk’ (Faulkner, 2001). + + On the general theme of why accidents happen, some academics adopt a +human psychology approach to causation – such as Reason’s (1990) study of +human error and his development of the generic modelling system. In +contrast, others take an organizational approach. For instance, Turner (1979, +1994) accepts that accidents are often sparked by a technical failure, but +believes that they are amplified by the institutional, administrative and +organizational context within which they occur. Whilst theorists have sought +to understand why accidents happen, the real task of risk management is to +develop strategies to prevent or minimize these for individual +organizations. + + Although a body of literature exists on the generic theme of risk +management, research into the use of this management technique within the +tourism industry and more specifically within the adventure travel sector is +sparser. However, there are several useful studies that have contributed +knowledge to risk management in tourism. For instance, Hollman and Forrest +(1991) developed a model to explain risk management in service companies +(tourism is a service industry par excellence) on the basis that ‘risk +management involves the protection of a firm’s assets and profits’. The model +is a five-stage process involving the discovery of loss exposure, the evaluation +of loss exposure, operational techniques, implementation of strategy, and +monitoring. Risk-management strategies are divided into two broad cate­ +gories: ‘operational techniques’ are measures that reduce loss exposure, for +example fire-fighting equipment; and ‘financing techniques’ aim to minimize +the effects of loss on a business, for instance transferring the financial +consequences of loss to an insurer. + + Though Faulkner (2001) acknowledges the vulnerability of tourism to +natural disasters and terrorism, he argues that ‘few tourism organizations at +the enterprise or destination level have properly developed disaster strategies +as an integral part of their business plans’. He proposes a ‘tourism disaster + + 171 +fAdventure Tourism + + +management framework that involves formulating disaster contingency plans +based on risk assessment of both potential disasters and the probability of their +occurrence’. + In an attempt to determine appropriate risk management strategies for +tourist scuba-diving operations, Wilks and Davis (2000) developed a risk +evaluation matrix (see Figure 8.2). The matrix entails four components: risk +retention is the assumption or acceptance of loss by the operator; risk transfer +is the use of insurance to cover infrequent but potentially costly accidents; risk +reduction is the adoption of ‘best practice’ to keep the likelihood of accidents +to a minimum; and risk avoidance is achieved by eliminating those activities +that are too risky from the operators’ product portfolio. + + + + +Figure 8.2 Risk evaluation matrix (Wilks and Davis, 2000: 595). + + + + The conclusion that Morgan (2000) draws from an investigation into white­ +water rafting in New Zealand is that operators target an optimal safety level +through an assessment of the desired level of risk. The assessment involves +numerous criteria, including the technical abilities of employees, the standard +and type of equipment used, the physical location of the activity, and legal +obligations. Operators have to ‘estimate the level of actual control that +participants will require to meet the actual risks from the physical hazards to +be encountered’. Furthermore, operators have some influence over the client’s +perception of risk; guides can talk the risks up to make the experience seem +more exciting or talk them down to avoid over-arousal and subsequent loss of +control by the clients. Clients can enjoy an optimal adventure experience so +long as the operator understands clients’ expectations and their perceived +levels of risk in the activity. + Priest and Gass (1997) examined risk management in outdoor education – +a sector that is closely linked to adventure tourism. They view risk +management as the: + +172 +f Risk management + + + . . . policies, practices and procedures used . . . to appropriately address + potential personal injury and financial losses, protecting [the] adventure + organization from the economic cost of being sued and reducing [the] + organization’s financial obligation if a suit is successful. + +They argue that accidents are a result of the interaction between environmen­ +tal dangers, objective hazards that arise from the local environment, and +human dangers – subjective perils within human control. To illustrate this, +consider an alpine ascent where objective dangers exist in the form of +crevasses. High temperatures cause these ice formations to be less stable, +resulting in a greater accident potential. This can be reduced by crossing the +danger zone at night when temperatures are lowest. The authors propose a +ten-step plan for assessing dangers in outdoor education environments (see +Table 8.1), although these procedures are not always adhered to due to a + + + +Table 8.1 Procedure for analysing dangers (Priest and Gass, 1997) + + +Step Explanation + + + 1 Plan ahead Recognize that accidents will happen; pre-plan + 2 Identify dangers Be continuously aware of dangerous situations + and conditions + 3 Point out potential dangers Ensure that all group members are aware of the + existence of potential dangers once identified + 4 When appropriate, remove If warning does not adequately deal with the + elements that contribute to danger, remove it as long as it does not increase + dangerous situations risk + 5 Avoid dangerous situations Change pre-planned activity or route to safer + alternative if possible + 6 Identify and classify dangerous What are the perils and hazards? How can + situations hazards be minimized? + 7 Assess risk and re-classify Are the dangers environmental or human? + danger + 8 Estimate potential losses What are the number and strength of dangers? + 9 Minimize losses Adopt course of action that keeps the accident + outcome as acceptable and recoverable as + possible +10 Make appropriate adjustments Adopt pre-planned accident countermeasures + + + + 173 +fAdventure Tourism + + +number of inhibiting factors. These include: the unfamiliarity of new or +unexpected situations, ‘smelling the barn’ (i.e. the rush to get home when the +activity is nearly complete), and a relaxation of concentration caused by +fatigue, carelessness or over-familiarity. + + The four risk management strategies identified in the risk evaluation matrix +by Wilks and Davis (2000; Figure 8.2) are similarly employed by Priest and +Gass. They view litigation as a key consideration for outdoor education +providers, in which liability is defined as ‘the degree of legal responsibility or +obligation that people or programmes have for repairing damages (often by +paying money) for injuries to participants’ (Priest and Gass, 1997: 124). In the +context of mountain adventure tourism, the tort of negligence is the most +applicable – i.e. ‘unintentional breach of legal duty causing damage +reasonably foreseeable without which breach the damage would not have +occurred’ (Van der Smissen, 1990; quoted in Priest and Gass, 1997). However, +providers can avoid lawsuits through adopting various measures. One measure +is to aim to prevent the accident in the first place by having proper safety +procedures. This would act as a good defence should a case arise, illustrating +to courts that the operation was conducted professionally. Another defence is +to inform clients fully of the potential risks and likelihood of accidents +involved in the adventure activity. Priest and Gass conclude that a post- +accident strategy is paramount to effective risk management. This should +include such measures as first aid, evacuation procedures and keeping +accurate records of incidents. + + Brown (1999) also approaches risk management from an outdoor education +perspective. His Adventure REACT model (see Figure 8.3) involves ‘the +recognition, evaluation, adjustment, choice and tracking phases of risk +management’, and the associated risk-management strategies are again based +on retention, reduction, avoidance and transferral of risk. Brown stresses the +need for an effective ‘critical incident management plan’ that should address +staff responsibilities and tasks, communication protocols, first aid and rescue +procedures, evacuation policies, and procedures for fatality management. +However, he accepts that ‘safety cannot necessarily be guaranteed by a set of +rigid standards’ due to the fact that objective dangers exist that are difficult to +control. In essence, no matter how good the risk management plan is it is +impossible to avoid every single risk. + + In the same vein, Cloutier (2000) affirms that risk is an innate +component of all adventure activities and hence risk management ‘is about +managing or optimizing risk’ rather than abolishing it completely. There­ +fore, for the activity to remain adventurous the risk management process + +174 +f Risk management + + + + +Figure 8.3 Adventure-REACT model of managing risk. + + 175 +fAdventure Tourism + + +needs to determine acceptable exposure levels for clients and operators +alike, identify risks, select suitable risk-management strategies, implement +these, and make the appropriate responses to incidents. Cloutier (1998, +2000) divides risk management strategies into two broad approaches. Risk +control concerns the decision not to undertake a trip or activity due to the +high risk involved. It also refers to risk-reduction measures such as client +briefings and increasing instructional ratios for activities considered of +greater risk. Risk financing follows on from risk control, and involves both +risk retention and risk transfer. He recommends the preparation of an +‘emergency response plan’ (Cloutier, 1998: 1–2) for each trip, comprising +risk management objectives, identification of hazards, evaluation of haz­ +ards, risk-management strategies, incident response strategies, action plan +and controls. A number of techniques can be used to ascertain hazards – +for example, site inspections and hazard checklists. In evaluating hazards, +providers should examine the frequency and severity of their occurrence +and consequently ‘assign a high, medium, low priority to each, and create +strategies to mitigate their effects’ (Cloutier, 1998: 7). The incident +response strategy should clearly set out the roles and responsibilities within +the organization in the case of an incident, considering such factors as +identifying the staff member who would mobilize and activate the incident +response strategy. + + + +A model of risk management +Whilst the aforementioned studies provide clear guidelines on what adventure +operators should do in terms of their risk management strategies, only a +limited amount of actual primary research has been conducted in this field. +Cloutier’s (1998) work, for instance, is written from the perspective of +advising his students as to which methods they should adopt. In a bid to +ascertain how the risk management process operates in practice, Hibbert +(2001) conducted an investigation into the mountain adventure tourism sector. +He undertook a series of in-depth interviews with tour operators who offered +mountain adventure products, and in addition sought the views of the +governing body of British mountaineering, the British Mountaineering +Council (BMC). A model of ‘risk management practice in mountain adventure +tourism’ emerged from these primary findings (see Figure 8.4). The model +incorporates contemporary viewpoints drawn from risk management lit­ +erature, and details specific risk management strategies that mountain +adventure tourism operators employ in practice. A broad overview of the +interview results and recommendations is presented here. + +176 +f Risk management + + +A model of risk management + + + + +Figure 8.4 Model of risk management practice in mountain adventure tourism +(after British Mountaineering Council). + + +Risk assessment +All operators considered the elements of risk involved in their adventure +products at the trip planning stage. At the same time, it was recognized that +unforeseen risks could occur on a day-to-day basis throughout the trips. +Hibbert (2001) concluded that most mountain adventure risk management is +conducted during the actual trips rather than in the company’s office +beforehand. Some operators assessed risk through reconnaissance trips to the +destination. As one operator explained, ‘it’s the first-hand experience that +proves how much of a risk the trip is likely to be’. Hibbert advocates the +implementation of formal written risk management planning, based on +Cloutier’s (2000) argument that it ‘forces the business manager to think +through individual and corporate philosophies, acceptable procedures and +legal-liability ramifications’. + The model incorporates the four risk management strategies identified in +previous research: +1 Risk avoidance. Operators employ this strategy when there are poor in- + country arrangements, socio-political instability at the destination, or + + 177 +fAdventure Tourism + + + objective mountaineering dangers. The latter hazards are specific to + mountain environments and are usually beyond a person’s control. An + example of this can be seen in one of the operator’s trips to Naya Kanga, + where the higher than normal temperatures and lack of snow cover led to + an increased objective danger of stone fall to a level that was deemed + unacceptable. Risk avoidance can also be achieved through offering a trip + in an alternative format. For example, one operator offers a trip to the + Karakorum region of Pakistan, visiting the site of the K2 base camp and + crossing the high pass of the Gondor La, while most companies offer this + trek by ascending the Baltoro Glacier and then crossing the pass and + dropping into the Huche Valley. The first operator goes the other way round + due to the risk of stone fall in the pass. Ascending from the Huche Valley + increases the chances of getting over the pass early in the morning whilst + the rocks on the surrounding slopes are still frozen in place, thus reducing + the objective danger. +2 Risk reduction. Operators utilize a number of risk reduction strategies. They + look for trek leaders who have appropriate qualifications, as qualifications + serve as an indication that leaders have a minimum level of experience and + have undertaken some formal training in practical mountaineering skills + and party management. Leaders also need to be mentally robust enough to + make unpopular decisions to ensure the safety of their clients. In Hibbert’s + research, operators stressed the importance of clients choosing the right trip + in accordance with their experience, skills etc. This was achieved through + requesting clients to provide an outline of their experience before booking + the trip. Some operators also assessed their clients’ capabilities during the + early part of a trip before committing to the main objective. In addition, + operators assigned grades to their trips, to assist clients in making the + correct choice. However, Hibbert notes that no uniform system of grading + is available, and hence clients may face problems when comparing the + holiday products of one company against another. As many mountain + adventure tourism activities involve clients being at high altitude, an + acclimatization programme is necessary to reduce the risk of altitude + sickness. Operators stressed that trips should be of an adequate length to + ensure clients’ acclimatization. Local agents were seen as key to risk + reduction, and whilst some operators had established good working + relationships with these companies over several years they also noted + difficulties in finding agents in whom they had complete confidence when + breaking into new destinations. +3 Risk transfer. The transfer of risk from the operator to others is a key method + used in managing risk (Hollman and Forest, 1991; Priest and Gass, 1997; + Wilks and Davis, 2000). In Hibbert’s study, operators identified three ways + +178 +f Risk management + + + in which risks were transferred out: to the operators’ own insurers, to the + clients, and to third parties. Transferring risk to insurance companies is the + main method used, and operators must hold public liability insurance as a + legal requirement. All operators encouraged clients to recognize the risks + involved in any particular trip. For instance, in the booking conditions one + operator states: ‘Please understand that there are certain hazards involved in + climbing expeditions, which you must accept at your own risk. The company + will not be liable for any illness, injury or death sustained during an + expedition, nor will it be liable for any uninsured losses of your property’. + On the issue of transferring risk to third parties, operators used different + measures. For instance, one company did not transfer any risks to third + parties whilst another transferred some risk to its local agents indirectly + through imposing financial penalties if a trip had serious problems. +4 Risk retention. Risk retention occurs where risk is not transferred to others + and is accepted deliberately, either unconsciously or owing to the inability + to transfer it to others (Cloutier, 1998). It usually covers those risks that are + low in both severity and frequency (Wilks and Davis, 2000). Risk retention + did not seem to form a major part of the risk management strategies of + operators. Hibbert notes that operators may take risks on unconsciously, for + example one operator commented that some risk in loss of equipment was + ‘part and parcel’ of the operation. This would explain the lack of risk + retention strategies. + +Hibbert also investigated how operators deal with the issues of litigation and +emergency planning. The importance of having a strategy to avoid litigation +was recognized by operators. As one operator commented, ‘you can’t get into +this game without accepting at some point someone may possibly sue you or +there may be a problem that may require a call on your professional indemnity +insurance’. Three methods of dealing with litigation emerged: the avoidance +of accidents through risk management strategies, a willingness to settle small +claims out of court if it was felt the client had a case, and financial protection +from the consequences of litigation through insurance. Emergency plans +differed according to the destinations, but were greatly affected by local +conditions. The contrast between Nepal (where helicopter rescue was fairly +advanced) and Bolivia and Mongolia (where such facilities were minimal or +non-existent) was made by operators. This meant that local agents who could +advise on the necessary arrangements were particularly important. + +Risk management review +The risk management review forms the final component of the model. Within +any management system, a feedback loop that allows operations to be + + 179 +fAdventure Tourism + + +reviewed and procedures and policies to be modified in the light of experience +is vital. Some operators stated that it was a formal requirement for their +leaders to submit a written report at the end of each trip as part of their +contracts, whilst others used a verbal reporting format. Client questionnaires +were also completed post-trip by a number of operators and, whilst no specific +safety comments were requested, all operators felt that any concerns would be +brought up. + + + Risk management and independent physical adventure tourism +The previous section focuses on mountain tourism that is largely group-based +and involves commercial and not-for-profit operators offering services to +mountain adventure tourists. However, a major component of physical +adventure tourism is independent travel rather than being organized by +specialist operators. Individuals or groups make their own arrangements and +are therefore also responsible for their own risk management. + If we imagine a group of friends who want to take a trip heli-skiing in the +Caucasus Mountains, the potential risks they face are many and varied, +including: + +� Financial risks if, for example, they book their travel before they obtain a + visa, then discover they will not get visas and cannot claim a + reimbursement of their travel costs +� Health risks in terms of disease (such as diphtheria), illness (such as food + poisoning) or injury +� Safety risks, such as travelling in inadequately maintained helicopters in + difficult terrain, or kidnapping by terrorist groups. + +They will endeavour to manage this risk as best they can by: + +� Reducing the risks where possible – for instance, they may consult + guidebooks, government embassies and websites to gain information that + will help them be better prepared for their trip +� Putting plans in place to ensure that if the worst does happen, the damage + is minimal – this may, for example, involve purchasing specialist medical + insurance that guarantees evacuation by air in the event of an accident on + the slopes. + +As in any risk management situation, our group of intrepid skiers will need to +balance the benefits of taking such actions with the financial and time costs + +180 +f Risk management + + +involved. This means they will need to carry out an evaluation of the chance +that a particular risk will become a reality against the severity of the +consequences if it does happen. + To reduce the risk while maintaining the predominantly independent quality +of the tourism experience, they may hire a local guide for part of their time in +the Caucasus. On the other hand, they may relish the idea of the riskiness of +endeavouring to take a trip where they are wholly reliant on their own +abilities. + Whatever approach they take, they will also need to develop their own +formal (or more likely informal) guidelines covering the responsibilities of +each group member towards fellow travellers in terms of the management of +risk. Will they make a group decision, for instance, to avoid particularly +dangerous slopes, or will each individual member make an individual choice? +If the latter, will the individual concerned expect the others to attempt a rescue +if anything goes wrong? + It is easy to try to answer such questions while sitting at home planning +such a trip, but it is very different when tourists are on the slopes, with the +adrenaline pulsing through their veins! + + + The concept of risk management in non-physical adventure + tourism +Most analysis of risk in adventure tourism focuses on physical adventure +tourism. However, not all adventure tourism is physical in nature, and nor are +the risks of adventure tourism always physical. Table 8.2 endeavours to +illustrate this point by looking at different types of non-physical adventure +tourism, the risks involved, and how tourists can seek to manage these risks. + The risks identified in Table 8.2 are, of course, in addition to the normal +risks involved in all travel. + It must also be recognized that in any situations there will be those who +perceive no risks and accordingly practise no approach to risk management at +all. At the same time, we must note that the division between physical and +non-physical adventure tourism and risks is largely artificial. In most cases +adventure tourism has both physical and non-physical elements, and the risks +associated with it are of both types too. For example, a young female +backpacker travelling through South-East Asia faces both physical risks +(attack or illness) and non-physical risks (verbal sexual harassment and the +constant attention of beggars). + + 181 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 8.2 The risks involved in non-physical adventure tourism + +Type of Nature of risk Approaches to risk management +adventure +tourism + +1 Hedonistic � Sexually transmitted � Don’t care; will take no + tourism diseases precautions and will deal + � Alcohol poisoning with problems only if and + � Getting involved in fighting when they arise + � Arrest by the police for bad � Go with friends for mutual + behaviour support + � Take precautions such as + using contraception in the + event of indulging in casual + sex + +2 Travelling to � Could fail due to lack of � Careful choice of country + another knowledge of other and educational institution, + country to country’s language and which may mean choosing a + study learning culture, with country with the same + resulting loss of face language + � Possible inability to � Prepare for the study abroad + integrate into host by improving language skills + community/potential � Make a concentrated effort to + rejection by fellow students fit into the host culture + +3 Gambling � Losing more money than � Only take a certain amount + tourism one can afford of money + � Becoming the victim of � Only go with friends who + criminals can offer support or control + your behaviour + � Avoid particularly risky + casinos or neighbourhoods + +4 Travelling in � The experience could, in � You may not see any + search of extreme cases, lead to potential risk + spiritual psychological problems and � Choose to travel with others + enlightenment a sense of isolation from for mutual support + your own family, � Only visit places with + community and background established reputations + � The chance of perhaps + losing money to + ‘charlatans’ + +5 Travelling to � You may dislike the � Choose a skill you already + learn a new activity and therefore gain have some interest in + skill, such as little benefit from the � Only choose a vacation + cookery or expenditure of time and package that is recommended + craft-making money by acquaintances, guidebooks + or professional bodies + + +182 +f Risk management + + + Having looked at the nature of risk, it is now time to move on to the +associated subject of crisis management. + + + Crisis management +Crisis management is about what happens when the risk becomes reality. It is +always better to develop crisis management plans in advance of the crisis, +rather than managing it in an ad hoc manner in the ‘heat of the moment’. + Organizations such as specialist tour operators need crisis management +plans for all foreseeable emergencies. These should be written down and +communicated to all staff so that when a crisis occurs everyone knows exactly +what to do. The plan should, for example, say what will happen in the event +of the drowning of a client on a white-water rafting trip, including: + +� Who will inform the relatives and how +� Whether the press will be informed and, if so, what will be said and who + will say it +� How the authorities will be informed of the event and by whom +� Whether the trip should continue or be terminated immediately for all + participants +� What communication should take place with other clients on the same trip, + and what counselling should be made available to them. + +All the relevant information (key telephone numbers, etc.) should be in an +easily accessible crisis management file. + Crisis management is a specialist field in its own right, but some general +rules can perhaps be elucidated, such as: + +� Staff who have been directly involved in the tragedy should not talk to the + media, as they are too emotionally involved +� Only one trained, experienced spokesperson should speak on behalf of the + company +� No speculation should be entered into about possible causes of the tragedy + before a full enquiry has taken place +� No suggestion of liability should be even hinted at before the completion + of the aforementioned enquiry. + +Even individual and independent adventure travellers need informal crisis +management plans – ideas of what they will do if things go wrong. For many +travellers, this may simply be calling their insurance company, friends or +parents! + +183 +fAdventure Tourism + + + For many adventure tourists, dealing with a crisis or potential crisis +enhances their enjoyment of a trip. On the other hand, failing to deal with it +can ultimately ruin the trip or have even more tragic consequences. + + + Summary +In this chapter we have looked at a number of aspects of the issue of risks in +adventure tourism, where the desire to experience risk is often a motivator for +trips. A range of different approaches to risk have been discussed, including +risk avoidance and risk reduction, as well as the question of risk assessment +and risk evaluation. Finally, it has been noted that when risk becomes reality +then crisis management comes to the fore. + In recent years, the question of risk has become a major ethical debate in +adventure tourism. It is therefore appropriate that we should now move on to +focus on the ethical challenges faced in the field of adventure tourism. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the value of the Risk Evaluation Matrix, illustrated in Figure 8.2, + for adventure tourists and the adventure tourism industry. +2 Develop a crisis management plan for a tour operator engaged in organizing + treks to remote mountain regions. +3 Carry out a survey of a small number of people who engage in adventure + tourism to see how they perceive risk, and whether they follow the model + shown in Table 8.1. +4 Discuss the contention that a high level of risk is an essential prerequisite + for all adventure experiences. + + + + +184 +f9 + Ethical issues in + + adventure tourism + + + + + + Introduction + Well-publicized tragedies such as the deaths of + Nepalese porters on Himalayan expeditions, and + the controversy over whether people should risk + their lives to rescue adventure tourists who get + into difficulties, illustrate one dimension of the + ethical issues involved in the field. However, the + range of ethical concerns in adventure tourism is + bewildering. + + + The scope and nature of ethical issues + The scope and nature of these ethical issues is + clearly demonstrated by Figure 9.1, which pre­ + sents a number of typologies of ethical issues in + adventure tourism. +fAdventure Tourism + + + + + (i) + + + + + (ii) + + + + + (iii) + + + + + (iv) + + + + + (v) + +Figure 9.1 Typologies of ethical issues in adventure tourism. + +186 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + + + + (vi) + + + + + (vii) + + + + + (viii) + + + + +(ix) +Figure 9.1 Continued. + + 187 +f Adventure Tourism + + + + + (x) + + + + +(xi) + + + + +(xii) + Figure 9.1 Continued. + + 188 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + + It is clear from this set of typologies that ethical issues in adventure tourism +can be divided into sub-types based on various criteria, including: + +� Who is affected by the issue – in other words tourists, including (for + example) organizations or host communities in destinations +� The geographical area where the issue exists, whether it be the destination + or the tourist’s own area +� Issues that are highly localized against those that are national or international +� Ethical concerns that relate to management facilities, such as marketing +� A number of issues based on the theme of risk and risk management +� The degree and nature of state regulation of markets and activities. + +These typologies clearly illustrate what we suspect is already clear to any +reader – that ethics is a complex, broad subject. This fact is also clear from the +following diverse examples of ethical issues in adventure tourism: + +� The morality of affluent tourists from developed countries visiting + developing countries as adventure playgrounds +� The apparent way in which many people with disabilities are discriminated + against in many aspects of adventure tourism +� The debate over ecotourism and whether or not it is harmful or beneficial + for the destination +� The level and type of expectation raised by the marketing of adventure + tourism products +� The management of risk in waterparks +� The problems caused by backpackers travelling in remote areas whose + cultures they do not really understand +� The level of wages paid to adventure tourism industry employees, and + discrimination on the grounds of age, sex or race, for example. + +There are three other important points to be made about the question of ethics +in adventure tourism. First, ethics are in the ‘eye of the beholder’ in that each +individual has an opinion on which constitutes an ethical dilemma, as well as +personal views on the dilemmas. These opinions and views are a result of a +person’s unique personal circumstances in terms of personality, life experi­ +ence, education, parental influences and cultural background. Second, the +views of every individual on ethical issues are continuously being affected by +external influences, including: + +1 The media, which highlights particular issues – often in a sensationalized + manner + + 189 +fAdventure Tourism + + +2 Pressure groups, which may often present issues in a biased way + (consciously or unconsciously) to further their particular interests +3 Professional bodies, which often play down ethical concerns to reduce the + risk of government intervention, or take action on particular issues to + improve the image of the industry as a whole +4 Governments, which may choose to tackle issues that they think will be of + most interest to voters. + +The third point to be made follows on from this. All four of the external +influences noted are highly subjective and political in their approach to any +ethical issue in adventure tourism – rarely does a newspaper article or a +pressure group publication attempt to give a balanced, even-handed account of +any issue. This can lead to issues being seen, crudely and unrealistically, as +being polarized between good and bad, right or wrong. Yet in many countries +some things that are criticized by pressure groups and the Western media are +traditional, deep-seated elements in the culture of the indigenous people. For +example, in many Western countries all hunting trips are seen as wrong, but +for some poor residents in inhospitable environments hunting is part of their +everyday life, and hunting tourism may be their only viable means of +employment. + However, there are sections of ‘adventure tourism’ where virtually +everyone is agreed that the type of tourism is intrinsically unethical and +immoral. Perhaps the most important example of this phenomenon is sex +tourism involving children. Men travelling to Asia and other regions for such +sex will even risk criminal prosecution to indulge in this perverted form of +adventure tourism. + + + Corporate responses to ethical challenges +Much criticism of adventure tourism (as with all tourism) in terms of ethical +issues tends to focus on the activities of commercial enterprises within the +sector. They may be accused of everything from risking the lives of their +employees and customers to paying their staff badly, causing environmental +problems through their products and so on. + When faced with criticism of their actions on ethical grounds, companies in +the field may adapt one of a number of approaches. Some of these are shown +in part (xii) of Figure 9.1. + We can illustrate these potential responses with a hypothetical case study. +Let us imagine a small tour operator who offers ecotourism adventures in a + +190 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + +Table 9.1 Corporate responses to ethical challenge + + +Response Example + + +Problem denial ‘Our tours cause no problems, they are small scale and + our clients are sensitive and careful not to cause any + damage’ +Responsibility denial ‘Yes we know there are some problems with such tours, + but they are caused by the lack of government action on + conservation and visitor development, together with the + lack of a proper infrastructure’ +Putting the other side ‘We know such tours can cause environmental damage, +of the case but on the other hand we employ local guides who + otherwise would have no job or income’ +Legal compliance ‘In running these tours we are doing nothing wrong, + they are perfectly legal’ +Tokenism and ‘We do our bit for the local community by donating £1 +cosmetic action for every client to a nature conservation voluntary group + in the rainforest’ +Cost reduction ‘We are going to make more use of the Internet rather + than brochures in our marketing to save paper’ (and + money!) +Competitive advantage ‘We will no longer take clients to village X because it is + overcrowded with tourists taken there by our + competitors, who are not behaving as responsibly as us’ +Ideological conversion ‘Wow – we had never thought about it like that before. + We’ll stop offering these tours from today’ + + + + +South American rainforest destination. People criticize the operator’s +activities because of the effects tourism will have on the rainforest. The +operator could respond as in Table 9.1 – although, perhaps not surprisingly, +the final response is very rare! + + + The responsibilities of the adventure tourist +As well as industry taking its fair share of responsibility for the ethical issues +in adventure tourism, it is important that the consumers or tourists should also +do so. After all, it is tourists’ desires that lead to the development of different +adventure tourism products, and it is the tourists who have the power to make +or break enterprises. Furthermore, sometimes it is the behaviour of the tourists + + 191 +fAdventure Tourism + + +themselves that can cause problems. Tourists can, for example, exploit staff +through their demands, while ignorance of local custom can lead to offence +being caused in the host community. + Every year the activity of irresponsible adventure tourists cause the deaths +of fellow tourists through accidents. + Figure 9.2 puts forward an ideal model for ensuring that tourists behave +responsibly and ethically. + + + + +Figure 9.2 A process for ensuring adventure tourists behave more ethically. + + + + The problem is that behaving more responsibly or ethically is not a high +priority for many adventure tourists because: + +� Some forms of adventure tourism, such as hedonistic tourism, have irrespon­ + sibility as a major motivator – the opportunity to behave outrageously +� For many tourists, holidays are the one time of the year when people feel + they do not have to behave responsibly or worry about ethical issues. + +It seems, therefore, that regulation may be the only answer where tourists are +required to behave responsibly. Clearly the case of child sex tourism shows us +that sometimes regulation is the only way to tackle unethical tourist +behaviour, and even then it can be an uphill task! + Evidence from many areas of life leads us to believe that public sector +campaigns to change the behaviour of the public have only limited success. +People who feel they are being lectured do tend to rebel. That is why this idea +of writing brochures to ‘educate’ adventure tourists to be more ethical is +probably naive. Instead, perhaps, behaviour will only change if and when the +media, which is now massively influential in the tourism market, begins to +take this issue seriously. + +192 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + + The impacts of adventure tourism +Like all forms of tourism, adventure tourism has three main impacts – +economic, environmental, and social. Most research has focused on the impact +tourism has on the destination and the host community. However, the +economic and social impacts are also seen, to a lesser extent, in the country +of origin of the tourist through the jobs created in the tour operations and +equipment suppliers, as well as in the impact it has on the tourists themselves. +This section focuses mainly on the destination. + + +Economic impacts +The economic impacts of adventure tourism are illustrated in Figure 9.3. + Some figures from Travel and Tourism Intelligence Reports published in +2000 illustrate the economic value of adventure tourism: + +� The US domestic adventure travel market is an estimated US$25 billion, + based on figures of participation rates and average spending per trip +� Hotels earned around US$16 million from the carnival in Rio in 1998 +� Tourism in Brazil, much of which is based on different kinds of adventure, + earned US$3.7 billion in foreign earnings for the country in 1998 + + + + +Figure 9.3 The economic impacts of adventure tourism. + + 193 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� The skiing industry in New Zealand is worth approximately NZ$43 million + per annum +� Zambia, whose tourism industry is largely based on adventure travel, aims + to be earning some US$171 million from tourism by 2004 – double the + figure achieved in 1998. + +Overall it appears that the economic impact is positive in most destinations, +although there is always the potential problem of ‘leakages’, particularly in +developing countries, where the industry is dominated by ‘foreign’ +enterprises. + However, the economic impact of adventure tourism is not limited to the +destinations. The equipment suppliers, who are not usually based in the +destination, represent a valuable economic sector in their own right. Individual +items of gear or clothing often cost hundreds (and sometimes thousands) of +pounds. Globally, those who supply the adventure tourism industry must +generate hundreds of millions of pounds for their national economies. + + +Environmental impacts +Adventure tourism often involves direct contact with the physical environ­ +ment – indeed, this environment is often the main attraction for the adventure +tourist. It can be argued that adventure tourism has had a positive impact on +environmental conservation, because it has given the environment a monetary +value and destinations a financial incentive for conservation. However, +adventure tourism has had many negative impacts on the environment around +the world, in a number of ways: + +� The development of facilities for activities can cause problems – for + example, the construction of ski slopes causes deforestation and can + increase the danger of avalanches +� The leaving of waste that is not biodegradable is a phenomenon that is now + even seen on Mount Everest! +� Some activities involve causing damage to the environment, such as + climbing with artificial aids (where metal pegs are hammered into the + rock) +� High-volume safari tourism can disrupt both the feeding and breeding + patterns of the animals +� Diving can irretrievably damage coral reefs +� Visiting places where man does not normally live, such as Antarctica, + introduces alien influences that disturb the fragile balance of the + ecosystem. + +194 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + +It is difficult to argue that the environmental impact of adventure tourism +outside cities is not overwhelmingly negative. A prime motivator in adventure +tourism is often the desire to get ‘off the beaten track’ and away from other +tourists, and this means that this form of tourism spreads its negative impacts +over a relatively wide geographical area. On the other hand, in purely +environmental terms urban-based adventure tourism is relatively low impact +as the urban environment is much more resilient and less fragile. + + +Social impacts +Many adventure tourists from so-called developed countries visit places +where populations are from much less privileged backgrounds and very +different cultures. This can cause all sorts of problems and negative impacts. +For example: + +� Tourists can behave in ways which local people find offensive. For + example, in Indonesia backpackers tend to dress skimpily and often expose + their ‘belly buttons’; this is very fashionable in Europe and Australasia, but + is highly offensive to local people as this part of the body has great spiritual + significance in their religion. +� Tourists can introduce ‘bad habits’ to the local population, such as drug + taking. +� Tourists can become role models for local young people because they are + perceived to come from ‘advanced’ countries. The copying of the habits of + the tourists by the young people can cause tension within families. +� Sex tourism causes, or at least perpetuates, health problems and individual + suffering within destinations. +� Adventure tourists, with their apparent greater wealth than the locals, may + unwittingly stimulate an increase in crime +� Tourists giving local people gifts and money may also encourage a culture + of begging, which will harm the ability of the community to develop + economically. + +However, adventure tourism can have a positive social impact on the +destination. Some tourists in developing countries take volunteer holidays, +where they work free of charge on conservation or aid projects. The growth +of tourism can sometimes also lead to recognition of the need to improve +education for local people. At the same time tourism can provide job +opportunities, particularly for women and young people. It also provides a +relatively low-cost way to develop small, locally owned businesses, such as +guiding. + + 195 +fAdventure Tourism + + + It is clear that the social impacts of adventure tourism are both positive and +negative, and that they affect both urban areas and non-urban areas. + + +Social impacts of adventure tourism on the tourist +For many adventure tourists their trip is just like any other holiday; it allows +them to have fun and recharge their batteries so they can carry on with their +daily lives. However, in some cases their trip can have a profound impact on +the tourists. For example: + +� For some, such as backpackers to India and other Asian countries, it can + result in them questioning everything about their life and maybe changing + their lifestyle or religion or both +� It can be the beginning of a new hobby or even obsession that will last for + the rest of their lives; such as snowboarding, micro-light flying or scuba- + diving +� Seeing wildlife in its natural habitat can make them become actively + involved in conservation when they return home +� Seeing new and exciting places may mean that tourists take these new + influences back into their homes, from food to clothes to styles of + decoration and furniture. + +Clearly, the impact on the tourist will depend on the type of adventure tourism +experience undertaken. However, while these impacts are generally positive +they can be a problem, with the tourist feeling out of place or dissatisfied on +returning home. + + + + The future +The adventure tourism sector clearly provides examples of a wide range of +ethical issues, and in relation to tourism generally these issues can be viewed +in terms of three types: + +1 Issues seen in adventure tourism but not generally in other forms of + tourism, such as unsafe behaviour on ski slopes or rock faces +2 Issues that are similar to those seen in tourism in general, for instance + economic impacts +3 Issues that are much less important in adventure tourism than in other forms + of tourism, such as traffic congestion. + +196 +f Ethical issues in adventure tourism + + +Looking to the future, new ethical issues may emerge as adventure tourism +develops in different ways, including: + +� The growth of adventure tourism in new ‘destinations’ and ‘venues’, + such as space, the Antarctic and underwater ‘resorts’ +� The development of outbound adventure tourism from different countries + and cultures, notably China, India and Latin America +� The rise of new forms of adventure tourism that cannot yet be + predicted. + +What we can predict with confidence is that adventure tourism will continue +to provide examples of a wide range of complex ethical challenges. + + + + + Summary +We have seen that adventure tourism has both positive and negative impacts +on destinations. It seems that in general, the economic impacts are positive +and the environmental impacts are negative while the social impacts are a +mixture of good and bad. It has also been noted that the impacts are usually +more marked in rural areas and wilderness zones than they are in urban +areas. At the same time, it seems clear that the impacts are more significant +when the destination is a developing, rather than a so-called developed, +country. + Some tourism commentators have agreed that adventure tourism is a +relatively low (negative) impact form of tourism because it is often smaller +scale than mass-market beach tourism, for instance. However, this view is +open to criticism because: + +� Adventure tourism often involves people travelling off the beaten track + into fragile environments and/or communities that are socially + vulnerable +� Small-scale adventure tourism destinations today tend to become mass- + market destinations tomorrow, as the message about them spreads – this + has been seen everywhere, but notably with the safari destinations in + Kenya. + +We need a better understanding of the impacts of adventure tourism if we +are to manage its development more effectively. + + 197 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Critically evaluate the typologies of ethical issues illustrated in Figure + 9.1. +2 Discuss the circumstances in which organizations may utilize the different + strategies outlined in Figure 9.1, part xii. +3 Discuss the relative responsibilities of tourists, the industry and govern­ + ments for making adventure tourism more ethical. +4 Select an adventure tourism destination and analyse the economic, social + and environmental impacts of adventure tourism on this destination. + + + + +198 +fPart +E + Key sectors of + adventure tourism +ff10 + Wildlife tourism + + + + + + Introduction + This chapter explores some of the prominent + features that constitute adventure in the inter­ + action of people with wildlife. We will look at the + idiosyncratic form that adventure takes, and show + how wildlife adventure is indeed as diverse as the + people that take part in it. The chapter also offers + an insight into some rather unusual wildlife + adventures – physical, physiological and psycho­ + logical – and we will explore some of the more + exotic drives that fuel the thirst for wildlife + excitement. + First we will look at the some of the existing + literature and explore how terms are problematic + as they are defined, re-defined and become + interchangeable. We will then examine the multi­ + ple use of nature within the tourism industry, and + illustrate how, for example, character, rarity, + exclusivity, danger and many other phenomena +fAdventure Tourism + + +play a key role in the reshaping and re-branding of wildlife through image +makeovers to create suitable tourism products. + + + The ‘nature’ of wildlife adventure +Three key texts that examine the use of nature in tourism are those by +Shackley (1996), Fennell (1999), and Wearing and Neal (1999). All three +offer an extensive array of case studies of wildlife tourism from around the +world. Shackley’s work includes a brief examination of the way that tourists +interact with wildlife, focusing very much on the resultant management +issues. She considers traditional wildlife tourism in some detail, setting it very +much in a broad tourism and ecotourism context. The work focuses strongly +on the management of wildlife and visitors and their impact, and the +involvement of local communities. Fennell, on the other hand offers a critical +examination of many social, environmental and political issues associated +with the industry, and concentrates on ecotourism policy, economics, +marketing, management and product development. Fennell also explores the +relationship of ecotourism to adventure tourism and, interestingly, notes that +many writers subsume ecotourism within adventure travel. Wearing and Neal +also offer a strong focus on philosophy, policy and planning, as well as +examining community issues and the many problems associated with defining +and practising sustainability. To some extent the main differentiating factor +between ecotourism destinations and adventure tourism destinations is the +focus on the need for environmentally ‘compatible’ and sustainable +recreational opportunities required, supposedly, by the former. In recent years +we have seen a rapid growth in so-called ‘ecotourism’ at the interface between +wildlife and tourism. However, while this word is often used it is rarely +satisfactorily defined, and it is still unclear whether it is a good or a bad thing. +Currently, it appears to have two sides that are very different in nature, as can +be seen from Table 10.1. + Some elements of the tourism industry are clearly using ‘ecotourism’ as a +label to attract higher-spending tourists, while others are using it to describe +a new form of tourism that is environmentally motivated and sensitive. At the +same time, there is a dangerous assumption that ecotourism is inherently small +scale and low impact. However, experience shows us that most tourism starts +small, becomes popular and then grows. Unless regulations are introduced to +control the industry, most forms of tourism grow ‘naturally’ as they become +more affordable and are adopted by the mass market. So there is no guarantee +that today’s small-scale ecotourism will not become mass tourism. This +phenomenon can be seen in relation to safari tourism in some areas of East + +202 +f Wildlife tourism + + +Table 10.1 The two sides of ecotourism + + +Positive and sustainable? Negative and non-sustainable? + + +Small scale Large scale +Low impact (e.g. making use of High impact (involving the development +existing infrastructure) of new infrastructure) +Complementary to nature (e.g. Exploitative (e.g. seeing wildlife as sights +working on conservation projects) to be collected +Informal and/or involving voluntary Formal and commercialized +labour +Part of a government policy on Initiatives by entrepreneurs looking to +tourism development improve their competitive market + situation +Tourists who are concerned about Tourists who see ecotourism as just +environmental issues another tourism experience + + + + +Africa, for example. As it grows in popularity the concept of ecotourism will +assume greater significance, and attract more controversy, as the deliberations +over the relationship between wildlife, adventure and tourism continue. + Laarman and Durst (1993), for example, offer a simple definition of the +term ‘nature tourism’, arguing that it take place ‘principally on natural +resources such as relatively undisturbed parks and natural areas, wetlands, +wildlife reserves, and other areas of protected flora, fauna, and habitats’ (in +Fennell, 1999). However, nature-based tourism can occur in urban locations +and artificially created wildlife environments and so the definition becomes +limiting. Roe et al. (1997) attempt to offer an all-embracing broader set of +defining parameters for wildlife tourism, and define it as tourism that +includes, as a principal aim, the consumptive and non-consumptive use of +wild animals in natural areas. They say it can include high-volume mass +tourism or low-volume/low-impact tourism, generate high or low economic +returns, be sustainable or non-sustainable, domestic or international, and +based on day visits or on longer stays. Whilst Roe et al. specifically refer to +wild animals, Shackley usefully broadens the concept still further to include +flora as well as fauna. Newsome et al. offer a very practical three-pronged +division of tourism in the environment (adventure tourism), about the +environment (nature-based and wildlife tourism) and for the environment +(ecotourism). + + 203 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Laarman and Durst (1987) suggest that adventure might be part of a +wildlife experience, and define nature tourism as tourism where the traveller +is drawn to one or more aspect of natural history found in the destination, and +where the visit combines elements of education, recreation and adventure. + + The visit combines education, recreation and often adventure’ (in Fennell, +1999). Newsome et al. comment that adventure tourism and nature tourism +share similarities but suggest they are simply different aspects of tourism. +They state that adventure tourism is ‘tourism that is focused on the activity in +a natural area. It involves physical challenge, education and contact with +nature, and can be one of three types: small scale, with many ecotourism +characteristics (e.g. birdwatching, scuba diving); medium scale and sports +oriented (e.g. canoeing and rafting) or large scale, and an aspect of mass +tourism (e.g. safaris)’. Roberts and Hall (2001) comment that ‘exhilaration, +challenge, thrill and fantasy represent some of the experiences sought by those +opting for adventure travel as their holiday choice. Imagination appears to be +the only limit to the diverse and exciting activities that make this one of the +fastest growing tourism sectors’. Fennell also refers to the definition of the +Canadian Tourism Commission who, in 1995, defined adventure tourism as +‘an outdoor leisure activity that takes place in an unusual, exotic, remote or +wilderness destination’. We will see later how wildlife adventures can have all +these features. + + Thus nature tourism, ecotourism and wildlife tourism are all terms used in +the tourism industry where nature is one of the main product ingredients. The +experience might have differing degrees of interaction with nature, a variable +educational content and differing approaches to the sustainable use of the local +natural resources, but also varying levels of thrill or excitement with some +experiences being offered purely for entertainment. From zoos and safari +parks, wilderness trekking, marine aquaria and wildlife sports to whale +watching and working holidays, the range of products is extremely diverse +and increasingly difficult to categorize. Wildlife adventures are also +continually evolving; balloon safaris, for example, are now popular in Africa, +combining the adventure of ballooning with wildlife watching. + + Adventures with wildlife are of course key ingredients in wildlife adventure +tourism, yet few writers seem to acknowledge the truly adventureous side to +wildlife interaction. Natural history, habitats, flora and fauna, protected +landscapes and education are hardly adrenalin-linked terms that allude to +adventure. However, wildlife adventure tourism can involve much more than +this, including conspiracy, jealousy, politics and obsessive behaviours. +Wildlife tourism can be as much about the intrigue behind such human + +204 +f Wildlife tourism + + +behaviours and backstage ‘adventurous antics’ behind the exploration of +natural history. + + What, then, are the most salient features of the wildlife adventure tourism +experience? Wildlife has always featured as a substantial part of the conscious +and unconscious travel ‘experience’. The wildlife part of the experience often +consists of the more visible and sought-after animals, such as lions, dolphins +or snow leopards, yet it is significantly sustained by the less visible backcloth +of the habitat and the less obvious wildlife, such as the sounds of cicadas and +frogs on warm tropical evenings. Wildlife adventure tourism is therefore very +much a separate market niche as well as an all-pervasive part of tourism +markets, with wildlife and nature images used to adorn most market products. +Using a simple definition of ‘to travel and enjoy and appreciate nature’, +Fillion et al. (1992) estimated that 40–60 per cent of tourists are in fact nature +tourists and 24–40 per cent are wildlife-related tourists. But why is the +wildlife itself generally seen as adventurous? + + Commentators on adventure travel all too often use a rather traditional view +of ‘adventure’, seeing it as outdoor pursuits or extreme sports and other +adrenalin-raising physical activities, rather than endeavouring to understand +the adventurous side of plant and animal tourism. The underlying excitement +in wildlife adventure so often receives little attention, and it is this that we +focus on. Some ‘wildlife seekers’ are indeed no different from any other form +of adrenalin-hungry adventurers; they are no different to tornado chasers, or +people looking for an eclipse or the northern lights – they are all participating +in ‘holidays with a difference’. Often wildlife adventurers will seek the buzz +of fear and uncertainty, and the unpredictability of the wild animals. However, +as with most other adventures on the mass market, the danger is mostly (but +not entirely) a perceived one. The risk experience can also sometimes be a +rather voyeuristic foray around the periphery of danger, as white Europeans +for example venture into Africa to glance at the dangerous wildlife and return +home to safety. Whilst danger is indeed one obvious component of the wildlife +experience, the relationship between danger, rarity and economic value in +wildlife is currently being reappraised. + + The fear of wildlife is reduced, and we now think we are more in control. +This is the case with most species at least! Risk-free adventure develops +largely as a result of the drives of commercialism and the spread of litigation +societies, but the dangers of wildlife adventure do not always lie in the +obvious form of large popular mammals. It is often the small, unseen threats +that present real and less controllable danger. Jonathan Young, in his article +‘Don’t feed the animals’, refers to the very real dangers of wildlife adventure + + 205 +fAdventure Tourism + + +and advises unwary travellers how to avoid being nibbled, bitten or +swallowed. The threats that lurk in the natural world are mostly due to the +power of the predators. Young refers to the ‘International Shark Attack File’ +(ISAF), run by the Florida Museum of Natural History and the American +Elasmobranch Society, and estimates that each year there are between 70 and +1000 attacks and between 5 and 15 deaths. Black bears in North America are +known to have killed 35 people in the twentieth century, and grizzlies were +responsible for 88 deaths. In America 8000 people are bitten every year by +poisonous snakes, of whom 9–15 die; in Australia 3000 people are bitten each +year and only 1–2 die. Worldwide, bites from venomous snakes are believed +to cause the deaths of 50–100 people each year. However, the minute +mosquito causes 300–500 million cases of malaria each year, of which 1 +million are fatal, and malaria kills 3000 children under the age of 5 years +every day. + Adventures with wildlife are clearly not simply about risk, awe or fear. The +adventure can be concerned with the collection of prized ‘trophies’ or +photographs, or with swimming with, sitting next to, learning about or +searching for new species, exploring, and adding to personal ‘tick lists’. Many +travellers now prefer to shoot wildlife through camera lenses, and collect and +share exciting wildlife stories and tick-off prized checklists. Ticking off rare +birds from a checklist is known as ‘twitching’, and Bill Oddie, in Bill Oddie’s +Little Black Bird Book, humorously describes and characterizes the ‘twitcher’ +subculture of language, habits and clothing, and refers to the cardinal sin of +‘dipping out on a lifer’ – which, roughly translated, is a person missing out on +a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see a rare bird! + As we become more in tune with nature society moves towards increasingly +empathetic strategies, so removing some of our ancient and basic fears about +nature. Western fairytales, for example, paint a picture of nature as foreboding +and dark. ‘Natural’ places are where Hansel and Gretel got lost, and where +Sleeping Beauty was surrounded by thorn bushes and immense forests. +‘Nature’ was a place with ‘wild’ animals and ‘savage’ people, both requiring +taming. The psychological origins of such negative mindsets are rooted in +folklore, history, law, policy and industrial practices, and they are explored by +Beard (2000), who offers interesting ways to reframe our thinking about the +natural environment by altering our inner script – changing ‘metaphors’, +‘images’, ‘labels’ and ‘functions’. This reframing is exactly what happens +with the re-branding of wildlife. Shackley, for example, talks of the poor +public image affecting the tourism rating of wildlife interest, and refers to the +North American timber wolf as such a victim as it is often portrayed +maliciously in film. According to some, the wolf is clearly in need of an image + +206 +f Wildlife tourism + + +makeover. As society significantly tames wildlife, the sense of being in +control of the wildlife adventure is reinforced by the anthropomorphic and +often humorous marketing language that is used to reshape the public image +of animals. ‘Escape to “The Greatest Show on Earth”. . .’ was the theme of +one Sunday travel paper. In ‘Natural wonders of the world’, Sarah Turner +describes flamingos: + + . . . the supermodel of the animal kingdom, the flamingo is an exquisitely + pointless creature, whose life is largely devoted to feeding on algae that + gives it its distinctive colouring. It is the ultimate fashion victim – its + spindly legs and non-aerodynamic body make it enormously attractive to + predators. As a result, flamingos are forced to live in vast packs up to a + million strong (looking not unlike a giant pink duvet); but create one of + the most beautiful spectacles in the world at the same time. + +In the same article, wildebeest are described as ‘animals that can make the +London rush hour look like a catwalk’, manta rays are said to be ‘not exactly +beautiful because they were designed on a 1970 style spaceship’, and the +whale is described as giving birth in the ‘world’s largest birthing pool’ off the +shores of California. + + + Packaging wildlife adventure tourism +Limited numbers of high-profile animals are much prized and sought after by +an increasingly regulated number of limited tourists: exclusivity can be +applied to animals and tourists alike. Whilst Africa promotes the much sought +after ‘big five’ must-see checklist of elephant, rhino, buffalo, lion and leopard, +the Galapagos islands promotes its own famous five wildlife adventure +‘package deals’ consisting of Boobies, Frigate birds, giant tortoises, marine +iguanas and tacky souvenirs (Neil Robinson, 2001). Robertson made +reference to a five-star entry into ‘birdsville’ by going to the Galapagos +islands: + + . . . situated 600 miles off Ecuador they have become one of the most + tightly controlled tourist zones in the world, and the talk is of cutting + numbers rather than increasing them, an interesting reversal of every + tourist trend . . . almost everyone on board is transformed into a wildlife + enthusiast, thumbing through guidebooks. . . + +Wildlife ‘events’ attract tourists the world over, from the dawn chorus of birds +to bat and swallow roosts at dusk, and mass gatherings of fireflies and + + 207 +fAdventure Tourism + + +marching ants. These performances gather crowds in increasing numbers as a +result of prudent marketing. Whilst rare wildlife often attracts tourists, the +destination or the uniqueness or exclusiveness of the experience are also +important. The Midnight Zoo in Singapore, for example, is an alternative +approach to passive–interactive wildlife adventure tourism. Here a Philips +specialist lighting engineer has manipulated nature and designed illumination +systems that do not upset the biorhythms of the animals in the dark of the +tropical evenings, yet allow them to be brightly illuminated for the visitors. +The night-time adventure inside small open carriages takes passengers close +to docile animals that are aware neither of the light nor of the closeness of +their visitors. Similarly, exclusivity features in other forms in wildlife +adventure tourism. The Lindblad Explorer, an ex–research and exploration +ship later purchased for adventure tourism, roamed exotic locations in the +1970s and 1980s. Continuously travelling around the world, tourists flew out +to the boat for exclusive and expensive luxury adventure holidays, ranging +from the forays into the jungles of the Amazon to landings in the frozen +wastes of the Antarctic. The safari market also has its exclusive luxury niche, +with venues like Kleins Camp (situated on the edge of Kuka Hills just outside +the Serengeti National Park). The main building was once a private hunting +lodge and is now a wildlife sanctuary set within 10 000 acres leased form the +Masai community by Conservation Corporation Africa. No more than twenty +guests are allowed at any one time; advertisements state that there is no +camping involved and the bathrooms sport showerheads the size of dinner +plates; the promotional material comments that the trek to get there as being +‘well worth it’ and part of the adventure, and this costs approximately US$500 +per night. + + The animals themselves are clearly only a part of the unpredictability of +nature that creates real or perceived danger. The distance between people and +wildlife can vary considerably, as can the degree of animal freedom and +captivity, or tameness. The extent of the animal interaction can vary too; +sitting quietly with feeding gorillas is a much deeper and more meaningful +close encounter than viewing from a safari jeep. In most cases wildlife tourism +involves observation of, rather than a significant interaction with, wildlife. +However, in some cases the wildlife is also an active participant in the +experience on an involuntary basis, for example: + +u0002 In hunting and fishing, where the pleasure appears to derive from the chase + and the quality of the ‘fight’ put up by the creature being hunted +u0002 In adventures where wildlife provides transport, such as husky sled trips in + the Arctic or elephant trips in Thailand or India. + +208 +f Wildlife tourism + + +Whilst television programmes help to develop the characterization of animals +that adds considerably to their popular appeal, live TV shows have more +recently encouraged a new form of passive rather than active wildlife +adventures. Live television is merged with the wildlife documentary format, +and live footage can be beamed across the world from the big game in the +African bush. A UK-based company called Horizons embarked on an +ambitious experiment in live television in spring 2001, and sent daily live +reports from camps across South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe +in an attempt to bring the safari experience into the living room. High on the +agenda were intimate portrayals of the life of Africa’s so-called big five +(elephant, rhino, buffalo, lion and leopard), and viewers were able to ask +questions by e-mail. + + Many species of ‘dangerous’ wildlife are pushed to the verge of extinction, +with the ironic result that the species becomes so rare that it becomes a key +tourist attraction and a valuable sources of income generation for the host +nation, so generating more commercial return than if simply ‘left’ for people +to observe. Some species, however, enter the tourist regime through positive +protection schemes such as the Red Kite project in Wales (see Box 10.1). + + What we see from the kite story is that although wildlife can present itself +as a relatively free resource on which to found a tourism business venture, the +unpredictability appreciably affects the commercial value of wildlife in the +tourism marketplace: species used in tourism attractions are vulnerable to +shifts in status, brand image and rarity labelling. This is true if, for example, +the species become success stories in terms of parallel conservation efforts to +increase their numbers and secure future ecological stability. There are +numerous cases of commercial operators using wildlife to develop major +business attractions for tourists yet failing to return any part of the profit to the +conservation of the natural resource as the source of wealth. This failure to +acknowledge its commercial value and contribution and so take some +responsibility for its supply and protection is illustrated in St Davids, the +smallest city in the UK, located on the coastline of South Wales, where several +boat operators use the logo of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds to +attract tourists to take boat trips to see the bird colonies and aquatic mammals, +but offer little or nothing of their trip fees to the bird protection charities. + + It is not just wildlife rarity or indeed its potential threat to humans that +forms part of the attraction. Ecologists have for some time rated the +importance of wildlife as part of the regional, national or international +framework of protection and management planning by using categories that +can also provide a useful tourism checklist framework for examining wildlife + + 209 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + + Box 10.1 Kite tourism + Human persecution of vertebrates, especially the larger ones, forms part + of the story of the ancient need to dominate the natural environment. The + last wolf was killed in the UK in Scotland in 1643, and in Ireland in 1770 + (Tubbs, 1974). Records also exist of the payment for the ‘heads’ of birds + as incentives for people to control those species that were seen as vermin + and thus threatening agriculture or hunting, and it was through this + system that the red kite was hunted extensively in the late seventeenth + century. By the late 1800s it had been reduced to the verge of extinction, + with a small population remaining in central Wales. + Now it is seen as one of the rarest and most beautiful birds in the UK. + Distinguished by its forked tail and majestic heron-like flight, there were + some 27 pairs of breeding birds in central Wales. The bird population has + fluctuated over the centuries, and at one time in the UK it was so common + it scavenged on rubbish tips in London. Its decline was due to hunting, as + the bird was thought to be a killer of young lambs, farmyard poultry and + rabbits. A small population remained in rural Wales where conservation + programmes, funded by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, + have helped the kite to make a comeback. + The attraction of the red kite is due to a number of factors: its status as + a rarity, the fact that it is an impressive and large bird of prey, and clever + marketing. Over the decades the Black Mountains have witnessed the + gradual transformation from hunting to kill, to adventure hunting to see + and observe. The adventure applies to the other side too, i.e. the kite + protectors, as the wardening work for the RSPB is partially shrouded in + mystery. Living in wooden sheds and caravans, RSPB staff are advised to + watch out for known egg thieves, and lists of car numbers regularly arrive + from the special investigation department at headquarters. People + asking too many questions in the pub are to be treated with some degree + of caution, and staff are asked to be careful about using maps that show + the whereabouts of nests of birds such as the buzzard, the merlin and the + red kite. Thieves will take many risks to steal eggs or young birds for + falconry, and the financial rewards for the latter were significant in the + past owing to the overseas demand for birds. In many Arabic countries + such birds are now specially bred thus reducing this demand. + A peregrine falcon was seen one season in the Black Mountains after + years of absence due to persecution, only to have its eggs taken within + days of laying. One valley was robbed of all the buzzard eggs, and the + police caught the known collector in the West Midlands several hours + later. + +210 +f Wildlife tourism + + + The significance of the red kite to the tourism industry is now being +investigated in more detail, and it has been estimated that there were +some 250 000 staying visitors and some 750 000 day visits to rural +mid-Wales in the late 1990s. The adventure lies in tracking down this +elusive bird: between 101 000 and 107 000 different people visited the +Red Kite Centres during 1996 (Rayment, 1997). The red kite is being +used as a powerful tourism marketing tool; A Green Guide to Kite +Country was produced to encourage sustainable tourism, and various +kite merchandise is produced and promoted. Schemes such as ‘Stay on +a farm in Kite Country’ and ‘Business in Kite Country’ have been +launched to attract more tourists and business interest in the kite. The +former scheme involved some 130 farms by the mid-1990s, and was +launched to link the kite ‘benefits’ more directly to the local economy. +Businesses in the area of the red kite were asked to sign up to a +discretionary ‘Green Levy’, and this scheme was launched to attract +more funding for kite research and protection. + Rayment (1997) argues that ‘the conservation benefits of Kite +Country are more difficult to monitor than the economic impacts, +because the project itself involves little habitat management and seeks +to achieve conservation gain through education, awareness raising and +strengthening links between the kite and the local economy’. The +continued breeding success of the kites is clearly evident, with the birds +increasing from 27 to 120 pairs (fledging 112 young) in less than 20 +years between the mid-1970s and the mid-1990s. No nests were robbed +in 1995, but this might be due to secret permanent cameras at some +undisclosed sites. + The red kite became extinct in Scotland over a hundred years ago, +and was reintroduced in the Black Isle in 1989. Research by Rayment +(2001) outlines the economic significance of these species to the visitor +spending and visitor motivations. The Highlands of Scotland Tourist +Board (HOST) promotes the Black Isle as a naturalists’ paradise, with +reserves and visitor centres for viewing the red kite, seals and dolphins. +Closed circuit television cameras allow visitors to watch live footage of +nesting red kites. Whilst the nest sites are kept secret, tourists can +follow a red kite trail around the main roads, reducing disturbance to +the birds. + The kite-breeding programme is a major success story, and thus +might result in a degree of decline in kite tourism in Wales. The red kite +has now been reintroduced in Southern England, and is becoming very +common in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and the Chilterns. It remains +to be seen if visitors still seek out the bird if it is no longer rare. In this +instance, the market does not dictate supply and demand! + + + 211 +fAdventure Tourism + + +issues as part of an adventure tourism market. Ecological habitat categoriza­ +tions, for example, illustrate their environmental value and include rarity, size, +diversity, naturalness, fragility, typicality, recorded history, potential value and +intrinsic appeal. + However, larger and fiercer animals have not become rare purely through +past human persecution. Why Big Fierce Animals are Rare (Colinvaux, 1980) +explains the significance of the Elton pyramid to the tourism industry. Charles +Elton, observing life on the Arctic tundra, noted how the smaller things were +common and large things were rare – something that had been known but +unexplained since the dawn of time. What he discovered was that discrete +sizes came about because of the science of eating and being eaten. He created +the famous ‘pyramid of numbers’ that simply shows that with every jump in +size there is a significant loss in numbers in order to sustain larger biomass. +To sustain large beasts there must be copious small things for it to eat. +Therefore, quite simply there will always be few big fierce animals! Add to +this the destruction of the natural habitats of these animals around the world +and we have even fewer large beasts to locate and then marvel at. Rare and big +animals add to the tourism attraction whether they are fierce or not. + Whilst the wildlife most frequently referred to in marketing literature +include whales, big cats, the great apes and birds, numbers and mass and other +criteria can also be important determinants of popularity and economic value +to the tourism industry. Classic Journeys, for example, concentrates on +wildlife adventure in Asia and notes that whilst the Himalayas are home to the +legendary snow leopard, musk deer and ibex, the Indian subcontinent as a +whole is home to over 365 species of mammals, 1200 species of birds and + + + + +Figure 10.1 Tourism species popularity pyramid. + +212 +f Wildlife tourism + + +13 000 species of flowering plants. If we construct a tourism species +popularity pyramid, it closely reflects the Elton pyramid of numbers (see +Figure 10.1). + + + The adventure and excitement of plants +The tourism industry is increasingly recognizing that for many people the +same fascination can exist for plants as it does for animals. There are many +plant-seeking tourists today, and some travellers wish to trace the journeys of +famous explorers. Whilst the adventurous exploits of plant-seekers have been +documented for many years, One River (Davies, 1997) is a relatively recent +story of Richard Evans Schultes, one of the greatest ‘botanical adventurers’ of +the nineteenth century, who explored lands no outsider had seen before. The +book narrates the epic story of one of the most pre-eminent ethnobotanists in +the world, ‘a man whose own expeditions a generation earlier had earned him +a place in the pantheon along with Charles Darwin, Alfred Russell Wallace, +Henry Bates and his own hero, the indefatigable English botanist and explorer +Richard Spruce’: + + Filled with colour and danger, the story is also one of extraordinary + discoveries as Schultes sought to understand the psychoactive plants of + the rainforest and how the native shamans used them. In addition to his + research into hallucinogenic plants that sparked the psychedelic era, + Schultes’ search for wild rubber led to one of the most important + breakthroughs in the history of cultivated plants. + (Davies, 1997) + + The book is filled with plant intrigue. The stories of botanical adventure are +globally significant, and the following extracts illustrate so well some of the +reasons why plant adventure can be so appealing. The book reports on one +plant fanatic who had studied mushrooms for over twenty-five years with his +Russian wife, Valentina Pavlovna. The man was Gordon Wasson, a banker and +vice-president of J. P. Morgan & Co. of New York. Wasson noted that societies +could simply be divided into those that revered mushrooms and those that +despised them. On 13 May 1957, Wasson published an article in Life +magazine about his exploits with sacred mushrooms that affected the mind; +the article was to have a profound effect. The editor, in seeking to capture the +spirit of the article, titled it ‘Seeking Magic Mushrooms’. The book notes that +neither the editor nor Wasson could have anticipated how the article would +mark ‘a certain watershed in the social history of the United States, the +beginning of the psychedelic era’. + + 213 +fAdventure Tourism + + + The political global significance of one single topical plant is also +exemplified: + + Every hose on every ship, every valve and seal, every tire on every truck + and plane . . . it’s wrapped around every inch of wiring in every factory, + home and office in America. Conveyer belts, hydraulics, inflatable boats, + gas masks, rain gear, it’s all rubber. + +One River also includes details of the search for and discovery of rubber in the +Amazon – said to be one of the greatest breakthroughs in the history of +cultivated plants. Brazil was the original home of the rubber trees that now +adorn hundreds of thousands of acres of Asian soil that was once rainforest. +As a result of the so-called ‘theft’ of many thousands of seeds from the +rainforests of Brazil, which were collected by British botanical adventurers, +the Brazilian rubber wealth declined drastically as commercial plantations +developed more successfully in Asia. + What also astounded Schultes was the use of natural drugs by, for example, +Amazonian indigenous people – not so much their effect, but for the +‘underlying intellectual question that the elaboration of these complex +preparations posed’. The Amazonian flora contained tens of thousands of +species, so ‘how had the Indians learned to identify and combine in this +sophisticated manner these morphologically dissimilar plants that possessed +such unique and complementary chemical properties?’. + Brazil is named after a single species of tree that produces a bright red sap +(pau do brasil), and brasile is from the Latin word for red. Significantly, +Europeans wanted the sap for dye for clothing, and this eventually resulted in +the first large-scale invasion of Brazil, by the Portuguese. This in turn led to +the destruction, domination and slavery of many of the indigenous peoples – +all for a tree. The book also describes in detail the intellectual property gained +from indigenous people that resulted in significant medical progress from +these botanical adventures, especially those into the rainforests of the Amazon +basin. + Equally fascinating stories describe the extreme adventure of plant +discoveries. One botanical scientist spent his entire career investigating the +chemical responsible for killing thousands of people, making noses fall away +from faces, and toes and fingers drop away from feet and arms. This occurred +in the Middle Ages, and many people suffered horrific hallucinations and +many were hung as they were thought to be possessed. The culprit was a +simple fungus that grew on rye and caused blood vessels to constrict in + +214 +f Wildlife tourism + + +humans; only dedicated botanical scientists would think about the promising +medical potential of such a phenomenon, and they relentlessly pursued the +chemicals involved for many years. It was thought that the chemical in the +plant could, for example, help to stem excessive bleeding after childbirth. +Plant scientists thus sought to discover the chemical involved, and one man, +a Dr Hofmann, was doing just that when one Friday he felt dizzy and set off +home on his bicycle. Unknown to him he had indeed discovered the chemical, +and small traces had been absorbed through his skin. The chemical was +lysergic acid diethylamide-25, LSD for short – the most potent hallucinogenic +ever discovered! The book rather matter-of-factly comments ‘On his way +home Dr Hofmann went on the world’s first acid trip’. + Plant adventurers and explorer naturalists exist in many forms, and they +continue today to push new frontiers that might affect new tourism initiatives +in the future. Botanists and zoologists identify with this natural inquisitiveness +that can eventually drive people to extreme behaviours in search of species. +Plant lovers and their antics are described in Orchid Fever (Hanson, 2001). +One international orchid grower summed it up on the rear of the book by +commentating that ‘You can get off alcohol, drugs, women, food and cars, but +once you’re hooked on orchids you’re finished. You never get off orchids . . . +never’. Eric Hanson is a well-known travel writer who, entering the world of +plant obsessives, describes the bizarre and compelling tales of corruption, +murder and plant politics, uncovering some of the underlying adventures +behind the hobby of collecting, breeding and exhibiting plants, giving insight +into the drives, impulses and urges of some tourists. The first few lines of the +book describe the adventurous side of plant hunting and make it clear that it +is potentially much more risky than bungee jumping, or indeed any other +extreme sport: + + There is something distinctive about the sight and sound of a human + body falling from the rainforest canopy. The breathless scream, the + wildly gyrating arms and legs pumping thin air, the rush of leaves, + snapping branches, and the sickening thud, followed by an uneasy + silence. Listening to that silence, I reflected on how plant collecting can + be an unpleasant sort of activity. + +Plant exploration continues unabated even today. Claiming a place in the +history books is another key driving force in wildlife adventure tourism. On +29 June 2002, The Times reported in the UK that (Browne, 2002): + + Explorers have nothing left to discover, but all botanists need is a plane + ticket to leave their names in the history books. Whilst the whole of the + + 215 +fAdventure Tourism + + + world is mapped in the tiniest detail, plants, often big ones, are still being + discovered everywhere . . . Almost any trip to South America or South + East Asia with a trained botanist will reveal dozens of previously + unknown species, but they need to go to the remote areas. + +‘The Scentsation seekers’ too are modern adventure scientists, and were +discussed in an article in ZEST, a health and beauty magazine for women, in +May 2001. The article describes how perfumers are looking to the rainforests +to find more smells, and says that people want more perfumes for different +moods. The article quotes the Director of Fine Fragrances at Quest +International as saying ‘. . . we’ve found some genuinely new essences in +Madagascar, not just coral and waterfall but delicious fruits, rich, peppery +vines and resins that no one has used before’. Quest International also +sponsored Oxford University research on rare Madagascan sea turtles, and has +invested generously to protect rare ecosystems. Madagascar is home to +200 000 species of plants, 85 per cent of which are endemic. Scientists go on +adventure expeditions to capture smells, placing glass bell jars over the leaves +or flowers to capture molecules of smell, and then try to replicate them in the +laboratory. No flora or fauna are destroyed or removed in the collection +process. How long it will be before such adventurous smelling expeditions are +created for the travel market? + + + The ticking of locations – habitats as destinations +Wildlife and nature form the core product for many tourist destinations +worldwide at a number of different levels, including the following: + +1 Countries that in spite of having diverse attractions are categorized by the + industry and are stereotypically seen by tourists as almost solely wildlife + attractions, such as Kenya and Botswana. This can be a real obstacle if these + destinations wish to develop other forms of tourism. +2 Regions and areas where nature is the main attraction although the country + may have other attractions. Examples include the Iguassu Falls in Brazil + and the national parks of South Africa. +3 Places where the main product is not wildlife-based but where wildlife + attractions are important secondary attractions, such as San Diego with its + zoo, and the night safari in Singapore. + +Many destinations have attracted wildlife tourists for generations. However, +some places are seeking to use wildlife to enter the tourism market as new +players, and wildlife attractions are being used to spearhead attraction-led + +216 +f Wildlife tourism + + +urban regeneration and rural development initiatives. For instance, aquaria +have been used to this effect in Boulogne-sur-Mer (Nausicaa) and Brest +(Océanopolis) in France, Barcelona in Spain, Baltimore in the USA, and +Birmingham in the UK. + However, wildlife tourism can become a problem in destinations if the scale +of it begins to overwhelm the host environment, whether this is a forest or a +coral reef. Just as with plant and animal species, habitats as ‘destinations’ +have also become fashionable places in the adventure travel industry. The +uniqueness lies in searching for new locations – a form of geographical or +habitat ‘twitching’. Shackley refers to the Galapagos Effect, and comments +that even the Antarctica as a new destination has seen a rapid increase in +tourism over the last two decades. The ‘been there . . . done that’ attitude does +exist among some adventure travellers. Thus the same pyramid or league table +might be constructed for natural habitats in terms of rarity or popularity, and +this could look like Figure 10.2. + + + + +Figure 10.2 Hierarchical pyramid of natural destinations. + + + + There might be some awesome adventure ‘tick-lists’ in the future – it is +reported by Wright (1996) that there are some 2700 National Parks in 120 +different countries! + Apart from the location and wildlife league tables, and the light-hearted +characterizations that form the basis of a species ‘image make-over’, there is +a much deeper, more spiritual and genetically anchored connection of people +to nature, and this is now explored in more detail. + + 217 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Curative nature +The outdoor natural world offers a tremendous range of variables, including +unpredictability, which can be used in designing and marketing the wildlife +adventure experience. Pringle and Thompson (2001), both with significant +experience with the advertising agency Saatchi and Saatchi, offer an analysis +of the use of cause-related marketing (CRM) to build brands, and they talk of +the three waves in branding history. The first wave, the 1950s, is described as +the rational era of marketing, whereas in the 1970s the behavioural +psychologists were more involved in advertising, and the concern focused on +the emotional image and the lifestyle benefits of the product and services in +the consumer landscape. This was the second emotional wave. In the 1990s +the third wave commenced, as a spiritual or ethical wave: + + If anthropomorphy is one of the fundamentals in branding then it was + inevitable that sooner or later the analogy with human behaviour and + psychology would be pursued to its logical conclusion. It would lead + marketers to having to provide the ultimate dimension in brand + personality and brand character in order to complete the presentation to + the consumer: the brand’s ‘soul’. + +These issues remain very significant to wildlife adventure tourism industry +today. Current lifestyles offer more security and routine for many, and people +increasingly experience nature as reconstructed and contrived in a new safe +format. Yet it remains to be seen to what extent this new form of the controlled +‘nature experience’ and our interaction with ‘new nature’ remains an essential +subconscious human need for a satisfying, quality life. Identity and self- +fulfilment may well still depend on, and be heavily influenced by, our +interactions with nature. Interestingly, a strong set of opposing emotional +affiliations occur in the human interactions with nature, and adventure tourism +embraces these very different approaches. One is the dominionistic need to +master nature – the combative approach (conquering and taming wildlife and +the natural environment) – and the other is a more empathetic approach (an +affinity and empathy to wildlife and natural habitats). Different forms of +adventure can be located in both approaches. Holiday stories often include +wildlife adventures, and in one narrative analysis we completed of a UK gap- +year young couple travelling in Australia and New Zealand, we found wildlife +storytelling commonly consisted of contrasting scary stories or near misses +with stories that related to feelings of being at home in nature. The dominant +stories were of a scary type, such as swimming with sharks, spiders under the +tent and frogs in the toilet, with the occasional reference to the cuddliness of, + +218 +f Wildlife tourism + + +for example, koala bears, and to lovely sunsets. The contrasting beliefs of +Native American and Western civilizations are compared in an article called +the ‘Spirit of the Earth’, by Georgina Peard, who offers a simple analysis from +the two perspectives on nature: + + Native American Western civilization + At home in nature Fear + Belonging Ownership + Community Individualism + Spiritual Capital + Sustainable Exploitation + Freedom Domination + +Despite the ancient origins of some negative feelings towards nature, it has +long been recognized that the natural environment has curative properties for +humans and our understanding of such phenomena is rapidly increasing. The +natural environment has an extensive history as a place for healing, for repair +and for personal development, and the human need to affiliate with life and +life-like processes is known as biophilia (Kellert, 1993). ‘Wilderness walks’ +are also now being given serious consideration as an option for doctors’ health +prescriptions! Research carried out long ago by Ulrich (1974) set out to +measure the attractive and aversive human physiological responses to natural +phenomena. Some early research was carried out on postoperative patients in +hospital, and early indications showed that patients who overlooked natural +green space had shorter postoperative stays, fewer post-surgery complications, +and required less medication and less analgesics. + The person–environment relationship is of course a two-way process, and +this subtle impact of the natural environment on our health and well-being is +both physiological and psychological. Kellert (1993) suggests that spending +time in green space causes the following physiological responses: + +u0002 Reduced heart rate +u0002 Reduced blood pressure +u0002 A decrease in circulating stress hormones +u0002 An increase in cognitive functioning, performance and creativity +u0002 Alterations in brain activity in the alpha frequency range +u0002 Relaxation of stress-induced muscle tension. + +These responses, he suggests, are due to a number of stimuli, including +colours, textures, natural smells, decreased ‘noise pollution’ (or more +interesting sounds such as running water), and exposure to the elements + + 219 +fAdventure Tourism + + +(wind, rain, heat, cold, etc.). Interestingly, this presents a juxtaposition of calm +and cure against adventure and excitement, but is these two very opposite sets +of emotional responses that, when combined, can create the thrilling ‘Peak +experience’ described by both Shackley and by Fennell, and explored in depth +by Beard and Wilson (2002). + Historically there have been many protagonists of the view that there is not +a single social ill or physical problem that would not respond to a course of +treatment in the outdoors (Charlton, 1992). In the worldwide Scouting and +Guide movements it was long ago considered that exposure to wilderness and +adventure was a potential cure for everything from flat-footedness to ‘bad +citizenship’! + In a more recent study, Sacred Nature, Adrian Cooper (1998) explored how +150 travellers reconcile their spiritual faiths with the challenge of interpreting +wild, natural environments, from tropical rainforest to frozen lands and +deserts. He collected information for eleven years, and in a section called +‘Turning points’ he describes how wildlife adventure had a very significant +therapeutic impact upon a woman who was diagnosed as HIV positive and, +two years later, was living in Bristol in a derelict warehouse, drinking very +heavily and sharing her life with four other homeless women. She found a +rain-sodden magazine blowing across the warehouse floor with a picture of a +mother and baby elephant in Amboseli National Park in Kenya. A week later +she hitched a lift to London and bought a one-way ticket to Nairobi. In the +airport in Africa she met a group of American youngsters about to go on a +camping expedition, and was invited to join them: + + For hours on end, I was lost in complete contentment watching the + elephants living their lives, and supporting each other. And I’d often find + myself hearing someone say the time. And I’d realize that I’d gone + almost all day without thinking about HIV. It was incredible. But it was + the gentle elephants and the gentle people I was with. + +Cooper comments that the woman’s healing came intuitively, and her study of +elephants turned into weeks of close observation and involvement. This rare +and precious fellowship among people and elephants became an adventure +that completely re-directed her life. Through her church in London she +became a social worker, eventually completed a law degree, and worked for +two charities advising young homeless adults. This illustrates how the wildlife +adventure experiences can so easily straddle the world of adventure of mind +and body – an embracing therapy. Adventure therapy is indeed a specialist +field that uses nature and outdoor experiential activities for individual, group + +220 +f Wildlife tourism + + +or family psychotherapy or counselling (Beard and Wilson, 2002), and +wildlife can often form a significant ingredient in the therapeutic process. + The ‘outdoors’ conjures up many other words, such ‘nature’, ‘earth’ and the +‘environment’; all of which are used interchangeably in the literature. It is +useful to explore this confusion about the nature of the term ‘outdoors’ if we +are to think laterally about the components that make up the term. Many +people experience an avalanche of over 1000 consumptive advertising stimuli +every day from television, radio, notices, packaging, street advertisements and +so on. This creates a blinding over-stimulation of our visual senses, creating +personal imbalance. Away from all this, in the more ‘natural outdoors’, this +sensory dulling is removed and replaced with completely new stimulation +signals. Outside in nature lie dramatic landscapes of different kinds, providing +unpredictable extremes of stimulus, where the natural elements are easily felt, +visible and accessible. We are bombarded with new, less familiar, stimuli, and +the rainforests represent the extremes of such exciting stimulation. In the +forest people listen attentively to thousands of animals that continuously send +out signals, such as warnings of encroaching predators. We alert the senses +and read the changes in light, humidity, wind, colour and shadows. We can +feel a storm coming although we cannot see it – it is a place to sharpen +observational and sensing skills (Beard & Wilson, 2002). + Natural surroundings and ‘fresh air’ energize and revitalize us, as well as +beckoning us back to our primitive roots (Consalvo, 1995). Consalvo +introduced her book on ready-made games for trainers with the following +comment that enriches the imagination: + + Blue sky, red sunsets, white puffy clouds, green fields speckled with + flowers, pine-covered paths, moonlit meadows, crickets chirping, birds + singing, snow crunching underfoot, the smell of the spring thaw, summer + sweetness, autumn decay, a salty breeze, burning leaves, the squish of + mud, the sting of hot sand and the cold of snow are just a few among the + plethora of sensory images we experience while outdoors. These + sensations often tap emotionally and spiritually uplifting memories. + +This quotation conjures up so many backcloth facets of the wildlife adventure +experience that we cherish in adventurous experiences in the outdoors. +Indeed, numerous natural ingredients are available to enhance sensitivity to +the wildlife adventure experience, including: + +u0002 The natural rhythms of life +u0002 Remoteness + + 221 +fAdventure Tourism + + +u0002 Changing seasons +u0002 Wetness, humidity and dryness +u0002 Heat and cold +u0002 The ebb and flow of tides +u0002 Day, night, dawn and dusk +u0002 The elements and their unpredictability (e.g. storms and winds) +u0002 Dramatic landscapes +u0002 Flora and fauna +u0002 Natural artforms +u0002 Spiritual sensations +u0002 Natural sounds. + +(Adapted from Beard and Wilson, 2002.) + + Reed (1999) describes five key elements – earth, air, fire, water and spirit +– and explains how these elements interact with people. He suggests that these +five are important symbols and may hold the key to learning and discovery in +adventure. Fire, he suggests, is a symbol of action and creativity, and of +destruction and new life. Water can symbolize feelings, emotion, dark +undercurrents. Air symbolizes ideas and intellectual pursuits, but also +insubstantial dreaming and lofty idealism. The fifth element, spirit, pervades +all, but he noted that ‘the ether is invisible, insubstantial but ubiquitous’. +Watching fire, listening to the flowing water and noticing the silence are +powerful experiences. Breathing the clean morning air, savouring and +appreciating basic shelter and food, and experiencing darkness are less +common everyday experiences for increasing numbers of people. For stressed +people these can be very welcome experiences. However, they must be treated +like the volume control when listening to your favourite music: too loud and +the stimulus can be painful, too low and it has little impact. The ideal stimulus +for learning lies somewhere in between, but can vary according to our needs +and moods. Physical ‘highs’ are not always necessary to achieve emotional +‘highs’, and this is where an understanding of the environment is essential. + + These ingredients can be broken down yet further into their subcomponents +– e.g. the use of remote wilderness time creating solitude, space, quietness, +and mental ‘sorting-out time’, especially following adrenalin-based adven­ +ture. The leads to the idea of creating ‘adventure waves’ (Beard and Wilson, +2002). + + The future is exciting for adventure tourism, as the outdoor arena can give +rise to endless experiences when people interact with the terrain, the natural +elements and the spirituality associated with it. + +222 +f Wildlife tourism + + + Clearly wildlife adventure tourism is a vast and complex subject, as is +shown in Figures 10.3–10.5, which summarize the types of wildlife tourism, +the levels of interest in such tourism and the forces that can influence demand +for it. + + + + +Figure 10.3 The types of wildlife tourism. + + + + + The tourism industry exploits all the forms of wildlife tourism shown in +Figure 10.3 all over the world. However, while some wildlife ‘promoters’ +such as whale watching or safaris can attract visitors to a destination from all +over the world, others like traditional zoos often have a largely local day-trip +market only. + Figure 10.4 shows us that different groups of people have different levels +of interest and participation in wildlife tourism. + Figure 10.4 is clearly a sweeping generalization, but it is not too inaccurate +overall. However, reality is more complex, with shades of levels of interest +within each of these categories and, of course, some people who have no + + 223 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 10.4 The range of interest and participation in wildlife tourism. + + + + +interest in wildlife-related tourism whatsoever. At the other extreme you have +a tiny number of obsessives whose whole life is dominated by their interest in +wildlife. + It is also important to recognize that the motives of wildlife tourists also +vary, and may include: + +u0002 The desire to study wildlife scientifically +u0002 Entertainment with animals seen as ‘funny’, such as monkeys +u0002 A wish to commune with nature as a recuperative activity +u0002 The desire for status through collecting experiences involving rare + wildlife. + +Figure 10.5 shows some of the key factors that influence the demand for +wildlife tourism. + However, this model can only be put forward tentatively, as little real +research has been conducted on the way in which wildlife tourists make their +purchase decisions. + +224 +f Wildlife tourism + + + + +Figure 10.5 Factors that influence the demand for wildlife tourism. + + + + + Summary +Nature is an essential component of most tourism products, and thus future +tourism initiatives will need to have less negative impact on the environ­ +ment than many other industries. Otherwise, tourism and wildlife will +become involved in a damaging conflict rather than having a symbiotic +relationship. At the same time the tourism industry will experience greater +regulatory forces that might encourage a distancing or ‘moving away’ and +separation from nature, so that nature might be more protected. The +relationship between adventure, nature, product and experience in the +tourism industry requires further discussion. Wildlife tourism has a range of +potential impacts on the wildlife itself, from hunting, where the form of +tourism may well lead to the death of the creature, to those forms of +wildlife adventure tourism where the creature may not even be aware of the +presence of the tourists. Between these opportunities are a range of impacts +from short-term minor disturbance to large-scale destruction of habitats and +disruption of feeding and breeding patterns, with severe long-term implica­ +tions. In this chapter we have paid less attention to these issues of direct +impact as they are addressed elsewhere in the literature, although many of +these issues remain unresolved. What we have done is to examine in some +detail the impact of wildlife on humans, not least the less manageable +dangers of some smaller animals. + + 225 +fAdventure Tourism + + + This chapter has looked at the fashionable, rapidly developing field of +wildlife adventure tourism and its emergence from and similarity to +ecotourism and nature tourism. However, we have seen that defining this field +is problematic, as wildlife adventure tourism is full of many contradictions and +is a complex subject. This chapter has extensively explored the deeper +interactions of people and wildlife that have received little attention elsewhere. +We have explored some of the key salient features that make up the wildlife +adventure experience, and examined how issues of rarity, size and diversity +have commercial significance to the tourism industry. We have looked at +political intrigue and plant politics, as well as other obsessive behaviours, and +have considered future new forms of wildlife adventure ‘package deals’ and +‘travellers’ checklists’ that extend beyond current ideas such as the ‘Big Five’ +game in Africa and the ‘Big Five’ of the Galapagos Islands. + + We have also scrutinized how nature and its constituent elements creates a +plethora of underlying therapeutic sensations and feelings in people, such as +the escape from over-stimulation that occurs in busy city lives, the biophilic +relationship with nature, the physiological and physical impact of outdoor +exercise, spiritual feelings, freedom and self-fulfilment. We have also +explored how such issues align with the current third wave of branding, +involving the spirit or soul of nature. + + Nash (in Redclift and Benton, 1994) argues that as societies develop +economically they appreciate ‘nature’ more and ‘civilization’ less. Our view +is that nature will ironically continue to be valued more as it disappears, but +societies will also seek to replicate it, mimic its powers, and will eventually +find it irresistible to go beyond nature. These are the issues that will spawn a +significant debate for the tourism and other outdoor industries in general in the +future, as manicured nature increasingly has significant commercial advan­ +tages. Nature is unpredictable, and the ‘right’ experience cannot be guaranteed +or indeed easily ‘read’ by people. This leads to the commodification and +commercialization of nature, yet nature itself does not fit easily with or abide +by traditional economic models. Economy and ecology follow different rules. +As a result, the experiences of nature are increasingly being artificially +manufactured and regulated. There are many environmental, social, technical +and commercial advantages to this process, but there are also many +disadvantages as we become estranged from and lose touch with real nature. +Choices concerning the consumption of nature and our relationship with +nature are crucial if tourism is to coexist alongside conservation. + + Nature will speak for itself, but as we go beyond nature few might hear its +voice: + +226 +f Wildlife tourism + + + Nature has become imbued with so many virtues that the term ‘natural’ + no longer confers unambiguous meaning. We have refashioned nature, in + our minds, as well as in test tubes and fields, transforming ecological + processes into political axioms . . . + (Goodman and Redclift, 1991, in Redclift and Benton, 1994) + + Exploring nature is clearly an adventurous business. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the ethical dilemmas involved in wildlife adventure tourism. +2 Discuss the factors that have led to a growth of wildlife tourism in recent + years. +3 Select two examples of the types of wildlife tourism product illustrated in + Figure 10.3, and compare and contrast them. + + + + + 227 +f11 + Artificial environment + adventure + + + + + Introduction + This chapter explores the key defining para­ + meters of artificial adventure and its future + potential within the tourism industry as a leading + area of income. Here we explore definitions and + boundaries, review market trends in the develop­ + ment and use of artificial adventure, and create a + practical typology. Whilst the creation of artifi­ + cial adventure sites is not a new phenomenon, + exciting possibilities lie ahead for yet more + innovative developments in the industry. + ‘Tall Stories’ is one of an increasing number of + adventure holiday companies offering all the + excitement of adventure activities for tourists + under seductive product headings such as ‘adrena­ + line junkie’, ‘radical experience’, ‘extreme addic­ + tion’ and ‘ultimate adventure’. These clearly + identify some of the needs of the consumers. +f Artificial environment adventure + + +Similarly, many other leading tourism companies are also offering exciting +adventure opportunities for their clients to experience alongside more +traditional holidays, through partnerships with other specialist adventure +activity providers. Behind the scenes, however, the prevailing technological +developments are beginning to drive the market in less transparent directions, +and exciting prospects lie ahead for the tourism industry with a range of new +adventure products. + + The Rock is a simulated two-person climbing wall that tilts, spins and + rotates in a 105-degree radius to mimic real mountain climbing. You can + select famous climbs via the computer console such as Everest, K2 and + the Eiger. To add to the challenge we can adjust the speed and incline/ + decline depending on your ability or the difficulty of the climb. It + remains quite safe, as you are never more than four feet off the ground. + Moreover your safety is ensured by an operator in attendance at all times. + The Rock can be used both inside and outside, and in adverse weather + conditions has its own impressive events station. There is no need for + special clothing, ropes or helmets. + +It is the world of artificially constructed adventure that now represents the +new frontier in adventure tourism, for a number of reasons. Besides the +technical advancements in new surface materials and the invention of devices +and gadgets, environmental protection, space, health and safety concerns and +product organization also play a key role. As we will explore later in this +chapter, some of these ingredients contrive to make the future of artificial +adventure very commercially attractive. Throughout the world we are seeing +the emergence of an ever-increasing array of adventure products that use some +degree of artificiality or simulation, and this gives rise to the need to create +something of a typology in order to understand the market more clearly. + + + Defining terms +In the late 1980s artificial adventure was given a basic underpinning definition +in the USA. Attarian (1999), in an examination of artificial climbing +environments, referred to a ‘man-made structure, device, or environment that +simulates a natural setting, which can be used specifically for teaching or +participating in outdoor activities’. This definition implies that artificial +equates to ‘man-made’ and outdoors, and suggests that it is anything ‘not +natural’ – ranging from a small gadget or ‘device’ to a whole ‘environment’, +which might take the form of a sizeable location. + + 229 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Such a seasoned view of ‘artificiality’ is now likely to be more problematic, +as a tension exists between artificial adventure and traditional views about +what constitutes ‘real’ adventure. + Real adventure is often perceived as being outdoors because the natural +outdoor environment is where there is exposure to wilderness and the +associated dangers of natural forces or elements. It is these that represent the +core of the challenge. It is perceived as being unpredictable and ‘pure’, in +the sense that it is not contrived. In contrast, when adventure is constructed +or contrived it can be perceived as somehow ‘not authentic’ – not +indigenous. The perception of what is natural in terms of the environment +and what is natural in terms of the individual endeavour is epitomized in +longstanding debates about, for example, climbing natural rock faces with +safety bolts, or summiting mountains without oxygen. But does it really +matter? + At one end of the adventure tourism dichotomy we might have Theme +Parks and Pleasure Parks, as they have long been artificially constructed +locations with a focus on popular, packaged excitement and fun. ‘Real’ +adventure might not include such adventurous rides at the fairground, in +white-water rafting simulators, or racing driving in an amusement arcade +machine. However, the boundaries between real and virtual or simulated +environments are becoming ever more indistinct, making it increasingly +difficult to distinguish adventure from amusement or entertainment. Fur­ +thermore, the high levels of risk-free safety, external inspection, regulation +and monitoring associated with the commercialization of these fun-adventure +environments is increasingly being transferred to the other end of the +spectrum: the extreme adventure challenges. Many companies now offer the +ultimate in adventure tourism, providing people with a chance to be ‘guided’ +to summit the highest mountain on earth, Everest, for a significant fee. The +challenge is to experience and survive in what is commonly known as the +Death Zone (Dickinson, 1998) and to summit Everest. This upper area is +rescue-free, and the body is continually breaking down and deteriorating. +Despite many people being aided by experienced leaders and highly skilled +Sherpas, and being supported by advanced technology and pre-laid ropes and +ladders, the death rates are high. Yet the degree to which such an extreme +adventure is viewed as a ‘product’, where paying clients are artificially +supported and parts of the environment reconstructed for their safety, is +continually changing. Increasingly if things go wrong the lawyers are called +in, and the commercialized elements of adventure then take on a new +appearance. ‘Adventure’ tourism is then highly scrutinized and is exposed to +the glare of the media coverage regarding blame and responsibilities. + +230 +f Artificial environment adventure + + + + Adventure in the mind +Although adventure is essentially a state of mind, artificial adventure offers a +particular type of adventure with the distinct advantage that the focus on +mimicry or inventive creation can allow providers to produce the very best +environment, or the most challenging natural conditions. This represents a real +advantage for large-scale commercial use in tourism or recreation, as the +relationship between risk and challenge is fundamentally changing. Products +that incorporate natural forces are always difficult to manage and control +commercially, and adventure activities themselves often impact negatively on +the natural environment. These factors can be immensely significant market +drivers. + If the development of these adventure products is to be successful in +tourism markets, manageable and variable levels of challenge are needed, +without the ‘real risk’. + There are also other interesting psychological issues. In the practice of +creating adventure in Outward Bound schools around the world there has long +been a central debate about instructors ‘letting the mountain (experience) +speak for itself’. Artificially constructed sites are lacking in this latent +meaning; the artificial stone of constructed climbing has no true evolutionary +significance, no historical pedigree. The walls cannot speak for themselves, as +they have little history to tell. What then is the essential composition of +artificial adventure? It can take place in an indoor or outdoor environment, but +the two locations can differ greatly in many respects as the boundaries are +often not clear-cut. When we use the term ‘outdoor adventure’ we tend to +think of a place outside, in the ‘natural’ environment, where many adventure +activities are conducted. However, a cave is neither indoors nor outdoors, and +many forms of artificial indoor caves are now being created to mimic natural +caves. This brings us to the point where a much more detailed investigation of +the characteristics of a series of practical examples can generate a +classification of the nature of ‘artificiality’, which might be helpful. However, +first we will examine a very brief history of artificial adventure in order to +observe some basic evolutionary trends. + + + Historical perspectives +In 1941 the first-ever artificial climbing wall was said to have been built in +Seattle, Washington, and in the 1950s the French extensively used adjustable +wooden walls, especially for military training purposes. The first successful +indoor climbing wall in the UK was at a school in Cumbria in the early 1960s. + + 231 +fAdventure Tourism + + +In 1970 in Arizona the ‘Big Surf’ was created on an island lagoon. This was +the first artificial surfing environment, though much has happened since those +early days and mobile surf machines can now be found adorning indoor +adventure exhibitions around the world. In 1972 the first major artificial kayak +slalom course was built for the Munich Olympic Games, and many more have +followed since. BMX sites, skate parks, roller-blading sites, artificial white­ +water rafting sites, portable high-ropes courses and many other artificial +adventure sites all started to take the form of major commercial ventures in the +late 1980s and early 1990s. They continue to proliferate around the globe, and +more research is needed into the nature of these developments. In 2001 a +million-pound project off the coast of Scotland proposed the creation of the +world’s largest experimental artificial reef from a million concrete blocks, +designed to attract fish and crabs as well as boost the spawning habitat of the +Scottish West Coast Lobster (Judd, 2001). This creation of whole islands can +also be realized in the name of adventure tourism. Such artificial environ­ +ments may not be any less ‘real’ to climbers, surfers or tourists than the +natural outdoors. + + Beach volleyball is not after all significantly different from indoor +volleyball. The old debate among outdoor specialists appears to have focused +more on what was considered pure, uncontrived and unpredictable adventure, +where a degree of real risk pervaded. + + The new contention is centred on technological developments and the +continued levels of technical challenge. The artificial–real mix is thus subtler +than first appears, as providers continue to mimic or alter or reproduce natural +ingredients with a view to enhancing selectively the ‘experience’ of +adventure, play, education, recreation or leisure. + + The roots of artificial climbing walls lie in the indoor gymnasium, initially +with the careful placing of bricks – sticking out bricks or missing bricks +created the basis of a simple rock face. However, technological developments +have enabled the emergence of many new artificial adventure activities within +the tourism market. From bio-mimicry in clothing to pre-packaged climbing +kits, from artificial caves and simulated ramps and hand-holds to bends, +burms, snow and ice, there will continue to be many more technical +development in the provision of artificial adventure in the future. Light and +dark can be regulated (floodlights), thus allowing the provision of simulated +adventure to take place when darkness might otherwise prevent it from +happening. Artificial wave-making machines can be located either indoors or +outdoors, they can be made mobile or fixed in one location, or even be placed +out at sea, all creating near perfect surf when and where it’s wanted. + +232 +f Artificial environment adventure + + + The first artificial ski slopes were built in the 1960s, and by 1990 Europe’s +largest artificial ski resort had been completed in the UK. This attracts many +tourists each year. The resort is located on an old industrial site in Sheffield. +Called The Ski Village, it has snowboarding, tobogganing, and ski-jumping +into water. A popular promotion is the Winter Sports Break, where the +package includes luxury accommodation in a hotel, full breakfast, eight hours +on the ski slope, equipment hire, and lesson options. + + Nearby, converted from semi-derelict buildings, is The Foundry, which +originated when students transformed an idea from their undergraduate +dissertation into reality. This was the first of a new breed of fully commercial +indoor climbing walls. It attracted 60 000 people in its peak in 1996, and was +host to the first European indoor climbing championships. There are now over +60 indoor artificial climbing walls in the UK, and many are adding new +artificial environments. + + Adjacent to the Foundry is Jagged Globe, an adventure travel company +specializing in high mountain adventures and with a good reputation for +successful client summits on Everest. Just down the road is The House, +created by resourceful young skateboarders in an old abandoned warehouse +when they were forced off the streets and into the indoor environment by new +laws. Now these young skateboarders operate a highly successful business, +providing opportunities for skateboarding and roller-blading for many young +people. The House was built with very little funding, and it brings with it a +whole subculture of clothing, music and language – it appears to some extent +to present a replacement of the ‘youth club’, emerging in the form of an +adventure club. These facilities, so easily created, are transferable to tourism +locations. + + Unofficial motorbike scrambling also occurs on nearby slopes, and +mountain bikers are now trying to enter this adventure zone with their own +proposals to create an artificial site. A few miles away at Sheffield’s Rother +Valley Country Park, a recreational site developed on old coal spoil heaps, the +British Championships of a new type of board sport called ‘all-terrain +boarding’ were held in 1998. This boarding is similar to snowboarding but the +boards have pneumatic tyres and suspension, so it is possible to ride all the +year round on grass, through trees, on dirt tracks, even on tracks and roads. At +nearby Doncaster, the world’s first environmental theme park – the Earth +Centre – mixes tourism adventure with visitors’ education and experiential +learning about the environment. It too has been developed on the site of an old +coal mine. Quite by chance these new adventure zones are emerging in urban +fringes around the world, replacing old industries and the world of production + + 233 +fAdventure Tourism + + +‘work’ with recreational businesses involved in the world of leisure, tourism, +training and coaching, learning, and new forms of adventure (Beard, in press). +The development of these sites offers interesting perspectives on urban +development; they have flourished and created some important fundamental +changes from: + +u0002 Factory sites to places for adventure, play, leisure +u0002 Potential workers to business owners and managers +u0002 Dereliction to regeneration +u0002 Damaging/polluting to reducing pressure on natural habitats +u0002 Old industries to new forms of work. + +Old urban spoil heaps now provide new places for scrambling. Walls and +ledges provide places to abseil and climb; and new terms such as ‘bouldering’ +(Proudman, 1999) are emerging (where climbers ‘boulder’ along a building or +wall rather than on natural rock, in a horizontal climb not far off the floor). Of +particular interest is the role of urban youth in the origination and design of +new adventure activities, who employ their sense of stunt-play and creativity +to develop business opportunities. + Urban adventure programmes can provide many personal development +opportunities similar to those of traditional adventure wilderness expedition +programmes, and the resemblance can be remarkable. The urban jungle can be +a very adventurous place to explore; it can be very challenging and will in +future present rich opportunities for the design of adventure tourism for +people of all ages. Natural urban woodlands, parks and waterways can serve +as places for adventure, as well as the physical environment of buildings or +other structures. The city can be exhilarating and exciting, but it can also be +frightening and intimidating and is often seen in a negative light. + + + Innovation in adventure developments +Much of the European and American literature on simulated adventure +environments was written in the late 1980s, before a number of key technical +breakthroughs occurred in some outdoor adventure industries – collectively +termed the ‘technical revolution’. Since the mid-1980s technical develop­ +ments have had a significant impact on the diversification of both outdoor and +indoor adventure. A traditional indoor environment has walls, floors, ceilings, +doors, stairwells and many other features and objects. All of these can be +enhanced and used in many creative ways to generate an adventure +experience. + +234 +f Artificial environment adventure + + + The indoor environment can become a climbing wall, a cave or an +underground tunnel and, significantly, some features can be either real or +imaginary. New materials and surfaces have played a central role in this +technological revolution. The climbing surfaces are increasingly ‘realistic’. +Stone surfaces in climbing walls can simulate either limestone or grit-stone, +and so mimic the natural feel and grip of the rock. Artificial ice can also be +created from wall materials that have a toffee-like consistency that reshapes +itself after the climbers have moved on. Similarly, artificially created indoor +snow offers a commercial opportunity to replace the hard-surface approach to +artificial slopes. + In mountain biking, the creation of obstacles, burms (high-speed banking +corners) jumps and bridges can all mimic natural conditions, but design can +theoretically proceed beyond the natural to ultimate environmental perfection +for high adventure challenge or skill development. The advantage is that the +conditions can be changed and controlled. Mobility too is emerging as a +strong design feature. As motion is the key to aircraft simulators, so now we +see the creation of rolling climbing walls and of more portable adventure sites. +Artificial adventure can also be seasonally synchronized with real adventure +activities (e.g. ski slopes operate in the same season as snow-covered natural +slopes) or may provide unsynchronized adventure (such as climbing walls in +winter). We are likely to see many more of these technical developments in +this field. + + + Rocks caves and snow +In 1994 in Birmingham, a company called Rockface created a much broader +leisure environment – again from a derelict warehouse in the city. Whilst the +climbing walls form the foundation of the centre experience, there are also +bars and restaurants. The centre offers a range of experiences for different +visitor groups, including programmes for people with disabilities, training for +executives, children’s activities, and family fun and adventure. The climbing +walls are adorned with a range of artefacts, such as artificial drainpipes and +toilets, which amuses many of the teenagers. The walls and ceilings house +abseiling platforms, rope bridges, a Jacob’s ladder, a tower game and an +artificial cave. The cave has been created using wooden panels to form a box +structure around the rear of the climbing walls. Painted black to create almost +total darkness, the cave also houses climbing holds, chimney breasts, ramps +and circular tunnels of various dimensions, and the routes change levels by +using trapdoors in the floors or ceiling. In darkness people experience many +sensations, some ‘natural’ and some artificially stimulated. In places masses + + 235 +fAdventure Tourism + + +of thin rope dangle down from the ceiling onto people’s backs, and some floor +areas are made from crunchy natural gravel. Small bells tinkle to give delicate +sounds, which the designers have built in especially for people with various +levels of sensory disability. The site is continually evolving, and it is difficult +to know whether to classify it as a teaching classroom, a recreational site, a +funfair or a leisure centre. It is this multiple perception that underlies its +unique success. + On mainland Singapore, six shipping containers have been linked by +welded metal tubes to form a long adventure tunnel/cave/maze. The site itself +is managed by Outward Bound Singapore as a children’s adventure training +camp; in Singapore it is compulsory for ten- to eleven-year-olds to experience +‘outdoor education’. Each of the six containers has different features and +challenges for young people to experience in their introduction to city +adventure. The children enter the caves with light sticks or headlights, and the +first cave is filled with small balls – creating an atmosphere more like play +than adventure. As the children progress through the caves the environment +changes. Some caves have pine logs to create a forest maze, whilst others have +layered floors that have to be navigated (see Figure 11.1). + + + + +Figure 11.1 Future tourism developments? Artificial caves in Singapore, courtesy +of SPARKc, Children’s Adventure Training Centre. + +236 +f Artificial environment adventure + + + There is a great deal of untapped potential to attract interest in artificial +adventure from the tourism community, perhaps especially so in places where +there are few or no large wilderness areas, such as Belgium, Denmark, or +Singapore. More adventure zones are likely to benefit the tourism experience, +as well as adding more excitement to the transformation of the image of the +urban jungle for the tourist of the future (see Table 11.1). + + Full-blown adventure resorts are also being created in many places. The +Ubin Lagoon Resort is located between the coasts of Singapore and Malaysia. +Pulau Ubin is a small natural island lying in the Straits of Johor with about +200 inhabitants, and it had largely remained underdeveloped until recently. +Sometimes known as the Adventure Island, it is a ten-minute boat ride from +the beautiful green and carefully manicured island city of Singapore, where +few natural resources now exist. The island has abundant wildlife and still has +traditional wooden village kampongs, and over 2000 visitors troop there in +local bumboats at weekends – over 10 per cent of these are now non- +Singaporean tourists. The island is an idyllic short-hop retreat for both +Singaporeans and tourists, where the vast majority hire a bicycle for the day +to roam around the many jungle roads and tracks. + + Locals involve themselves in small-scale agriculture, fishing, boat building, +and in sundry provisions for tourists. Bicycle rental, drinks and fruit stations +have booming small businesses over the years, with more visitors wishing to +experience the island’s ‘great outdoors’ by pedal power. Despite the island +being very small (a mere 8 km long by an average 1.5 km) there is a huge +variety of bird life, and the once extinct Southern Pied Hornbill is making a +comeback and is a key wildlife attraction. Over 179 species of birds have been +recorded there, along with a total of 382 species of vascular plants. The wild +boar still exists, as does the small-clawed Oriental otter. The existence of +indigenous wildlife constitutes a key part of the adventure for many people. + + A large part of the island, some 549 hectares, is designated as the Pulau +Ubin Recreational Area by the Singapore National Parks Board. Amenities +include a Tourist Information kiosk, seated shelters, look-out points, beach +camp sites, picnic and barbecue sites, and interpretive storyboards. However, +there are some tensions under the tranquil surface; according to Chua Ee Kiam +(2000): + + Ubin’s popularity as an outdoor retreat and repository of wildlife may be + what saves the island from being developed for residential purposes. But + Ubin runs the risk of being a victim of its own popularity. Outdoor + activities, if not managed properly, can actually lead to great destruction. + + 237 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 11.1 The advantages of simulated adventure recreation to the tourism +industry (Beard and Wilson, 2002) + + +Social Commerical + + +Can take part regularly – high levels of Potential to increase the number of +accessibility by walking, public transport. participants and beginners – creates a + new market of participants +For the urban and rural population + All-season participation possible +Potential for greater social interaction – +crowds, spectators, cafés, clothing, music, Suitable for experienced participants +youth culture etc. and beginners +Reduced trespass – e.g. by mountain Suited to experiential development +bikers programmes for managers, youth + groups, children etc. +Reduced conflict with other users – e.g. +public on streets, as in skateboarding, and Equipment and clothing sale/provision +in National Parks, as in mountain biking at location +Located off the ‘streets’ Café/bar and tourism functions +Time and space zoning + + +Environmental Technical + + +Controlled environmental conditions Mimic the ‘best’ bits – features and + obstacles +Less susceptible to the unpredictable +elements of the natural environment Local natural environment may not + contain the necessary features in one +Less travel impact – people and place +equipment + A valuable training resource +Potentially less environmental impact – +less direct physical environmental Creating new champions in sport and +damage, less pollution and less ecological recreation +damage Added safety for schoolchildren/youth +Less environmental unpredictability groups/ managers etc. + Artificial flood-lighting provides +Elements on tap – e.g. light, snow or + winter opportunities in the UK +wind + Controllable conditions +Less environmental risk + +Can create unique/unnatural challenges – +those totally new and not found in natural +conditions + + + +238 +f Artificial environment adventure + + + Hopefully, these offerings will be kept as spartan as possible so that one + has time to experience what Ubin has to offer. + +Both public and private bodies and their interests are vying for space and +resources, and wildlife and nature exist alongside agriculture and fishing and +adventure and recreation, with large-scale tourism emerging recently +alongside locally controlled tourism development. It is a unique combination, +but future harmony is uncertain. + The impressive Outward Bound Singapore (OBS) centre is also located on +the northern end of the island. Outward Bound embodies the spirit of public +adventure. It started in 1967, and the organization and management were +taken over by the People’s Association in 1991. It is self-sufficient, with its +own power and water supply and sea transportation. Outward Bound +Singapore covers approximately one-third of the island, and it is fenced off +from the tourist areas on the rest of the island. With its 130-plus staff it has +instructed more than 153 000 participants between 1997 and 1999. Outward +Bound Singapore has developed many development programmes for the +nation’s young people, and increasingly provides corporate training and +development courses. + The island location was specially selected for the outdoor activities, which +use the local rainforests, cliffs of granite quarries, mangrove swamps, +surrounding seas and offshore islands. Outward Bound Singapore is one of the +best equipped centres in the world, having 66 000 square metres of well- +designed centre buildings, a large swimming/training pool in the tropical +jungle, a gymnasium, an Indiana multi-element challenge and commitment +course, the tripod and summit course, the inverse tower challenge course, the +Ubin rescue system, numerous rock climbing walls, cutters, and many other +facilities, including one of the largest zip wires in Asia. A vast majority of +young Singaporeans will visit the island at some stage in their early lives and +stay over in jungle accommodation blocks or in tents and carry out +expeditions, treks, and many personal adventure challenge courses. + Further south on this small island is a more recent private venture. The +development appears partially to replicate the Outward Bound ‘experience’, +but it is designed for an altogether different audience and has very different +accommodation. The Ubin Lagoon Resort is for tourists. It opened in May +2000, when over $S25 000 million was invested in it to make it the ultimate +adventure tourism experience in Singapore. Alongside the resort is the +Adventure Training Centre, designed by Adventure Training Systems of +Australia. One climbing tower sports a large Nike logo, and the resort caters +for Singaporeans and overseas tourists seeking either ‘adrenaline-quenching + + 239 +fAdventure Tourism + + +pursuits’ or simply quiet relaxation away from the hustle and bustle of the +mainland. With kampung-style chalets, the resort offers a back-to-nature +holiday concept with a focus on outdoor activities. The resort is family +orientated and management say it now attracts some 8000 visitors a month. +The brochures state that the resort offers a ‘comprehensive holiday destination +. . . and we are proud to say Ubin Lagoon Resort has it all’. The resort also +offers corporate training and claims to have gained a large share of this +market, having trained 10 000 corporate clients in 2000. + Significantly, in adventure tourism terms, the resort has artificial whirl­ +pools, an artificial lake with an artificial waterfall, trampolines and high-ropes +courses. Tourists can buy adventure by the activity, and the list of activities on +offer is impressive. Archery, discovery cruises, fishing, sea-kayaking, swamp- +kayaking, a kelong trip, snorkelling, day and night swamp and rainforest +trekking, island explorer trips, ‘the great leap of faith’, a ‘flying fox’, rock +climbing, abseiling, water skiing, mountain biking, simulated parachute +jumping and dangle duo are some of the adventure experiences on offer. There +is also a 22-metre international standard Extreme Sports Tower and a +Challenge Pyramid. The Resort was host to the Ubin climbing championships +in 2001. Membership to the Club Endeavour offers people exciting and daring +escapades in other places besides Singapore. Other exotic locations for such +adventure resorts include the islands of Bintan, Battuta and Phuket, and other +destinations in Australia and Canada. + Whilst the Singapore government has postponed decisions about the future +of Pulau Ubin developments, one potential solution to the problem of multi­ +use of small islands was reported in Action Asia magazine (August/September +2001). The article remarked that the famous Lion City of Singapore intends to +promote tourism by an inventive scheme of ‘reclaiming nature’, by infilling +the land between three offshore islands for resort development whilst leaving +the ‘natural’ islands undisturbed. + + + Towards a classification of artificial adventure +Some simple practical typologies are created here in order to investigate more + +fully the diversity of artificial adventure. Whilst practical typologies are + +helpful in delineating some boundaries of ‘adventure activities’, the exact + +nature of artificiality varies and the term ‘artificial adventure’ might refer to + +all or some of the following ingredients: + + +u0002 Devices (e.g. bolts, gadgets, equipment) + +u0002 An activity (canyoning, coasteering, roller-blading, indoor climbing) + + +240 +f Artificial environment adventure + + +u0002 The natural elements (artificial snow, artificial lights, simulated wind, + simulated waterfalls) +u0002 The structure/location (an indoor climbing wall, roller-blade ‘courses’) +u0002 Whole environments (resorts, adventure zones, adventure islands). + +The biosphere matrix (Figure 11.2) offers an ecological division of the four +basic elements in which adventure takes place (adapted from Beard and +Wilson, 2002). Each segment can be subdivided into natural and artificial +elements used in adventure programmes. For example, natural adventure +environments include the land-involving habitats such as jungle, moorland, +desert and mountains. Semi-natural environments refer to parkland and highly +cultivated sites. Artificial locations include alleyways, subways and tunnels, +walls, bollards, bridges or human-constructed islands. Eighty-two per cent of +UK climbers, for example, now use artificial indoor climbing sites, and there +are more than 60 artificially constructed skate parks in the UK. + In terms of activities, bungee jumping represents an interesting adventure +topic when considering whether an activity can be classified as natural or + + + + +Figure 11.2 The biosphere matrix. + + 241 +fAdventure Tourism + + +artificial adventure. The activity occurs as a tourist attraction in many +natural locations, and is popular in New Zealand. It is popular in Europe, +too, and there is a European Bungee Sports Association. The activity itself, +whilst being exhilarating, is generally the ingredient that seems less natural, +in that people throw themselves head first off a high point whilst attached to +a strong elastic rope that should engage and halt the fall not too far from the +ground. However, this adventurous activity also uses artificial structures to +leap from, although it is a variant of a ritual carried out long ago by +Polynesian Islanders. Base jumping is also essentially jumping from very +high objects – ‘base’ being an acronym for Bridge, Antenna, Span and +Earth. These are the objects that these adventure seekers launch themselves +off, and hence it is still a largely an illegal operation. It is undertaken by +experienced skydivers who tend to perform at least 250 jumps before +moving to try base jumping. + Another exceptional activity is extreme ironing, where people iron clothes +in extreme locations. Absurd as it sounds, the activity is very popular and +there were over 100 participants in 2001. The sport’s worldwide governing +body, the Extreme Ironing Bureau, received well over 20 000 hits on its +website in 2001. The craze, which has now spread across France, Germany, +the USA and New Zealand, evolved from humorous stunts and is said to be +a post-laddish activity for new men, invented by Philip Shaw of the UK. He +is known by his fellow ironists simply as ‘Steam’! + This also leads us to the question as to whether the ‘newness’ of activities +gives rise to a perception that they are less traditional and less natural. Are the +newer activities tending to become more contrived and extreme in their +artificiality? Technological developments make for more artificial gadgets and + +Table 11.2 Natural and artificial activity and environmental adventures + + +Natural environment Artificial environment + + +Sky-surfing Base jumping +Barefoot water skiing Extreme ironing +Fun-yaking +Coasteering +Sea kayaking Artificial slalom white-water rafting +Cliff diving +Climbing Skateboarding +Running Roller-blading +Walking Indoor climbing + + + +242 +f Artificial environment adventure + + +surfaces, but extreme invention makes for fun and adventure in devising a new +breed of activities for the thrill-seekers. This is a subject requiring more +research. Thus we see another simplistic classification starting to develop. +Table 11.2 shows which activities are natural and which are artificial with +respect to whether the location or environment is natural or artificial. + + Instant adventure +Certainly the adventurous element of tourism products increasingly has an +elevated status, by popular demand. In St Davids in Pembrokeshire, Wales, a +company called TYF No Limits has been offering adventure ‘on demand’ +since the early 1990s. ‘Instant adventure’ decisions are possible for +holidaymakers who haven’t already planned the details of their holiday and +want to be able to make the most of the weather and the choices that they see +when they arrive in Pembrokeshire. Another major drive has been to increase +TYF’s ability to service other accommodation providers as well as provide +improved ease of booking for existing clients. An e-commerce-enabled +booking system was recently installed, which allows hotels, guest houses and +attractions to act as booking agents for activities running the same afternoon +or later the same week. The same system makes it possible for families or +individuals who do plan ahead to make their own bookings without reference +to charts, forms, books or any other paper paraphernalia. + TYF pioneered the sport of coasteering in the 1980s and, through a +highly successful PR campaign, raised awareness of the sport. Coasteering +involves travelling around the coast by scrambling, swimming and cliff +jumping into the water. Coasteering was accepted as a registered trademark +in 2000; to protect the investment and 16 years of intellectual property, TYF +created a set of safety and environmental standards (SES) for coasteering +with input from other centres. These are run on a ‘not for profit’ basis, with +any surplus revenues donated to Surfers Against Sewage, a UK-based +pressure group that campaigns for clean water. To make the stories from +coasteering sessions more memorable and more easily recounted, sections of +each route have been branded recently with new names such as Dambusters, +Babylon Bay, Great Plains, Jabberwocky, Soho and many more. Five per +cent of TYF’s pre-tax profit is committed to environmental charities, and +staff have an optional 5 per cent ‘timebank’ of one day every two months to +be used for community development activities. + In the competitive world of retailing, traders have also taken advantage of +artificial adventure technology. The Outdoor Experience superstore in +Scotland has developed a unique sales environment to stay ahead of the +competitors. The superstore has its own indoor ice wall, climbing walls, + +243 +fAdventure Tourism + + +mountain bike paths, a waterfall and rocky footpaths, all freely available for +customers to try out new equipment and clothing before buying. It does not +stop there. The temperature can be lowered to minus 20 degrees centigrade, +wind speeds can be increased to 30 kilometres per hour, and a tropical +rainstorm turned on in an instant! + + + Conclusion +In this chapter we have revealed the nature of the continuous evolution of new +adventure technology, new artificial adventure activities and artificially +constructed adventure locations. The transition towards this increasing use of +‘artificialness’ has, in some cases, been episodic, shifting from simplistic +structures such as brick shapes used for climbing coaching through to +complex equipment and large specialist adventure resorts. Some artificial sites +have had considerable investment, whilst others have involved small sums of +money. Some evolving adventure products have an emerging new adventure +subculture (youth culture, indoor climbers, music, clothes) and language +(coasteering and bouldering) associated with them. + In this chapter we have also explored the changing mindsets associated with +the relationship towards traditional versus artificially constructed adventure. +The nature and degree of risk and challenge and fun appears to differ +fundamentally in artificial adventure, where the challenge and or environment +can easily be altered and regulated to suit consumers. Highly commercially +controlled activities can still take people beyond their comfort zone, but their +psychology plays a key role in their experience and acceptance of the +contrived product. Risk is simply perceived as not being real. Commercial +pressures in force predominantly influence the risk reduction: it is inherent in +business law and practice. + Finally, we have explored many other commercial, environmental and +social advantages and disadvantages for artificial adventure. Artificial +adventure, it appears, is increasingly likely to play a key role in the future of +the tourism industry. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the reasons why artificial adventure tourism has grown sub­ + stantially in recent years. +2 Critically evaluate Table 11.1. +3 Create your own typology of artificial adventure, together with a rationale + for your chosen typology. + +244 +fPart +F + The future of + adventure tourism +ff12 +Adventure tourism in the + future: the new frontier + + + Introduction + This chapter attempts to look into the future and + forecast developments in the adventure tourism + industry and assess the main issues it will face. It + is divided into three sections. + The first section examines background trends. + The initial stage of prediction is to draw out the + underlying factors influencing the trends in adven­ + ture tourism, and in particular we will consider: + + � Demographic factors, such as population size, + age structure, and family structure + � Socio-economic factors, such as employment + patterns, attitudes to ageing, and lifestyle + trends including consumerism and health and + fitness + � Technological developments, such as the Inter­ + net, new materials and transport + � Political and macro-economic trends, such as + the role of developing countries in the world + economy, policy and legislation, political + stability etc. +fAdventure Tourism + + +The second section looks at the impact of these trends on the adventure +tourism industry, and attempts to predict: + +� How the characteristics of participants in adventure tourism might change +� What new adventure tourism activities and products might emerge +� Which destinations will become increasingly involved in the adventure + tourism business +� How tour operators will manage their adventure tourism businesses to + ensure their sustainability. + +Section three concludes by identifying major issues for the adventure tourism +industry, and by suggesting areas for further research. + + + Key background trends +The development of adventure tourism is dictated by demographic, socio­ +economic, political and technological changes. Of course it is risky predicting +social, political and technological changes and how quickly they will develop, +but these trends are the foundations upon which forecasts are built. +Considering them therefore gives us a more informed basis for the predictions +that follow later in the chapter. + Some of these trends have been referred to briefly in previous chapters. +However, here we have drawn together and summarized what appear to be the +most significant contextual trends for the tourism industry in general, and +adventure tourism in particular. + + +Demographic trends +To begin, it is worth reminding ourselves of key demographic factors – +principally population size, age distribution and family patterns. In most +developed and post-industrial countries the population is reaching its peak in +terms of size, and will shortly enter a period of decline. In the UK and many +other developed countries, the largest cohort of the population is of those +people born between 1945 and 1970. Over the next 30 years these post-war +‘baby boomers’ will be a very large potential market – much larger than their +younger counterparts. The oldest of the baby boom generation are now in their +mid-fifties, and the youngest are approaching their mid-thirties. This +population structure means the number of ‘empty nesters’ (adults whose +children are leaving home) and middle-aged ‘no family’ couples will increase +over the next few decades. A more detailed look at all cohorts, over a shorter + +248 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +timescale, is also important for niche marketing. For example, the number of +15–24-year-olds in the UK will increase by 8.4 per cent from 7.2 million in +1998 to 7.8 million in 2005 (Mintel, 2001a). This is the age group most likely +to indulge in sporting activities. + Another demographic characteristic of developed countries is that women +are not only having fewer children, but are also often having them at an older +age. Family and household structure is also changing. More single-parent +families, more childless couples and more single-person households are +revising expectations of a typical family structure. + Many of these demographic trends are a result of changing social attitudes +and financial capacity, which brings us neatly onto socio-economic factors. + + +Socio-economic trends +Socio-economic changes tend to create lifestyle trends and, as lifestyle is one +of the key determinants of consumers’ choice of tourism experiences, we will +consider some of them here. + +Employment patterns +Employment and work patterns have seen considerable shifts over the last 30 +years, and these will continue to influence tourism activities. Working +conditions are increasingly regulated by legislation. Throughout Europe paid +holiday entitlement has risen, and is generous compared with that in the USA. +More professionals are taking early retirement, with good company pensions. +Working practices such as flexi-time mean that workers can more easily create +‘long weekends’. However, whilst in general holiday entitlements have +become more generous, many workers find they are working harder and +longer than ever. The era of ‘a job for life’ has gone, nationalized and public +sector industries are increasingly becoming ‘privatized’, and the risk of job +loss exists for many employees. The shift from manufacturing to management +and professional jobs and the increasing numbers of self-employed mean a +considerable sector of the population sees work as the focus of life. +Professionals feel under pressure to spend long hours at the office, protecting +their reputation and outputs. In the UK, a survey by Buzz, the low-cost airline, +estimated that employees lose a staggering 49 million days holiday +entitlement per year (published in the Sunday Times, Jan 20th, 2002). The +development of a ‘24/7’ culture means that service sector workers don’t +escape this pressure, and are often working unsocial hours. One of the results +of these current employment patterns is that short breaks are becoming much +more popular. + + 249 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Career patterns are also changing. The proliferation of ‘gap years’ directly +before or after university, and adoption of ‘work–life balance’ HRM policies +mean that it is becoming increasingly acceptable for workers to take a career +break at any time. + +Changing attitudes to ageing +There is no doubt that attitudes to age are changing, and this is going to +continue to have a major impact on future trends in adventure tourism. Whilst +‘youth culture’ continues to thrive, plenty of baby boomers are refusing to act +their age! They no longer feel they have to adopt the behaviour and attitudes +of their parents’ generation. High-profile examples of this attitude abound in +middle-aged rock musicians, who once epitomized youth and rebellion and +now refuse to retire on the grounds of age. Better personal and professional +health care is also helping people maintain high physical activity levels. + +Lifelong education +In the UK, lifelong education and broader access to education and training are +widely promoted. A wider range of young and not so young people is being +encouraged to enter Higher Education. Mintel (2000b) suggests that, as the +population becomes more mature and education standards rise, leisure will be +seen as a broader process of personal development. Travel and cultural and +intellectual pursuits will be undertaken during leisure time for self- +development and to improve lifelong learning. + +Consumerism and fashion +Lifestyles continue to be dictated by fashions and fads. Millington et al. +(2001) observe that travel is becoming a fashion accessory, and this is +reflected in the media, with a number of glossy travel magazines and +increased coverage of travel experiences (particularly adventurous travel) on +the TV. A whole channel is dedicated to ‘extreme’ sports on Sky. This media +attention is making certain destinations and activities more popular. + +Culture and counter-culture +Mintel’s 2020 Vision report (2000a) suggests the next twenty years will see +major changes in consumer lifestyles. It particularly highlights the develop­ +ment of an ‘entropic society’, which is more fragmented, less socially +cohesive and more individualistic and personalized. Mintel suggests estab­ +lished social and economic institutions and traditions will be regarded with +less reverence, and society will split into subcultures that reflect personal +interests. The drivers behind this development are identified as the ageing + +250 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +population, the increase in single households, the trend towards later +marriages, a rise in cohabitation, and increased divorce. + Self-reliance will become more important, and consumers will create their +own world and sense of belonging from the disordered and confusing array of +choices that an increasingly hectic information environment will create. +Mintel (2000b) suggests the consumer will actively seek out lifestyle brands +that identify the individual and give a stable point of reference that reflects +their values. This will apply to young and old alike. + Hand in hand with an increasingly consumerist society we can expect to see +an increasing disillusionment with materialism, which does not always bring +the fulfilment that many people anticipate. Subcultures ranging from low-key +alternative lifestyles to anarchical countercultures will continue to have a +presence in the marketplace. + +Health and fitness +A growing interest in healthier lifestyles is evidenced by increased +participation in active leisure pursuits, membership of gyms and health clubs, +sales of diet and detox books and so on. Mintel (2000a) reports an increase in +participation in non-competitive sports, suggesting that participants take part +out of a desire to keep fit and healthy, look good, and meet other people +socially. Outdoor activities are perceived to promote a sense of well being, +whether through the benefits of exercise or by reconnecting with the self +through contact with nature, and increasing numbers of visits to the +countryside are being made (Countryside Commission, 1998). + +Under-represented groups in tourism +Some groups of consumers do not participate in tourism as much as other +groups. There are a number of barriers to participation in leisure activities, +including adventure tourism. Lack of time and lack of disposable income are +two barriers that are easily recognized. Patmore (1983) has identified a +typology of barriers to participation, which include ‘social’ barriers (where +some people consider certain types of activity are ‘not for them’) and +‘physical’ barriers (where physical obstacles prevent some individuals from +participating). + Two groups in particular are increasingly participating in leisure tourism +activities as these barriers shift. People with disabilities have been confronted +with many man-made obstacles in tourism – for example, the design of +buildings and transport has often created barriers. They have also been faced +with discriminatory attitudes and social barriers that make a tourism + + 251 +fAdventure Tourism + + +experience less enjoyable. Pressure groups have helped develop a growing +awareness of ways to accommodate people with disabilities, and technical +advances in specially designed or adapted equipment have enabled participa­ +tion in lots of adventurous activities, such as skiing. + Ethnic minority groups have also been under-represented in certain types of +tourism activity. For example, in the UK they are under-represented in +countryside recreation and outdoor activities (Agyeman, 1990). A number of +projects have been set up to encourage participation in countryside and +outdoor activities by ethnic minority groups, and these, along with the UK +current policy focus on ‘social inclusion’, may augur change in participation +rates in this type of adventure tourism. + + +Technological trends +There are a number of areas where technological trends will have impacts on +the adventure tourism industry. + The information environment will continue to grow more complex. The +increasing cheapness of technological goods such as e-mail, voicemail, video +conferencing, and portable PCs will have a number of impacts, including +information overload and an increased sense of pressure. This will in turn +impact on the tourism industry as more people wish to escape these pressures. + Electronic communication and data management will have an impact on +how consumers find information and make bookings, and on how operators +manage their businesses. The Internet has already had a huge impact on the +tourism industry; for example, it has been the big technical innovation behind +low-cost airlines (further illustrations can be found in Chapter 7). In the +future, voice-based computer systems may save time for businesses and tackle +the reluctance of some members of the public to use IT. Virtual reality will be +used in new ways, perhaps as a marketing tool. + More sophisticated data handling systems will enable businesses to target +micro markets. Mintel (2000a) suggests that the era of mass communications +(and advertising) will come to an end, as increasing individualism means +consumers will plug into channels designed specifically for their interest. + The development of new materials and new manufacturing methods will +make some activities accessible to a wider range of people, through cheaper +production, enhanced safety control and lighter, stronger materials. + Technological changes in the world of transport are going to affect tourism +in general. The Channel tunnel has cut down journey times from the UK to the + +252 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +European continent, whether by car or Eurostar. High-speed catamaran ferries, +tilting trains and faster air flight are also predicted to make an impact +(O’Connell, 2002). It is a commonly held perception that journey times of +more than two and a half hours put people off making a trip, and reducing +travel time opens up new destinations to the weekend break market in +particular. Fast-track travel, with personalized electronic ticketing systems, +will also play a part in reducing journey times. Environmentally friendlier +alternatives to petrol engines are being researched and tested by the motoring +industry, and their introduction could benefit the environmental reputation of +the tourism industry. + Technological developments that improve the safety of passengers, +particularly security scanning equipment in airports, will be developed. +Restoring confidence after the terrorist turmoil of 2001 and 2002 is been a +priority for the airline industry. + Both transport initiatives and electronic communication will create a global +market that will be easier to access than ever before, at least for those who +have money and power. These last two factors bring us to the issues of +economic and political trends. + + +Economic and political trends +We can speculate on what individuals and businesses may or may not be able +to do, but their activities are very much constrained by the economic and +political contexts in which they exist. + It is already clear that many of the early-industrialized nations are moving +into a post-industrial era, where the economy is not so reliant on +manufacturing and is more dependent on service, technological and +information/knowledge-based industries. Where manufacturing remains, it is +for specialized, high-value products. There has been an increase in the +proportion of ‘white collar’ workers and, whilst there have been real problems +with unemployment amongst the displaced manufacturing workers, in general +standards of living and personal disposable income have consistently risen +and look set to continue to do so over the short term. One of the results is that +there has been an increase in spending on leisure and tourism products. + Developing countries have picked up the manufacturing and production +role that industrialized countries have lost, often using high-tech methods of +production. The location of production near the intended market is no longer +a practical issue, as transport and communication make access to a global +market easy. Much of the investment needed to set up manufacturing and + + 253 +fAdventure Tourism + + +production plants in developing countries comes from foreign investment. +This also often means that a lot of the profit generated by the business leaves +the country. Multinationals in particular hold a great deal of economic and +political power. + + There are growing concerns and tensions about this kind of investment, and +the foreign policy of powerful western governments and the actions of +multinationals may come under closer scrutiny. The relatively low wages paid +to most workers in developing countries will make it difficult for them to +match the affluence of their western counterparts. Nonetheless almost all +forecasts predict a global rise in standards of living, and consequently in +developing countries an increasing proportion of people’s disposable income +will be spent on leisure and holidays, initially based in their own region. +Whilst it is unlikely that developing countries will become larger generators +than receptors of international tourists, there will be a growing number of +newly wealthy individuals in developing countries who will look beyond +domestic tourism opportunities. + + A number of the remote and exotic destinations that attract adventure +tourism are affected by political and social unrest. Some destinations have not +yet developed a tourism industry because of concern over safety; in other +places tours are put on hold when levels of crime, civil unrest and military +action escalate. However, once the levels of risk to travellers become +‘acceptable’, often the first returning tourism activities are adventure tourism +activities. Mintel (2001b) identifies overland expeditions as being the first to +lead tourists to destinations that are emerging form a period of war or social +instability. Overland tours do not require sophisticated accommodation and +transport networks, as they are relatively self-sufficient. Indeed, it is their +speed at moving into new areas makes them an attractive activity for +adventure tourists. + + It is hard to predict which areas will be ‘out of bounds’ for tourists in the +future. Current conflicts in Israel, Palestine, Kashmir and Afghanistan are +impacting on the tourist trade, as are concerns about crime and personal safety +in countries such as Bolivia and Papua New Guinea. The Machu Pichu Trail +has suffered from a number of attacks on tourists recently. In some instances +terrorist activity purposely targets tourists, who are viewed as representatives +of the countries and policies that terrorists are fighting against. Visible and +identifiable groups such as adventure tourists, especially those who have +expensive adventure gear and vehicles with them, also run the risk of being +resented for their privileged and consumerist lifestyle. The destinations where +such tensions against western developed countries are likely to arise are often + +254 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +prime destinations for adventure tourism, being less developed and remote. +Terrorism has the potential to impact significantly on the development +adventure tourism business in these locations, especially where the North +American market is involved. Of course the adventure tourism sector is the +one sector where this type of risk might act as an attractor rather than a +detractor, but these consumers will be in the minority. + Sometimes self-imposed restrictions, based on objections to regimes with +poor human rights records, deter many tourists from visiting destinations such +as Burma or China. + The opening of borders and the government policy on tourism are of course +hugely influential. Developing countries are aware of the potential socio­ +economic benefits of international tourism, and this is generally resulting in +the opening up of more borders and the promotion of more destinations. + Policy and legislation influence the tourism industry in a more sedate but +equally far-reaching way. For example, European legislation forced deregula­ +tion of the UK airline industry, which enabled the launch of low-cost, ‘no +frills’ airlines. These now look set to become the chosen beasts of burden for +medium-distance travel. + The political agenda is manifested in policy as well as legislation. Policies +relating to environmental conservation and sustainable development provide +an example of how policy can influence developments in tourism. Since the +1980s, international strategies, conventions, resultant national policy and +growing public awareness have ensured that the concepts of sustainable +development and eco-ethics have penetrated all types of business and activity. +However, because sustainable development is more of a policy matter than a +legislative one, some companies and authorities take it on board more than +others. This is as true of the tourism industry as any other. + Currently, in the UK at least, history, culture and heritage are high priorities +in terms of policy, as well as being popular topics of interest amongst the +general public. The fashionability of culture and heritage has created a large +market of customers who are interested in discovering more, and this demand +bodes well for discovery-based tourism. + + + Future developments in adventure tourism +This section looks at the implications of these trends for the future +development of adventure tourism. It is structured around future develop­ +ments in four aspects of adventure tourism – participants, activities and +‘products’, destinations, and operators. + + 255 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 12.1 Main discussion points + + + Participants Activities and Destinations Operators + products + + + Older Extreme adventure Developing countries Independent + and alternative + Youth Activity and multi- destinations Vertically + activity holidays integrated + Family Eastern Europe + Family adventure Partnership + Women Domestic destinations + ‘Benefit’ adventure Standards and + Singles Artificial certification + Technology-mediated environments + Nationalities activities H&S/risk + Restrictions management + Changing Prestige adventure + motivations travel Marketing + + Non-physical Retailainment + adventure + + Independent adventure + + Short breaks + + + + + Table 12.1 summarizes the main points in each of these aspects, and the +following discussion provides an analysis of each point. + + +Participants +Adventure tourists are not a homogeneous group, and the profile of adventure +tourists in the future will be as wide ranging as it is now. However, we can +expect certain segments of the market to grow. Here we discuss the growth of +older participants, families, youth, women, singles and certain national +markets in adventure tourism. This is followed by an examination of whether +we can expect the motivations of tourists to change. + +Older adventure tourists +We predict that there will be an increase in the number of older participants +in adventure tourism. The baby boomers who are refusing to get old will +seek more adventurous holidays. This large market will be relatively + +256 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +affluent, and as each cohort approaches retirement its members will have the +time to travel too. + Self-fulfilment rather than escapism will be an important motivator for +older adventure tourists, supporting a growth in discovery adventure travel, +and ‘ed-venture’. Many of these consumers will also aim to maintain their +levels of physical activity and skill, which they have not allowed middle age +to diminish, and so a growth in physically challenging adventure holidays for +this market segment is also anticipated. Millington (2001) states that many +adventure companies report that at least one-third of the people who like to +rough it whilst on white-water rafting, snowmobile, horse riding and other +adventure activities are in their fifties, sixties and seventies. A Mintel (2000a) +survey implies many will purposefully avoid the traditional ‘senior travel’ +activities. + +Youth adventures +We predict an increase in what Millington (2001) terms ‘globe trotting youth’. +In the USA student travel increased by 20–30 per cent each year during the +1990s. As more young people enter higher education they will be exposed to +the concept and expectation of travel as part of the total education +experience. + Another major development will be the increase in teenagers’ autonomy as +consumers. Individualized lifestyles will affect families too, and there will be +fewer shared family activities as children get older. Youngsters are becoming +increasingly sophisticated and experienced purchasers, and familiarity with +the Internet gives them access to the information they need to make their own +choices. There is no doubt this will encompass many goods, and we anticipate +an increase in tourism purchase decisions being made by children in the +future. + +Family adventure +There is an opportunity for an increase in family-focused adventure tourism +products as people delay having a family until they are older. By the time +adults start a family they have often developed leisure and holiday patterns +that they are reluctant to give up when children come along. + The US Travel Industry Association (1997, in Millington et al., 2001) say +that ‘over 55 per cent of people participating in adventure activities while +travelling in the previous 5 years had children in their household, and at least +a third of them took children on their trips’. This suggests a huge potential +market for adventure tourism for families, which is as yet untapped. + + 257 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Leisure time is a precious commodity for adults in the middle of the family +life cycle. A survey of parents of children aged 0–15 years put family holidays +at the top of the list of leisure priorities, beating keeping fit, watching TV, +eating out and gardening by a substantial margin (Mintel, 2000b). Time +pressure means that many of these customers will pay for services that +maximize the intensity and quality of their valuable holiday experience. It also +means that ‘sure bet’ holidays are sought, as holidays that turn out to be +mediocre or poor are a waste of precious time. However, cost is also important +to families on a budget, and transportation costs (both financial and +emotional!) to remote or exotic destinations may be prohibitive for family +groups. Concerns about health-care provision often exclude these destinations +too. + +Women +The growth of the service and information sectors and flexible work practices +has increased the proportion of women in the workforce. This trend will +continue, and the demands of these financially independent women will +influence tourism services. This suggests opportunities for adventure tour +operators to develop less ‘macho’ adventure products that will appeal to a +greater range of women. + +Singles +The number of single people also looks set to increase, and we anticipate the +tourism industry will respond by creating products that assist singles to mix +socially. An example of such an initiative can be found in the Activities +Abroad 2002 brochure, which states: ‘Group trips make up the bulk of our +departures and solo travellers will find themselves amongst friends on one of +these holidays. In response to requests from our clients we have also set aside +certain weeks catering exclusively for families, single-parent families and +women only’. Adventure tourism based on group travel or on group activities +is very well aligned to meet the needs of these market segments. + +Nationalities +It is predicted that established generating regions for adventure travel will +continue to provide most of the growth in numbers of consumers of adventure +tourism. These regions are principally the USA, Canada, Australia, New +Zealand and North West Europe, particularly the UK, Germany, France and +Italy. + However, as tourism develops in areas such as East Asia, India and Brazil +we can expect a move away from ‘initiate’ tourism activities, such as + +258 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +organized group trips with set sightseeing itineraries and specially tailored +hotel accommodation, to more independent travel and adventurous activities. +The younger clients will probably lead the way in these changes; indeed +Millington (2001) reports that heli-skiing, climbing in the Himalayas and live- +aboard diving trips in remote parts of the Pacific are growth products among +high-flying young Asian professionals. The size of the Chinese market is +potentially huge, and many companies will be considering how they can best +tap into this market. + The rapid change in the economic fortunes of Central and Eastern Europe, +including Russia, suggests that participants from these regions will aspire to +the same types of tourism experiences as their western neighbours. They will +certainly become enthusiastic adventure tourists, and because it will take some +time before wealth distribution across Europe is similar, we can expect the +development of adventure tourism destinations in Eastern Europe to cater for +this demand at more affordable prices. + + +Changing motivations +It is unlikely that the range of motivations, in terms of tourism pursuits, will +change greatly over the next few years. However, the numbers of consumers +motivated by particular needs will ebb and flow with societal changes. We +predict that the following four motivators will become more significant, and +these will drive the growth of adventure tourism: + +1 Escape – from the stresses of urban living, employment and information + overload, and from the materialistic culture of our consumer society. + Adventure tourism can provide absorbing activities and a simpler life, close + to nature, that meets these escapism needs. +2 Self-fulfilment – increasing exposure to the concept of self-development, + through higher education, professional development and the media, means + this will become a more clearly articulated demand. In addition, Muller and + Cleaver (2000) suggest that the baby boomers will experience certain + psychological transformations as they approach middle age. They identify + two changes that are particularly pertinent to this discussion: the emergence + of introspection, which can lead to a re-setting of goals and new challenges, + and people’s desire to make the best of who they are and what they are + capable of, and in doing so find self-fulfilment. These reinforce the + likelihood that older participants will become a major part of the adventure + tourism market. +3 Stimulation and intensity – the consumers’ appetite for new and novel + experiences seems insatiable. Time pressure demands full and intense + + 259 +fAdventure Tourism + + + experiences. Things that are ‘different’ and things with a high ‘experiential’ + quotient will be seen as a valid antidote to the vicarious acquisition of + knowledge through an intermediary such as the TV or the Internet, and will + fulfil sensation-seeking needs. +4 Aspiration – in today’s image-conscious world, leisure activities and the + type of holiday a person takes are regarded as reflections of their character + and values. Adventure can suggest heroism, strength, bravery, individuality, + independence, skill, and many other impressive qualities. The TIA (see + Millington, 2001: 84) also found, in a recent survey, that 85–90 per cent of + all respondents had a positive reaction to adventure travel. We can expect + to see more aspirational purchasing of adventure tourism products, and + more marketing activity focusing on these aspirations. + + +Activities and products +New products are being developed and refined in response to the changing +market and technological developments. The following is a list of products +and activities that we anticipate will take a more prominent position in +adventure tourism, ranging from more physical challenges to products at the +‘softer’ end of the range. + +Extreme adventure + ‘Ask any extreme sports participant and they will tell you that their sport + is more than just a sport – it’s a state of mind and a way of life. It’s about + challenge, adventure and pushing the boundaries . . . It’s about meeting + and sharing your enthusiasm for your sport with a like-minded group of + people and it’s about fun, challenge and excitement.’ + (Mintel, 2001a: 1). + + We predict that ‘extreme’ activities will develop as a significant component +of the adventure tourism industry (see Box 12.1). These physically +challenging activities will be based on a ‘harder, faster, deeper’ mentality. As +adventure activities become more popular, people will push the boundaries of +performance and achievement levels – hence the development of sports such +as speed skiing. Many of the activities that form the adventure activity milieu, +such as mountaineering, sport climbing, stunt surfing etc., are undertaken by +professionals who are sponsored to develop their techniques and prowess as +part of the ultimate goal of promoting the sport and equipment. Amateurs are +spurred on to achieve similar standards. The competitive aspect of sport is one +of the drivers of the development of more extreme activities. + +260 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + + + Box 12.1 Extreme adventure + We are beginning to see the first signs of major tour operators + expanding their product range into this ‘extreme’ area. The UK’s + leading adventure travel operator, Exodus, is an example of a company + that is diversifying into developing more challenging forms of adventure + holiday. It launched a new brand of holidays called ‘Feat First’ in 2001, + targeted at those people who want to ‘test themselves to the limit’ + (Planet News, 2001: 6). Although Exodus already offered six other + types of adventure holiday to more than 80 countries – Discovery and + Adventure, Overland Journeys, Biking Adventures, European Destina­ + tions, Multi-Activity, and Walking & Trekking – and hence catered for + many different typologies of adventure tourist, it was keen to develop + more extreme forms of adventure. Its Feat First holidays are mainly of + a mountaineering nature, with several trips taking clients up to high + altitude and on the ultimate of adventures, to the summit of Everest. + Other trips include expeditions to destinations such as Greenland and + the North Pole, and survival courses in demanding environments – for + example, deserts and jungles (Exodus, 2002). Clearly these products + are geared towards the more practised adventurer who is seeking out + exciting, unusual and challenging experiences. + + + + + The Observer Sport Monthly’s Guide to Extreme Sports (2001) describes +extreme leisure activities, and gives information on how to get involved in +them (see Table 12.2). Getting involved often encompasses a tourism +experience, in that travel and overnight stays are required for these +activities. + Mintel (2001a) identifies some of these, notably skateboarding, inline +skating, wakeboarding and snowboarding, as ‘lifestyle extreme sports’. These +are sports that place more emphasis on clothing, codes of behaviour, music +and language. Some of these have less potential as mainstream tourism +activities, as they can easily be undertaken at home, but snowboarding and +wakeboarding need resources that merit travel. In addition, three emerging +extreme sports are identified as having the potential to be the next popular +trend: – kite-surfing, street luge and parakarting. + Mintel’s survey of extreme sports (2000a) suggests they are of most appeal +to the 15–34 age group, with teenagers looking forward to being able to + + 261 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Table 12.2 The Observer Sport Monthly’s Guide to Extreme Sports (2001) + + +Extreme air Base jumping Sky diving + Bungee jumping Sky surfing +Extreme motor Rock crawling Quad biking + Drag racing Truck racing + Motocross/enduro/trials Snow mobiling +Extreme ski Speed skiing Snowboarding +Extreme water Scuba diving Sea kayaking + Free diving White-water rafting + Cliff diving Barefoot waterskiing + Wakeboarding +Extreme boarding Skateboarding Mountainboarding + Sandboarding Downhill skateboarding +Extreme wheels Inline skating BMXing + Mountain biking +Extreme climbing Sport climbing Rock climbing + Ice climbing Abseiling +Other sports Adventure racing Skeleton + + + + +participate in their twenties, and those in their thirties using extreme sport as +a way of continuing their youth. As equipment and travel can be expensive, +most of those expressing an interest were from the ABC1 socio-economic +group, although this is not the case for activities such as mountain biking, +bungee jumping and motocross. The image of extreme sports appeals to +individualistic, anti-establishment, fitness-conscious individuals – values that +seem to be on the increase. The trend for delayed parenthood has created an +extended pre-family life stage, and has positive implications for increased +participation in extreme sports and adventure tourism based on these +activities. However, we also predict a growth in participation of extreme +sports adventure tourism for families. Some ‘extreme’ activities are more +suitable for older and younger participants, and the most popular of these are +snowboarding, white-water rafting and mountain biking. These can provide all +the thrills and spills associated with extreme sport, regardless of the actual +level of skill being employed. + Not only will more people participate in these activities, but tourism +operators will also promote association with the ‘extreme’ element of the +products, regardless of how extreme or risky what they are offering really is. + +262 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +This ploy will be used to connect with the ‘adventure’ aspirations of potential +consumers. It should be noted that a significant part of the enthusiasm for +extreme sports will not actually result in direct participation, because much of +the interest is aspirational rather than realistic. However, this augurs well for +products that have some relationship with extreme adventure, such as +clothing, locations, media, and soft-adventure holidays. + Tourism operators will find new ways of providing packages for a much +larger range of extreme activities. The issue of ‘packaging’ will be an +interesting one to follow. Packaged holidays involving activities such as scuba +diving and mountain biking already have a considerable presence in the +marketplace. However, many tourism trips involving the pursuit of ‘extreme’ +activities are currently organized by the participants themselves. One of the +difficulties tour operators will have to deal with is the risky nature of these +activities. Some, such as base jumping, are unregulated and occupy a legal +grey area. Also, there is an uneasy relationship between commercialization +and the anti-establishment lifestyle and philosophy of many participants of +extreme sports. There is some resentment of sponsorship and advertising, and +no doubt this will extend to the tourist industry’s packaging and appropriation +of extreme activities. Nonetheless, we anticipate that there will be an increase +in organized holidays based around extreme activities. + + +Activity and multi-activity holidays +Multi-activity holidays, which provide customers with adventure activity +options, are currently a growth area of travel (Millington, 2001), and we +expect this sector to continue growing. It’s a great way for beginners to find +out which activities they like, and also for groups with mixed preferences. + Mintel (1999) reports there has been a steady growth in general activity +holidays (walking, biking, horse riding, multi-activity etc.). Of all types of +activity holidays, multi-activity holidays and adventure holidays are high­ +lighted as becoming more prominent. They note it is difficult to disentangle +activity holidays from adventure holidays, especially for foreign trips and +long-haul destinations. We predict that a greater proportion of activity +holidays will rely on an adventure theme, and this overlap will be +inescapable. + Multi-activity holidays produced the highest volume of sales for the UK +activity holiday market leader, Acorn Activities, in 1999 (Mintel, 1999). This +organization’s activity holidays are geared towards singles, couples and +families, span from weekend breaks to week-long trips, and are held in North +Wales and the Lake District. Figure 12.1 illustrates the range of activities + + 263 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + +Figure 12.1 Activities available on Acorn Activities holidays. + + +offered by Acorn, and highlights the link between activity holidays and +adventure trips. Whereas some activities require the participant to have an +adventurous spirit, for example climbing and dinghy sailing, others could not +really be regarded as adventure activities, for instance archery and fencing. +The sales of this type of holiday in 1999 superseded sales for other single +activity trips such as white-water rafting, air sports breaks and gorge +adventures. + The Mintel (1999) survey found that 47 per cent of all people asked would +like to go on an activity holiday but had never been on one. This is an +encouragingly large untapped market. Potential expansion can be expected in +at least three areas; first among the mid-twenties, as the trend for later +marriages delays family commitments, and second, among teenagers, who +want to do something independent of their parents. The fact that current +participation in physical activities and sports is greatest in the 18–25-year-old +bracket lends weight to this proposal. Third, the increasing average age of +first-time parents provides a more mature, wealthier family market, which we +also predict would enjoy adventure multi-activity holidays. There are +obviously opportunities to develop very specific micro-niche markets within +the ‘adventure activity’ holiday sector, to meet the very different needs of +these three distinct groups of consumers. + +264 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + + A major strength of this market is the endless variations that operators can +supply to keep the novelty needs of customers satisfied. Different cycling or +hiking itineraries or activities in different locations will help maintain repeat +custom. + We also anticipate seeing adventure activity ‘add-ons’ to ‘ordinary +holidays’. Mainstream tour operators will add appeal to their packages by +offering opportunities for holidaymakers to buy into ‘instant’ adventure +experiences, in much the same way as package holidays try to sell day +sightseeing tours or local cultural experiences to holidaymakers at the +moment. + + +Family adventure +There are a number of approaches that adventure tour operators can take with +regard to this family market segment. The most common manifestation of +adventure tourism for this segment is the adventure activity-based holiday, as +mentioned above. We predict that packaged activity-based holidays (partic­ +ularly multi-activity) will grow in popularity for the family market segment, +as parents are relieved of the time-consuming organization and co-ordination +of activities that would be necessary if these holidays were undertaken +independently. The adventure theme increases the appeal of these holidays to +both adults and children. + We also anticipate growth (albeit smaller) in family adventure holidays that +do not conform to archetypal family holiday requirements (such as being +inexpensive, and having good health care provision, low levels of objective +risk and short journey times). Two leading UK adventure tour operators have +begun to offer family safaris and a range of family adventure trips that can +accommodate children as young as five years. Traditionally companies have +been reluctant to provide family adventure packages like these for health and +safety reasons. + One approach to dealing with the difficulty of combining the abilities of +children with adults when on an activity-based holiday is to provide packages +where separate activities are provided for different abilities (or ages), and +families are catered for separately from other tourists. Skiing companies have +already responded to the demand for family holidays from clients who are +unwilling to give up their ski holidays with the arrival of children. They have +developed initiatives such as family chalets, where family groups book a small +suite in a large, multi-suite chalet. The chalet staff provide communal meals +for children in the evening, prior to a more sophisticated dinner for the adults. +Nanny and activity supervision services in the chalet mean that children are + + 265 +fAdventure Tourism + + +occupied and parents can go out in the evening. Out on the slope, ski clubs for +children enable parents to ski hard and fast in the morning and join their +children for family activities in the afternoon. These types of holiday are also +relatively affordable because the facilities are shared between a number of +family groups. Adventure tourism may well use similar techniques to package +and sell products to this growing market segment. + An alternative approach, for families who want to provide quantity and +well as quality time together during their holiday, is to have activities that +the whole family can participate in. Examples include river journeys, or +journeys that include pack animals (llamas, camels etc.) so that some +members of the family can walk whilst others ride. In the next chapter, a +case study explores the setting up of a small, independent, family adventure +vacation business. + +‘Benefit’ adventure +Charity challenges involve travel and adventurous activities, and are +undertaken with a higher purpose than purely leisure and recreation. +Participants generally seek sponsorship for their adventurous and often +arduous task (such as climbing Kilimanjaro or cycling across Egypt). The +donation of monies raised through sponsorship is for the benefit of many good +causes. Sponsorship-based events are not the only type of ‘benefit adventure’. +Participation in environmental or community projects also has a donation +element, but in this case of time, labour and perhaps expertise rather than +money. Humanitarian or environmental compassion is usually a significant +motivator, but participants also hope to get some more personal reward and +enjoyment from the experience, and the adventure element is one way that +organizers can appeal to both sets of motives. We forecast that this type of +adventure tourism will continue to grow. We also anticipate that the increasing +involvement of the not-for-profit sector as purchasers, and indeed of the +clients themselves (who are likely to be ethically minded and conscious +consumers), will push ethical and eco-friendly practices in adventure tourism +forward. Bleasdale (2000) makes a number of practical suggestions, such as +briefing packs, to help organizers limit the negative impacts of the trip on +local communities and the environment. + +Technology-mediated activities +Of course, technology is already facilitating many aspects of adventure +tourism. However, there will be some activities that are very dependent on +technological developments or on using expensive technology, and we believe +that this will be an area of growth. + +266 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + + Heli-skiing and heli-hiking both involve the use of helicopters to get to +remote and almost untouched locations. The nature of the location is part of +the adventure, but for many of the participants the helicopter flight, the +landing on a narrow, snow-covered ridge and the procedures for disembarking +from the helicopter are very much part of the thrill! + + New materials and construction methods have already helped revitalize +skiing and put a brake on its decline into something of a passé leisure pursuit. In +fact, the development of snowboarding has had a large role to play in this story. +The construction methods, materials and attitude associated with boarding have +inspired the development of new types of ski, which are shorter and wider than +their predecessors. These skis are easier to manoeuvre and are shaped to facili­ +tate beginner and intermediate skiers to progress to ‘feel-good’ carving turns +quickly. Perhaps more telling is the development of very short freestyle skis, +which help a skier to perform tricks and jumps that catch lots of air, in much the +same way as snowboarders do. Ski resort operators now provide terrain parks +with half-pipes and jumps for these skiers as well as snowboarders. + + One particular example of a technology-mediated activity that deserves a +more detailed analysis is space tourism. It seems that leisure travel beyond the +earth’s stratosphere is becoming a reality at last. As rocket technology +progresses, the cost of a ticket will plummet from ‘astronomical’ to merely +phenomenally expensive. Technological developments will be the key to +making space tourism an economic reality. It is not simply a question of +developing the technology that makes space travel possible, but also of +developing a technology that is cheap enough. Even at today’s prices, +consumer demand far outstrips supply, and the scale of latent demand is +unknown and potentially huge. The political barriers that have kept civilians +out of orbit are crumbling as government space and defence policies change +in response to new world orders. Funding is however crucial for the necessary +technological advances, and the relative contribution of government and +private sector investment will have to be negotiated if space tourism is to take +off sooner rather than later. + + Motivations for space tourism include taking in spectacular and ever- +changing views of the Earth suspended in the blackness of space. This is one +of the most profound and moving experiences reported by space travellers. +Stunning views of the moon and galaxy of stars add to the awe-inspiring and +magical quality of this sightseeing trip. The physical experience of +weightlessness in zero and micro-gravity environments is another fascination, +and in the future we can expect facilities where tourists can play and +experiment with this novel experience. There is also the excitement of the + + 267 +fAdventure Tourism + + +journey itself, including the sensations of speed and acceleration in the launch. +As if these are not enough, there’s always that extra little frisson of risk to add +to the heady mix! As an adventure experience, space travel has plenty of the +‘core ingredients’ – novelty, discovery, self-actualization . . . In fact its ‘step +into the unknown’ quality makes it a classic adventure. + +Prestige adventure travel +Millington (2001) considers ‘prestige’ adventure travel as one of the innovative +product segments in adventure travel. Space travel is perhaps the most extreme +form, but there are plenty of other options that are somewhat easier to achieve. +Participants are motivated by the prestige of the destination or activity, which +should be unusual or exclusive, and perhaps inspire admiration or envy in +others. Adventure tourism can certainly hold its own in terms of one­ +upmanship! Exclusivity can reside in the price of the product – for example, +a luxury safari. This takes an already relatively expensive product (due to the +distance travelled and the need for guides and permits etc.) and adds further +prestige by ensuring that the accommodation, catering, and service are of +luxury standard. Climbing Everest is an example of a destination and an activity +that is prestigious because of the difficulty and challenge involved. Gorilla +watching is an unusual activity based on a scare resource, a rare species. +Numbers of visitors are regulated and limited, ensuring it will never be a run-of- +the-mill activity. These latter examples suggest that prestige is not a function +of price alone; however, most of these activities will be expensive, if not +luxurious, and cost is the major factor that distinguishes the ‘prestige adventure +travel’ sector of both hard and soft adventure products. + We predict an increase in prestige adventure travel products as disposable +incomes rise and aspirations widen through the promotion of such travels by +the media. Mintel (2000a) forecasts that the divide between the very rich and +the very poor will widen. Certainly very affluent consumers will be prepared +to pay a premium for holidays that minimize inconvenience, use the shortest +journey times and maximize the intensity of the experience. + +Non-physical adventure +The authors believe that non-physical adventure tourism will grow dramat­ +ically in the future, because of both demand and supply factors. + The demand for non-physical adventure tourism will be fuelled by: + +� The search for new experiences by tourists bored with mainstream tourism + products; Mintel (2000a) suggests that limited free time will lead to an + active search for life-changing experiences + +268 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +� Increasing disenchantment with the materialism of consumer cultures, + which adds impetus to the search for meaning, fulfilment and self- + actualization +� The desire to learn something new while on vacation +� The general growth in international tourism and the development of + outbound tourism markets from countries such as India, China, Russia and + Brazil – a significant proportion of whom are likely to be interested in non­ + physical adventure. + +Even physical, activity-based tourism has a non-physical dimension – there +has always been a strong emotional element to mountaineering, for +example. Interestingly, in recent years we have seen a steady blurring of +the distinction between physical and non-physical adventure. Consider, +for instance: + +� Charity challenges where the physical activity is undertaken partly because + of the emotional motivation of wanting to help a good cause +� Television programmes where people are left on a ‘desert island’ (or in + another remote environment) to ‘survive’ – here the challenge is physical + but is also emotional in terms of how people cope with new situations and + new people. + +We believe that this trend will continue to develop in the future. + + However, returning to the subject of non-physical adventure tourism itself, +we predict that the following forms will experience significant growth in the +next few years: + +1 Fantasy tourism, where the tourist chooses to enter an imaginary, non- + authentic world. This could include virtual reality experiences, trips to + artificial environments such as biospheres and ‘underwater worlds’, or + the use of themed hotels where guests can act out their sexual + fantasies. +2 Gambling tourism, as new casinos are developed and traditional resorts + endeavour to regenerate themselves by developing this market. +3 Short breaks, based on the desire to relieve stress, either to resort hotels that + offer stress reduction therapies, or to peaceful, relaxing, stress-free + destinations. +4 Spiritual enlightment seeking. It is our prediction that, following previous + interest in Hinduism and Buddhism, future spiritual enlightenment seekers + + 269 +fAdventure Tourism + + + from the West may turn to the native Shamanic religions and Islam. This + will change the geography of this type of tourism. +5 Visiting places seen as dangerous. More people will be tempted to ‘walk on + the wild side’ by travelling to these places, whether the danger is due to + crime, terrorism, war, extreme climate, or disease. +6 Intellectual adventure seeking. An increasing number of people will travel + for intellectual adventure, which includes student exchanges and people + travelling to other countries to undertake a course of education or to learn + new skills – from a new language to cooking, for example. +7 Backpackers, who will increasingly be seen around the world, always + trying to get ‘off the beaten track’ and away from other tourists. This + market will become more heterogeneous, we believe, with an increasing + number of older people taking part as well as more and more young people + from Asia. + +In this list, we have viewed non-physical adventure tourism in terms of +particular types of activities. However, if we view adventures as experiences +that are simply new to the tourist, where they are not sure of what might +happen, then the scope of non-physical adventure tourism is much wider. + + For those people who are not experienced travellers, or those from countries +where outbound travel is still a relatively new phenomenon, non-physical +adventure tourism could include the following activities that might be seen as +rather tame by experienced adventure tourists: + +� Buying timeshare properties in another part of the world – a financial + adventure +� Travelling much further than ever before, to countries that are very + different to the visitors’ home regions. + + At the same time, the authors believe that three groups of people in the +future will have greater opportunities to become active participants in non­ +physical adventure, namely: + +1 People with disabilities, as facilities for them improve around the world +2 Children travelling with other children, rather than their families, for non­ + physical adventures, as children become tourism consumers in their own + right +3 Retired people, as company pensions and improved health care allow them + to take a growing role in the non-physical adventure tourism market. + +270 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +We suggest that these three groups will also be participating in greater +numbers in the field of physical adventure tourism. + +Independent adventure tourism +People are increasingly putting together their own tailor-made packages by +booking the flight, car hire, accommodation and activities with separate +companies. The development of a more individualistic society is fuelling this +trend. Developments in technology have also opened up an Aladdin’s cave of +opportunity, especially with the advent of the Internet. As mentioned +previously, independent travel can be an adventure in itself, stimulating feelings +of self-reliance and of going into the unknown. More people are going to +experience this particular form of adventure as access to, and confidence in, +using the Internet increases. The development of secure payment mechanisms +will help reduce some anxiety and suspicion, and better-designed websites will +make the experience less frustrating and time consuming. Independent travel is +attractive because holidays can be tailor-made to suit individual requirements +and substantial savings can often be made, despite the claims that big operators +can keep costs down through economies of scale and ruthless application of +their purchasing power. In addition to this, some people simply find it satisfying +to beat the system and thwart big operators! + More people will undertake adventurous activities on their holidays, which +they will organize with independent operators. Networking and exchange of +information amongst like-minded individuals (on dedicated websites, such as +those for climbers or gap-year travellers) will also aid this trend. In fact there +is a long history of independent travel arrangements for adventure trips as, +previously, tour operators were not particularly involved in packaging this +type of holiday. Adventurers have therefore gained quite some experience in +organizing trips themselves, and this experience is easily shared. + + +Short breaks +The recent reduction in the cost of flights has revolutionized the short break +market. It is now financially viable to fly around Europe for a long weekend, +as the cost of getting there is no longer the biggest proportion of the cost of +the holiday. Added to this, overworked professionals who feel they have too +much to do or are nervous about their career prospects are choosing shorter +holidays with less time away from the office. A long weekend means that such +employees get a four-day break with only two days away from the office. +Short breaks for the cash rich/time poor are increasingly popular – this is +universally acclaimed as one of the fastest growing sectors of the travel +industry. This is sure to be translated into the adventure tourism market, and + + 271 +fAdventure Tourism + + +we predict seeing growth in short packaged breaks, with intense activity levels +to create a complete break and ensure value for money and time spent. + + +Destinations +The destinations that will grow in importance for the adventure tourism +industry are those that can offer a new, fresh tourist experience and a sense of +personal discovery. These will include ‘alternative‘ destinations that are just +starting out on tourism development. In addition, locations with sophisticated +or high quality resources and facilities will engage and inspire the tourist. The +type of resources required will vary for each of the main sub-sectors of the +adventure tourism market. + +Developing countries and alternative destinations +The demand for new and novel experiences is going to feed the growth of +adventure tourism visits to developing countries. Different cultures and exotic +or rare wildlife are two things most developing countries can offer. The less +developed transport infrastructure and difficult terrain means that accessing +some regions can be an adventure in itself. The economic status of some +developing countries makes them relatively cheap for visitors, and the need +for foreign income means that tourism is encouraged. Countries such as +Namibia or Bhutan have purposefully adopted a policy of low volume, high +value tourism. Latin America and Africa are currently popular destinations for +discovery adventure travel – the popularity of South America with gap year +travellers is testimony to this. Political stability and the ability to create +partnerships between local providers and tour operators will determine which +of the countries in these continents are winners and which are losers over the +next few decades. + Another group of ‘alternative’ destinations that looks set to grow in +adventure tourism terms is that of colder destinations. As holidaymakers’ +desire for alternative experiences overrides their desire for sun, locations such +as the Arctic and Antarctic will become more popular. + Also, as consumers increasingly take more than one holiday a year the +winter holiday market (especially that segment based on winter sports) is +growing. People are becoming more accustomed to taking at least some of +their holidays in colder climates. + +Eastern Europe +Central and Eastern Europe provides a closer-to-home destination for most +Europeans. Political and economic factors dominate the development of this + +272 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +region. Many former Eastern Bloc countries are currently awaiting accession +to the European Union (EU). Their integration into the EU will have economic +repercussions for member states. In return they have much to offer, not least +vast areas of landscape with a high scenic and nature conservation value. + The speed of development in much of Central and Eastern Europe is +phenomenal. A great deal of money is being invested in the development of +these countries, both from Western Europe and from internal investors. +Entrepreneurial spirit has been set free, for better or worse. We predict that +established tour companies from Western Europe will exploit adventure +tourism opportunities in Eastern Europe, but small-scale independent +operators within these countries will also respond to demand. These will +particularly supply the independent adventure tourist, and will use the Internet +to advertise and communicate with potential customers. We also anticipate the +growth of partnership arrangements between the foreign tour operators and +local organizers. As is the case with many developing countries, the exchange +rate means that destinations in Eastern Europe are relatively cheap for EU +tourists. There will also be a considerable demand from the domestic market, +so it appears that this region could support some very buoyant adventure +destinations. + +Domestic destinations +It is important to remember that most of the participants in current adventure +tourism activities are domestic tourists. As most participants in adventure +tourism reside in North America, Europe and Australasia, we anticipate the +development of adventure-focused destinations in these areas. This is where +an impressive range of innovative facilities and high quality resources is +advantageous. These help create a sense of novelty and anticipation, and +stimulate the jaded palate of the repeat customer. Queenstown, in New +Zealand, has shown the world the way when it comes to creating an +adventure-themed destination. In the UK, we predict the Lake District, the +Southwest coast of England, Scotland, and Wales will develop the adventure +sector of their tourism industry. These are the more rugged, upland regions +that have landscape features that facilitate outdoor adventure activities, and +have obvious nature and cultural interest for those consumers preferring the +discovery aspect of adventure. + +Artificial environments +Tate (2002) describes the development of very specific facility-based +destinations, such as ice hotels and undersea resorts, in a report on alternative +tourist destinations. An ice hotel is built each year from blocks sawn from the + +273 +fAdventure Tourism + + +adjacent frozen river, near Kiruna in northern Sweden. In 2002 it had 60 +rooms and 11 000 overnight guests, and over 33 000 visitors made the trip in +the 2000/2001 season. The resort is being extended to include an ice adventure +park in the nearby forests. + Undersea resorts are not so far progressed, despite a huge interest in marine +environments. Full undersea hotels, where an entire stay can be spent +underwater in restaurants, lounges and bedrooms with a high proportion of +transparent surfaces, are still at the drawing board stage. Mooted destinations +include Hawaii, Taipei and Miami (Tate, 2002). + The growth of ‘artificial environments’, as described in Chapter 11, means +that urban locations may see more adventure tourists. Likewise, ‘gateway’ +destinations on the periphery of wilderness or remote zones will develop +artificial environments to keep adventurers happy while they are preparing, +resting or awaiting better weather conditions. + + +Restrictions +We anticipate seeing more restrictions employed in destinations where there is +a concern about the impact of increased tourism activities on the resource and +local culture. Already, sensitive areas such as American National Parks have +a bookings systems and ceilings on visitor numbers. Bhutan has adopted a +very cautious approach to the development of tourism in order to protect the +culture and environment of this small Eastern Himalayan kingdom. Visitors +must be either invited guests of the government or designated tourists. +Independent travel is not permitted, and visits may be booked only through +government-registered tour operators. There is a minimum daily tariff, and +government approved accommodation must be used, which costs from +US$150–$250 per night. In 2000, the number of tourists allowed to enter the +country was 7559 (Tate, 2002). Closer to home, the use of the new open +access areas of countryside created by the Countryside and Rights of Way Act +(2000) will be restricted for commercialized and organized adventure tourism +activities, such as outdoor pursuits. + Restrictions can be used to manage visitor numbers, distribution and +behaviour. Consequently there are different forms of ‘restriction’, which vary +in their precision. For example, a strategic tool such as planning control policy +can be used to direct the building of facilities in one place, leaving other areas +undeveloped and therefore less attractive to large numbers of visitors. High +price policies tend to restrict numbers; a booking system restricts them more +precisely. Legislation and fines support stricter policies. There are some issues +related to the use of restrictive tools – for example, equality of access to places + +274 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +and experiences and the distribution of economic benefits from the limited +tourism allowed. + + +Adventure tourism operators +Independent tour operators +At present specialist independent tour operators continue to dominate the +adventure tourism market. According to Millington (2001), the tour operating +industry has witnessed the emergence of an increasing volume of small tour +operating businesses, many of which are specializing in adventure tourism. +Most of these adventure operators report growth rates of between 15 and 20 +per cent annually, an indication of the current popularity of packaged +adventure holidays and their future expansion. Mintel’s (2001) research on +UK independent tour operating companies found that as many as one in four +operators affiliated to the Association of Independent Tour Operators (AITO) +offer adventure-based holidays. The proportion would be even higher if +AITO’s classification of adventure tourism included snow sports, sailing and +diving holidays. + AITO is a trade body that ‘represents the collective voice of what essentially +are small-to-medium sized holiday operators with just over 150 members +producing approximately 245 branded products in 2001’ (Mintel, 2001). + The market position of these operators seems to be secure in the foreseeable +future because many of the adventure tourism products that they offer require +personal attention, for example in creating individualized itineraries or +contacting local guides and hoteliers. This means that it is difficult for such +operators to achieve economies of scale; their success depends more on +achieving economies of scope. Therefore, up until recently the adventure +tourism market has not been particularly attractive to large mainstream tour +operators. + However, adventure tourism is obviously a very attractive area for portfolio +development for specialist tour operators, and we can expect to see a growth in +the number and range of adventure products they offer. We can also expect to +see more newly established operators entering the fray, especially as predictions +for growth in the adventure tourism market are so encouraging. + +Vertically integrated tour operators +Although smaller independent operators are currently the dominant players +within the adventure tourism industry, large, mainstream, vertically integrated +operators are starting to challenge their dominance. For example, First Choice + + 275 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Holidays – ’a leading European leisure travel company comprising main­ +stream and specialist tour operations’ (First Choice, 2002) – recently acquired +one of the leading specialist tour operators, Exodus Travels. First Choice also +offers activity holidays through Flexigroup, its ski operator, and Sunsail, its +yacht charter and water sport club operator. + An increasing number of mainstream tour operators are following First +Choice’s acquisition and diversification strategies. For example, Thomas +Cook, ‘the third largest integrated travel group in Great Britain’ (Thomas +Cook, 2002) has moved into the activity holiday market through the setting up +of its sister company, Neilson Holidays, a snow sports and water sports +specialist. + It could be argued that the two aforementioned mainstream operators offer +conventional, well-established adventure tourism products (e.g. skiing and +sailing) whereas the smaller specialist operators are focusing on emerging +products that fit into the broad umbrella of adventure tourism. This aside, it is +important to note that the mainstream tour operating industry appears to be +committed to developing the adventure section of its portfolio, and this trend +looks set to continue. + Mintel (1999) reports a mixed response from independent activity holiday +operators to the presence of ‘large, general tour operators’, with some feeling +threatened and worried. However, most concur that there is also a plus side, +and agree that the entry of large operators would help to expand the market for +activity holidays and raise its profile. + +Partnership +We anticipate the development of partnership working between organizations +in the destination and tour operators in the generating regions. As sustainable +development ethics become more embedded within the tourism industry, it +will become less acceptable to bypass native operators in developing +countries. Developing countries themselves are also becoming more experi­ +enced in international tourism and the generation of foreign income, and we +expect this to mean that benefits and involvement will be re-negotiated. + +Standards and certification +It is predicted that as adventure tourism becomes a more prominent niche +holiday product, an increasing number of tourism organizations will employ +the concept of adventure as a marketing tool. Evidently, some of these +organizations will be offering true adventure products whilst others may +merely be ‘jumping on the bandwagon’, taking advantage of the fact that the + +276 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +adventure phenomenon is presently in vogue. The increased usage of the word +‘ecotourism’ by numerous tourism organizations is proof that fashionable +tourism terminology can lead to the successful promotion and selling of +products. Buckley (2000) notes that ‘for tourism marketers, almost any form +of nature-based tourism is advertised as ecotourism, irrespective of environ­ +mental management, education or conservation’. Tourism Concern (2002) +further corroborates this idea, suggesting that ‘there are in fact a variety of +tourism “ecolabels” around, but without one standard for industry to conform +to, working out the green from the greenwash is tricky’. These statements +suggest that some tourism organizations do not adhere to ecotourism +principles yet claim to be offering ecotourism products. This problem may +well emerge within the adventure tourism sector as organizations start to +recognize the growing potential demand for adventure experiences. As it is +clear that the growth of adventure tourism has been driven largely by the +tourism industry, the likelihood of this happening is strong. + One way that ecotourism organizations convince consumers that they are +offering authentic ecotourism holidays is through their membership of +certification schemes. Such schemes usually assess whether an organization +has met certain tourism standards, and relate to the company’s contribution to +the environmental management of a destination. They help to protect the +consumer and assist their decision-making. However, there are over 100 of +these schemes in operation and they vary in standard. Some are complex +environmental management systems, whereas others are promotional umbrel­ +las and unsubstantiated awards (Sallows; see Tourism Concern, 2002). If +similar schemes were set up for adventure tourism organizations they would +inevitably be variable in quality, with some merely acting as marketing tools +whilst others serve the purpose of ensuring that their members are genuine +adventure tourism organizations. One obstacle that may hinder the successful +operation of these schemes is that adventure tourism embraces such a wide +range of activities and niches (e.g. ecotourism, special interest tourism, +wildlife tourism, charity challenges) that it would be virtually impossible to +encompass all these under a single certification scheme. + +Health and safety/risk management +We predict that there will be increasing emphasis on the health and safety and +risk management side of adventure tourism operations. The implementation of +more formal procedures to protect clients is also highly likely. + Despite the importance of risk management, it is not a well-established area +of the adventure tourism industry. Although most adventure tourism +organizations will have their own risk reduction and avoidance methods, these + + 277 +fAdventure Tourism + + +are often inconsistent across different companies and different sectors (see +Chapter 8 for further details). + + This inconsistency could be due to a lack of national legislation concerning +adventure tourism and/or recreation in some countries. For instance, in the UK +the Adventurous Activities Licensing Bill legislates only for children under +the age of 18 who participate in water sports, caving, climbing and trekking. +This bill does not take into account other adventure sports, and equivalent +legislation for adults does not currently exist. + + Guidelines and opt-in schemes do exist; for example, in Ireland the +Association of Adventure Sports (AFAS) has worked in collaboration with +several national governing bodies and adventure sports providers to design +and monitor safety standards that have become benchmarks for the Irish +adventure sports industry. The Irish government has accepted these standards +as minimum safety requirements. The standards are primarily concerned with +staff qualifications, instructor to participant ratios, equipment requirements +and activity locations. The guidelines apply to a range of adventure sports, +including rock climbing, mountaineering, canoeing, kayaking, surfing, sailing +and snorkelling. Any organization that supplies these sports and wants to +conform to these standards can register with the AFAS Centre Standards +Board (CSB). Members are subject to a previously announced annual +inspection as well as ‘on the spot’ inspections, and these are carried out by +qualified sports instructors with industry experience (CSB, 2002). + + However, Queensland’s Diving Industry Taskforce, a government body (see +Wilks and Davis, 2000: 594), suggests that voluntary codes of conduct don’t +entirely work: + + Unfortunately, experience over the 1990s has shown that it cannot always + be assumed that all employers and self-employed persons in the + recreational and snorkelling industry have been or are willing to + voluntarily adopt safe systems of work in the absence of regulatory + controls prescribing minimum workplace health and safety standards. + +It seems that minimum safety standards may only fully be achieved through +the development of legislative measures. One of the difficulties with +legislation is that it is generally national rather than international, and this +leads to even more inconsistency. Hibbert’s (2001) work (see Chapter 8) +highlights several inconsistencies in the safety measures used by mountain +adventure tour operators that offer international trips and expeditions. For +instance, companies employed different systems for grading their trips and + +278 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +assessing their clients, not all operators transferred risk to third parties in +the same way, and emergency plans sometimes differed according to +destination. + Some of these inconsistencies could be ironed out if legislative measures +that imposed a uniform set of safety guidelines on this type of adventure +operator were enforced. + We anticipate risk management strategies to be further refined as more +research and experience is shared. Research carried out on New Zealand’s +overseas visitors to establish the nature and extent of adventure tourism +injuries provides some useful recommendations on reducing the risk of injury +(Bentley et al., 2001). Table 12.3 presents a summary of a selection of +measures that could be implemented. + + +Table 12.3 Possible interventions to reduce the risk of adventure tourism +injuries in New Zealand (adapted from Bentley et al., 2001: 334–336) + + +Tourist/recreation Adventure tourism Government intervention +authority/service operator + + +� Make participants � Ensure clients are � Regulatory government + aware of the ‘actual equipped with intervention for + risk’ involved in adequate knowledge, perceived ‘risky’ sectors + adventurous activities, fitness levels and of the adventure tourism + plus the level of skill understanding of industry (e.g. horse + and experience needed possible risks and how riding and cycle-related + to participate safely to deal with these adventure activities) +� Promote safe � Make sure clients fully + adventuring understand key safety + specifically to instructions before the + independent tourists activity begins + who participate in + tramping in wilderness + areas and mountain + recreation without + guides +� Discourage � Maintain activity + independent overseas equipment and ensure + tourists from engaging this and clothing are + in new activities in carefully matched to + unfamiliar the client + environments + + + + 279 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Although the recommendations identified in Table 12.3 have been designed +specifically for the adventure tourism industry in New Zealand, most are +generic to almost any country or destination. + + +Marketing +Marketing is one of the major activities of tour operators, and it is bound to +see some changes in the future. We have already drawn attention to the fact +that many products will be re-labelled and re-branded to benefit from the +current enthusiasm for adventure tourism. + Mintel (2000) predicts that micro-marketing will proliferate with the +growth of a more individualistic and fragmented society and the demise of the +mass media. Brand managers will have to tailor their marketing initiatives to +specific lifestyle groups, channels and, perhaps, points of purchase. We +envisage adventure tourism operators, many of whom already use these +techniques, honing this type of marketing even more. In this forthcoming era +of micro-marketing, with everyone being an individual market segment, +understanding the highly personal nature of adventure tourism is essential if +marketing initiatives are to be effective. + Mintel (1999) reports that eight out of ten activity holidays (within or +outside the UK) are booked directly with the operator or venue. Direct +contact between customers and companies can only be intensified by the +Internet, which means that repeat business and personal recommendation are +going to be the most important means of marketing for these companies. +However, despite the growing role of the Internet for marketing, there will +still be a place for brochures in adventure tourism. Customers will continue +to enjoy browsing brochures at leisure, and taking the opportunity to be +inspired and dream in the comfort of an armchair rather than in front of a +VDU screen. + + +Retailainment +In the future retail stores will be competing with on-line shopping, and Mintel +(2000) suggests that retailers will entice customers by marketing the +environment and entertainment provided by the store. ‘Retailainment’ and +‘Destination Stores’ that are convenient and provide added leisure value to the +retail experience are seen by many as the way forward. Already this idea has +found practical expression in adventure equipment and clothing stores, such as +those that provide indoor ice-climbing walls and artificial climate environ­ +ments, and we foresee this trend being picked up and exaggerated by +adventure gear retailers. + +280 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + + + Conclusions +It seems that the way is relatively clear for a growth in adventure tourism over +the next few years. Demand is increasing, as is evidenced by the increasing +numbers of people participating in adventure themed holidays. Positive +consumer reactions to the concept of adventure mean that the supply side will +promote adventure heavily, to stimulate further latent demand. Micro- +marketing of the vast range of different adventure tourism products will be the +key to greater participation, as the consumers of adventure tourism are by no +means a homogeneous group. + +The moving frontiers of adventure tourism +Frontiers in adventure tourism will be attacked both ‘head on’ and more +incrementally. The development of enabling technology and equipment will +smash through current barriers to participation in some adventure tourism +activities, such as undersea resorts and space tourism. Increasing industry and +participant involvement in ‘extreme’ adventure tourism will help promote +adventure tourism as a new and ‘happening’ development. Radical and +exciting artificial or simulated environments will introduce large numbers of +participants to activities they would probably never otherwise try, and will +fuel the development of extreme and technical adventure. + However, there will be a more gradual sea change that incorporates +adventure into mainstream tourism. We anticipate the re-labelling of products +we currently regard as other niche forms of tourism, such as ecotourism, +discovery, cultural and spiritual tourism, with the adventure theme. Potential +demand will also be stimulated by the introduction of optional adventure add­ +ons to existing holidays. Adventure will be incorporated into luxury products, +to enhance their cachet further. Most of these will fall into the so-called ‘soft +adventure’ tourism market. Because soft adventure covers such a wide range +of activities, and because participation in these activities is already substantial, +the potential customer base is very large. This more stealthy growth of +adventure tourism might not be so showy, but it will be important because this +is where the highest turnover will be. + The recognition of the adventurous characteristics of non-physical activities +will also expand adventure tourism away from the ‘standard fare’ that we are +accustomed to. New groups of participants will also broaden the adventure +tourism market. + Adventure tourism will become very much part of mainstream tourism, +rather than something on the periphery of the tourism industry. This is for two + + 281 +fAdventure Tourism + + +reasons: first, the adventure element of tourism products will become more +commonplace, and second, the tourism industry itself will change. In the +future, ‘mainstream’ will no longer mean ‘mass’ tourism. The WTO (1997) +identifies diversification as a primary trend in the tourism industry, and this +means the industry itself will come to regard niche tourism as the norm. + + +Unconstrained growth? +In the meantime, there is a danger that the type of adventure tourism we have +been describing in this book will grow at a rate that is unsustainable in resource +terms. The various ‘resources’ that adventure tourism uses (for example, +landscape, biodiversity, remoteness and culture) are susceptible to degradation +through overuse, and systems need to be negotiated and put in place to help +reduce this. This will require different mind sets, as society has often treated +these resources and qualities as free goods. Indeed, the restrictions on +commercial use of open access land specified in the Countryside and Rights of +Way Act (2000) highlights the issue of whether organizations that use the +resource for commercial purposes such as outdoor pursuits should contribute to +its upkeep. Despite the active debate on sustainable tourism, it is our belief that +the philosophy of sustainable development will constrain growth of adventure +tourism in only a relatively minor way in the short term. + Further to this, on an individual level, the WTO (1997) suggests the +consumer will experience a growing personal conflict between a socio­ +environmental conscience and the urge for travel consumption. The +awareness-raising activities of organizations like Tourism Concern have +helped to make consumers much more conscious of their impacts and +responsibility. Adventure tourists comprise one of the groups most likely to +have to face up to this dilemma. They are often the first tourists into newly +opened up areas, and the world is littered with examples of how the +‘recreation succession’ that follows this incursion can spoil the very qualities +that once made the place so attractive. Like the adoption of sustainable +tourism practices, we sadly anticipate this discomfort will only motivate +behavioural change for the majority of adventure tourists in the longer term, +rather than the short term. + The development of artificial adventure environments will be a crucial +release valve for this type of pressure. We also believe, in the longer term, that +adventure tourists will grapple with the moral obligation to maximize the +benefits that accrue from visiting remote and unspoilt adventure destinations. +The education and personal development agenda will come to the fore, adding +value to an already privileged opportunity. + +282 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +Will the concept of adventure tourism stand the test of time? +Adventure tourism is a topical idea. The phrase fulfils a purpose at this +moment in time because it captures the essence of prevailing desires and +developments. As a method of categorizing tourism activities it relies on the +common theme of adventure, which pulls together a rather unwieldy range of +experiences. In many ways adventure tourism is more of a ‘meta-category’. +Almost every single product we have examined could just as easily be defined +by another label. However, although it’s awkward, it remains undeniably +irresistible! One of the major benefits of the concept of adventure tourism is +that it articulates something fundamentally important for both the consumer +and the supplier. + In the not too distant future, niche tourism and micro-marketing will +predominate and one of the biggest barriers for adventure tourism, the +difficulty in using it as a way of ‘pigeon-holing’ tourism products, will +become largely irrelevant. Being able to pin down the category a product +belongs to will not be as important as being able to pin down the target market +sector. + Nonetheless, in the short-term future we expect ‘adventure tourism’ to be +embraced by the industry and the public as both a phrase and a concept. In +many respects, its use marks a shift in the nature of tourism products and +activities. + However, adventure tourism will only really develop, achieve recognition, +and be effectively managed if it is well understood. We therefore end this book +with a plea for more research. + + + +Towards a research agenda for adventure tourism +It is clear to the authors, based on their experience of writing this book, that +there is a great need for more empirical research to be carried in this rapidly +growing field. Below is a proposed research agenda to help us better +understand the phenomenon of adventure tourism as it has been defined in +this book. + + 1 In contrast to the field of physical adventure, there is very little research + on spiritual or intellectual adventure tourism. We know too little about the + scale, motivators, and tourist behaviour in sectors as diverse as westerners + seeking spiritual enlightenment in Asia to tourists who take holidays to + learn a language or a new skill. + + 283 +fAdventure Tourism + + + 2 More research is also needed on what we might term emotional adventure + tourism, such as the hedonistic holidays discussed earlier in this book. + 3 Another neglected area requiring researchers’ attention is urban adventure + tourism, including red light district tourism and visits to dangerous cities + and neighbourhoods. + 4 There is clearly a need for us to find out more about cross-cultural differ­ + ences in perceptions of adventure and adventure tourism. This is a very + important subject as the tourism market becomes ever more globalized. + 5 We need to know more about the impacts of adventure tourism on both the + tourist and the destination. + 6 It would be interesting for the industry to know more about the + perceptions, attitudes and motivators of adventure tourists, and how they + make their purchase decisions. + 7 Adventure tourism is an ideal sector in which to study entrepreneurship, + given that many operators are small businesses, often started almost as + ‘hobbies’ by enthusiasts with little or no experience of running a business. + 8 Work needs to be done to find out how people view the concept of + adventure, and how this view may differ depending on their age, culture, + gender, personality, and past experiences. + 9 It would help the adventure tourism sector to be taken more seriously if + international agreement on definitions could be reached so that data could + be collected world-wide on a comparable basis, and if governments could + be persuaded to see this sector as a discrete field worthy of research as a + separate entity. +10 More research would be welcome on the ethical dimension to adventure + tourism, covering everything from pricing policies to human resource + issues. +11 The media clearly plays a major role in influencing consumer behaviour in + adventure tourism, but it would be useful to have empirical data to show + the relative impact of guide books, the Internet and television, for + example, on the behaviour of adventure tourists. +12 It would be interesting to see the Delphic Oracle technique and focus + groups being used to try to predict likely future changes in the adventure + tourism market. + +However, currently it looks unlikely that this research agenda will be +implemented because: + +� Adventure tourism is not generally perceived in the way suggested in this + book; it is largely confined to the rather restricted idea of physical + adventure, usually in remote areas or wilderness + +284 +f Adventure tourism in the future: the new frontier + + +� The industry is highly fragmented, with no real professional bodies + focusing on adventure tourism rather than either adventure activities or + general tourism +� Adventure tourism is growing and changing so rapidly that conducting any + research on it is perceived as too difficult and costly to be worthwhile +� Governments still do not recognize the value of adventure tourism to their + national economies. + +Yet this research is vital if we are to manage effectively this growing but +potentially damaging form of tourism. + + + Discussion points and exercises +1 Discuss the factors that will influence the future development of adventure + tourism. +2 Select several adventure tourism organizations and interview representa­ + tives of each organization about how they feel adventure tourism will + develop in the future. Compare and contrast their views. +3 Discuss the benefits and costs of implementing the research agenda + outlined in this chapter for adventure tourism. + + + Postscript: 11 September 2001 – the dawn of a new era? +On 11 September 2001, the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington +stunned and shocked the world. At the time of writing, it is impossible to +predict what the long-term implications of these events will be for the world +as a whole, and adventure tourism specifically, partly because we do not know +if this was a one-off event or just the first manifestation of a phenomenon that +will go on for years. However, they could have the following impacts on +adventure tourism: + +1 Adventure tourism as a whole could suffer a general decline, as with other + types of tourism, as people become increasingly concerned about the risks + of travelling. +2 Countries that attract adventure tourism but are seen to be near to the + destinations with the greatest perceived risks could experience a reduction + in inbound adventure tourists. +3 Because of voyeurism, or because people feel sympathetic towards New + York, there may be a trend for people to visit the city, almost as a form of + adventure tourism, even if the city is subjected to further terrorist + attacks. + + 285 +fAdventure Tourism + + +4 If these events herald a new era of urban terrorism, it may change our + attitude towards ‘adventure’ forever. If the everyday act of living ordinary + life in a city becomes more risky than trekking in the wilderness, then the + motivation for the latter may diminish. On the other hand, urban terrorism + could stimulate the demand for wilderness adventure tourism as a ‘safer’ + tourist destination than cities. + +Alternatively, maybe nothing will actually change once the original immediate +impact passes, and things return to ‘normal’. However, at the moment of +writing, it is hard to believe that the events of 11 September 2001 in the USA +will not have a long-term impact on tourism in general, and adventure tourism +specifically. + + + Second postscript: terrorists targetting tourists, Autumn 2002 +In the few months since the first postscript was written further tragedies have +directly affected tourists. In Bali and Kenya terrorists deliberately targetted +venues which they knew would be full of tourists. The victims in Bali were +largely young backpackers, particularly from Australia. Thus, adventure +tourists have now become targets for the actions of terrorists. + Interestingly, many people believe these recent attacks will encourage +tourists to avoid well established, high profile destinations. This could boost +‘off the beaten track’ adventure tourism or it could reduce the volume of +adventure tourism. + Only time will tell what the future holds. + + + + +286 +fPart +G + Case studies + +ff13 + Case studies + + + + + Introduction + This book suggests that adventure tourism has + several characteristics, including the following: + + � It encompasses both physical and non-physical + adventure + � The concept of adventure tourism varies between + different cultures, countries and individuals + � Adventure tourism is growing, evolving and + mutating all the time, with new forms developing + constantly + � Adventure tourism involves complex inter-rela- + tionships between the tourists, suppliers and + destinations + � Increasingly, some types of adventure tourism + raise serious ethical concerns. + + The following selection of case studies is designed + to illustrate some of these points, as well as + demonstrating the breadth and diversity of adventure + tourism. +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Case study 1 Family adventure tourism + +Active Family Vacations +Active Family Vacations is a small company that provides ‘outdoor adventure-based +vacations for families on the go’. It is at a transitional stage in its development, where a +concept is becoming a real business. The company was set up in 2002, essentially in the +directors’ ‘spare time’ to reduce the investment risk. At the time of writing it is too early +to tell whether it will be successful or not, but the company directors say that if the +company continues to stimulate interest and business, and build critical mass, this will +signal the need for full-time career commitment. + The company is run by a married couple who have long had an interest in, and extensive +personal experience of, activity-based adventurous holidays. The arrival of their own +children helped focus their business concept. As this happened at a time when the couple +were firmly committed to corporate careers and study, it also deepened their +understanding and empathy towards the needs of busy parents when it comes to planning +family vacations. + An excerpt from the ‘company history’ section of the Active Family Vacations website +describes some of the thinking that lay behind the formation of the company: + + + + When it came to family vacation planning, we always made sure that our vacations + had two main components: (1) fun activities in a unique setting, (2) family inclusion – + good quality time for the entire family. That is the environment we aim to create for + you. All you need to provide is the enthusiasm. + In establishing Active Family Vacations, we sought to offer our clients what we had + wanted, but could never find: + 1 vacation planning from beginning to end – including arranging accommodation, + car rental, hiring of gear and the adventures themselves, + 2 locations away from the masses and over-crowded tourist destinations, + 3 an itinerary or individual tour to fit your own pace (no concern about the ‘pace of + the others’), + 4 a vacation that you could enjoy at your leisure, + 5 assurance that the tour provider was well established, knowledgeable and + experienced in meeting the needs of families. + Vacationing with us means you get to enjoy your family and the activities without the + stress and time pressure required to arrange all the finer details. + + +290 +f Case studies + + +In many respects, this company is an example of the type of small, independent operator +that predominates the adventure tourism market. It also echoes some aspects of Mintel’s +(2001b) observation on overland expedition companies: ‘. . . almost without exception +these companies were started up by people who, having made an overland trip to an +unusual destination, have come home and set up tours to take other people on the same +route’. Like these companies, Active Family Vacations is deeply grounded in personal +experience and interest. + The company has attempted to define its own niche and differentiate itself from other +‘family adventure’ providers. One of the main differences is that it is not trying to replicate +the most common manifestation of family adventure holidays, where a company provides +separate programmes for adults and children. Instead, there is more emphasis on offering +products for parents who want to spend both both quantity and quality time with their +offspring whilst on holiday. Family Active Vacations also offers to make arrangements for +individual families, which means that a family group can have its own itinerary, at a pace +and with activities that suit the family. It also means they escape the pressure of having +to join a bigger group and fit in with other people’s needs and agendas. Each family can +have its own guide, which maintains the intimacy of the family group and lets members +focus on developing their relationships with each other, rather than with other +holidaymakers. To sum up, one of the most distinctive characteristics of this company is +that it is targeting families who want to spend time together and experience what it means +for the whole family to get involved in their own adventure-based holiday. + The main accent is on holidays involving physical activities rather than, say, historical +tours. However, non-physical activities do feature within some trip itineraries. Peppering +a holiday with a few of these activities can work well with families, as even non-physical +activities can keep children busy and active, and most children have a natural need for +variety. One of the challenges facing Active Family Vacations is providing activities that +all family members can participate in together and find adventurous, despite different +abilities. They have tried to overcome the potential difficulties by: +� Selecting activities that are not extreme or highly dangeous in nature but are still + exciting and enjoyable, such as rafting +� Working closely with suppliers who are willing to provide the individual attention and + added support that could make a family adventure more enjoyable, i.e. bicycle trailers, + tag-a-longs and backpacks +� Using qualified and skilled guides who are sensitive to safety needs and are able to + switch between different ‘guiding/instructor’ styles to suit different levels of ability + within the family +� Including vehicle-related activities within the itinerary, to rest weary limbs. +A range of different types of holidays is offered. Some, for example ‘multi-sport +adventures’, may be programmes run in one location, where guests can undertake a + + 291 +fAdventure Tourism + + +different activity every day and return to the same ranch or hotel every evening. +Alternatively, some holidays are ‘point to point’ – perhaps three days river rafting followed +by two days in a jeep or on a mountain bike, with a pick-up at the end. Accommodation +varies, and can range from backcountry camping to ranch or inn accommodation. There +are also ‘single theme’ holidays such as family rafting, horseback holidays, biking or hiking. +Local suppliers, with whom Active Family Vacations have built up a relationship, provide +these programmes. Todd Heskett, the Company Director says: ‘It has been difficult finding +suppliers who comply with our philosophy and provide good family tours. Many of them +say they do, but can’t substantiate the difference between an ordinary tour and a tour that +really is suitable for all the family to do together. Field research has been invaluable in +helping us find local suppliers we are confident in’. Destinations for these holidays are +primarily the USA, Canada, Puerto Rica, Belize and Europe, and are based in areas of +inspiring landscape. Most of the holidays on offer are five days to one week long. This +reflects the needs of cash-rich, time-poor parents, who may not be able to take extended +holidays (this applies to the USA market in particular). + These parents also benefit from the time-saving and hassle-reducing ‘packaging’ +service offered by Active Family Vacations, who will organize everything, including +transport and gear hire. In general the prices range from US $2500 to $8000 for meals, +accommodation and most transportation (excluding the airfare) for a family consisting of +two parents and two children. + One of the chief strengths of Active Family Vacations is in researching and putting +together a holiday to suit a client’s needs, and to that end they also advertise ‘Tailor Made +Family Vacations’. Families are encouraged to identify their ‘dream holiday’. A list of +activities that the company can arrange is provided to help stimulate ideas, and this is +illustrated in Exhibit 1. + The company headquarters is currently in the UK, yet 60 per cent of the prospective +clients are anticipated as being North American. Information about the product is available +on the company’s website, although a full-scale marketing drive has not yet been +implemented. The Internet has been incredibly important in the way this company has +begun, allowing the company to be based in one country, yet target customers in another. +It also enables the company to do the research required to arrange tailor-made holidays to +specific requirements and budgets relatively easily and cheaply. Setting up a company in +this way would not have been feasible ten years ago, without the Internet. The relative +cheapness of setting up a website has also facilitated this ‘dipping a toe in the water’ +approach to business development. + A considerable amount of research and analysis preceded the establishment of the +company. Todd Heskett, the company director, confirms that a gap analysis between self- +catering family holidays, adventure tour companies and the large holiday/tour operators +particularly convinced him that family adventure holidays were a viable business +opportunity. He adds that research also demonstrated that: + +292 +fExhibit 1 Activities at Active Family Vacations. + + Adventure training Dog sledding Iceberg viewing Rodeo tours + African heritage Dolphin research/swim Ice fishing Safari/game viewing + Air safari Dude ranch Island cottage rental Sailing schools + Backpacking Elephant ride Jeep safari Scuba/snorkelling + Ballooning Equestrian riding lessons Jungle expeditions Sea kayaking + Barge/canal cruising Equestrian tours Jungle lodge Skiing/cross country/touring + Biblical tours Expeditions Kite flying Skiing/downhill + Bicycle touring Family heritage trips Kon-Tiki rafting Snowboarding + Bird watching Farm stay Lighthouse tours Snowmobiling + Brown/black bear watching Festival tours Llama packing Showshoeing + Bullfighting Fishing Mine tours Spa/hot springs tour + Camel safaris Fly fishing trips Mountain bicycle tours Spelunking + Camping Fly-in hiking Mountaineering Surfing + Canoeing/kayaking Foliage tours Multi-sport family trips Children’s sports camps + Canyoning Garden tours National Parks tours Trekking + Castles/palaces tours Geneaology tours Native Americans tours Volcano tours + Cattle drive Ghost town tours Natural history Walking tours + Cave art tours Glacier tours Nature reserve Water-skiing + Caving Goat packing Nature trips Whale watching + Christian tours Gorilla viewing Northern Lights viewing White-water rafting + Christmas tours Great walks and hikes Outdoor skills school Wild horse watching + Church tours Heli-mountain biking Penguin viewing Wilderness courses + Collectors tours Heli-rafting Polar bear watching Wildflower viewing + Conservation Heli-skiing Polar expeditions Wildlife viewing + Country house tours Heli-trekking Rafting Windjamming + Country inns Hiking Rainforest tours Windsurfing + Covered wagons Historic houses Ranching/guest ranching Wine tasting + Cowboy skills History tours Reindeer safari Winter sports + Cultural expeditions Horse carriage tours River rafting Yachting + Cycle touring Horseriding/packing/trekking Rock climbing Yoga/meditation + Desert expeditions Hot air ballooning Zoology + Dhow sailing Ice climbing + Disabled tours +fAdventure Tourism + + + . . . families desiring adventure and time together had limited options if they wanted + an intimate, non-threatening and relaxed family setting. Our company is built on this + analysis. Market analysis also suggests a lack of competition offering true family + holidays. An increase in dual income families, resulting in time constraints for + parents, and increasing desire and demand for adventures of this type have also + helped convince us that the market is ripe for our product. + +As for proposals for future development, the company is currently researching European +and UK destinations for the USA market. Todd illuminates further on the company’s +development plans: + + This winter (2002/3) we will be launching our full scale marketing campaign in the + US for travel in Europe and the UK. Our marketing efforts are differentiated from + classic Internet sites, as we do not equate high volume of traffic through our website + with families on holiday with us; we will be focusing on quality of hits as opposed + to quantity of hits. During the next three years we will continue to work closely with + our suppliers refining the tours, and adding tours run directly by ourselves. We will + also concentrate efforts on accreditation through widely accepted travel industry + associations. We have a strategic plan that extends to five years and beyond, yet we + understand that the market is changing dramatically and will continue to do so. + Therefore we expect constant environmental scanning and adjustments to our + products and operation to be very much part of our future work. + + + Case study 2 Women backpackers +In recent years there has been a great increase in the number of female backpackers taking +trips across Asian, Africa and South America. More and more women are also choosing +to make the journey alone. This trend does not seem to be affected by well-publicized +stories of the murder of women backpackers in different parts of the world over the past +three or four years. + Most of these women backpackers are in the younger age group, are relatively highly +educated, and tend to come from developed countries in Europe, North America, +Australasia and – increasingly – South-East Asia. + In the past twenty years, guidebooks specifically targeted at women backpackers have +appeared. For example, in 1986 Pandora/Rough Guides published Half the Earth: +Women’s Experiences of Travel Worldwide. (See Davies and Longrigg, 1986.) This book +highlighted the risk of sexual harassment faced by solo women backpackers, and over +3000 women contributed articles on around 70 countries for this book. + Today, most guidebooks for independent travel – Rough Guides, Lonely Planet, +Lets Go – include sections of advice specifically for women. + +294 +f Case studies + + + The first edition of Asia Overland, published in 1998, assessed 35 Asian countries in +terms of how ‘woman-friendly’ they were for solo women backpackers using a scale of +1 tick (very bad) to 5 ticks (very good). The results are shown in Exhibit 2. + However, it must be stressed that the assessment in Exhibit 2 was highly subjective and +was prepared by ‘western’ authors. It may therefore reflect perceptions rather than reality, +and misunderstanding (or intolerance) of other cultures. + Some of the commentators can sound stereotypical or arrogant, as can be seen from +these few patronizing examples: + + South East Asia is not the Middle East – women play an active role in day to day + public life. + While most of Indonesia and Malaysia is Muslim, it is not of the fundamentalist + variety – you will not be stoned by religious zealots for baring an ankle. + A haughty attitude can work wonders. + +On the other hand, women travelling alone in some parts of the world do face particular +risks and harassment. + + +Exhibit 2 Attitudes towards solo women travellers in 35 Asian +countries. + + Number of ticks Number of Comments + countries + + + No ticks – unable to 5 Includes Afghanistan and Bhutan + make any judgement + + + 1 1 Pakistan + + + 2 5 Includes Turkey, Iran, India, and Indonesia + 3 6 Includes Azerbaijan, Uzbekhistan, and + Turkmenistan + + + 4 14 Includes China, Russia, Malaysia, Nepal, + Sri Lanka, and Vietnam + + + 5 4 Includes Japan, Thailand and Singapore + + + + 295 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Many solo women travellers make use of a wide range of information sources when +travelling to reduce the problems. These sources include websites, guidebooks, and the +experience of fellow travellers. Women also tend to join up with other women or a male +companion when they are about to travel across countries or regions that are considered +particularly risky for solo women travellers. + Each year thousands of women travelling alone succeed in crossing Asia and, to a lesser +extent, Africa and South America, unscathed. + The profile of solo female backpackers appears to be changing, in the following ways: + +� More older women appear to be starting to go backpacking as solo travellers +� Young women from countries where women have not traditionally travelled alone, are + starting to be seen around the world as solo backpackers; this is particularly true of + women from South-East Asia. + +The growth of female solo backpackers is probably being partly stimulated by the travel +writings of women who have travelled the world on their own. One example is Dervla +Murphy, who has made solo journeys and then written about them in books with titles like +In Ethiopia with a Mule, Eight Feet in the Andes and On a Shoestring to Coorg. + It seems likely that social change around the world will further stimulate the growth of +the female solo backpacking market in the future. + + + Case study 3 Disabled people and adventure travel +In recent years there has been a growing demand for vacations from disabled people. In a +large number of countries any vacation is something of an adventure for these tourists owing +to a lack of specialized facilities and services. Nevertheless, a growing number are seeking +to take more adventurous vacations than would have been the case a few years ago. + This growing interest has been reflected in specialist guidebooks for disabled travellers. +In 1991, for instance, the Rough Guide published its contribution, Nothing Ventured – +Disabled People Travel the World. + At the same time, many guidebooks to adventure tourism destinations have started +offering specific advice to disabled travellers. However, many of these guides present a +picture that is far from encouraging, as can be seen from the examples in Exhibit 3. + From this evidence and other sources of data, it is clear that: + +� Facilities for disabled travellers are more sophisticated in developed countries; this is + an issue for adventure travel, as much of it takes place in developing countries where + there are fewer facilities for the disabled + +296 +f Case studies + + +Exhibit 3 Guidebook advice for disabled adventure travellers. + + Guidebook Selected comments + + + Lonely Planet Guide to South ‘South America is not well set up for disabled + America on a Shoestring, 7th travellers.’ + edn (2000) + ‘Unfortunately, expensive international hotels are + more likely to cater for guests with disabilities + than cheap local lodgings; air travel will be more + feasible than inexpensive local buses; and well + developed tourist attractions will be more + accessible than some off-the-beaten track + destinations.’ + ‘Careful planning is essential, but there is little + detailed information on South America for + disabled travellers.’ + + + Footprint Morocco Handbook, ‘Morocco really cannot be said to be well adapted + 2nd edn (1999) to the needs of the disabled traveller.’ + + + Ministry of Sound, Misguided No mention of disabled people and no details of + Ibiza (2001) facilities for disabled travellers + + + Let’s Go Central America ‘Central America still poses a formidable + (1999) challenge for the disabled traveller. Though few + facilities are accessible to disabled persons, many + attractions are trying to make exploring the + outdoors more feasible.’ + + + Eyewitness Travel Guide to ‘There are few facilities in Greece for assisting the + Greece (1997) disabled, so careful planning is essential.’ + + + The Rough Guide to Mallorca ‘Despite their popularity as holiday destinations, + and Menorca (1996) Mallorca and Menorca pay scant regard to their + disabled visitors.’ + + + Trailblazer Publications. No specific section on travel advice for disabled + Guide to Azerbaijan and people. + Georgia (1999) + + + Continued overleaf + + 297 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + + Guidebook Selected comments + + + The Rough Guide to This guide has three pages of detailed advice for + Australia (1997) travellers with disabilities. It provides details of + advice leaflets from the Australian Tourist + Commission, and encourages disabled travellers + by telling them they can go snorkelling and visit + the Kakadu National Park with no problems. + + + Lonely Planet Guide to The guide gives details of specialist attractions + Norway (1999) designed for disabled visitors and also talks about + ski events for visually impaired skiers, and + disabled athletics; however, it still advises + disabled travellers to plan well ahead when + travelling to Norway + + + The Rough Guide to Brazil ‘Travel in Brazil for people with disabilities is likely + (2000) to be difficult, if special facilities are required.’ + + + Trailblazers Publications. This guide has no general specific advice for + Asia Overland (1998) disabled travellers; there is advice for each + country for women travelling alone and for + vegetarians, but nothing for disabled travellers + + + Lonely Planet Guide to Syria. ‘Scant regard is paid to the needs of disabled + 1999 travellers in Syria.’ + + + The Rough Guide to St. ‘In the past, very little attention has been paid to + Petersburg (1998) the needs of the disabled anywhere in Russia. + Attitudes are changing, but there is a long way to + go, the chronic shortage of funds . . . doesn’t + help.’ + + + The Lonely Planet Guide to ‘Travellers with serious disabilities are unlikely to + South-East Asia on a find South-East Asia very user friendly . . . It is + Shoestring (1997) unrealistic to expect much in the way of public + amenities.’ + + + + +298 +f Case studies + + +� Services for disabled travellers are usually better in big cities and on airlines than in + adventure tourism destinations +� Provision is improving, albeit slowly. + +One development in recent years has been the great increase in infrastructure and advice +for disabled travellers, from two main sources: + +1 Organizations for disabled travellers such as RADAR and the Holiday Care Service in + the UK, Mobility International USA, and ACROD in Australia +2 Websites for disabled travel organizations, specialist tour operators and destinations, as + well as for the experiences of individual disabled travellers. + +There are also more tour operators offering packages for disabled travellers. + In spite of all this progress any travel still seems to be an adventure for disabled people, +while true adventure travel is too often an impossible dream. + + + Case study 4 Red Letter Days +Red Letter Days is a UK-based company that sells out-of-the-ordinary ‘experiences’ to its +clients, both individuals and as part of the incentive travel market. In the individual +market, many of the experiences are given as gifts by friends and relatives. They either +choose the experience for their friends or relatives, or give them gift vouchers valued at +between £49 and £1000 in 2000–2001. + Most experiences involve either adrenaline rushes of some kind or luxurious breaks +where the consumer is pampered. An indication of the range on offer from this company +is given by the following selection, taken from their 68-page 2000–2001 brochure: + +� The chance to drive a Ferrari 350 around a 1.7-mile course in Leicestershire, UK (£225 + for four hours) +� A half-day 4 × 4 off-road driving adventure at a range of locations in the UK (£120 for + four hours) +� The chance to spend 20 minutes at the controls of a F4 Phantom jet simulator (£149) +� A balloon trip over London with champagne (£185 per person) +� A four-day visit to the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre in Moscow, including + ten 30-second weightlessness experiences in an Ilyushin 76 aircraft (estimated cost + £4750!) +� A four-day vacation in Russia including a 25-minute flight in a MIG-29 fighter with the + chance to take the controls (estimated price £8500!) +� A week’s holiday in South Africa that includes the chance to come face to face with a + Great White Shark, albeit from the safety of a cage (around £1250) + + 299 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� A day of SAS-type military training in the UK (£165) + +� A nostalgic flight of 40 minutes duration in a classic old biplane (£120) + +� A unique opportunity to descend in a submarine to the wreck of the Titanic, off the + + Newfoundland coast (£30 000!) +� A two-day package in the UK, learning to handle eagles (£225) +� A one-day yacht racing course in the UK (£165) +� A luxurious weekend break for two at a stately home in Scotland (£1200) +� ´ + A three-night cookery course, with 13 hours tuition at the Raymond Blanc L’Ecole de + Cuisine in Oxfordshire (£800) +� A full personal makeover in London, including photographs, taking a day (£199) +� A three-hour recording session in a professional studio (£149). + +While very different from each other, all of these experiences can be seen as adventure +travel because they are usually new or very unusual experiences for the consumer. The +price of the experience includes free cancellation, personal accident, and public liability +insurance. + While Red Letter Days pioneered this kind of tourism package just over ten years ago, +new companies are appearing in this growing market all the time. + + + Case study 5 GREENFORCE +This case study examines GREENFORCE, a company that organizes and runs +conservation expeditions in various countries around the world. The case study also +focuses on the experiences of two people who worked as part of the GREENFORCE team, +first in Uganda and then later in Zambia. Sue Norbury and Julian Harlow started out as +volunteers on a ten-week expedition to Uganda, and were able to extend their stay as staff +trainees for a further three months. After briefly returning to the UK, Sue and Julian were +selected as part of the Zambia project set-up team, a truly fantastic experience for them. +After a further two years of fieldwork they were selected for the MSc sponsorship +programme, and are very grateful to GREENFORCE for launching both their careers. + GREENFORCE was set up in 1996, and is a non-profit organization that operates +environmental conservation expeditions in developing countries around the world. Its +mission statement is: + + To assist in the conservation of wildlife and the natural environment through the + provision of interpretative biological information regarding species within or using + protected areas. In doing so to integrate with existing programmes and collaborate + with like-minded institutions for mutual benefit and to ensure the sustainable + development of the aforementioned protected areas. + (GREENFORCE, 1996; see GREENFORCE 1998). + +300 +f Case studies + + + To this end, GREENFORCE works for the host country’s National Trust or Wildlife +Commission and yields useful environmental data to assist these organizations in +producing management plans that endeavour to protect or rebuild endangered ecosystems. +In order to carry out such work, GREENFORCE utilizes volunteers and employs paid +staff to work in the host country over a period of time. Field-staff who originate from the +host countries also work on the projects. Other stakeholders also become involved in the +projects – for example, Peace Corps Volunteers. + GREENFORCE’s inaugural project was set up in Uganda in 1997. The director of the +Uganda Wildlife Authority invited the organization to carry out a biodiversity inventory +of Karuma Wildlife Reserve, an area of land that acts as a buffer zone for Murchison Falls +National Park in southern Uganda. The country was subjected to civil war and unrest +throughout the 1970s. Consequently wildlife populations were decimated, leading to a loss +of wildlife diversity and uncertainty about which species still existed within the national +parks. Though the conservation value of conducting the species inventory acted as the + + +Exhibit 4 GREENFORCE’s environmental projects (adapted from +GREENFORCE, 2001). + + Environmental Destination Project overview + project + + + Marine projects Bahamas Assessment and monitoring of two coral + reef areas that will shortly become + marine ‘no take’ (no harvesting of any + marine organism) zones + + + Borneo Conducting baseline surveys of the flora + and fauna of coral reefs + + + Fiji Carrying out an assessment of coral + health and fish populations to assist with + community-based conservation + + + Terrestrial projects Zambia Producing species inventories and + population estimates for all species, from + large mammals to birds and reptiles + + + Peru Conducting research on birds, mammals + and tropical trees in the Amazon + rainforest + + + + 301 +fAdventure Tourism + + +main impetus for this work, other benefits were also achieved from this project. The +project team helped to identify areas within the Park that could be developed for tourism +purposes. In addition, they set up links with local schools and carried out workshops at the +GREENFORCE base camp to encourage children to learn about the importance of +conservation in the area. + As illustrated in Exhibit 4, GREENFORCE’s current projects are either marine- or land- +based and take place in a number of global destinations. + + +GREENFORCE staff +The organization ‘provides opportunities for conservation enthusiasts to gain practical +experience, essential for building a career within this competitive and fast growing sector’ +(GREENFORCE, 2001). GREENFORCE recruits up to fourteen fee-paying volunteers +per project four times yearly. In addition, paid staff work as research co-ordinators, +research assistants, expedition leaders and country co-ordinators. The organization also +helps volunteers and employees who are keen to develop careers in conservation through +funding their postgraduate studies in relevant subject areas. Most people start off working +with the organization as volunteers, and as such have to raise sufficient funds +(approximately £2550) to finance their trip. Volunteers generally undertake a project for +a period of ten weeks, although some stay out in the field for a longer duration. For +example, Sue and Julian worked as volunteers in Uganda for six months in total and +gained relevant work experience through the organization’s training programme in order +to become field staff in Zambia, where they spent eighteen months. This programme offers +individuals the means to build up their fieldwork, teamwork and organizational skills, as +well as gaining experience in running an environmental project. + GREENFORCE provides volunteers with full training, ‘so no previous experience is +required, however living conditions in the field are basic so you must have enthusiasm and +a desire to provide a positive contribution to this vital conservation work’ (GREEN­ +FORCE, 2001). The type of work that volunteers get involved in depends upon which +project they choose (see Exhibit 5). Most projects run over a much longer duration than +ten weeks, and therefore some volunteers will not see the end results of their efforts. + + +Volunteer training +Four months prior to embarking on an environmental expedition, volunteers participate in +a comprehensive training programme at the Bowles Outdoor Centre (Kent, UK). This +takes place throughout the course of a weekend. During this time volunteers are given +information about the history and culture of the host country, the National Park where they +will be based and the overall aims of the specific project that they are to be involved in, +and also basic training in orienteering skills. Another important part of this training + +302 +f Case studies + + +Exhibit 5 Examples of GREENFORCE’s conservation activities +(source: GREENFORCE, 1998). + + + + +session is to communicate to volunteers the conditions they might expect whilst working +in the host country. In the initial few weeks of their time spent in Uganda, Sue and Julian +comment on their pre-expedition expectations and how different these were to the actual +expedition experience itself: + + We were permanently warned it would be very basic. They [GREENFORCE] try to + place some negative thoughts in your mind rather than it all being completely + positive. Obviously they don’t want it to sound too negative but the aim of that is just + to prepare you for some of the extremes that you’re going to face. So, you have your + own expectations that you see on TV and in the newspapers, then they help you to + shape your expectations throughout the training weekend. When you actually arrive + there [the developing country] it’s nothing like you expected it to be, and yet you + + 303 +fAdventure Tourism + + + don’t know why it’s not like that. You go there and think that some things are just like + you expected but most of it is not. + It was all so new and exciting. Every small detail about being in another country + on the equator was just so exciting. I remember being absolutely petrified of walking + to the pit latrine. I wouldn’t go on my own because I thought there would be snakes. + I remember lying in my tent and I could hear the termites underneath, I was so + pathetically terrified that I was my own worst neighbour. + There were times when we had to go out and collect our own water, as our vehicle + broke down so often. It really made you think. Local people have to do that all the + time, cycling with water containers on the back of their bikes. You see people cycling + along, no problem. It was impossible! They were killing themselves laughing, + watching us trying to cycle down the road carrying water. + +Such comments illustrate the uniqueness of GREENFORCE’s expeditions in providing +individuals with highly exciting adventurous experiences that no amount of pre-expedition +training can prepare them for. It is apparent that the organization’s training sessions and the +volunteers’ expectations built up during these sessions result in only the most determined of +individuals ultimately working on GREENFORCE’s environmental projects. + + +Volunteer profile +Although volunteers embark on GREENFORCE expeditions primarily because of their +interest in conservation, there are also other reasons. The volunteers range from those with +only a limited interest in conservation work to those with total enthusiasm for the subject. +Many express a need to do something that is worthwhile and valuable to the environment +and to society. Talking about their experiences in Zambia, Sue and Julian comment: + + It was quite amazing how diverse people’s reasons for coming out were. There were + people like us who’d just finished their degrees and wanted an experience and wanted + to feel they were doing some good as well as going to a country they’d always + dreamed of going to. You’d get people who were on career breaks – one of the + women was earning an absolute fortune and she had just decided to come away for + ten weeks and she didn’t know whether or not she was going to come back to it. + People want to have something that will stop and make them think. Other people who + came out wanted to view large mammals. They didn’t seem to have much interest in + conservation and that’s very difficult as the basis of what we do is conservation work. + If you saw wildlife as well, then that was absolutely fantastic. + +Volunteers’ expectations are also wide-ranging, and whilst some people are quite realistic +about what to expect whilst working for GREENFORCE others seem less willing to + +304 +f Case studies + + +accept that their work will be largely routine in nature with only intermittent bursts of +excitement: + + Some would see conservation as something spectacularly exciting and think ‘what a + job. It’s going to be brilliant!’. But a lot of it is routine, tedious, incredibly boring, + repetitive (vegetation surveys especially) and it’s not always permanent excitement. + Occasionally you witness something and you think ‘Oh my God, I can’t believe I’ve + just seen that’. Three weeks of solid sweat and toil is absolutely and completely + worthwhile. Some people expected to see things all the time – people who perhaps + weren’t experienced. Some other people came out to try to do a research project and + saw it as an opportunity to get practical experience. + +It is evident from the above that a diverse group of individuals make up the volunteer +team, and that these people are looking to fulfil various needs whilst on GREEN­ +FORCE expeditions. On further examination, it becomes clear that some of their needs +and motives are indistinct when compared with other groupings of adventure tourists. It +has already been noted that an important part of adventure is risk, and the opportunity +to engage in an experience that will lead to excitement, thrills and ultimately an +‘adrenaline high’. GREENFORCE volunteers are no exception, placing themselves in +situations where some degree of risk is often inevitable – for example, working in a +country where political instability is rife. Their personalities and lifestyles may also +reflect the need to take part in risky activities on a regular basis, as demonstrated in this +quotation: + + I was looking for something adventurous, something different to do. If you liken it + to bungee jumping and white-water rafting, that’s always been something I’ve loved + doing and jumping out of trees when I was a child etc. There’s always something + different to look for that’s exciting. + +A range of other motives and benefits are experienced from participating in GREEN­ +FORCE expeditions, and these are illustrated in Exhibit 6. + People who participate in GREENFORCE’s expeditions appear to do so in part for +adventure and excitement. The various expeditions offer challenging environments for +individuals, no matter what their level of experience of living in the bush. Although +carrying out conservation work in developing countries is the primary goal spurring +GREENFORCE’s work, from the volunteer’s perspective there are a whole host of other +reasons. Importantly, people are interested in doing something that is going to be a +memorable and perhaps life-changing experience. Adventure most definitely forms an +integral part of this experience, and is encountered on a day-to-day basis whilst +conducting the field research and living in base camp. For instance, when Sue and Julian + + 305 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Exhibit 6 Benefits and motives – the GREENFORCE experience. + + + + +were asked about their feelings towards the risks when working as GREENFORCE staff, +one of their responses to stampeding elephants in Zambia was: + + It was great! Sometimes you’d be driving the vehicle and your legs would be shaking + so hard that you could barely press the accelerator and they’d just charge towards you. + + +Conclusion +This case study attempts to illustrate connections between adventure tourism and the +conservation expeditions offered by GREENFORCE. Although the latter may not be +conventionally viewed as a form of adventure tourism, or indeed any form of tourism, its +participants work throughout an expedition and often spend extended periods of time +away from their home environments and thus links can clearly be seen. The most obvious +similarities can be found through drawing comparisons between the adventure tourist and +the GREENFORCE participant; both appear to be primarily driven by risk, excitement +and the need to do something new and different. + +306 +f Case studies + + + + Case study 6 Adventure tourism magazines +The growth of adventure tourism in recent years has been both reflected in and stimulated +by a plethora of new glossy magazines focused on this area. Here we will analyse just two +UK examples, Adventure Travel Outdoors and Wanderlust, based on an individual issue +of each magazine chosen at random. + Adventure Travel Outdoors appears six times a year, and was launched in 1996. It is a +full-colour magazine with an editorial : advertising ratio of approximately 75 : 25 per cent. +However, it should be noted that a number of pages are not advertisements but are +editorial features that review all kinds of products produced by individual companies, +from package holidays to walking books, guidebooks to weatherproof clothing. + For the March/April 2001 edition, the breakdown of the editorial aspect is shown in +Exhibit 7. + Other interesting features of this issue were as follows: + +� Only one article was focused on the UK, the remainder being largely international in + flavour +� Several articles focused on health issues, including deep vein thrombosis on long-haul + flights, mosquitoes, and food hygiene + + + +Exhibit 7 Analysis of the editorial content of Adventure Travel +Outdoors, March/April 2001. + + Type of content Approximate percentage + of editorial content + + + Destination features 33 + + + Stories of individual travellers’ experiences 11 + + + Reviews of adventure holidays offered by tour operators 12 + + + Equipment reviews 13 + + + Articles on issues of interest to the adventure traveller 24 + + + News items and factual information 7 + + + + 307 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Sections had titles such as ‘Stuff’, ‘Tales from the trail’, ‘Yes grasshopper’ (questions + to the editor), ‘Do you wanna go’, and ‘The big trip’ +� Most of the advertisements were either large ones for equipment manufacturers or + smaller ones for specialist tour operators +� There were two pages of small advertisements where travellers could advertise for + companions on future trips. + +Wanderlust is also produced six times a year and was launched in the early 1990s. It +describes itself as a magazine ‘for people with a passion for travel’. While this could in +theory include people taking, sun, sand, sea and sex holidays on the Costas or coach tours +in the Benelux countries, it is clear from the content of the magazine that it is largely about +adventure travel. For example, the April/May 2001 issue contained features on Azerbaijan, + + + +Exhibit 8 Analysis of the editorial content of Wanderlust, April/May +2001. + + + Type of content Approximate percentage + of editorial content + + + Destination features 27 + + + Stories of individual travellers’ experiences 3 + + + Reviews of adventure holidays offered by tour 0 + operators + + + Equipment reviews 6 + + + Articles on issues of interest to the adventure 30 + traveller + + + News items and factual information 9 + + + Miscellaneous, including book and music reviews, 15 + letters pages, details of world travel related tourism + programmes etc. + + + Special features 10 + + + +308 +f Case studies + + +tree house hotels in Kerala, Uganda, Hong Kong and South America. Even its feature on +European cities featured more offbeat places, such as Rotterdam, Trömso, Split and +Vilnius. + Nevertheless, Wanderlust is more mainstream and is concerned with all types of +tourism, not just the active pursuits tourism covered by Adventure Travel Outdoors; it also +looks at urban tourism, culture tourism and wildlife tourism. + The content of the April/May 2001 issue is analysed in Exhibit 8. + Of the 136 pages in the issue, around 30 per cent consisted of advertising whilst the +remainder was editorial. + The interesting features of this issue were as follows: + +� Ten pages were devoted to a ‘Travel photos of the year’ special, featuring 38 photos + from over 3000 submitted by readers;of these photos, none was taken in the UK and + only five in Europe as a whole +� There was a broader range of advertisements than in Adventure Travel Outdoors, with + advertisements from airlines and national tourist boards +� About 6 per cent of the editorial related to health and safety issues +� Travel photography was the focus of around 5 per cent of the editorial and advertising + content of the magazine (excluding the ‘Travel photos’ special) +� Readers’ letters and small advertisements designed to allow one reader to communicate + with another represented 8 per cent of the editorial content +� Cultural tourism was well featured, with an article on Branson, USA, famous for its + music heritage, and one on six unusual city break destinations in Europe. + +It is clear that both magazines are aiming at somewhat different markets, but both +concentrate on types of tourism that are ‘out of the ordinary’ and represent some kind of +adventure experience for the tourist. + + + Case study 7 Walk on the wild side – travelling to the world’s most + dangerous places +A small but growing number of people seem to enjoy travelling to places that are perceived +to be dangerous for some reason. ‘Dangerous places’ (DP) travel has clearly become an +obsession for its aficionados, and there are now guidebooks just for them. For example, in +1997 Fielding World-Wide published the second edition of its The World’s Most Dangerous +Places guide (Pelton et al., 1997), which claims it helps its readers to: + +� Stay alive in the world’s most dangerous places +� Find hidden or forbidden areas, including war zones + + 309 +fAdventure Tourism + + +� Explore the dark side +� Find ‘hard-core’ adventures. + +The following extracts from the preface to this book indicate the nature of this market and +the motivations of such DP tourists. + + The DP thing + To say that DP has become popular would be an understatement. In less than a year + we have gone from laid back travellers visiting the world’s cesspools and hot spots, + to minor celebrities, complete with offers of TV and movie deals. Throughout all this, + we have the bizarre sense of being Peter Sellers in Being There or Tom Hanks in + Forrest Gump. ‘Dangerous is as dangerous does’ might even be our motto. We didn’t + set out to be the post boys for thrill seekers and professional adventurers, but things + have changed since the first edition was published. Coskun now has one of the top + television shows in Turkey, Wink keeps getting mistaken for Mel Gibson in Saigon, + and I endure the hundreds of questions reporters throw at me in an effort to find out + just what is so appealing about this book. + Along the way, we have chatted and broken bread with some interesting characters + – from the leaders of Hezbollah to the warlords in Liberia, to the Moros in the + Philippines to the taliban in Afghanistan. We also have hit the books and tried to keep + track of, and make sense out of the rapidly changing world. + + + Is DP a macho thing? + Some adventure magazines have tried to portray us as tough guys cruising the world + looking for trouble. I can’t think of anything that is further from the truth. I now + consider myself a seeker of knowledge, a far more cerebral occupation than my + previous title of professional adventurer. I can admit that we may be adrenaline + junkies, but none of us has ever been bungee jumping, rock climbing or even + windsurfing. I collect art, write books, love nature and have two beautiful twin + daughters. Coskun likes to cook, Wink likes to play blues guitar, and together, we + don’t exactly fit the hairy-chested, cigar-chomping adventurer profile. + + + What is the most dangerous situation you have been in? + I truly can’t answer this. It might be as mundane as surviving a plane crash in Borneo, + Coskun hitting a land mine in Afghanistan, or Wink riding his motorcycle through + war-torn Cambodia. We really never set out to do anything overly dangerous, but we + do pride ourselves on knowing how to handle ourselves in dangerous situations, and + we have done a lot of fast talking at gunpoint. + +310 +f Case studies + + + A message to fellow adventurers and seekers of knowledge + The response to the first edition of this book has been overwhelming. Governments + have expressed their outrage, and readers have sent in their heartfelt thanks for + creating a book that ‘tells it like it is’. If this book can save one life or change a + misconception, we did our job. As for the many readers who gave us the benefit of + their experiences in dangerous places, we are very grateful and they now own a free + book and a cool T-shirt. If you have any pearls of wisdom that may save another + traveller from misfortune, please send it in and if we use it we will gladly send you + a DP book and one of our politically incorrect (but heavy-duty) T-shirts. + +The authors are very candid about their views on travel to dangerous places. While +claiming not to be classic macho adventurers, their words make them seem very different +people to the ordinary tourist. While they claim not to be in the business of promoting +tourism to dangerous places, the book does attach a certain status to such travel, which +may make it attractive to some people. + Pelton, writing as publisher as well as author, seems to be suggesting dangerous place +travel really is a new adventure tourism market when he says: + + Despite early predictions of folly, DP has become Fielding’s fastest-selling travel + guide and the rallying point for a new type of traveller. A traveller who is a lot like + the authors: curious, intelligent and sceptical of the sound-bite view of the world’s + least travelled places – people who trust other travel guides as much as we trust + infomercials. + Many people ask how we do the things we do. The answer is simple. We just + do it. We may not always be successful in our quest, but we always have a good + time. + +Some sections of the book have headings that suggest that the authors believe this a sector +of adventure tourism will grow and become formalized in the future, including: + +� ‘Coming attractions’, where the authors predict which destinations will become more + dangerous places to visit in the future +� The ‘Adventure guide’, which gives details of related issues and types of vacations + such as expedition planning, volunteer vacations, adventure travel publications and + survival training schemes. + +The 1997 guide rated Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Burindi, Colombia, India, Israel, +Liberia, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon as the world’s most dangerous +countries to visit, but its list of dangerous places also included popular tourist destinations +such as Egypt, Sri Lanka and Turkey. + + 311 +fAdventure Tourism + + + Interestingly, the guide suggests that the danger in a destination can be a result of: + +� War +� Terrorism and the actions of security forces +� Crime +� Transport accidents +� Disease +� Drugs. + +Most worrying for the mainstream tourism industry is that, in the future, the authors +predict that several popular destinations may become more dangerous places due to +tension, social unrest, war and crime – including Cyprus, Greece, Kenya, Morocco, and +South Africa. + + + Case study 8 Clubbing and party tourism in the UK market +In the UK market, clubbing and party tourism has grown considerably in recent years, +becoming ever more sophisticated. An increasing number of tour operators are targeting +this market and developing brands to satisfy the party tourists. + The market for this form of adventure tourism is generally men and women under 30 +years of age. Such tourists are found in the UK and a number of other Northern European +countries, notably Germany, Denmark, Finland and the Netherlands. College students in +the USA also have a reputation for enjoying similar vacations when their examinations are +over. Furthermore, in the UK market there are hedonistic holidays aimed at an older +clientele. + The authors have analysed the 2001 brochures of four leading brands in the UK market: +Club 18–30, Escapades, Ministry of Sound, and Twentys. + Club 18–30 was the pioneer of this form of tourism in the UK market, and has in the +past attracted criticism for the overtly sexual nature of its advertising. The 2001 brochure +promoted packages with phrases such as: + +� ‘We take you that little bit further’ + +� ‘Stick your fingers up at convention and have the holiday that you want’ + +� ‘If you want stimulating, you have come to the right place’ + +� ‘You can guarantee that at our accommodation “there are no screaming kids or + + whinging old people to complain about you enjoying yourself”’ +� ‘Come again – wouldn’t we all love to?’ + +The brochure also contains details of the annual reunion for Club 18–30 holidaymakers +in Skegness in November 2001, where it says there will be: + +312 +f Case studies + + + . . . a 2-week holiday crammed into one bloody great party weekend . . . blokes, birds, + boozing, bums, boobs, beer, bonding [and if you’re lucky, a bit of bondage]. + +The brochure features holidays in thirteen destinations in the Mediterranean and the +Canary Islands. Not surprisingly, the largest single destination in the programme is the +party island of Corfu. + Each resort section features a ‘diary’ quotation, purporting to be from a holidaymaker +in the resort. The flavour of the product is contained in these quotations, including: + +� ‘I’m not sure how I came to wake up on the beach. Chalk that one down to experience.’ +� ‘I don’t believe for one second that Simon got a shag last night. He was so drunk he + couldn’t have raised a smile.’ +� ‘All praise to the God that is me. What a fantastic pull.’ + +Escapades also makes the nature of its offer clear, with the terms at the beginning of its +brochure like ‘Shocking good holidays’ and ‘For you – not your parents’. It goes on to add +that ‘we’ve picked resorts with wild bars where anything goes and closing time comes +when you finally leave’. + Escapades offers not only Mediterranean/Canary Island destinations but also Cancun in +Mexico, described as being ‘for the fun-loving, sun-loving generation’. It sells all its +packages with a message of ‘wild days, crazy nights’. + The Ministry of Sound’s Clubbers Guide Holidays brochure promises five great +features of their Mediterranean packages: + +1 The Wave-Larks in Watersports – a combination of water slides, music, and dancing +2 The Beach – beach parties with top music, drinks, and barbecues +3 The Sunset – parties on board yachts and catamarans with music and champagne +4 The Flick – parties with the music of the 1970s and 1980s +5 The Session – nights at the best clubs with big name DJs. + +It also offers a winter ‘snow stormin’ party, which in 2001 took place from 31 March to +7 April in Mayrhofen (Austria), and weekend clubbing breaks to Barcelona, Berlin and +Reykjavik. + With this company the focus is clearly on clubbing rather than sun, as it says twice in +the brochure ‘F__k the tan?’ + Twentys begins its brochures with the words: + + Holidays that change the way you walk. Overdo it, love it, drink it, snog it, jump it, + have it. + + 313 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Part of the brochure features ‘Straight from the Horse’s Mouth’, which purports to be the +record of a week’s holiday of one customer. It features a mixture of hedonistic pleasures, +including drinking, casual sex and partying. Helen says she ‘ended up shit-faced’ on +Sunday night and ‘ripped to the tits on the beach’. + The spirit of such holidays seems to be summed up well by a description of Kavos on +Corfu: + + There are no kids and old gippers so we can do what we want, when we want, with + who we want. + +These holidays are more than the traditional ‘sun, sand, sea, and sex’ holidays. The music, +alcohol and watersports are also now an important part of the experience. This partying +market reflects a distinctive lifestyle lived by this market segment, with its own language +and music and set of shared beliefs. + It could be argued that these people are not being that adventurous because they are +simply doing on holiday similar things to those they do at home. However, there is +adventure, for they can go further when they are away from the constraints of their own +home town. And being with new people in a foreign country is an adventure in itself. + If the operators have gauged the market correctly, and there is no reason to believe they +have not, then price is very important to this market. They want to pay the minimum price +with as many added value features as possible, so they can have the maximum cash +available for drinking and other entertainment. + It is also clear that this is a very fashion conscious market, where people want to be seen in +resorts that are the current ‘in places’ in terms of clubs and nightlife, with the best DJs. + There is no doubt that this market has grown rapidly in recent years. However, it has +been criticized, largely on moral grounds, as encouraging bad behaviour and leading to +problems in resorts. While no doubt lucrative for destinations, there is a fear that this +tourism puts other tourists off visiting the same destinations. It has been suggested that +resorts where clubbing tourism dominates should ‘de-market’ themselves to this market, +to allow them to attract other, more morally acceptable, markets. This apparent +discrimination against certain people and their lifestyle is clearly controversial. + As this market continues to grow, there is no doubt that the arguments surrounding this +form of tourism will continue. + + + Case study 9 Rock climbing in Spain +Spain has experienced relatively recent and dramatic growth in climbing-based tourism as +adventure addicts have begun to visit the country’s coastal and inland regions to climb on its + +314 +f Case studies + + +crags and mountains. One of Spain’s most important attractions for climbers is its relatively +mild winter climate. The main period for rock climbing in this country is the shoulder +season, between the months of October to March, outside the peak tourist season. At this +time of year the congenial climate is naturally appealing to Northern European climbers +seeking out some winter sun, while during the summer months the Spanish climate usually +becomes too hot and humid for climbing. Spain has a wealth of natural resources suitable for +rock climbing, and those crags that have been developed for the purpose of climbing +comprise only about 20 per cent of the total potential (Craggs, 2001 personal com­ +munication). Such a figure indicates that climbing-based activities are merely at the early +stages of development and there is considerable scope for further expansion in the future. + Rock climbing in Spain is predominantly of the sport variety, and therefore there is a high +proportion of bolted routes (routes that have artificial protection bolted into the rock) as +opposed to the traditional/adventure routes commonly found in the UK. One reason for this +high propensity of bolted routes is the geological nature of the rock. Most rock found in the +climbing regions of Spain is limestone, and such rock typically has sections that do not +allow climbers to be protected with climbing gear because of the lack of features and gear +placements. It is generally advocated that bolted routes provide a safer environment in +which to climb as the bolts are firmly embedded into the rock and will effectively hold a +climber should he or she fall whilst leading. Leaders of the more traditional type of climb +have to be far more reliant on the effectiveness of their gear placements should they fall. + + +Rock climbing destinations in Spain +Although a seemingly small proportion of Spain’s natural resources have been cultivated for +rock climbing, several destinations have recently evolved to become well-established areas +for participating in this sport. Many of these destinations – Majorca, Ibiza and the Costa +Blanca – are household names in Europe, originally renowned for their mass tourism and +coastal package holiday offerings. Other climbing destinations have grown from different +types of tourism. For instance, El Chorro in Andalucia (see Box 13.1) originally became +famous for the Garganta del Chorro, a spectacular limestone gorge, and El Camino del Rey, +a somewhat dilapidated concrete catwalk that spans the length of the gorge. + The mountain of Montserrat, situated in Catalonia, is another example of a destination +that attracts people to climb its unusual rock formations, although it is better known for +its monastery – one of the most popular visitor attractions in the region. Various individual +shapes characterize the mountain: + + . . . the towering spire of Bernat’s Horse, the huge bulge of the Bishop’s Paunch, the + shaded folds of the Mummy, the massive trunk of the Elephant and the exaggerated + bump of the Pregnant Woman to name just a few. + (Climb Catalunya, 2002) + + 315 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Box 13.1 El Chorro + The village of El Chorro, situated in Andalucia, is a well-established climbing + destination. An impressive yet overwhelming gorge is the main focal point of the + village, and every year thousands of climbers gravitate to its towering walls to + tackle its exposed routes. The gorge offers a range of single and multi-pitch climbs + that cater for various climbing abilities. El Chorro’s surrounding natural + environment is renowned not only for its rock climbing opportunities but also for + walking, cycling and caving activities. Climbers can easily access the village by + taking a one-hour journey by car or train from Malaga airport in the Costa del Sol. + Cottages, bunkhouses and a campsite are available in the local vicinity, within a + short walking distance of the gorge. The campsite was set up in response to the + increasing volume of visitors to the area; prior to this ‘wild camping’ was the norm + in El Chorro, although this style of camping exerted certain negative impacts on the + area’s environment. El Chorro is considered to be one of the first destinations in + Spain to attract international visitors for the purposes of climbing. Its popularity + has risen partly as a consequence of a readily available climbing guidebook of the + area. However, it is thought that any future growth in demand for climbing in the + El Chorro region may be restricted by the current lack of accommodation + facilities. + (Craggs, 2001 personal communication) + + + + + This unusual massif is made up of towering rock formations that contain literally +thousands of climbing routes, ‘from micro-routes to big wall adventures’. + The Costa Blanca coastline, famous for the resort of Benidorm and notably a settlement +area for ex-patriot communities, is perhaps the best-known region in Spain for rock +climbing. According to Craggs (1997), It has ‘become known as one of the premier sun +rock destinations for Britons (and Germans and Scandinavians) wanting to escape the +rigours of our grim northern winters’. The region is extensive, and covers the whole +coastal area from Murcia in the south to Valencia in the north. Aside from the appeal of +its warm winter climate, the Costa Blanca offers a variety of climbing opportunities on its +sea cliffs – adjacent to the heavily developed coastal strip – and on its numerous +mountains and cliffs located further inland. + Majorca, the largest of the Balearic Islands, is another climbing destination that has +grown in popularity over the last few years, drawing in rock climbers from all over Europe +and more recently from further afield. Simmonite (1999) describes the island and the +many climbing opportunities available: + +316 +f Case studies + + + Mallorca’s northern coast is dominated by a rugged mountain range, topped by Puig + Major with a height of 4700 ft and criss-crossed by spectacular gorges and ridges that + provide a plethora of walks for the energetic. It is also very tranquil with inlets that + are only accessible by boat, and lush vegetation abounds. + Further north, mountains give way to impressive sea cliffs at Cape Formentor on the + northern tip of the island and are well worth the drive even if you don’t climb in the + area. The southern side of the island is gentler and less rugged, and parts of it are no + less beautiful than its northern counterpart. It is also home to the majority of + Mallorcans, and tourism, centred mainly on Palma. The entire island has an + abundance of rock with everything from slabs to walls dripping with tufas and the + most awesome caves. + + +There are numerous other climbing destinations on mainland Spain and its islands, such +as the well established island of Tenerife in the Canary Islands, the mountain region Los +Picos de Europa in La Cordillera Cantábrica, northern Spain, and La Pedriza in the Sierra +de Guadarrama, north-east of Madrid. Such destinations are also increasingly attracting +the international climbing tourist. + + +Demand for rock climbing in Spain +Much of the European demand for climbing in Spain has stemmed from the independent +travel market. There are also a few outdoor activity organizations and specialist tour +operators that offer climbing packages and courses in Spain for those people requiring +instruction or guiding in the sport. The Spaniards have been proactive in developing both +crags and mountains for traditional and sport climbing ever since the 1930s. Originally +this resulted in domestic demand for the sport, but over the past couple of decades the +country has attracted an increasing volume of international climbing tourists. + Aside from the domestic market, climbing holidays in Spain primarily attract the +Northern European markets. This destination mainly seems to entice ‘part-time’ or less +serious climbers, as well as a smaller number of ‘hard-core’ individuals who regard +climbing as an integral part of their lives. The part-timers are generally less experienced +in the sport and interested in doing lower graded routes whilst concurrently being +motivated to improve the grades that they climb at. They are attracted by both the +abundance and the quality of sport climbing routes available in the region, and the +relatively safe environment associated with this type of climbing. A number of these +climbers, often on their first climbing trip abroad, select renowned climbing regions such +as the Costa Blanca and Majorca for their holiday. In contrast, the hard-core group of +climbers prefer less-crowded, more isolated regions that offer new opportunities for +climbing (Craggs, 2001 personal communication). + + 317 +fAdventure Tourism + + + A number of significant factors contribute towards the broad appeal and growth of rock +climbing in Spain. The country is easily accessible by road, rail, sea and air from most +parts of Europe. Several climbing destinations are situated within close proximity to major +international airports – for instance, Barcelona airport and Monserrat, Alicante airport and +the Costa Blanca, Bilbao airport and Los Picos de Europa, Malaga airport and El Chorro. +Undoubtedly this is advantageous for climbers who prefer to make their own travel +arrangements. Likewise, the introduction of European no-frills airlines such as EasyJet +and Go have revolutionized air travel through the provision of low-cost airfares to +numerous destinations in Spain. Whereas return scheduled flights to most parts of Spain +consistently cost upwards of £200, their no-frills equivalents charge a much lower fare of +between £50 and £150 on average. + + As the Spanish tourism industry is well established and has a prolonged tourist season, +climbers visiting various destinations can take advantage of competitively priced package +holidays (inclusive of flights, accommodation and airport transfers). For instance, +Benidorm, an established inclusive holiday resort, provides an ideal base for people who +want to climb in the Costa Blanca region. A key benefit of booking a package holiday is that +it is convenient for the traveller: ‘people like the fact that they can hand over a cheque and +then be met at the airport’ (Craggs, 2001 personal communication). For independent +travellers there is a wide choice of good quality, cheap accommodation in the form of villas, +apartments, campsites and refuges, often located in close proximity to the climbing areas. + + Climbing guidebooks seem to have exerted a significant influence upon people’s choice +of climbing location and hence are useful in providing an estimate of the demand for rock +climbing in Spain: ‘if it’s not got a good guidebook and cheap flights, people are put off’ +(Craggs, 2001 personal communication). Craggs wrote the first English guidebook to the +region, entitled Costa Blanca Climbs, in 1990, and a more comprehensive second edition +was released in 1997. ROCKFAX’s (2001) Costa Blanca, Mallorca and El Chorro +guidebook is its best-selling book amongst a plethora of other guides that this company +publishes. Over the last few years Craggs has produced several guidebooks to various +climbing areas in both mainland Spain and the Spanish islands: Rock Climbs in Majorca, +Ibiza & Tenerife (1995, 2000); Costa Blanca Rock (1990, 1997); and Andalucia (1994). +Book sale figures have reached 14 000 over a period of nine years. The books are mainly +sold through shops, and most of the sales have been to the UK market. Since a website has +been established through which people can directly purchase these guides, the volume of +sales in Scandinavia and Germany have increased and the North American market has +grown slightly. + + ROCKFAX has been producing guidebooks on Spanish rock climbing since the mid­ +1990s, and covers the Costa Blanca, Mallorca and El Chorro areas in just one guidebook +(see Exhibit 9) in contrast to Craggs’ three separate guidebooks for each different location. +Such similar coverage by both producers illustrates the popularity of these different + +318 +f Case studies + + +Exhibit 9 ROCKFAX climbing guidebook sales (James, 2001, +personal communication). + + ROCKFAX guidebooks Total sales Sales ranking in order of + for Spain volume (1996–2000) + + + Costa Blanca, Mallorca 7200 copies sold 1. UK (80–85% 6. France + and El Chorro between of sales) 7. USA + (1st edn 1996, 2nd edn September 1996 2. Germany 8. Japan + 1998, 3rd edn 2001) and October 3. Spain 9. Australia + 2000 4. Scandinavia 10. South Africa + Costa Daurada (published + 5. Holland + November 1998) + + + +regions for rock climbing. Furthermore, both Craggs’ and ROCKFAX’s guidebooks were +published from 1990 onwards, which highlights the relatively recent growth in consumer +interest in Spain as a climbing destination. In addition, various editions of these books +have been published in short succession. For instance, Craggs’ original Costa Blanca +Climbs (1990) guidebook comprised information on 200 routes spanning nine cliffs. The +second edition (1997) contains over 1500 routes on more than 50 cliffs. Such a pattern of +guidebook production confirms that the development of rock climbing in Spain is rapidly +expanding and new routes are constantly being developed. + + +Rock climbing organizations operating in Spain +In contrast to climbers who make their own holiday arrangements, some climbing tourists +prefer a more structured holiday that includes some form of training and/or guiding from +qualified instructors. There are a number of organizations and individuals located +throughout the main climbing regions of Spain that offer such provision. The training +courses tend to be set up by climbing enthusiasts, originating from the UK or other parts +of Europe, who have become residents within Spain’s different climbing regions. + Compass West International School of Rock Climbing (ISR) is a small family-run +organization, originally set up in Cornwall, England. The organization has been operating +rock-climbing courses in Spain since 1982, and is run by Roland Edwards, a qualified +international mountain guide. Both the guides and the courses are based in and around +Finestrat, a small village situated at the foot of Puig Campana in the Costa Blanca. The +school offers tailor-made packages that include seven nights’ accommodation, five full +days of instruction covering every aspect of rock climbing, equipment (except rock +climbing boots), transport to the crags, and airport transfers. It is ideally located amongst +a varied range of high-quality limestone crags either situated along the roadside or on + + 319 +fAdventure Tourism + + +mountain routes. Such a variety of crags guarantee appeal to both novice as well as more +experienced climbers. Similarly, the courses are designed to suit different standards of +climbers from beginner to advanced levels. + There are a number of advantages associated with using Compass West ISR when +compared to the ‘DIY’ approach that most rock climbers tend to adopt when organizing +their holidays. This organization has operated in the Costa Blanca region for two decades, +and its instructors have an excellent knowledge of the local area and its climbing crags, +both popular and more remote ones. They also have substantial climbing experience, and +collectively have pioneered approximately 300 new climbing routes in the region. The +organization’s courses target all levels and abilities of climbers, and the ratio of students +to instructor never exceeds 4 : 1 (Compass West ISR, 2001). + Climb Catalunya specializes in providing tailor-made holidays for rock climbers ‘who +have limited time and who want to be looked after so that they can concentrate on the +fabulous rock found in this part of Spain’ (Climb Catalunya, 2002), but also offers holidays +for other types of outdoor enthusiast. It is a small organization that usually caters for +between two and six people at any one time, with a maximum group size of twelve. + The rationale for this is that clients are guaranteed the personal attention they need in +order to make the most of their holiday. Climb Catalunya is based in the Montsec +Mountains, at the edge of the High Pyrenees in the north west of Catalunya. It offers +various packaged climbing trips to different areas of the region to climb in gorges, on the +High Pyrenean granite, and on the Montserrat Massif. The packages include transport +transfers from Barcelona airport, transport to and from the climbing areas each day, full- +board accommodation in two or three refuges over the holiday duration, typical Catalan +meals, experienced guides and expert route advice, and guide books of the area (Climb +Catalunya, 2002). + Both of the aforementioned climbing organizations are small scale and cater for small +groups of people. It is apparent that larger organizations based in Spain and offering +similar packaged trips simply do not exist at present. This could be due to the niche nature +of climbing tourism and its specialized appeal to this unique category of adventure tourist. +Another explanation is that Spain has only become established as a climbing destination +since the 1990s. With the wealth of guidebooks providing detailed accounts of different +areas’ climbing opportunities, the majority of climbing tourists choose to be independent +travellers who do not require the services of such organizations. + It is evident that there is a growing market for rock climbing in Spain, and its natural +resources attract both the independent traveller and package holiday market. There have +been a number of different factors impacting favourably on this growth. The country has +abundant natural resources that can be exploited for rock climbing tourism, and a +relatively warm climate throughout the winter months. Several of Spain’s rock climbing +destinations are situated within close proximity to internationally renowned holiday + +320 +f Case studies + + +resorts, and therefore rock climbers can travel to prime climbing areas with relative ease +and enjoy well developed tourist services at these resorts. A number of publishers are +producing climbing guidebooks to the area, stimulating a growth in demand, and there are +organizations in Spain that cater for climbers who are looking for a packaged trip. All +these factors present a positive picture for the potential growth of rock climbing tourism +in Spain. + + + Case study 10 Backpacking across Asia +Backpacking across Asia has been fashionable since the 1960s, often being seen almost as +a rite of passage for those passing from youth into adulthood. Traditionally Europeans +have made the journey from West to East, and Australians vice versa. In recent years the +overland route across Asia has been disrupted by political upheavals in Iran, Iraq and +Afghanistan. Nevertheless, backpacking across Asia is still very popular with young +people, and a proliferation of guidebooks exist to help them. This case study is based on +the first edition of Asia Overland, published in 1998 by Trailblazer Publications, UK. Like +most guidebooks, it is written by Westerners who are experienced backpackers. They +suggest that things change rapidly and invite readers/travellers to keep them up to date +with developments, in anticipation of the next edition. + The authors cover 35 countries in 533 pages, from the point of view of overland budget +travellers. The relative attractiveness and popularity of these countries can be partly +gauged from the pages devoted to them in this book, which are as follows, although they +are countries of very different size: + +Afghanistan 10 Armenia 7 +Azerbaijan 15 Bangladesh 13 +Belarus 4 Bhutan 3 +Cambodia 9 China (including Hong Kong and Tibet) 78 +Georgia 23 India 33 +Indonesia 11 Iran 29 +Japan 22 Kazakhstan 12 +Krygystan 19 Laos 15 +Malaysia 8 Mongolia 8 +Myanmar 16 Nepal 18 +North Korea 4 Pakistan 21 +Philippines 5 Russia 22 +Singapore 4 South Korea 12 +Sri Lanka 7 Taiwan 2 +Tajikistan 5 Thailand 12 +Turkey 24 Turkmenistan 10 +Ukraine 10 Uzbekistan 18 +Vietnam 21 + + 321 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Taking the size of the country into account, it is interesting to note that: + +� Vietnam has more than twice the number of pages given to Malaysia +� Indonesia has only a half as many pages as Pakistan +� China receives more than three times more attention than Russia +� The Philippines receives a third of the coverage of Laos +� Georgia has ten times more pages than Taiwan +� Vietnam receives more than five times as many pages as Singapore. + +Just like the Silk Routes in the past, there are well-established routes for backpackers +crossing Asia. The book identifies thirteen such routes that cross all or parts of Asia. +Factors influencing the route chosen by backpackers include: + +� Their country of origin +� Transport problems, including the impact of wet seasons +� Incidence of terrorism and war +� Health risks +� Visa requirements and immigration policies. + +On the main routes and at the favourite stopover points for overland travellers an +infrastructure of specialist services has grown up to meet their needs, including: + +� Guest houses and hostels designed for backpackers +� Cafés, bars, and restaurants, where tourists compare notes on where to go and where + to stay +� Ground handlers offering car and bike rental and one/two/three-day tours for those + stopping over briefly. + +Guidebooks like Asia Overland include an eclectic selection of advice for western +travellers. In the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, for example, the guide warns travellers +about: + +� Extortion and unfriendliness by officials at the airport +� Over-priced hotel rooms +� Over-crowded public transport +� Areas in which women travellers feel uncomfortable +� A heavy police presence in some neighbourhoods +� Dishonest taxi drivers +� Hotels that will not accept foreigners +� Poor quality skis and bindings that are rented out for skiing trips to the mountains. + +322 +f Case studies + + +Guidebooks such as those in the Lonely Planet and Rough Guide series greatly influence +demand, and inclusion in these guides guarantees visitors will come – or not. However, the +Internet and word-of-mouth recommendations from fellow travellers also influence tourist +behaviour. + Overland backpacking through Asia does pose some risks, ranging from abduction by +terrorists to bus accidents. Occasionally tourists are murdered, and these incidents receive +world-wide publicity, particularly when the victims are women. However, the main risks +are usually health-related – from stomach bugs to malaria. Backpackers are increasingly +using e-mail to remain in contact with home and friends, although some prefer to stay +incommunicado, thinking it adds to the experience. + In the 1960s and 1970s, many people travelled to Asia, principally to India and Nepal, in +search of spiritual enlightenment. This is still the case today, although the emphasis has +moved on now to include Thailand, with its Buddhist tradition. Many travellers over the +years have stopped at points on their route and stayed for months and sometimes years. + Overland travel in Asia is often budget travel, and therefore travellers frequently spend +most of their time in countries with a low cost of living. As well as the experience, the +Trailblazer guide considers that important factors in destination selection for overland +backpackers include places where English is spoken, what it is like for women travelling +alone, and the situation for vegetarians. + In the past most overland backpackers in Asia were Europeans, Americans and +Australians, but in recent years, mirroring the global tourism market in general, more and +more Asian people have been making similar trips around or across the continent. + Overland travellers, are always searching for new, off the beaten track, ‘non-touristy’ +places, as these give status. However, this search for new places to explore also puts +locations with fragile environments and/or vulnerable populations in jeopardy. + + + Case study 11 Winter sports in New England +Until recently, winter sports meant skiing, usually of the downhill variety. Now the term +covers a wide variety of types of activity of two main types, versions of skiing, and non- +skiing activities. + Exhibit 10 illustrates the range of activities available in 2001 in two New England +resorts in the USA, Jay Peak (Vermont) and Loon (New Hampshire). + The New England list of ‘sports’ excludes a range of activities found in other parts of +the world, including troika rides and ice-fishing, dog sledding and heli-skiing. + Winter sports in fashionable regions such as the New England resorts is not +inexpensive. For example, in 2001: + + 323 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Exhibit 10 The range of winter sports activities in two New +England resorts in 2001. + + + + +� A three-night half-board package for an adult in Jay Peak, including a lift pass, cost + between $607 and $667 +� A day’s skiing or snowboarding activities for children in Loon cost between $59 and + $89 +� A five-day lift pass cost $159 in Loon, and $210 in Jay Peak. + +Whatever activities visitors engage in they are accommodated in resorts and inns, +generally with good facilities. The Northern Lights Resort in Jay Peak is typical of an +upscale resort in New England. This is how it described itself in 2001. + + Nestled on the mountainside of Jay Peak, Inglenook Lodge provides fine + accommodations. The Inglenook is located less than one mile from Jay Peak and + features an indoor pool, jacuzzi, sauna, game room and full-service restaurant and + lounge. Our tastefully furnished rooms, all with private baths and TV, offer privacy + and comfort. The sunken lounge with its giant circular fireplace is the place to visit + while taking in the spectacular mountain views. + +324 +f Case studies + + + Trillium Woods English country-style townhouses offer you gracious, comfortable + living for long or short visit to the Northeast Kingdom in Vermont. Located one mile + from Jay Peak, each eight-room townhouse provides over 2000 square feet of + beautiful multi-level accommodations, with the ability to sleep up to eight people. + During your stay you will enjoy the many features, such as a den with TV/VCR, a + family area with TV and exercise equipment, a large whirlpool tub and sauna, and an + open living area with woodstore. All townhouses have fully-appointed kitchens and + washers and dryers. + + +Exhibit 11 Woods skiing policy, Jay Peak 2001. + + � When skiing in the woods or when you pass beyond the all area boundary, you + leave the area of ski patrol services. You are entering an area that has many + hazards and no skier services. Woods are not open, closed, or marked. + � If skiing beyond the ski area boundary, you are responsible for your own actions, + for your own rescue and the cost of your rescue, and you waive all claims for + injury. + � Woods are recommended for EXPERT SKIERS in groups of three or more only, + and should not be entered into in late afternoon (3 pm). + � Woods skiers must enter and exit from an open trail and cannot ski under or + around any traffic-controlling ropes or fences. + � Be aware that skiing in the woods may lead you away from Jay Peak trails. + (Jay Peak brochure, 2001) + + + +Exhibit 12 Responsibility code, Loon, 2001. + + Your responsibility code: + + + 1 Always stay in control and be able to stop or avoid other people or objects. + + 2 People ahead of you have the right of way. It is your responsibility to avoid them. + + 3 You must not stop where you obstruct a trail or are not visible from above. + + 4 Whenever starting downhill or merging into a trail, look uphill and yield to others. + + 5 Always use devices to help prevent run-away equipment. + + 6 Observe all posted signs and warnings. Keep off closed trails and out of closed areas. + + 7 Prior to using any lift, you must have the knowledge and ability to load, ride, and + + unload safely. + + + + 325 +fAdventure Tourism + + +In New England great emphasis is placed on safety and informing guests of the risks, to +protect visitors and, perhaps, to reduce the chances of successful actions for damages by +guests! For example, the Jay Peak brochure (Exhibit 11) gives warnings concerning +‘woods’, ‘forest’, or ‘glade’ skiing. + The resorts also encourage responsible behaviour by visitors, as can be seen from +Exhibit 12. + In other parts of the world winter sports are not as commercialized or heavily managed +as in New England, and nor is the infrastructure as highly developed. + + + Case study 12 180° Adventures + +Introduction +180° Adventures is a South African-based organization that provides adventure services +within Sub-Saharan Africa. Two founding directors established the company in August +2000, and their backgrounds clearly illustrate the level of expertise that exists from both +business and adventure sport perspectives. Brad Pearse is a qualified and registered +chartered accountant with extensive business experience. He also has an avid interest in +sports and the outdoors, and represented South Africa in rowing, becoming a finalist in the +South African 2000 Camel Trophy event. He pursues a number of outdoor activities, +including canoeing, surf skiing, mountain biking and scuba diving. Xavier Scheepers is a +qualified and registered civil engineer, although he is an adventurer at heart and has +participated extensively in adventure activities. He has also competed in the Camel +Trophy, and was a member of the year 2000 winning team held in Tonga and Samoa. The +rest of the team comprises spirited adventure enthusiasts who are all from professional +backgrounds. 180° Adventures describes its mission as follows: + + 180° Adventures is an adventure company dedicated to providing unique experiences + amidst the splendour of Africa’s great wilderness. We are committed to providing our + customers with experiences they will never forget through the supervision of our + skilled and experienced staff and by striving to become the standard in quality and + safety in the adventure domain. + + +Historical background +The company originated in Durban, in the South African province of KwaZulu Natal. At +the outset, the founders built up business by tapping into the clientele of large companies +such as Unilever and PricewaterhouseCoopers within which they were previously +employed. They also exploited existing contacts they had with local adventure providers. +The corporate adventure market formed the basis of 180° Adventures’ early success, and + +326 +f Case studies + + +included organizing adventure events, client entertainment, incentive travel, and team- +building and personal development products. With this success in KwaZulu Natal, the +business quickly expanded into the more lucrative markets of Johannesburg and Pretoria +in the province of Gauteng. As new opportunities evolved in the domestic retail market, +the company diversified from purely concentrating on the corporate market and moved +into the adventure sports events arena. The company then began to pursue investment in +order to take the business to the next stage of growth, and this came from the Halcyon +Hotel Group in April 2001. For their cash injection of R500 000 (£50 000), Halcyon took +50 per cent equity and worked with 180° Adventures to develop adventure tours based +around their hotels, mostly located in Tanzania and South Africa. + + + + +180° Adventures – present day +180° Adventures now has a presence in all three of South Africa’s major centres, with +offices based in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town. Its staffing structure reflects the +company’s expansion activities (see Exhibit 13). + Exhibit 14 illustrates the product categories offered by 180° Adventures, and the current +stage of business development in both the domestic Southern African and foreign inbound +tourism markets. + + + + +Exhibit 13 180° Adventures – organizational structure. + + + + + 327 +fAdventure Tourism + + +Exhibit 14 180° Adventures’ product categories and market +development. + + Product categories Southern African UK & other inbound + domestic market tourism markets + + + Corporate products: + � Team development � Successful product � Hoping to attract + � Incentive travel development within all corporate adventure + � Destination categories listed markets + management � Constant development + � Adventure of skills and expertise in + entertainment corporate training in the + � Product launches outdoors + � Events management + + + + Adventure tourism: + � Mountain biking � Strong push in this � Entered market in + � Scuba category with second half of 2001 + � Kayak and raft appointment of � Leveraging off Halcyon + � Hike and climb managers in each Marketing Network UK, + � Off-road activities division company is attracting + � Strong in South Africa, adventure tourism from + Tanzania and Zanzibar the UK and other + foreign destinations + + + Event management: + � Adventure-based � Adventure sports � Once the domestic + competitions and competitions are being product has been + expeditions developed in exotic proven and refined, the + destinations (e.g. foreign inbound market + Zanzibar and Tanzania) will be actively pushed + for such events as + triathlons + + + + In their quest to build a powerful brand, 180° Adventures are pursuing the idea of an +Adventure Centre that will cater for all the needs of the adventurer. The Centre will +provide the ideal one-stop channel for adventure seekers, whether tourists, corporate +clients or local people looking for leisure activities. Facilities will be available for booking +trips from a number of tour operators, for purchasing equipment from a range of retail +shops, and for ‘tasting’ adventure from simulated adventure environments. The new centre + +328 +f Case studies + + +will also provide adventure guide training and set standards for operators based in +Southern Africa and working within the adventure tourism industry. + This case study documents the evolution and expansion of the successful South African- +based company 180° Adventures. It illustrates the broad scope of the company’s product +range and the markets in which it operates at both domestic and international levels. One +of the major factors that has clearly facilitated the growth and success of 180° Adventures +is the dedication of its founding directors and staff, all of whom are ardent adventurers not +only in the workplace but outside it as well. + + + Case study 13 Space tourism +In 2001 the first space tourist, Denis Tito, a sixty-year-old Californian businessman, paid +the Russian Space Agency around $20 million to take him on a ten-day mission that +involved an eight-day sojourn at the International Space Station. In May 2002, Mark +Shuttleworth, who made his fortune out of the Internet, undertook the same adventure. A +media company planned to sponsor Lance Bass, a member of a internationally famous boy +band, to visit the International Space Station in November 2002, hoping to base a +television special around his experiences. Although this plan has fallen through, it +indicates the level of anticipated interest and curiosity in space travel. NASA, the +American space administration, originally treated the idea of space tourism with some +disdain and claimed civilians were a safety hazard and a waste of valuable research time +and space, especially in the International Space Station. However, they have recently been +reviewing their policy on space tourism, which can provide a source of money to subsidize +the rest of the expedition. Currently, only the Russian Soyuz spacecraft and the American +Space Shuttle have the proven capability of being suitable for human travel. However, +many other spacecraft have reached the development stage before withdrawal of funding +or political support prevented them from becoming operational, or they are currently used +for unmanned flight and have the potential to be modified for passengers. + The Russian space programme, which has been progressively starved of cash since the +collapse of communism, quickly realized that tourism income is one way of generating +revenue. The Russians are marching ahead of the Americans in terms of exploitation of +space for tourism, and are currently looking at opportunities for sub-orbital space tourism +too. + The Russians unveiled a full-sized model of their new spacecraft, the C-21, in Moscow +in 2002, and intend to begin testing the three-man sub-orbital spacecraft in 2004. The C-21 +is a re-usable pod that will take two tourists beyond the Earth’s atmosphere. It piggybacks +on a carrier aircraft up to an altitude of 20 km, and the spacecraft separates from the carrier +aircraft at a trajectory angle of 40–60 degrees to the horizon. At the top of the trajectory, +at around 100 km altitude, the crew experience a few minutes of weightlessness and the + + 329 +fAdventure Tourism + + +blackness of space, and the C-21 then glides back into the atmosphere to make a +parachute-assisted touchdown. The short trip, lasting only an hour or two, with five +minutes in space, costs US $98 000 per person (The Guardian, 2 April 2002), but 250 +people have already paid their deposits through Space Adventures, the US firm that +brokered Tito’s trip. This development looks like being the first concrete move towards +commercial leisure travel in space. + Projections suggest such leisure space travel will become affordable for the general +public in twenty to thirty years’ time. Frank Sietzen, president of the Space Transportation +Association, foresees an eventual space-tourism income of US $10–20 billion per year +(The Guardian, 2002). The potential for big business is there – the race is on to realize that +potential. + The X-prize is a privately funded competition that aims to encourage the development +of an economically viable tourist spacecraft. It requires the building of a vehicle capable +of taking three passengers to an altitude of 100 km, and of repeating the trip within two +weeks. Once the barrier of a re-usable launch vehicle is overcome, the absence of the high +development cost and associated risk will make the market much more attractive for +related industries such as resort companies, travel agencies, and airlines. It is the economic +potential of the tourism market that is driving the development of a re-usable vehicle, as +this single factor will contribute significantly to bring down the price of a ticket. + The Californian company InterOrbital Systems is a potential contender for the X-prize, +and The Independent (13 April 2002) notes that the company is planning to launch its first +passenger flights in 2005. The government of the South Pacific State of Tonga has reached +agreement with InterOrbital to allow one of its islands to be used as a base for rocket +launches. The commercial flight will take two astronauts and four paying passengers. The +trip involves orbiting around earth for seven days, and is preceded by a 60-day training +programme in a ‘resort setting’. Proposed prices for this adventure tourism package are +US $2million. InterOrbital’s catchline is, ‘Why pay high prices for a five-minute +suborbital flight at the present going rate of US $20 000 per minute when you can spend +up to seven days on an orbital vacation at a cost of less than US $200 per minute?’. The +spacecraft has yet to be designed and tested, but this hasn’t stopped one Texan woman +booking her place. + The proposed 60-day training programme is a reminder that there is much more to space +tourism than the flight itself. Although only a few have enjoyed the ultimate thrill of +actually being in space, preparations for this adventure are part of the total tourism +experience. On-the-ground space activities are big business. The space shuttle launch site +at Cape Canaveral in Florida and the Kennedy Space Centre in Houston are already +massive visitor attractions, and there are many smaller-scale attractions based on the space +theme scattered all over the world. Star City is the Russian equivalent of the Kennedy +Space Centre, but it is doing much more to raise revenue from potential space adventure + +330 +f Case studies + + +tourists. US $200 000 buys a two-week intensive cosmonaut training course, which +includes learning how to fly the Soyuz spacecraft (used for the current space tourism +missions), experiencing varying G-forces (similar to those experienced during lift off and +re-entry) using centrifuge training, and playing with weightlessness in a neutral buoyancy +hydro lab. Mintel (2002) says that over 10 million people visit a space museum, a space +camp, a rocket launch-recovery site or a government space R&D centre – a business worth +over US $1 billion a year. + There are also space-related possibilities that do not involve such high altitudes, and +might be termed ‘near-space’ options. One potential development is the use of high +altitude balloons, which could carry a pressurized capsule containing three people to the +stratosphere at around 40–50 km (ISU, 2001). This altitude would give a black sky, and +views of the stars and of the curvature of the earth below. Existing activities include ‘Edge +of Space’ flights in Russian MIG 25 jets, which take tourists to the outer limits of the +Earth’s atmosphere (around 25 km). They fly at two-and-a-half times the speed of sound, +and from this altitude the curvature of the earth and the blackness of space can be +seen. Flying jet aircraft in loops can also create sensations of microgravity for about +30 seconds. + In terms of destination development, some locations will trade on their links with the +space industry and develop space tourism facilities, becoming gateways for this particular +form of adventure tourism. Tonga must be anticipating an economic benefit of this kind, +in addition to any other inducements offered. + Returning to future developments in orbital space tourism, there are a number of options +for the way tourists are delivered into orbit and returned to Earth. Tourists can either lift off +in a vehicle that then goes into orbit and returns to Earth, or they can be transported to a +separate orbital facility for their stay, and returned at the end. Tourist amenities would be +located within the spacecraft in the first option, or in the orbiting facility in the latter option. +There are pros and cons to each option, with key factors being the expense per launch versus +the size of payload (ISU, 2001). Consideration of ‘tourist requirements’ suggests that more +private space than is currently allowed for astronauts, recreation facilities, client-oriented +hygienic facilities, and a greater window area will be needed. + Some people are thinking ahead; the famous American astronaut Buzz Aldrin has +ambitious plans for orbiting hotels between Mars and Earth. He is planning for around +2018, and whilst the timing may be optimistic, if space tourism takes off there will almost +certainly be opportunities for this kind of space station and infrastructure. More +futuristically, interplanetary flight and space trips further afield will depend on inventions +that attack the practical problem of covering vast distances at great speed. Solar sails, +wormholes, or plasma propulsion systems could hold the answer; the solution is not clear +at this stage. Whilst health issues are not a major concern for current short space flights, +where anyone in reasonable health can withstand the physical demands of the trip, + + 331 +fAdventure Tourism + + +developing ways of dealing with the effects of microgravity, zero gravity and radiation on +human systems on long trips will be important. + + Naturally, there are arguments that suggest space tourism might not take off in the way +that Buzz Aldrin envisages. There are even arguments that low earth orbital (LEO) space +tourism of the kind currently taking place right now will remain beyond the reach of the +general public. + + Finance is an issue. ISU (2001) suggests that a ticket price in the order of US $50 000 +is necessary for space tourism to sustain itself. Achieving such a low ticket price will not +simply depend on technological developments in vehicle design and propulsion systems, +but also on low operational and maintenance costs. + + Developing technology that meets these requirements is costly, risky and long term, and +ISU (2001) suggest these conditions do not present an appealing opportunity for private +sector investment under normal market conditions. Whilst the expansion of space tourism +is not explicitly supported by governments, ISU (2001) argues that governments have a +duty to contribute to the funding of essential technological developments. This would be +a defensible argument where there is a proven market demand for space tourism, as the +benefits of a successful space tourism industry would support businesses, governments, +space agencies and the scientific community. + + Regulatory and legislative challenges will also have to be overcome in order to create +a favourable environment for the development of space tourism. Liability arrangements +for loss of life, injury and damage to property will need to be negotiated, perhaps based +on current arrangements for the commercial aviation sector. Certification, licensing, traffic +control regulations, environmental law and criminal law will also need attention. +Ultimately, politics will clearly very much influence the speed and direction of the +development of space tourism. The ISU (2001: 139) states: + + The challenge of a space tourism policy is to establish the technological and + regulatory environment that will encourage private companies to invest in space + tourism and allow commercial ventures to prosper. + +The other major influence will be the level and strength of demand from the market. Is this +form of adventure just too adventurous? Will people be prepared to pay for it? It appears +that the demand is there. A 1998 survey of the general public carried out by NASA +concluded that 42.2 per cent were interested in a space holiday, and a recent Harris poll +in the USA and Canada found that more than 10 000 people per year would purchase a +sub-orbital space experience at a price of US $100 000 (Mintel 2002). Early targeting of +the market could focus on the corporate incentive sector, which could afford to fund the +ultimate performance reward, or ‘corporate jolly’. + +332 +f Case studies + + + Affluent individuals with a keen sense of adventure provide another sector potential. +The first space tourist proved that it is possible at 60, so age is no barrier (in fact it may +be a spur!). + + + Case study 14 Adventure travel writing today +Until recently most travel writing fell into one of several classic types, such as the epic +adventure, the travels of urbane men, the adventures of intrepid women travellers, and the +memoirs of the colonial classes. However, today travel writing has mirrored the growth +and democratization of international tourism. Not only has the volume of such writing +grown, but it has also become a much more diverse field as authors seek to differentiate +their manuscript from the thousands of others that publishers are offered every year. + Most travel writing can be viewed as adventure travel writing, as the travel represents +an adventure for the author, and mundane travel tends to make for very dull literature! + The following list provides a typology of such writing, to illustrate this diversity: + +� Books about journeys to remote and/or exotic destinations +� Books about visits to dangerous destinations, whether the danger is caused by the + terrain, climate, disease or war +� Books that include collections of stories by intrepid backpackers and independent + travellers, like those now being published by Lonely Planet +� Books in which the author uses a novel form of transport, from a bicycle to a canoe, + an elephant to a microlight aeroplane +� Books about expeditions and epic adventures +� Books in which the focus is on humorous incidents +� Books where the author offers ‘alternative views’ of well-known places +� Books where the journey is a therapeutic activity for the writer because of some + problem or crisis in his or her life +� Books written by women making journeys to places where women would not normally + be seen travelling on their own +� Books where travellers recount stories of love and life from their travels +� Books by famous travellers that are autobiographies of their lifetime of travelling +� Books by authors who have observed hedonistic travel at first hand +� Books by people who have worked in the front line in the tourism industry +� Books that combine travel writing with travel guides +� Books in which people seek to discover the dark side of their home country +� Books reliving the world of pioneering forms of transport of yesterday, such as the + flying boats +� Books in which authors retrace the steps of famous travellers of the past +� Books about virtual rather than ‘real’ travels. + + 333 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Case study 15 Adventure travel as television entertainment +Adventure travel experiences have in recent years become a common topic for +television programmes designed to entertain viewers. This point can be illustrated by +several examples drawn from the UK. + + +1 Castaway. This programme involved selecting a group of strangers who were left + alone on a remote Scottish island together for 12 months, as a social experiment. + These people were cut off from their friends, workplaces and everyday lives. The + temporary residents of the island had to be largely self-sufficient on this island, which + had been uninhabited for a quarter of a century before their arrival. Viewers were + invited to tune in several times a week to view their progress, listen to their + arguments, and watch new romances blossom. This $3.8 million project was a modest + success in terms of ratings. +2 Temptation Island. Here, a group of men and women were taken to an idyllic island + in the ocean. There, their faithfulness to their partners was tested as they were + tempted by other participants. +3 Survivor. This is one of a series of popular shows where participants are taken to an + unfamiliar and hostile environment. They have to survive by working as a team, but + eventually one of them emerges as a winner and enjoys a cash prize. +4 Ibiza Uncovered is a voyeuristic programme in which the viewer watches the exploits + of young hedonistic tourists on the island of Ibiza, providing a salacious opportunity + for viewers to be both excited and disgusted by the spectacle. +5 Weird Weekend with Louis Theroux, where the presenter travels to meet ‘unusual’ + people, such as white supremacists in the USA and South Africa, and ‘Swingers’ in + California. +6 A series of shows that put celebrities in adventurous situations, including footballer + Ian Wright meeting Kalahari bushmen in Africa and TV star Joanna Lumley being + stranded on a desert island. +7 Charity telethons, where celebrities travel to other countries to see how the income + from an appeal may be spent. Many of these programmes involve British celebrities + travelling to Africa. +8 Wildlife programmes, where presenters travel to remote areas in search of unusual + wildlife – a subject of great interest to UK viewers. +9 Programmes such as those featuring Michael Palin, where he undertakes epic + journeys with his own gentle sense of humour, like a latter-day Phileas Fogg. These + programmes are always towards the top of the ratings. + + +These few examples show that adventure travel is a popular but diverse, subject for +television programmes in the UK. + +334 +f Case studies + + + + Case study 16 Personal adventures and the holiday postcard +Adventures and vacations come in all shapes and sizes, and are seen in different ways by +different tourists. For over a century postcards have recorded people’s adventures as +tourists, and the variety of adventures they can have is illustrated by the examples in +Exhibit 15, which are taken at random from John Swarbrooke’s personal collection. + +Exhibit 15 A selection of adventures recorded on postcards +1906–1999. + + + Mick tells his folks in a card from + Sheelagh, from Dubai, tells Lillian in + India that, ‘We’ve had 2 days camel + Merseyside that ‘Our Wedding in + trekking in the desert by the + Dubai yesterday went brilliantly, + Pakistan border, although Bombay + nothing went wrong’ + was hot, smelly, and dirty’ + + + + + In Crete, Julie tells her friends back Barbara and Stewart, writing from + home in 1996 that, ‘this place is full Minorca tell their friends in Exeter + of talent, I’m having a new guy every that ‘we have found a wine distillery, + night. I’m knackered’ so our evenings are perfect’ + + + + + Edith, in 1975, writes to a friend telling + Neal in Milan writes to his parents + her of all her ‘adventures’ in the USA + that ‘I met a very nice girl from + from dining at the top of a 26 storey + Finland last night and we will be + building in Atlanta’ to ‘attending a + seeing each other again tonight’ + session of the Congress’ + + + + + Louisa visiting Bangkok doing a bit + Maria sent a card to friends in the + of local shopping tells her friends in + UK telling them how her family were + Exeter that ‘I have had a work suit + settling into their new life in Brunei + and an evening dress made for me + saying ‘we are slowly settling into + and am collecting them this + the way of life here’ + afternoon’ + + + + 335 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + Billy has clearly gone to Florida for + Judy tells her parents that ‘we are medical treatment. His Mum writes + on a Thomson bargain break and that ‘Thank you for helping make + had no idea were we would be this trip possible. Billy is doing well. + staying until we arrived’ Week 2 should really give us some + great results. The therapy is + intensive but it’s working’ + + + + + Joyce, on a cruise around Madeira + Josie tells her parents from San + and the Canaries writes, ‘It has been + Diego, that ‘arrived after delays due + rough at sea, and smelly, with + to fog and snow, and missing my + everyone sick. One lady was very ill. + flight due to a mix-up in Chicago’ + I hope to get some seasick pills’ + + + + + A woman writes from Athens to her Tom tells his friends in the UK about + daughter, and says ‘We took a taxi his trip on an old freighter, ‘we are + . . . it was quite an experience . . . all on our way to Panama, Ecuador, + the drivers are mad . . . I am lucky to Columbia, Ireland and Antwerp, then + still be alive!’ they sell the ship’ + + + + + Liz, writing from Ecuador is obviously + Then Kerry and Pam write to friends suffering romantically. She writes, + in England, ‘Tonight we are going on ‘After 3 years, Colin and I have finally + a night jeep safari, . . . it should be reached something real . . . first two + very exciting’ months was very difficult . . . I have + not seen Carlos for 2 months’ + + + + + Anne writes to her friend that on his + Mark tells his parents ‘Life below the + first trip abroad since he was born + waves is most spectacular . . . with + ‘Neil is such a contented baby, + brightly coloured fish, electric eels + coping well with his travels, while we + and sharks!’ + worry about him’ + + + + +336 +f Case studies + + + + + Lizette tells her friends at work ‘I am +In 1916, Sergeant Bacon tells his learning to scuba dive and, of +family in a card from Arras ‘I have course, the instructor is gorgeous +signed on for the duration of the war’ . . . I’m hoping for some private + lessons!’ + + + + +Mary, in 1951, tells friends that she + Beverley, from Dubai, tells her +was ‘delighted to report that she was + parents ‘we are off into the desert in +relieved to have visited the Empire + a 4 wheel drive vehicle and then into +State Building and get down again + the Indian Ocean on a catamaran’ +safely, although I was scared stiff!’ + + + + +Jane, from Corfu, tells her friends + Maurice tells his family ‘I arrived in +‘we just gave the travel agent £200, + Marseilles after a 13 hour journey +he gave us tickets and we ended up + . . . saw lots of floods on the way . . . +here. We had no idea where we + will cross to Algiers tomorrow’ +were going’ + + + + + Auntie writes to her nieces from +Miss Smith writes to Mrs Opperman California in 1938 telling them that, +in Bournemouth telling her that ‘It is ‘we have visited the homes of all the +a lovely pilgrimage, here in Lourdes’ great theatrical stars and the top + studios’ + + + + + Alison writes to her grandparents +Dorothy tells her friends that ‘Geoff + from the French Riviera to tell them +has caught his first ever salmon + that ‘on the way to Paris we had a +here [in Ireland] . . . he is so excited’ + car crash although we are not hurt’ + + + + + 337 +fAdventure Tourism + + + + + Anne and John tell her father-in-law + Jane tells her colleagues at work + that he should go to Amsterdam, ‘to + from the Costa Brava that, ‘Today, I + find that blonde you always wanted + went topless for the first time . . . + . . . you can window shop to choose + nobody seemed to care’ + the one you want’ + + + + + Lucian, an aid worker sent a friend a + Doug and Susan tell their friends + card showing land mines, from + from Greece that, ‘this is our first + Afghanistan, saying ‘50% of Kabul + ever holiday without the children’ + looks like this’ + + + + + Alison, an exchange student in + France, tells her parents ‘It is a real + struggle . . . my French is not up to it + and the work is really hard’ + + + + +338 +f Bibliography + + + + +Addison, G. 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information + +URL: http://www.firstchoice.co.uk/ + +GREENFORCE (2001) + +URL: http://www.greenforce.org/ + +High Places (2001) Trek grades + +URL: http://www.highplaces.co.uk/ + +Mintel International Group Limited (1999) + +www.activefamilyvacations.com + +Plas-y-Brenin National Mountain Centre (2001) + +URL: http://www.pyb.co.uk/course/rock.htm + +ROCKFAX (2001) + +URL: http://rockfax.com + +www.spaceadventures.com + +Thomas Cook (2002) Company history + +URL: http://cms.thomascookag.com/ + + + + + + 351 +ff Index + + +Accommodation sector, 145 Dangerous place tourism, 309–12 +Activity holidays, 263–5 Demographic trends, 248–9 +Adventure sports, UK, 129–30 Designer adrenaline risks, 48 +Adventure tourism: Destinations, 121–7, 149, 166–7, + definitions, 16–31 216–17, 272–3, 316–17, 323–6 + future of, 247–86 Disabled traveller, 296–9 + history of, 38–52 Domestic adventure tourism, 101–2, + industry, 36–7, 121–34, 135–51 273 + management of, 155–68, 169–84, Dominican Republic, 116 + 185–98 Drug tourism, 49 + market, 55–90, 91–118, 256–60 + products, 127–34, 135–51, 260–72 Economic migrants, 43 + typologies, 31–6 Economic trends, 253–5 +Adventure Travel Outdoors, 307–8 Entrepreneurship, 149–50 +Aid workers, 50 Equipment suppliers, 144–5 +Artificial environments, 47, 228–44, Ethics, 185–98 + 273–4 Europe, 112 +Asia, 294–8, 321–3 Explore Worldwide, 33–4 + Explorers, 41 + Extreme adventure, 260–3 +Backpacking, 294–6, 321–3 +Belize, 85 + Family adventure, 265–6, 290–5 +Botswana, 96–7 + Flora, 213–16 +Brazil, 97 + Foxwood Casino, USA, 131–2 +Brochures, 164–5 + Franciscan Renewal Center, USA, 134 + +Charts challenges, 88–9 Gambling, 107–10, 182 +Chile, 97, 99 Gay tourism, 113–15 +Clubbing tourism, 312–14 Greece, 115–16 +Corporate responses to ethical GREENFORCE, UK, 300–6 + challenges, 190–1 +Crisis management, 183–4 Hard adventure, 63–6, 104–5 +Cultural differences [in adventure Hedonism, 40, 182 + tourism], 51–2 Hedonism II, Jamaica, 132–4 +fAdventure Tourism + + +High Places, 60–1 Risk, 70–4, 169–84 +Human resources, 150–1 Risk management, 170–83, 277–80 +Hunting, 46–7 Rock climbing, 314–21 + Romantic Era, 44 +Ibiza, Spain, 312–14 Rough Guides, 294–6, 296–8 +Impacts of adventure tourism: + economic, 193–4 Sampo, Finland, 130–1 + environmental, 194–5 Sensation-seeking, 74–8 + social, 195–6 September 11, 2001, 285–6 +Inbound adventure tourism, 96–101 Settlers, 42 +Independent travel, 271 Sex tourism, 48, 115–16 +Internet, 161–2 Singapore, 236–7 +Ireland, 278 Socio-economic trends, 249–52 + ‘Soft’ Adventure, 63–6, 104–5 +Market segmentation, 103–6, 160–1 South Africa, 99–100, 326–9 +Marketing, 156–68, 280 Space tourism, 329–33 +Media, 146–8, 307–10 Spain, 314–21 +Mercenaries, 41 Spiritual enlightenment, 47, 182, see +Missionaries, 43–4 also Religious tourism +Motivations of adventure tourists, 9–14, Sri Lanka, 100–101 + 66–70, 259–60 Student exchanges, 50 +Mountain adventures, 170–6 + Technological trends, 252–3 +Namibia, 99 Technology-mediated adventures, 266–8 +Natural historians, 44–5 Television, 334 +Nature tourism, see Wildlife tourism Terrorism, 285–6 +New England, USA, 323–6 Tour operators, 138–42, 163, 164–5, +‘New Tourists’, 58–9 278–80, 326–7 +New Zealand, 99, 279–80 Transport, 145–6 +Northern Cyprus, 107 Travel agents, 143 + Travel writing, 333–4 +Outbound adventure tourism, 94–6 Travellers, 42 +Outward Bound, 44 + USA, 102, 103–4, 107, 109, 110, +Pilgrims, 41–2 329–33 +Planula, Australia, 130 +Political trends, 253–5 Venezuela, 125, 126 +Postcards, 335–8 Venues, 127–34, 148 +Promotion, 162–3 Voluntary organizations, 148 + Volunteer vacations, 300–6 +Red Kite Project, Wales, 209–10 +Red Letter Days, UK, 299–300 ‘Walk on the wild side’ urban tourism, +Religious tourism, 110–13, see also 49 + Spiritual enlightenment ‘Wanderlust’, 307, 308–10 +Research, 282–5 Wildlife tourism, 20–2, 86–7, 201–27 +Responsibilities of adventure tourists, Winter sports, 323–6 + 191–2, 325 Women travellers, 45–6, 115–16, +Retailainment, 280 294–6 + + +354 +f
+