www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

Preserving cultures and protecting wildlife

Updated: 2013-11-10 07:59

By Remy Scalza(The New York Times)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small

For nearly two decades, Namibia has been part of an ambitious experiment in both community tourism and wildlife conservation, known as communal conservancies. "The idea was to fight poaching by restoring control over wildlife to the local people," said John Kasaona, the director of Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation. "We wanted to show them that they could benefit financially from keeping these animals alive, in particular from wildlife tourism."

The plan has been a resounding - and rare - success story for African wildlife. Seventy-nine conservancies now cover 20 percent of Namibia. Populations of desert lions, desert elephants and black rhinos, all threatened with extinction in the '90s, have increased several times over, while poaching has plummeted.

At the same time, the conservancies have teamed up with tourism operators, giving travelers unprecedented access to animals and local culture.

Nearly half of all of Namibia's conservancies, and many of the country's most ambitious community tourism projects, are in the northern Kunene region, an expanse of dry mountains and valleys the size of Greece but with fewer than 90,000 inhabitants. Rutted tracks thread through desert, cross dry river beds and sometimes disappear altogether. There, the conservancies have logged one of their greatest successes, the return of the endangered black rhino.

Preserving cultures and protecting wildlife

"These animals were almost completely wiped out by poachers 25 years ago," said Aloysius Waterboer, a guide at Desert Rhino Camp, a tent lodge located in Damaraland, traditional home of the Damara people. Roughly 30 rhinos now live in this area. The camp sits alone on 4,400 square kilometers of rocky hills and desert scrub leased from area conservancies, who are also 40 percent shareholders in the project. Many of the expert rhino trackers on staff are former poachers. "If you're a poacher, all you really want is to feed your family," Mr. Waterboer explained. "So it made sense to put them on the payroll."

At the edge of Kaokoland, in the arid northwest, may be Namibia's most unusual community tourism experiment. The first guest camp owned by the Himba people, one of the country's last truly seminomadic tribes,sits on a mountaintop in the Orupembe conservancy. Opened in 2011, Etambura Tented Lodge is hundreds of kilometers from the nearest village on the electrical grid. Many of its Himba owners reside in the surrounding valleys, herding goats and cattle, and living in dung-and-stick huts, as they have for centuries. More than wildlife, it is these people whom travelers come to see. And unlike tensions with animals, the challenges to isolated tribal communities posed by the conservancy model are just beginning to be acknowledged.

"Wildlife are cared for like our own livestock, and money from tourism goes into our conservancy bank account," said Uamunikaije Tjivinda, a Himba woman, as she threw strips of dried giraffe meat into a pot of boiling water. "The conservancy has been good for us."

"Before the camp opened, there were almost no tourists in this part of the country," said Kaku Musaso, a camp manager brought in from the city of Opuwo who, like many modern Himba women, wears Western clothes and speaks impeccable English with a British accent. "It was rare to see any white people here."

Preserving cultures and protecting wildlife

Early one morning, Ms. Musaso guided visitors along a rocky ridge, then down a steep slope to a watering hole. Hundreds of goats clustered around a shoulder-deep depression dug in an otherwise dry river bed, where a young boy was scooping buckets of water into a wooden trough. In the shade of a shepherd's tree, six Himba women and a dozen children gathered.

Like Ms. Tjivinda, many women of the semi-nomadic Himba people have plaited hair that is a striking rust-red color, rubbed with ocher dug from the earth.

The women unrolled blankets and topped them with baskets and jewelry made of beads and ostrich bone. Ms. Musaso bargained and the visitors handed over the equivalent of $20 in Namibian bills. When asked what they used the money for, one woman produced a package picturing a young woman with long, regal tresses: synthetic hair extensions, made in South Africa.

The New York Times

 Preserving cultures and protecting wildlife

Photographs by Remy Scalza for The New York Times

Preserving cultures and protecting wildlife

(China Daily 11/10/2013 page10)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 手机在线看片国产日韩生活片 | 亚洲国产精品久久久久久 | 亚洲线精品一区二区三区 | 久草视频手机在线观看 | 97一级毛片全部免费播放 | 狠狠色综合久久丁香婷婷 | 91在线产啪 | 精品久久久久国产免费 | 日本一级大黄毛片免费基地 | 两性色午夜视频免费国产 | 欧美成人h | 国产99在线播放 | 亚洲视频在线视频 | 国产综合成人久久大片91 | 18在线 | 久久精品国产亚洲精品2020 | 韩国自拍偷自拍亚洲精品 | 日韩高清不卡在线 | 姐姐真漂亮在线视频中文版 | 欧美激情一区二区三区高清视频 | 中文字幕在线观看一区二区三区 | 久久国产精品久久精 | 亚洲成人在线网 | 亚洲精品国产一区二区在线 | 国产毛片久久久久久国产毛片 | 日韩一级不卡 | 91视频久久久久 | 国产成人亚洲综合91精品555 | 综合视频在线 | 精品午夜寂寞影院在线观看 | 欧美日韩加勒比一区二区三区 | 成人a毛片在线看免费全部播放 | 国产三级毛片 | 国产亚洲欧美在线人成aaaa | 精品国产夜色在线 | 日韩欧美成末人一区二区三区 | 国产精彩视频在线观看 | 成人α片 | 国产午夜精品久久理论片小说 | 福利视频在线午夜老司机 | 成年人在线看片 |