Jordan leads the Middle East's new
focus on eco-tourism
By Dale Gavlak, Associated Press Writer
DANA, Jordan A
trek uphill from Jordan's scorching Dead Sea shore through the
towering sandstone walls of the Mujib gorge leaves you with a
pulse-racing way to get back down strap into a harness and rappel
down a waterfall into a sparkling river.
Jordan, home of the ancient red-rock city of Petra, is reaching
beyond its considerable historical and Biblical tourist attractions
to try to capture a stake in the growing outdoor adventure and
eco-tourism market.
Besides the Mujib gorge which has the distinction of being the
lowest elevation nature reserve in the world Jordan is marketing
places like the wooded highlands and rocky slopes of the Dana
Reserve in the country's south. Visitors there take in views of
massive domelike clusters of red-beige rock and with luck might
catch a glimpse of the shy mountain ibex before settling in for the
night at a camp site, rustic guesthouse or the reserve's candlelit
eco-lodge.
The
desert kingdom's effort to lure eco-tourists 66,000 came last year
among a total of 3.4 million tourists seeks to reap the benefits
of four decades of pioneering wildlife and nature conservation.
Environmentalists supported by then-ruler King Hussein founded The
Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature in 1966 at a time when
war with Israel, not ecological conservation, dominated most Arab
agendas.
"The
area was in turmoil," said the society's director, Yehya Khaled.
"The following year we had a war between the Arabs and Israel."
Since then, the non-governmental organization has led environmental
education programs, set a national environmental strategy and
established and maintained eight nature reserves so far.
Other countries in the Middle East are following Jordan's lead.
In
the United Arab Emirates, for example, Dubai's dune-rippled Desert
Conservation Reserve was recognized in November as a protected area
by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, thanks in
part to its sustainable tourism program and its re-introduction of
Arabian oryx and gazelles.
Among the region's more far-flung places, Yemen's island of Socotra
is also drawing determined eco-tourists and has been compared to the
Galapagos because of its hundreds of species of plants and animals
that are found nowhere else on earth.
Jordan, for its part, has even dispatched its cause-crusading Queen
Rania, known for her activism on issues like poverty and education,
to boost eco-tourism numbers. She promoted the country's natural
heritage recently at a Conde Nast travel forum in New York.
"If
you want adventure, you can abseil (rope) down waterfalls, paraglide
off sandstone crags, navigate Red Sea reefs, then cook supper deep
in the desert sands of Wadi Rum," she told an audience of hundreds
of travel industry leaders.
Such
exhilaration can be had along one of the trails through the Mujib
gorge. From the edge of the Dead Sea, it winds up through hills and
descends to the Mujib river via a rope rappel down a 65-foot
waterfall. Along the way, you can stop and cool off in natural
pools.
The
country's reserves are also great places to spot wildlife. Jordan's
conservation efforts included the 1978 reintroduction of the once
nearly extinct Arabian oryx, an elegant white antelope native to the
Arabian Peninsula.
The
Dana Reserve is home to the Syrian wolf and other endangered
animals, as well as 700 plant species, including Jordan's rare
national flower, the black iris, and 215 kinds of birds. You might
even cross paths with a horned ibex.
In
establishing the reserve in the 1990s, Jordan also resurrected the
fortunes of a dying Bedouin village there, providing residents with
jobs helping run the reserve.
With
Dana and the other reserves, The Royal Society for the Conservation
of Nature also helps market and sell hand-crafted silver jewelry,
organic jams and olive oil produced by the local communities through
its Wild Jordan division.
Officials at Dana also took into account the area's broader
environmental problems, including by setting up a sustainable
grazing program for Bedouin goat herders.
"We're ahead of the entire Mideast region. We've introduced
integrating biodiversity conservation with sustainable community and
socio-economic development," conservation society director Khaled
said.
The
conservation society, which is looking to establish nine more
reserves, hopes eco-tourism will serve as the main source of income
for the work.
Dana
is the country's largest reserve, covering some 190 square miles.
It
is a place of startling variety.
Lush
mountains as high as 4,900 feet descend to open woodlands of juniper
and oak. And farther down sits scrubland and sandy desert below sea
level.
"Your walk may start in snow and after four hours you'll only need a
T-shirt. You're still in Dana, but it feels like a different
country," said local guide Tayseer al-Qtashat.
The
reserve has 11 walks ranging from a gentle one-hour jaunt to a more
invigorating 10-hour trek that demands some climbing and swimming.
Dana
and three other natural sites in Jordan the Azraq Wetlands, Mujib
and Wadi Rum are soon to be added to UNESCO's World Heritage List,
which already includes other Jordanian favorites such as Petra,
Qasayr Amra and Umm Rasas.
American tourist Daniel Dyer, from New Jersey, has visited several
of Jordan's nature reserves and said he plans to keep coming back,
especially to Dana.
"There is drama here. Such natural beauty is exceptional," Dyer
said. "I'd have to agree with Queen Noor who called the views here
nothing less than '10-star.'"
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
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IF YOU GO |
|
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JORDAN'S NATURE RESERVES:
rscn.org.jo or
visitjordan.com.
Highlights among Jordan's eight nature reserves:
·
Dana in southern Jordan has a chain of valleys and mountains
extending from the top of the Rift Valley down to the desert
lowlands of Wadi Araba. Dana is home to 703 plant species,
215 different kinds of birds and 38 mammal species, including
raptors and ibex.
·
Mujib is located within the deep Wadi Mujib gorge that enters
the Dead Sea at 1,300 feet below sea level. It is the lowest
altitude nature reserve in the world. Mujib has over 420 plant
species, 102 species of migratory birds and 10 species of
carnivores, including the red fox, the jackal and mongoose.
·
Wadi Rum is dotted with massive mountains, colored in shades of
red, yellow and orange. Here you can rent a camel and follow in
the footsteps of Lawrence of Arabia or
sandboard across the rolling dunes. Spring reveals hundreds of
species of wild flowers.
·
Shawmari Wildlife Reserve is a breeding center for some of the
most endangered and rare wildlife in the Middle East, including
the Arabian oryx. Ostriches, onagers and desert
gazelle are also rebuilding their populations in this safe haven
protected from hunting and habitat destruction.
·
Azraq Wetland Oasis is located in the heart of the semi-arid
eastern desert. A wide variety of migratory birds stop here each
year on routes between Asia and Africa. |