Saturday 8 February 2014

Tropical Tourism Case-study Kenya, East Africa.

Where is Kenya?

Kenya is located in East Africa, its capital city is Nairobi and it has a population of approximately 30 million people.


Why visit Kenya?
  • - it has an attractive climate (tropical) with sunshine all year round, hot and humid at the coast; temperate inland and dry in the NE (rainy season - April-June and Oct-Dec, heavy rainfall in the afternoon and early evening)

  • - Safari holidays are popular - e.g. in the Maasai Mara / Nakuru National Park - Kenya has spectacular wildlife - including the big 5 - Lion, Elephant, Rhinoceros, Leopard and Buffalo

  • - Cultural experience - many tourists visit local tribes such as the Maasai to find out more about their lifestyle and traditions
  • - Coastal Holidays - SE of Kenya has fine sands and coral reefs with spectacular marine life - e.g. Mombassa

Why have numbers of tourists visiting Kenya increased?
  • - Kenya was one of the first LEDC countries to acheive mass tourism and in the 1970s and 1980s there was a rapid increase in the numbers of tourists, particularly following the release of the films Born Free and Out of Africa.

  • - Tourist numbers have also increased as larger aircraft in the 1980s brought prices of air travel down.

Advantages of Tourism to Kenya:
  • - Tourism encourages the building of new roads and better communications
  • - Jobs in tourism have helped develop people's business skills
  • - Tourism has created all year round jobs for Kenyans
  • - Tourism is Kenya's biggest earner of foreign exchange
  • -Tourism has stimulated farming, by creating a demand for local food from farmers
  • - National Parks have been created - encouraging people to protect the environment.
Disadvantages of Tourism for Kenya:
  • - there is leakage of income - with a lot of the money paid for holidays never actually reaching Kenya (travel companies and foreign owned hotels get it instead)

  • - Safari minibuses disturb animals - often getting too close (e.g. can be 30-40 buses around a single animal in the Maasai Mara), they also cause soil erosion as the wheels churn up the grass

  • - many Maasai are traditionally nomadic, but many have been forced out of the National Parks - losing their land and also losing their traditional lifestyles.

  • - Hot air balloons in parks disturb animals - by casting shadows and from the noise of the burners.

  • - Coastal Environments such as those in Mombassa have been damaged - e.g. destruction of coral reefs as tourists step on the coral and also take souvenirs.

  • - Drugs and crime has increased and AIDS is a major problem

Working towards sustainable tourism in Kenya - KIGO CONSERVANCY - An example of ECOTOURISM.
Kigio Conservancy was set up in 1997 on an old beef / dairy ranch with the aim of providing a wildlife sanctuary and a sustainable eco-tourism destination.

The accommodation at Kigio is in "cottages" built of mud, timber and thatch, using local and reclaimed materials and methods. The furniture is built from re-claimed timber from the ground and there is no electricity, oil lamps are instead used.


Kigio has a number of ecotourism activities it is involved in:
  • - partnerships with local communities - helping to fund and work on community projects
  • - provides links with local schools with schools in the UK, raising money for new classrooms and other projects (e.g. water tanks)
  • - partnerships with conservation organisations such as the Tusk Trust - which has involved setting up conservation centre for use by local schools and providing sustainable development education for local communities
  • - employees local people - e.g. guides and other workers
  • - conservation activities - e.g. looking after orphaned wildlife - e.g. 2003 relocation of giraffe into the area - including a baby giraffe from the Karen Blixen Giraffe Orphange in Nairobi.

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