Posts Tagged ‘Darjeeling’

Chautare: A travel magazine for East and Northeast India

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009
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Help Tourism celebrates diversity with grassroot level stakeholders promoting pro-poor tourism & green travel in East & Northeast India.

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Help Tourism celebrates World Tourism Day at several destinations by empowering the grassroot level stakeholders in tourism and launching several green travel products.

World Tourism Day 2009 - East & Northeast India

Puri, by the Bay of Bengal is one of the most sought after pilgrimage destination for the Hindus worldwide has gradually emerged as a leisure holiday destinations for the millions of travellers from West Bengal and other parts of India. With the change in type, the quality of facilities also changed drastically. The pilgrimage dharamshalas (free/donation accommodation for pilgrims) were replaced by hotels, the temple prashad (food offered to the Gods and then distributed to the pilgrims) was all replaced by restaurants, rickshaws were replaced by auto-rickshaws etc. The 2000 auto rickshaws put the rickshaw pullers out of work, leaving them frustrated anti-social elements and Puri a polluted town.
A group of about 50 rickshaw pullers greeted the passengers with roses in the morning at Puri Railway Station. They were led by the local Superintendent of Police, Mr.S.K.Priyadarshi and the members of Barefoot (a local association of tour operators, hoteliers and other professionals). Help Tourism, Siliguri is an advisor to this association and acts as the principle motivator towards responsible tourism.
In the morning itself at 10am, the Mayor of Puri, Mrs.Shanti Pradhan flagged off the Green Rider Rickshaws from the Lion’s Gate of the Jagannath Temple. The rickshaws passed through all the major roads and sightseeing points, stopped occasionally by the people who supported the rickshaw pullers by giving them drinking water. The rickshaw pullers rode proudly around the town with a sense of achievement.

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The evening was an exclusive event in the Panthanivas beach of Puri. This event dedicated to the rickshaw pullers and their families was attended by several tourists, travel agents and hoteliers. The chief guest of the event was Mr.S.Das Verma, the local MLA from Bragmagiri, Orissa and the Guest of Honour was Dr.Peter Patel, an active Rotarian from the United Kingdom who has been organizing several health programs in Orissa. Mr.Gobind C. Bhuyan, Asst. Director, India Tourism was a special guest at the event.
The highlight of the evening was the team of Mrs.Nanda Kundu, a salsha guru from Delhi and founder of Kiran’s Dance in Rhythm, who performed several international level western and Indian folk & classical dance forms. The team consisted of both Indians and foreigners and truly lived to the theme of World Tourism Day 2009, celebrating diversity. A team from the youths of the Sevait families performed yoga  under Bharat Yoga Kendra. The Green Riders were finally recognized on stage and several facilities were announced for them.
International sand sculptor, Mr.Sudarshan Pattnaik and his team created a beautiful piece of art in sand to match the World Tourism Day theme. A film by famous news personnel, Ajoy Roy, who is also the President of ACT (Association for Conservation & Tourism) made an excellent promo -documentary on the Green Riders.
The extraordinary initiative was taken by Mr.Yugabrata Kar, founder of Heritage Tours of Puri and Barefoot, Puri. This was supported by India Tourism (Kolkata & Bhubaneswar), Orissa Tourism, Mayfair  Puri, Chariot Puri, Holiday Resort, Shakti International, State Bank of India, Lakshya, NICE, Coca cola, 1000 Sands etc.


wtd_kurseong_2009_03 Kurseong, a part of the Darjeeling Hills in the East Himalaya houses the World Heritage Site, the DHR (Darjeeling Himalayan Railway), but the sense of ownership by the local people was missing as their livelihood had no relation with the DHR. This is when the DHR Director, Kurseong SDO , Divisional Forest Officer and several other  persons from the administration and political parties decided to support a local group of youth from Kurseong and adjoining areas to start ecotourism and hence their name Himalayan Ecotourism Welfare Society.

Help Tourism, as their advisors helped the youths to constitute a management committee and framed a greater heritage area added to the DHR World Heritage Site, ‘Kurseong Ecotourism & Heritage Park’. The Tea Estates and Forests with the people in and around Kurseong were included in the map. Hotels, Tea & Forest Bungalows, Homestays and other service providers were identified and added to the initiative. Activities including nature treks, nature drives, tea treks, tea drives, DHR heritage rides, cultural shows, handicrafts & handlooms and volunteering with schools, scouts, health & Agro based NGOs, salamander conservation programs etc were included.
The official launching was done on the World Tourism Day, 2009 in the presence of several people and media from the region. Chief Guest, Mr.Gopal Lama, Director, West Bengal Tourism and Guest of Honour,  Mr.Subrata Nath, Director, Darjeeling Himalayan Railway declared the project launching of ‘Kurseong Ecotourism & Heritage Park’. They both said that this initiative will bring back the old glory of Kurseong. Mr.Gopal Lama said that this will help in generating self employment in hundreds of families in this area and will support a better civil society. Mr.Subrata Nath said that they will provide all support for the successful implementation of this project, also a tourist information centre was inaugurated in the Kurseong Railway Station on this date to be managed by the Himalayan Ecotourism Welfare Society. Mr.Paras Dahal, the East Himalaya co-ordinator for Help Tourism said that the national & international bodies like DHR-India Support Group & DHR Society will certainly provide support to the initiative by participating in the several ecotourism programs that have been launched and will help in promoting the same.

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Map of Kurseong Ecotourism & Heritage Park

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Brochure about the “Himalayan Salamander”

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

During a placement in a local school in Darjeeling, Marion volunteered to compile a small info folder about the Himalayan Newt, an endemic and threatened species of Salamander. The brochure serves two purposes: Visitors to Darjeeling can learn about the tiny animal and its habitat, local people can find valuable tips how to help in protecting this specialty of the East Himalaya.

Info Brochure “Himalayan Salamander”

Well done, Marion. Let many people read this – for the sake of the Salamander.

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Workshop on Waste-Management, Lava

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Workshop Banner “Promoting Waste Free Tourism Destinations” Lava, January 2008

A community workshop on waste management was held in Lava village in Kalimpong Subdivision of Darjeeling District. A German Expert spent three days in the village to train the villagers on waste separation and proper disposal.

The village is a popular tourism destination and the increasing amount of non-biodegredable waste has become an eyesore both for tourists and local people.

The programme was a joint initiative of ACT-Association for Conservation and Tourism, Help Tourism, Lava Hotel Owners Association, Lava Drivers Welfare Association, the village panchayat, and Byapari Sangathan.

Read the full summary of the workshop.

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Project Red Panda

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

Project Red Panda

The Red Panda, one of the most endangered species of the East Himalaya and is distributed from Nepal, into Sikkim, Darjeeling Hills, Bhutan, and Arunachal Pradesh. The distribution further extends into Northern Myanmar and a few provinces in China. They are the least aggressive and quite animals to have survived in the wild because of its inaccessible terrain dominated by bamboo forests.

The Darjeeling Zoo or the Padmaja Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park, which houses only the animals of the East Himalaya, boasts of the most successful Red Panda breeding and release in the wild project. It has about twenty, genetically healthy population of Red Pandas. The wild population around Darjeeling is at the Barshey Rhododendron Sanctuary, Neora Valley National Park and the Singalila National park. The most vital fact about these protected areas that they share borders nationally and internationally, i.e. Barshey has international borders with Nepal and is extended to Darjeeling district of West Bengal, Neora Valley has its international border with Bhutan and extends its border nationally with the East district of Sikkim, and Singalila internationally shares its border with Nepal and extended border with the West district of Sikkim.

To confirm conservation of this species and their habitat, Help Tourism and ACT has been working with fringe communities to achieve sustainable development in the adjoining areas and ensure protection by the local people. Several initiatives have been taken in different directions and in collaboration with several organizations to create an atmosphere in the right direction as mentioned hereunder.

  1. Help Tourism at Darjeeling in the Swiss Hotel proposes to adopt two Red Pandas at the Darjeeling Zoo.
  2. Help Tourism and ACT has collaborated with local youth forces at Hee Bermiock and Singling, adjoining to Barshey Rhododendron Sanctuary and have been developing and running ecotourism projects.
  3. There is also a proposal by ACT to develop a community reserve in the Hee Patal area, mainly for preservation of birds and en extension of the sanctuary.
  4. There is a similar proposal in the Meghma village adjoining to Singalila National Park. This village falls in route of the world famous Sandakphu trek.
  5. The ecotourism initiative by Help Tourism and ACT is developing in full swing in Kolakham, the village adjoining to Neora Valley National Park.
  6. ACT is working on a Neora Valley Conservation Reserve with the local community of the area.
  7. Help Tourism is organizing a hospitality training course at the Swiss Hotel in Darjeeling for the participants from the three protected areas.

ACT’s role here would be mainly to support and nurture the creation of community or conservation reserves as extension of the mentioned protected areas. Develop capacities for protection in the local youths and ask for support from conservation organizations to fund the process.

Help Tourism, on the other hand is already moving with the ecotourism development in the mentioned areas. Developing infrastructure and local manpower to run tourism in the areas is the immediate progress. Networking with special interest groups for volunteering, conservation, birding, nature based and adventure tourism has already begun.

The ultimate aim of this project is sustainable development of the communities living in the fringes of the protected areas, help them to extend the protected area and confirm protection by local communities.

Learn more about the Red Panda

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