martes, 17 de diciembre de 2013
sábado, 2 de noviembre de 2013
viernes, 11 de octubre de 2013
Best Whale Watching EVER in Contadora!
Whales are not gone yet! This was film 2 days ago in Contadora Island
lunes, 30 de septiembre de 2013
Todays assingment was to find mammals and we did great despite of the
gray sky: Collared Pecari, Central American Agouti, White-nosed Coati,
Vested or Northern Tamandua, Tayra, White-throated Capuchin Monkeys and 2
troops of Mantled Howler Monkeys! Besides the many mammals the nice
show of some birds was just not to be missed: Toucans, Jacamars,
Motmots, Manakins and even some early migrants! Great day!
Great Jacamar. |
Three-toed Sloth |
Mantled Howler Monkey |
Upland Sandpiper |
Northern or Vested Tamandua |
Pipeline Road |
viernes, 27 de septiembre de 2013
martes, 24 de septiembre de 2013
Investing in tour guides training pays back
"It would have been even greater
if the guide had known anything about the birds. He was very nice,
but admitted he had little knowledge of birds"
" Our guide seemed to be a nice person, but had few "guide" skills"
" It was a waste of money because our guide didn't know much about the birds"
" Our guide seemed to be a nice person, but had few "guide" skills"
" It was a waste of money because our guide didn't know much about the birds"
When I found these comments I was devastated! Millions of dollars in fancy
infrastructure, marketing, equipment but the outcome of the guide
service is so terrible that it destroy the benefits of the investment
overall.
The last 15 years Panama went from
being the Latin America Cinderella to become one of the fastest
growing nation in the area with an ever expanding tourism offer and a
bright future for the industry of pleasure and leisure.
This future could be truncated, limited or even destroy if we, as a country, don't correct the “magic
formula” we had used to make our tourism industry grow: new
hotels, thousands of new rooms, new flights, better airports and very
limited investment in TOUR GUIDES!!!
Coming to Panama to learn about its
diversity and having to listen to a poorly trained guide is like
watching TV in a foreign language without the captions!!!
No matter how beautiful is the hotel
room, how glamorous was the bar nor how stunning was the view of the
skyline, the modern visitors are seeking for more “engaging and
educational experiences” Experiences in which they can do and
learn about things they do not normally know or do!
Going to Pipeline Road to birdwatch
without a birdwatching guide is simply a waste of time!
And so many things in this country are
not written in any guide book or information panel that having a local
expert who can advise and uncover the wonders laying just behind a
tree becomes a mos.
Seems like our legal system, the
tourism authorities and the long range policies for the tourism
industry only price construction of new hotel, new facilities and does not care about the overall quality and the guide services
provided in the country. Seems like the vision of tourism in Panama
is limited to exclusively eating, sleeping and shopping. There are no
incentive that create the conditions to train the best guides of the
region so our visitors get to learn more about this extremely rich nation in which a melting cacophony of colors, nature, cultures and
history move along a history of connectivity.
Since I started guiding I heard of
tourism companies complaining about how difficult was to hire a great guide.
Very few ever invested in training! The few who did they seldom
checked the quality of the outcome and the comments at the beginning
of this note are the result of it.
In contrast, I will give you the result of
months of good training and a well planed investment on preparing the
guides of the Panama Rainforest Discovery Center so they delivered
beyond the expected:
“A guide is very worthwhile. She knew
where to look and what to look for. She also took a spotting scope
which made it much easier to see the birds and animals”
“Also, the naturalist guides that are
currently working at the Center do not speak English. However, they
are quite knowledgeable about the birds and the area and are very
friendly”
“Great guides that speak English and
really know the wildlife in the area and there is a lot”
In few words Panama is in need of better
tour guides, not more hotel rooms!
lunes, 23 de septiembre de 2013
domingo, 22 de septiembre de 2013
Bat falcon acting like parrot!!
A carnivore parrot??? Hell yes! Since the phylogenetic tree of birds got reorganized and falcons were place next to parrots I can think of falcons other than been cockatoos with love to haemoglobin!
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