Quotes of the Day

Monday, Jul. 25, 2005

Open quoteTravel philanthropy has been on the rise since the tsunami of 2004. Tourists looking to help the often disadvantaged countries they visit can invest time, energy or money. Below, some of the best ways to get away while giving something back.

Turtle Island in Fiji
This luxury resort is committed to improving the standard of living for residents of the Yasawa Islands by providing medical clinics, building secondary schools and helping create budget resorts and businesses owned and operated by villagers

Habitat for Humanity
Participants in Habitat's Global Village programs spend one to three weeks helping build houses for needy families in any of 60 countries, including Mozambique, Ireland, Samoa, New Zealand, Guyana and the U.S.

Style Watch: Rattan Revolution
Diversions: All Talk
Food: Season to Taste
Outdoors: Comfy Camping

Wildland Adventures
This outfit has developed a sort of cross-cultural exchange program with the nomadic Masai in East Africa whereby the Africans receive direct benefits from tourism and guests are exposed to the tribe's culture.

Wilderness Travel
This pioneering adventure-travel company is committed to low-impact tourism, support of conservation and cultural groups and fair working conditions. In Peru and Nepal, it provides porters with boots and health insurance.

Lindblad Expeditions
These small cruise ships go everywhere from Antarctica to the Galápagos. When a traveler donates $250 or more to a cause like the Galápagos Conservation Fund, he or she receives a $250 travel voucher toward a future trip.

Charitable Cruising
Check to see if your cruise line is a member of the Cruise Industry Charitable Foundation, which provides support for ocean research and preservation efforts as well as scholarships for kids in the areas where the ships do business.

Mountain Travel Sobek
This adventure-trip organizer works with grass-roots outfits to boost the local economy in countries like India and Sri Lanka. In China it supports the Nature Conservancy by training locals to be Yangtze River guides.

Other Ways to Help
• Join Country Walkers' tree-planting project in Costa Rica to create a corridor for mono titi monkeys
• Improve health conditions in remote regions with Medicines Global by packing extra first-aid kits
• To offset the CO2 emissions released during your travels, go to treesftf.org and purchase CO2-consuming trees ($1 will offset a round-trip domestic flight, $3 an international one) Close quote

  • Lisa McLaughlin
  • For travelers looking to give back to the communities they visit, here's some suggestions
| Source: For travelers looking to give back to the communities they visit, here's some suggestions