Puesta Del Sol

Puesta Del Sol

Puesta del Sol

Ometepe, Nicaragua

Impact

Puesta del Sol has created new job opportunities which has strengthened the economy and quality of life of La Paloma. This has created access to formal education for the members of the Paloma community. They have also developed a series of training programs related to tourism and new tourism initiatives. The Association has created a community fund that allows them to provide scholarships, support the elderly and invest in community infrastructure (local school, local park and others).

18
people directly impacted
300
community members indirectly benefitting

Critical Need

Job opportunities are scarce on the island of Ometepe, which forces many people to emigrate to find work and be able to support their families. The Puesta del Sol community association was founded by women in the community to provide more job opportunities and better the quality of life for the people on the island.

Puesta del Sol received funding from foundations previously in order to develop a homestay program and a community center in their village. However, there were never enough customers to sustain the businesses. Community homestays are often in remote areas and lack the ability to market their services, resulting in little revenue. 

Our Involvement

Planeterra Foundation worked with the community of La Paloma on Ometepe Island to strengthen the homestay program and visitor center for groups. This provides a stable income to a small village that has traditionally lacked the opportunity to benefit from tourism.  Planeterra helped introduce Puesta Del Sol to tour operator G Adventures to help provide a steady stream of travellers. 

Puesta del Sol Association Ometepe, Nicaragua

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Mesilou Atamis Homestay Association

Mesilou Atamis Homestay Association

Kundasang, Borneo, Malaysia

Impact

The Mesilou Atamis Homestay Association is managed primarily by the young generation in Mesilou who have returned home to create income from tourism. The program not only provides a new source of income, it also highlights sustainable projects locally, like the organic fruit orchard and the aquaponics farm. Through the regeneration of this tourism experience, and connection to a customer base of international travellers, the community feels they are able to shine again after many years of not having the opportunity to share their culture.

23
families directly impacted

Critical Need

Mesilou Atamis Homestay Association was registered in 2014 with 20 homestay families. Located at 1600m above sea level, the homestay is popularly known as the “The Highest & Coldest Homestay in Malaysia.” In the past, Mesilou Atamis Homestay showcased unique traditional and cultural activities to guests, but over time became more like a home rentals service through demand from the domestic tourism market. A homestay once created as a way to showcase their local culture had lost its connection to cultural celebration and immersion. 

Our Involvement

Planeterra provided a catalyst grant for Mesilou Atamis Homestay (MAH) to undergo a training program by BEST Society, a Malaysian non-profit that has expertise in community development. MAH received training to improve their homestay operation, with a focus on creating new tourism activities that allow travellers to experience and connect with the local culture. 

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Laem Sak Tourism Community Enterprise

Laem Sak Tourism Community Enterprise

Ao Luk, Krabi, Thailand

Impact

Our partnership brings additional income to 450 community members in Ao Luk, allowing local businesses to grow. With improved tourism products, the community is better set up to benefit sustainably from tourism and perform in the niche market of adventure tourism. The community members take responsibility for their fragile environment seriously and are able to bring travellers through ecosystems in a way that is sustainable and is educational.

20
community members directly benefitting
55
community members indirectly benefitting

Critical Need

Laem Sak is one of the hidden gems of Southern Thailand, with its beautiful sea, mangroves, islands, cultural diversification, foods, and rich natural resources. Because of this, the Laem Sak Tourism Community Enterprise was launched in 2014 to allow community members to diversify their income. Unfortunately, the program had limited success in reaching customers, as it is considered to be far away from the typical tourist route. As a community near a fragile marine ecosystem, the community members felt a strong desire to attract visitors as a more responsible way to experience the Andaman Sea.  

Our Involvement

Planeterra partnered with the North Andaman Network (NAN), a local non-profit organization that provides training to small community tourism enterprises in order to upgrade the Laem Sak Tourism Community Enterprises’ tourism experience. This included the purchase of new equipment for marine tours and upgrades that would enable them to receive travellers for active tours that include hiking, biking and kayaking. Planeterra connected the Laem Sak community with G Adventures, who bring their travellers to experience the community through a 3-day sea kayaking experience with locals, and hands-on activities like batik making, sea-grape planting and experiencing local foods. These programs are supporting the women, men and youth of this community, making up 12 microenterprises.

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Mekong River Homestays

Mekong River Homestays

Ban Pak Ngum and Ban Huay Tom, Luang Prabang, Laos

Impact

The Mekong Community Homestays have allowed the Ban Pak Ngum and Ban Huay Tom communities to increase employment and income opportunities in the area while sharing and preserving their unique culture. Investments into the homestay’s tourism service have allowed the hosts to receive travellers in a professional manner, setting them up for future growth and sustainable tourism partnerships. Income from this program is used by many families to send their children to school.

25
people directly benefitting
75
community members benefitting

Critical Need

Traditional agriculture and fishing practices in rural Laos are often unable to provide the income needed for households to cover all expenses. Because of this, communities are in need of alternative income opportunities in order to stay in their ancestral villages. Planeterra believes that the travel industry can provide such opportunities for remote areas in Laos, while also providing a platform for a cultural celebration. The Ban Pak Ngum and Ban Huay Tom communities along the Mekong River are made up of three Indigenous communities: Laos, Khmu, and Hmong.  Entering the tourism industry for the first time, the Mekong River Homestays were in need of training to create a meaningful experience for guests and hosts.

Our Involvement

With support from Planeterra, CBT-I (The Thailand Community Based Tourism Institute) and Travel Treasure Laos (TTL), training was conducted for both homestay communities. The topics covered included ways to improve their tourism experience, food and hygiene training, developing new tourism products, interpretation skill-building, and an overview of the tourism industry to better prepare them for success in the future. Planeterra connected them with one of our corporate partner’s G Adventures, to secure a steady flow of travellers to the homestays.

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Make A Difference Homestay

Make a Difference Homestay

Bohol Island, Philippines

Impact

Through this partnership, 17 homestay families are able to receive additional income through tourism. Since this program began, members have been able to plant kitchen gardens and start chicken farms which provide food to travellers and increased food security to the community. The community has also launched a new MADster Chef program, improving their skills in cooking class delivery for guests

17
homes improved
50
families benefitting

Critical Need

Maribojoc is a seaside community on the island of Bohol. There are 50 families that rely on fishing and farming for income. In 2013, Bohol was hit with a 7.2 magnitude earthquake, followed by typhoon Haiyan which devastated much of the country. During this time, many people in Maribojoc lost their homes. Gawad Kalinga, the Philippines’ largest non-profit organization, works to build homes for marginalized communities across the Philippines. Their social enterprise offshoot, Make A Difference Travel, has helped the community of Maribojoc develop the organization’s first community-run homestay.

Our Involvement

Working with Make A Difference Travel, Planeterra provided funds for training and to support home renovations, converting 17 homes into homestays. The program helped people rebuild their homes, install new washroom facilities, and develop skills in hospitality. Travellers visit and stay in the community, homestays, dine at the local restaurant, and experience a farm tour and mangrove-planting outing.

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Ngadas Community Homestay

Ngadas Community Homestay

Java, Indonesia

Impact

Planeterra was able to secure over 1,500 customers to visit the Tengger tribe annually through our partnership with G Adventures. The program benefits 498 households with ripple effects supporting many micro-enterprises that include: local farmers, local guides, drivers, tour guides, and homestay hosts. The homestay program is located inside of Bromo-Tengger-Semeru National Park and allows the older generation to diversify their income; as well as creating opportunities to provide employment for the next generation of Tenngerese to stay in their local community to work. Travellers have a chance to meet and stay in a traditional Tengger home, and explore the surroundings on a community developed hike.

39
people directly impacted
156
community members benefitting
Ngadas Community Homestay
.

Critical Need

The village of Ngadas is home to 1,898 people in central Java. Ngadas is inhabited by the Tengger tribe, who claim to be the descendants of the Majapahit princes. This community acts as the protectors of the mountain, Mount Bromo Volcano, one of the most sacred sites in Indonesia. Over the past few decades, the Tengger people’s land has been subjected to illegal logging activities by external parties, and younger generations have begun relocating to urban areas. This has caused a loss of cultural retention in the area, leaving the older generation to sustain themselves. The Tenggerese people rely mostly on subsistence agriculture as their main source of income; with changes to climate in recent years, crop yields have also varied. Ngadas village had been introduced to homestay programs by the local government as part of a community tourism development program. Unfortunately, the homestays were left widely unvisited by travellers despite the community’s unique culture.

Our Involvement

Planeterra supported the Ngadas community to build their capacity and also provided a catalyst grant for infrastructure development. By working with the Tengger Tribe, we created a homestay and community tour program that was fully owned and managed by the Tengger people. Planeterra conducted a 6 month training program to improve locals’ skills and knowledge in guiding, meal preparation, healthy and safety, and homestay management. Further, a village walking tour and ancestor trek were designed with the community, and Planeterra provided a grant to improve the homestay facilities.

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Mae Hong Son

Mae Hong Son Hilltribe Trek

Mae Hong Son, Thailand

Impact

All three communities Pha Mon (Red Lahu), Muang Pam (White Karen), and Jabo (Black Lahu) benefit from income diversification. The hill-tribe trek creates job opportunities for individuals to continue to stay in their home village, retaining culture, and preventing urban migration. Thanks to their community development plans, 10% of each tourism activity is invested in a wider community development fund. This fund is used to benefit the greater communities’ needs such as the local school, community environmental programs such as reforestation programs, medicinal herb gardens and sustainable fisheries. The community can also use these funds to allocate loans to individuals looking to start their own businesses or to fund different emergency situations.

75
people directly impacted
120
community members indirectly benefitting
Thailand Hill-Tribes Trek Mae Hong Son, Thailand

Critical Need

Hilltribe trekking in Northern Thailand has been a popular tourist experience over the last 20 years; however, the product has not changed much and the most popular routes visited are saturated with limited benefits to the greater hill-tribe communities. There are several hill-tribe communities between Chiang Mai and the Myanmar border that have limited access to the tourism market as they are deemed too far and too remote to access by many tour operators. 

These communities mainly rely on subsistence agriculture as a primary source of income and utilize slash-and-burn agricultural techniques to farm their heavily forested areas. With unpredictable weather patterns, harvest and crop yields have become less consistent over time, and a means to develop alternative livelihood programs and income-generating activities for the remote hill-tribe communities is vital.

Our Involvement

Planeterra worked with our ground partners, Community Based Tourism-Institute (CBT-I), to develop and deliver an 8-month training program that would build the capacity of three remote hill-tribe communities, and effectively link them together. The villages of Pha Mon (Red Lahu), Muang Pam (White Karen), and Jabo (Black Lahu) had received limited travellers prior to our involvement. Training was provided around the topics of hospitality, waste management, sanitation and hygiene, sustainable development, financial literacy, and reservations. Further, each of the communities was taken on a “Learning Journey” to see each other’s villages to experience what the power of tourism can do, and what they can accomplish by working together on their community development plans. Within each village, a community association was created to manage the various products and services included in this community trek — the entire trek is owned and operated by each of the hill-tribe associations.

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Dqae Qare San Lodge

Dqae Qare San Lodge

D’Kar, Botswana

Impact

With a grant from Planeterra, improvements to Dqae Qare San Lodge that would have taken five years to complete took only a matter of months. In addition, the revenue brought by Planeterra connecting Dqae Qare San Lodge to a wider travel market, including G Adventures tours, allows the Kuru Development Trust to invest more in their business, empower and employ more people from D’kar, and invest more into community projects and infrastructure. The Kuru Development Trust uses revenue for the lodge for community development projects like fresh water infrastructure and support for the preschool – projects that are invaluable for the community. Additionally, with the D’kar community living on about 30 cents a day, the jobs provided at Dqae Qare are truly changing lives. One Dqae Qare employee is able to support a family of ten back in the village of D’Kar. 

52
people employed
2,000
community members benefitting

Critical Need

Like all Indigenous communities around the world, the San of Southern Africa are a marginalized people – often excluded from the formal economy and lacking social services, while under constant threat from the ‘developing’ world that seeks to diminish their language, history, and culture. The San, who are the earliest inhabitants of Southern Africa, currently number around 113,000 and are scattered across six countries in Southern Africa, with a large number residing in the Kalahari region of Botswana.  

The Kuru Development Trust was formed to protect the San of Botswana, and their activities centre around assisting the D’kar community of around 2,000 inhabitants. Dqae Qare San Lodge, which is a wildlife area, lodge, and campsite, offers full-time employment to 12 staff members and part-time work to some 40 individuals who offer cultural activities and other small jobs at the lodge. 

Our Involvement

Seeing the amazing work that the Kuru Development Trust has done to empower, employ, and support thousands of San in Southern Africa, Planeterra partnered with Dqae Qare San Lodge to assist them with improvements and upgrades to their campsite and lodge accommodation.

When they received a grant from Planeterra to upgrade their campsite and accommodation, the Dqae Qare San Lodge staff went to work, building an ablution block – including six showers, toilets, and wash basins for travellers visiting the wildlife area and staying on the property. Local labour and material were used, and the local Kuru Development Trust art project decorated the outside of the new toilet block in May 2019. Meanwhile, work started on upgrades to the lodge, with new doors installed, floors repaired and washrooms upgraded. 

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Coope San Juan

Coope San Juan

San Juan, Costa Rica

Impact

As a cooperative dedicated to providing travellers with community experiences and overnight accommodation, the Coope San Juan saw their community’s income coming increasingly from tourism instead of agriculture. This allowed families to have more income to improve their quality of life. Further, they were able to invest more into their agricultural initiatives.  This investment allows the community to keep their land and pay off their debts that they owed on their land. 

24
people directly impacted

Critical Need

Coope San Juan is a community cooperative dedicated to agriculture and natural forest preservation. Coope San Juan was established in 1985 by 12 families from the community of La Palmera and San Juan de Ciudad Quesada. The farm is 416 hectares (nearly 1000 acres), which is 62% of natural forest which the remaining land left to be cultivated by the families. 

Unfortunately, income from agriculture is limited.  The community was close to losing their land due to failed investments in agriculture, as their income was 95% agriculture leaving many families with just enough income to meet the basic needs of the families.

Our Involvement

With the tourism industry expanding in Costa Rica, Coope San Juan decided to start a homestay business. This tourism project is managed by the women of the community’s cooperative.

Planeterra funded 20 bicycles and related equipment, purchased at a discount from our generous local partners, Desafio, for the families to host travellers and provide cycling activities as part of the community experience. Planeterra also connected the cooperative with our travel industry partners to create a steady stream of income through group stays.

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