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Results tagged “UNESCO” from Intelligent Travel Blog



Silbo Gomero is a whistling language that developed on the island of La Gomera, one of Spain's Canary Islands off the northwest coast of Africa. The island is difficult to traverse due to its very steep hills and deep ravines. La Gomera's inhabitants, tired of yelling at each other, long ago invented a phonetic language based on whistling, and for centuries this form of communication worked very well. Then came telephones, and the whistling language fell into disuse.

Saving Silbo Gomera became the goal of busuu.com, an online community for learning languages, which produced this video as part of a worldwide campaign. Their efforts were successful. Yesterday UNESCO declared the language to be an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity

Also making UNESCO's list was the sultry music and moves of the Tango. This is thanks to a bit of cooperation between Uruguay and Argentina, who have long bickered over who laid claim to its origins. The two countries put their arguments aside in order to petition UNESCO for the special status, and they now stand to receive funding to safeguard the cultural tradition. There were 76 designations made this year, and include the Chinese Dragon Boat festival, Aubusson tapestry-making in France, and the traditional Nigerian harvest festival know as the Ijele masquerade. The entire list is fascinating, be sure to take a look.

Thanks to French blogger Kirsten Winkler for the whistling tip!
Gaszpromtower.jpgIt's 1,300 feet high, towering far above the elegant city laid out by Peter the Great, and four times higher than the maximum building limit established by city planners to preserve the architectural integrity of the czarist-era city. Developers of the controversial new Gazprom office building received the green light this week from the governor of St. Petersburg to start construction on the tallest skyscraper in Europe. Not everyone's pleased about it.  The London Times reports:

UNESCO expressed "grave concern" in July about the impact of the tower and warned Russian officials that it could place St. Petersburg on the "World Heritage in Danger" list next year. It urged them to suspend work on the project, adopt a different design and submit a report by February on measures to protect the 306-year-old city centre.

Will the UNESCO warnings be heeded?  The Times thinks not, because Gazprom is the most powerful company in Russia and has close ties to President Medvedev and Prime Minister Putin; in addition, the governor of St. Petersburg, Valentina Matviyenko, is one of Mr Putin's most loyal appointees.

A Times' reader commented:

I spent 2 years living in Beijing (in another country prone to bouts of "look at me and how powerful I desperately want you to think I am" style building) - there is no life around the new developments there, they breathe a cold soullessness and only assume any elegance when viewed from a minimum of a kilometer distance. With the low sun of St. Petersburg the shadows cut by this will also be huge.

What do you think? Should the skyscraper be built? For more information on St. Petersburg, see our Places of a Lifetime series here, with photo galleries, quizzes, walking tours, hotel and restaurant recommendations, entertainment and nightlife, cultural tips, music, books and recipes. 

Belize: Trouble in Paradise

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Thumbnail image for reefpic.jpgThe Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System is a wonder. Inscribed as a World Heritage site in 1996, it's home to sea turtles, manatees, and American marine crocodiles. It represents the "evolutionary history of reef development" and includes 450 cayes and three atolls. The reserve is part of the Mesoamerican Reef, which is the second largest in the world (behind Australia's Great Barrier Reef). But largely due to unsustainable tourism practices, Belize's reef has recently been added to the "List of World Heritage in Danger."

One of the biggest threats to the reef reserve's sustainability is mangrove cutting to make way for commercial development. According to a State of Conservation report for the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System, 29 percent of mangroves in Pelican Caye have been cut down. The ocean floor has been dredged to fill the land with coral and sand, resulting in a loss of sponges and other sea life.

The number of visitors to the reef has tripled since its World Heritage designation, and Half Moon Caye alone hosts 10,000 tourists per year.  According to the Caribbean Tourism Organization, over 600,000 people arrive in Belize via cruise ships, a method of travel vigorously promoted by the country's government and private sector.

There are lots of problems to tackle, but there are also some positive signs. The local community has an interest in preserving the reserve, fishermen are learning about conservation and sustainable fishing practices, and efforts are being made to regulate tourism in the World Heritage site. In order to fully protect the reserve system, however, more cooperation is needed between Belize's government and tourism industry, NGOs that manage some sites, and UNESCO.

Photo: Bobby Ramirez via Flickr

New Sites Added to UNESCO World Heritage List

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090701-06-united-kingdom-pontcyslite-aqueduct_big.jpgThe UNESCO World Heritage Committee added 13 new sites to its World Heritage List last week, bringing the total of protected sites to 890 properties. The list, which encourages countries to preserve important cultural locations, now includes two additional Natural Heritage sites and 11 Cultural Heritage sites, including the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct in Wales (above). 
Traveler and Photo District News are currently hosting our annual World in Focus Photo Contest, and this year we're letting readers preview the submissions and vote on their favorites. Each week, we'll feature ten entries on the Traveler website. Here's one of of the featured shots:

contest-wk2-03-1024.jpgThis shot was taken of the hillsides of the central Mexican city of Guanajuato, by Dennis J. Butera. Guanajuato is a UNESCO World Heritage city, and was one of the first sites in Mexico to be colonized by the Spanish. Submit your photos now and get the chance to win great prizes, gear, and trips.  

Kathmandu on the Cheap

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IT contributor Cathy Healy is back from her recent trip to Nepal, and offers some inexpensive ways to make the most of the country's rich cultural offerings.



Kathmandu, Nepal -- Tala Katner awes me. Her blog about watching Hindu death rites with burning corpses and floating the ashes down the Bagmati River made me glad I dodged the experience that day. We were both in the area at the same time, but had very different experiences, which helps explain why Kathmandu continues to be a mythic destination for anybody who visits.
 
First, we did a fly-by of Everest. Then we explored two of the seven UNESCO World Heritage sites in the Kathmandu Valley: 14th-century Bhaktapur, a car-free, Hindu temple town where people still live traditionally, and the 15th-century Buddhist stupa at Bodhnath, a center of Tibetan life here. Finally, we kicked back with live jazz at the Cafe New Orleans in Patan. (Which, by the way, is a few blocks from a third UNESCO site.)
 
This was a meandering day, not a dash, and three of the most extraordinary sights in the world were affordable. Here's how:
tekapo.jpg
The Church of the Good Shepherd at Lake Tekapo, New Zealand. Photo: Neil Gardner

The diverse New Zealand landscape is among the most beautiful in the world: pristine beaches, rolling green fields, awesome mountains. But residents in Tekapo aren't so much concerned with what surrounds them on the ground, they're much more interested in preserving what shines down from above.

The small South Island town of about 800 people is on a mission to receive UNESCO's approval to become the first starlight reserve, an idea first generated four years ago. Locals have been darkening their Canterbury town since 1965, and have since restricted lighting use within a 19-mile radius of the town. Today residents use low-energy sodium streetlamps and household lamps that face down. Even the local skating rink installed special lighting that prevents ultraviolet rays from reflecting into the night sky, according to the Associated Press. The AP also reports that more than two-thirds of people in the U.S. and about one-fifth of the world's population cannot see the Milky Way from their homes, a statistic that the folks of Tekapo hope to change.

For more places to see the night sky, check out other Dark Sky Destinations.

Photo: Neil Gardner

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Cultural, Authentic & Sustainable: This is your brain on travel. We showcase the essence of place, what's unique and original, and what locals cherish most about where they live. And we highlight places, practices, and people that are on the front lines of sustainable travel—travel that preserves places’ essential uniqueness for future generations. more...

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Recent Comments

Bed and Breakfast Christchurch on New Zealand's "Park in the Sky": I haven't come across any updates yet on the project. I must say that its a good idea.
Shailendra on New Zealand's "Park in the Sky": I hope the town will get the status soon. Shail : Agra
Mohammad Zohaib Khan on New Zealand's "Park in the Sky": Your blog is very nice & informative. I always appreciate your work. Thanks to the sharing. Mohammad
Jeannette on New Zealand's "Park in the Sky": Thanks for the tip, Caroline. Tekapo is hoping to be the first starlight reserve to achieve World He
Caroline - Philadelphia on New Zealand's "Park in the Sky": Wait -- Pennsylvania has a Dark Sky Preserve. Isn't that the same thing? In the Pennsylvania Wilds,

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