Showing posts with label World Heritage Site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Heritage Site. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Practicing my culture

Sometime in the last 20 years, locals in the CNMI came to understand conservation as a bunch of haoles telling indigenous people not to fish, not to feed their families, and not to practice their culture. They are mistaken. Conservation has always been an integral part of Micronesian culture.

I learned it from my father and I know these guys learned it from theirs.

Even so, times have changed. The definition of conservation has changed along with it.

Old habits and old technologies result in expected outcomes.

1000 years ago when a Chamorro went out to catch fish using the technology available to him at the time, he could safely assume that he wasn't destroying his resource. No new technology was going to be introduced to help him catch more fish and no huge influx of off-islanders would be coming to his home anytime soon (at least for another 500 years).

The only thing he needed to navigate his world were the stars, the waves, and the wind. He lived the way his grandparents lived and he could expect his grandchildren to live the same way.

Like I said, times have changed. We now have more people and new technologies.

When people use old habits combined with new technologies, unexpected outcomes occur.

Fish & Wildlife admits that SCUBA spearfishing nearly decimated our Napolean Wrasse population. I've also heard that gill nets in the 1990's wiped out the turtle population in the lagoon [unconfirmed, just hearsay, so don't jump down my throat, I was in Florida].

When these new technologies were introduced, they weren't introduced with the intent of destroying our resources. People just wanted to catch more fish, feed their families, and practice their culture.

In a previous post I told the story of my father eating one of the last mariana mallards.

I don't think he was purposely eating the last mallard. He was just practicing his culture, right? If you had asked him about the bird on the day he shot it, he would probably have told you that he knew where to find more.

I don't recount that story to try to paint my father in a bad light, I'm just using it to highlight my point. He had spent his whole life shooting and eating that bird and probably expected to spend the remainder of his whole life shooting and eating that bird.

Old habits (hunting every bird you see) combined with new technologies (better rifles than centuries past) led to extinction (the shelling of Saipan during World War II didn't help either).

Am I less Chamorro because I will never see a mariana mallard? Am I less Chamorro because I will never taste one? And is Saipan less Saipan because we no longer have bats and barely any coconut crabs? Do you see where I'm going with this?

If eating certain foods is part of our culture, then what does it say about our culture when we allow that food to go extinct?

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Speaking of forming new habits, I came across this news item as I was surfing the Internet:

The tiny Pacific islands nation of Kiribati declared the world's largest marine protected area Thursday - a California-sized ocean wilderness that includes pristine reefs and eight coral atolls teeming with fish and birds.
Kiribati isn't even one of the Micronesian nations to sign the Micronesia Challenge, yet look what they just did. I highly recommend reading the whole article, but this is part of the article that I found to be of the most importance:
The plan does not come without costs. Some commercial fishing in the area will be restricted, meaning the Kiribati government will forego some revenue from foreign commercial fishing licenses.

Kiribati earned $33 million in 2001 from fishing licenses - the latest available figure.

The government stands to lose about $3 million of this revenue with the creation of the reserve, but is hoping to recoup some of the losses by boosting tourism, which now accounts for 20 percent of the gross domestic product. It has already applied to have the marine reserve listed as a World Heritage Site. [emphasis added]
The CNMI should start thinking like our brothers in Kiribati.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

First Day in Pohnpei

MCT Office PohnpeiOffice with a view: The Micronesia Conservation Trust office is right on the water. This is what they are forced to look at 8 hours a day.

Carlos Kusto is Pohnpei's first blogger. Ever. Please bounce on over to Carlos' blog and send your regards from wherever you are sitting. I know I have regular readers in Saipan, Mongolia, Japan, and all over the United States.

Carlos is a Micronesia Challenge Intern. He is being mentored to become one of Pohnpei's future conservation leaders.

Please give Pohnpei's first blogger and one of Micronesia's future leaders some encouragement.

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Learning Exchange: Here I am with Mary Rose showing her how to upload documents to the MCT website. That's Carlos behind us.

I'm in Pohnpei to help the Micronesia Conservation Trust (MCT) with their web presence. We had a session yesterday and we had about a four hour session today.

So far we've created two new bloggers (Johnny is Pohnpei's second blogger), gone over some basic html elements, and talked about how we want to edit the MCT website.

We'll continue working all day Monday, Tuesday, and then Wednesday morning.

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I'm going to Nan Madol tomorrow morning at 9 AM. I was mistaken; it is not a World Heritage Site. Either way, I'm still pretty stoked. I've been reading about this place in books since I was a kid.

Now if I can just get up to the Northern islands...

Sunday, January 06, 2008

The Pohnpei Blog

I am leaving for Pohnpei on Friday for a week of work. I am participating in a Learning Exchange and an MIC Steering Committee meeting.

I am going to spend a few days helping the Micronesia Conservation Trust with their Internet utilization and then we're going to plan for the upcoming MIC Retreat in Guam.

I'll have one day off while I'm there. I want to visit Nan Madol, a World Heritage Site, on that day.

This will be my 26th World Heritage Site visit.

In a previous post I asked my fellow bloggers to figure out how many World Heritage Sites they had visited using this list.

Who is your guess for the most traveled Saipan blogger?

My guess is EJ Lee. She's been everywhere.

Friday, November 23, 2007

UNESCO World Heritage Sites Redux

To quote myself from a previous post, one of my professors at Rollins College used to describe World Heritage Sites in this manner:

"If aliens were to land on Earth and you wanted to tell them where the most important ecological, cultural, and historical sites on the planet were, you would use the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites."
Before my vacation, I had visited the following World Heritage Sites:
  1. Area de Conservación Guanacaste - Costa Rica
  2. Talamanca Range-La Amistad Reserves / La Amistad National Park - Costa Rica
  3. Canterbury Cathedral, St Augustine's Abbey, and St Martin's Church - United Kingdom
  4. Maritime Greenwich - United Kingdom
  5. Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites - United Kingdom
  6. Tower of London - United Kingdom
  7. Westminster Palace, Westminster Abbey and Saint Margaret's Church - United Kingdom
  8. Cathedral of Notre-Dame, Former Abbey of Saint-Remi and Palace of Tau, Reims - France
  9. Paris, Banks of the Seine - France
  10. Everglades National Park - United States
  11. Statue of Liberty - United States
  12. The Great Wall - China
  13. Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties - China
  14. Summer Palace, an Imperial Garden in Beijing - China
  15. Temple of Heaven: an Imperial Sacrificial Altar in Beijing - China
  16. Historic Centre of Lima - Peru
  17. Pre-Hispanic City of Chichen-Itza - Mexico
  18. Pre-Hispanic Town of Uxmal - Mexico
  19. Historic Villages of Shirakawa-go and Gokayama - Japan
Now that the trip is over, these places can be added to my list, bringing my total to 25:

Complex of Hué Monuments - Vietnam
Ha Long Bay - Vietnam
Hoi An Ancient Town - Vietnam
My Son Sanctuary - Vietnam
Town of Luang Prabang - Laos
Angkor - Cambodia

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I am writing an article for Island Locator magazine about the potential for creating a World Heritage Site in the Marianas. I have four suggestions that I think could work. Check out the December issue for the article.

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Speaking of writing, as reported on another blog, I am indeed going to be writing for the Saipan Tribune in the very near future. However, unlike my good friends, Dave, Jeff, Bruce, and Walt, I am going to be a freelance reporter, not a columnist.

I am going to write environmental stories. I'm just waiting for them to decide how much they are going to pay me.

******

Hey Bloggers,

This is the list of all 851 UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Have many have you visited?

Monday, October 22, 2007

Shopping Spree

I haven't bought much stuff on this trip...

That's changed.

Since arriving in Hoi An, I've been fitted for two pairs of jeans (effectively increasing my total number of jeans from one to three) and three shirts and I've bought incense, a T-shirt, a new back pack, and coffee. Lot's of coffee.

Today I am going to visit My Son, a World Heritage Site just outside of Hoi An. This is the fourth World Heritage Site we have visited on this trip.

I'm going to have a lot to say about World Heritage Sites when I get back to Saipan. Stay tuned.

...tomorrow we are flying to Ho Chi Minh. You old people (Yes, I'm talking to you) might know Ho Chi Minh as Saigon.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Vietnam Rocks My Socks Off

The day that we spent in No Man's Land between Vietnam and Laos was rainy. We were way up in the mountains, so it was also very cold. It warmed up as we descended into the valley, but it only barely cleared up.

Our first full day in Vietnam started in Ninh Binh. We arrived there the night before after a seven hour drive...after our nine hour immigration fiasco. We woke up very early and drove to Halong Bay. It was no longer rainy, but there was a very thick haze in the air. It could have almost been smoke, but it didn't smell like smoke.

As we got closer to the Bay, we started passing limestone formations rising 500 feet straight out of the rice paddies. I was horrified to see that some of them were being crushed to make concrete.

Why would you destroy something that took millions of years to make only to build a concrete structure lucky to survive 100 years?

Thank God for Halong Bay's World Heritage Status.

Halong BayHalong Bay is a textbook example of Karst topography (Florida has Karst Topography, too). The only other place I've seen it as dramatic as this is in Guilin, China.

The mountains in Guilin occur along the Li River. Halong Bay is in the ocean. Up until this trip I thought that the Li River was the most beautiful place in the world. This isn't a close second; it ties for first. I would have a hard time deciding which one was more beautiful.

There are a few things in Halong Bay that I found that we didn't get to see in China.

Well, let me start with the similarities. Both have unbelievable scenery, have a long history and have been depicted in art for centuries. You have to take a boat to visit both places. In Guilin, we took a one way boat down the river. It took a whole day and we had dinner on the boat. In Halong, we spent two days on the Bay and we had breakfast, lunch, and dinner on the boat.

Halong Bay Floating MarketHalong Bay has floating markets. Ladies and children in row boats come up to your boat and try to get you to buy beer, water, chips, Oreos(!), and other snacks.

HalongThey yell up to you, "Excuse me, you want beer?" Then you run down to the lower deck and start negotiating. I didn't really want anything, but I bought stuff from the ladies to keep the tradition alive. I hope that in 10 years tourists can be continued to be hassled by locals selling stuff the tourist doesn't really need.

:)

Halong BayHalong Bay also has Junk Boats, which I have never seen in person before. They always make me think of James Bond or other movies that take place in Asia. I got to sleep on one! How cool is that?

Halong BayAlright, well I'm going to officially withhold judgement on Angelo's Most Beautiful Place in the World. There are still a lot of places I haven't seen.

******

Halong BayThe sky cleared up the next day and it has been blue ever since. If only we had come one day later! Oh well, maybe next time.

EJ?

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We've just spent the last three days in Hanoi. Tonight we travel via overnight train to Hue (pronounced kind of like "Way").

Hanoi is a shopper's paradise. As such, we've stocked up on electronics and DVDs. Ben got a 160 GB external hard drive for only $100 and both Olivia and Ian bought Ipods. I've got my eye on a Canon S5. It is about $400 here. What do you think, should I get it?

Microsoft VistaMicrosoft will be happy to know that they are selling bootleg copies of Windows Vista for 28,000 Dong...that is, unless you can negotiate a better price. 28,000 Dong might sound like a lot of money...but at 16,000 Dong to the dollar, it is barely over $1.50.

Ouch!

...and no, I didn't buy it.

Ho Chi MinhIn addition to shopping we've also seen the sites and gone to the museums. Hanoi is quite an incredible city. If you can get through immigration, I would highly recommend coming here for a short stay.

Vietnamese Flag in front of Ho Chi Minh GraveViva Vietnam!

Monday, October 15, 2007

Blog Action Day

On October 15th, bloggers around the web will unite to put a single important issue on everyone’s mind - the environment. Every blogger will post about the environment in their own way and relating to their own topic. Our aim is to get everyone talking towards a better future.

Blog Action Day is about MASS participation. That means we need you! Here are 3 ways to participate:


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So what am I going to do for Blog Action Day?

In about 5 hours I have to get up to spend two days on a boat touring Halong Bay in the Gulf of Tonkin. This will be my 20th World Heritage Site. This is one of the most beautiful places in the world.

There are areas in the Marianas worthy of International Cultural and Natural recognition, too. I list some of the Beautiful Places on the right hand column of the Beautify CNMI blog, but the places I think are worthy of World Heritage Status (which is not a protected status) are the Northern Islands and the Marianas Trench.

If you were to ask someone to name the three most impressive natural formations in the World, I bet they would say, Mount Everest, the highest mountain in the world, the Grand Canyon, the biggest canyon in the world, and the Marianas Trench, the deepest part of the ocean.

As the people who live closest to the trench, why are we not using this? Why don't we have a Marianas Trench hotel? Why don't we have a national drink named after the trench? Why don't we sell T-shirts that say, "I survived the Marianas Trench...and all I got was this T-shirt?"

The trench is both inside and outside the Marianas' 200 mile exclusive economic zone, but the potential exists to create a status for part of the trench, a place worthy of protection...and utilization.

Before we even consider what it would take to do something like earn World Heritage Status, think of the marketing opportunities.

What if people around the world starting saying, "I'm going to go visit the Marianas Trench?" What if they said they were going to go dive the Marianas Trench?

When people around the world go to visit natural areas...and nature is usually given as Saipan's #1 tourist draw...they tend to seek out places that have a status or some type of management. They go to Grand Canyon National Park. They go to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. They go in droves to the Monteverde Cloud Forest Preserve in Costa Rica...to see a toad that has been extinct for 20 years!

A simple name change, some new management practices, and some good marketing and we'd have an increase in the number of flights in no time.

This sort of thing has been done successfully around the world. It is time for the Marianas to follow suit. The days of unlimited cheap labor are over. It is time to start thinking differently.

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Now that I have your attention with the economics of the trench, maybe we can start to discuss the ecological and the social benefits. Stay tuned.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

UNESCO World Heritage Site #18

In 27 short years of life I have managed to visit the following UNESCO World Heritage Sites (out of 812 in 137 countries):

  1. Area de Conservación Guanacaste - Costa Rica
  2. Canterbury Cathedral, St Augustine's Abbey, and St Martin's Church - United Kingdom
  3. Cathedral of Notre-Dame, Former Abbey of Saint-Remi and Palace of Tau, Reims - France
  4. Everglades National Park - United States
  5. The Great Wall - China
  6. Historic Centre of Lima - Peru
  7. Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties - China
  8. Maritime Greenwich - United Kingdom
  9. Paris, Banks of the Seine - France
  10. Pre-Hispanic City of Chichen-Itza - Mexico
  11. Pre-Hispanic Town of Uxmal - Mexico
  12. Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites - United Kingdom
  13. Summer Palace, an Imperial Garden in Beijing - China
  14. Talamanca Range-La Amistad Reserves / La Amistad National Park - Costa Rica
  15. Temple of Heaven: an Imperial Sacrificial Altar in Beijing - China
  16. Tower of London - United Kingdom
  17. Westminster Palace, Westminster Abbey and Saint Margaret's Church - United Kingdom
I'm embarrassed to have to admit that I've only visited a single World Heritage Site in the United States. When I get home I'm going to have to make an effort to visit the other 19 sites.

So anyways...

Yesterday afternoon I added Angelo's World Heritage Site #18 (in my 8th country), the Historic Villages of Shirakawa-go and Gokayama (in Japan, of course).

One of my professors at Rollins College used to describe World Heritage Sites in this manner:

"If aliens were to land on Earth and you wanted to tell them where the most important ecological, cultural, and historical sites on the planet were, you would use the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites."
I had no idea I would be visiting such an important place when I woke up yesterday morning. Elly (the girl that accompanied Laura and me to Kanazawa last week) asked me if I wanted to hang out and when she picked me up she suggested that we go to Gokayama. I had no idea what Gokayama was, so I googled it before we left and found that it was the area encompassing the village with the thatch roofs that I see in posters all over Toyama-ken. That is also where I read that it was a World Heritage Site. This is what the UNESCO website says about the area:

"Located in a mountainous region that was cut off from the rest of the world for a long period of time, these villages with their Gassho-style houses subsisted on the cultivation of mulberry trees and the rearing of silkworms. The large houses with their steeply pitched thatched roofs are the only examples of their kind in Japan. Despite economic upheavals, the villages of Ogimachi, Ainokura and Suganuma are outstanding examples of a traditional way of life perfectly adapted to the environment and people's social and economic circumstances."
HERE, HERE, and HERE is some more info on the villages.

While we were driving up into the mountains I noticed that we were surrounded by snow again. So winter really isn't over! The snow just made the drive a little more, um, interesting. The mountain roads are nothing less than terrifying. They are about as wide as a single lane road in America and curve around, up, and down the mountainside. The roads are even narrower than the mountain roads in Costa Rica.

There is a bright side, however. Parts of the road, instead of being built ON the side of the mountain, were built INTO the side of the mountain. This picture illustrates what I'm trying to describe:

The road is on the bottom left hand corner of the photo. The road was still curvy and steep, but the roof at least removed the threat of snow or landslides.

We only stopped once on our way to Gokayama. There is a rather large dam along the way and we stopped to walk across it.

Elly did all of the driving and navigating. Thank God, because I would NEVER have been able to find the village. It took us about an hour of winding through small mountain roads to get from Takaoka to the village of Ainokura. It appears very suddenly; You drive along the main road, make a quick left turn and suddenly you are faced with 20 thatch roof houses.

There was a man in the parking lot collecting the fee to visit the village. It cost 300 Yen per car. Next to the parking lot is a souvenir shop, a restaurant, and public toilets. I also noticed that the vending machines, which are everywhere in Japan, were painted brown so as to blend into the surrounding landscape.

I've already mentioned that there was snow in the mountains. The steeper we climbed, the deeper the snow got. By the time we reached Ainokura, it was between 5 and 10 feet deep. I've never seen so much snow in my entire life, but it can not compare to what this place must have looked like in January. There was a lot of evidence that most of the snow had already melted; the snow was packed and hard and there were rivlets and puddles of water everywhere. I don't even want to think about what living up there must be like during the winter.

I was surprised to find that people actually live in the village. The village itself was a mixture of traditional thatch roof houses and more modern buildings. Although the houses looked primitive, most of them had a Honda or a Toyota sitting out front and some modern conveniences were visible inside and around the houses. There were also electric street lights and a very elaborate fire prevention system covering the entire village.


I wish I could say that we saw more than just thatch roof houses, but sadly, during this time of year, that is really all you can see. The rest of the village, including the shrine, temple, and rice paddies, were blanketed in snow.

I guess I'll have to come back during the summer.

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