Andean Trails’ Environmental and Responsible Travel Policy
Andean Trails is a small owner run specialist adventure tour operator, which started in 1998 with the aim of providing fantastic adventure holidays which respect both the environment and the people of the areas we work.
Since the start, we have been committed to responsible tourism – working with the best local companies, employing local staff, supporting small local businesses, and supporting and donating to vital community projects.
We use only local staff and hand pick our local operators in each of our destination countries – all are small, specialist, professional responsible companies.
A prime example of this is our support for the Tourism Concern Porters Policy, (unfortunately Tourism Concern no longer operate) which worked to promote better working conditions and fair wages for porters on the Inca Trail in Peru.
We support Accion Andina that help local communities restore and protect native forests throughout the Andes.
Local employment
Introduction to our ethos
By working with excellent local businesses and local guides on all our trips, we ensure we have the best expertise in each place and we inject vital funds into the local economy.
We do this by using specialist agents on the ground with insight into the communities they live and work in, and working with locally-owned hotels and restaurants wherever possible.
In turn, these partners employ local trek staff: porters, muleteers, cooks and guides who are all educated in cherishing and respecting the landscape and leaving no trace. These workers keep us informed of any items their communities may need for their schools or village, and we endeavour to raise funds to help them.
Fresh local produce from small shops and markets is sourced in and around departure towns and villages – we always prefer to choose local rather than imported goods, where possible.
Andean Trails uses public transport when possible, and we aim to offer our guests opportunities to meet and talk to local people, soak up the atmosphere of villages and markets and learn about the vibrant culture of your proud hosts.
Girl at Huchay Yachaq
Causes and money donated
Over the years, Andean Trails has helped various projects across South America.
We are a small company but we have supported and continue to support the work of nine charities/NGOs through donations and membership fees.
These donations have contributed towards the education of more than 40 Peruvian Quechua children, a teacher’s salary, library materials and school maintenance costs at Huchay Yachaq.
We also send volunteers annually to work in the Huchay Yachaq project and have paid for the set up and cost of hosting their website and donated photocopiers, computers and various school supplies.
Amantani is another project we have supported. Andean Trails sponsored the Grafham Water Marathon in Sept 2011, which raised more than GBP 21,000 to go towards Amantani’s boarding house project in Peru.
Our very own Kathy Jarvis and Kat Dougal took part in the race, swelling the sponsorship funds.
Andean Trails is also a corporate member of the Galapagos Conservation Trust and Rainforest Concern.
Environment
We follow a strict sanitary practice regarding water (not washing dishes in rivers or lakes, bathrooms at least 50m from water bodies).
We also make a positive contribution by being members of a variety of organisations that are work in nature and wildlife conservation. These include:
Our donations have helped to plant more than 100,000 trees helping to reforest Peru’s Andes.
We minimise carbon output from our UK office operations (turn machines off overnight, use low energy light bulbs, recycle all waste, bike or walk to work etc) and use non-toxic, fair trade products where ever possible. We share an office space to minimise power consumption.
We help to carbon offset our own flights also through Rainforest Concern and use local transport in the UK and for all our tours if possible, rather than hiring private vehicles & adding transport to the roads.
If you book a trip with us, we ask if you would like to contribute to Rainforest Concern, the money being used on South American projects to protect natural habitats.
Responsible Travel
Responsible Travel with Andean Trails
By visiting our partners and communities frequently, we can check with our own eyes the impact we and our clients are making.
We follow a “leave no trace” policy: taking our rubbish out – including excrement on Aconcagua and Apurimac; toilets are responsibly built and covered; we use the vehicle size necessary according to group numbers; shop with re-usable bags and avoid plastic.
We and our partners recycle waste where facilities exist. We offer boiled water to refill water bottles instead of buying bottled water, help organize and participate in clean-ups of trek routes and rivers, provide reusable cloth bags for snacks instead of small plastic bags, use biodegradable soap and dishwashing liquid & purchase locally produced food.
All of our partner companies and in our own UK office we provide education and training for staff on our environmental policy and practice. Through our partners we are also currently involved in the construction and maintenance of toilets in the highland communities on our trek routes.
Eco-camps
Positive impacts we have made
We can see that our local partner companies and local staff are making an effort to recycle materials, using less plastic and we are all becoming more aware of positive environmental practices.
In Patagonia in The Los Glaciares National Park we changed our treks to help minimise their impact, working closely with the park authorities. We continue to try to improve the toilet situation there by writing to the park and by applying pressure through our local partners.
In Torres del Paine national park the camping areas have been massively cleaned up in the last 10 years due to pressure from tour operators including ourselves.
Previously, we have sponsored two of our female Bolivian guides and one of our Peruvian guides to visit the UK for nine months each to study English and do some UK office work experience – visa restrictions make that virtually impossible now unfortunately. We continue a close working relationship with those guides, and will keep trying to get visitors visas for other guides so they can have the same experience.
In Peru and Ecuador we have been proactive in reforestation of mountain areas, with native species, together with local organisations.
Iguanas in Galapagos
Protecting the Galapagos
If you are booking a Galapagos cruise we offer a complimentary one-year membership to the Galapagos Conservation Trust or make a donation of £25 to help them continue their work on these incredible islands.
The Galapagos Islands are a very fragile environment and the arrival of more and more inhabitants to the islands, as well as tourist have an impact. Please try to minimise your impact:
Can’t find what you’re looking for? Get in Touch
+44 (0)131 378 5593
+44 (0)131 554 6025
info@andeantrails.co.uk
The high point was a sea lion swimming with us whilst snorkelling off Cape Rosa amongst the lava ‘tunnels’. We have a video of this taken by the snorkel leader playing on our digital frame at home. The low point were the Avianca flights out and back to Galapagos from Ecuador mainland – an airline & staff that really don’t care about you! The day tours were all excellent – sometimes the description was a little vague – for example the Volcano tour on Santa Cruz was a 5 hour 10 mile hike on muddy paths and uneven lava fields, with only a couple of short stops, that needed a good level of fitness but was pitched as a 2 to 4 hour ‘walk’. Food on some tours was a little basic and not very vegan whilst on others it was superb, e.g. the vegan vegetable rice served on one of the boat tours. The highlights were the snorkelling trip to Cape Rosa tunnels and the visit to the Bartolome Island, plus the small plane trip back from Isabela to Santa Cruz. The guides were all very knowledgeable and friendly – William and Martin stood out. We feel we benefited the local people. We had lots of feedback from locals thanking us for staying on land rather than going on one of the boat cruises What we would do differently is probably fly between islands rather than taking the speedboat – and perhaps fly to a third island as we had long enough there to spend three days on a third island (Cristobal?) We chose Andean Trails because it felt like a focused agency that specialised in the area and we liked Kat!
Prof Bob
We had a wonderful time in Galapagos. We really appreciated the guide we had: he gave us so much information, he made us feel safe and took us to the most spectacular snorkelling sessions. I can’t describe any low points. Everything went very smoothly: starting from Quito airport, the welcome in Baltra, the boat and the whole crew. The crew did their best to accommodate all our requests and desires. The only thing I would do differently next time is choose a longer holiday :).
A Calinici