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Travel Souvenir
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Written by Natalya Stanko
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| Thursday, 22 September 2011 | ||||
Travel SouvenirI typically don't buy much, and yet I do have an ugly striped sweater from Ecuador and a pepper shaker that says “Atlantic City,” which I never use because it split in two as soon as I bought it. When we're on vacation, we'll buy it, whatever it is, even when the product is overpriced, even when we know we don't need it. Without our souvenir, how will we remember the good times? At home, my souvenirs often seem out of place. The itchy striped sweater does not remind me of the good times, but of how itchy it is, and how I should donate it to a thrift store in the near future (though I feel bad for whoever wears it next, if someone ever does). When I hoe a field, hike up a mountain, or play volleyball—that’s when I remember the good times in Ecuador. It's what we do, not what we buy, that makes our memories. We all know that. Even so, the next time I travel to a faraway place, I know I'll be tempted to bring something home. I'll always have that human desire to remember every moment of every adventure—to magically pause the passage of time right as I'm summiting some volcano in South America or eating pizza in Italy. I'll inevitably buy something, but I promise that my next something won't be another cheap pepper shaker. I have learned that there are plenty of ways to physically hold onto my travels without disrespecting the Earth I travel on. Here are some ideas for remembering your trips without the wasteful travel souvenirs: 1. The easiest way is to bring a digital camera. “Take only photos, leave only footprints,” as the saying goes. To make your photos more memorable, experiment with candid shots and with holding your camera at different angles. Upload your photos to a Facebook album, or make a photobook with an online service like Shutterfly, Kodakgallery, Lulu, and many others. Or, while still on vacation, print out some of your photos and send them as postcards! 2. Send yourself a postcard. On the card, write your favorite things about wherever you are and what you’ve done there. 3. Start a travel blog or just bring a good old-fashioned journal. Don't chronicle exactly where you went and why. I happen to have 23 journals in my closet, and that's why I know that in ten years you won't care about those boring details. Write down the stories that you'll want to tell your friends back home. Also include the stories that you think are too embarrassing or too personal to repeat to others… those are the things you’ll look back on the most fondly ☺ If you hate writing, bring a voice recorder instead. 4. If you're prone to collecting:
It's true that buying souvenirs from local businesses can help boost the local economy and improve the environment. A few years ago, I visited the Peruvian Amazon and saw first-hand how every basket or belt woven and sold by a native Bora artisan empowered her family to rely less on logging as an income source. It's not that the Bora wanted to cut down their own trees, it's that they were unwillingly thrown into the global economy and given few job opportunities. But buying stuff isn't the only way to do good with your money in a foreign land. Instead of buying tactile souvenirs for your family and friends, donate to a local charity in their name. If you visit Costa Rica, you could buy a “Cerveza” shirt for your brother and a mug for Mother... or, with the help of The Nature Conservancy, you could adopt an acre of local rainforest! In Costa Rica, about 20,000 acres of land are deforested annually. Each year, about 2 million visitors pass through the country. So what if just 1% of those visitors (20,000) adopted an acre for just $50 each? Some say that in the near future we won't be licking postcard stamps and stuffing Eiffel Tower statues into our suitcases... We'll be sending our family and friends electronic postcards that give them the option of printing out an Eiffel Tower statue using their 3-D printers. But I don't think that's the future of souvenirs. Many of us have already concluded that a Facebook album is a handier way to remember a trip than a cheap statue (even a cheap statue from a fancy 3-D printer). We're tired of filling our homes and landfills with junk. We think twice before jumping on a gas-guzzling plane, but when we do book a flight to a foreign land, we hope to give something back to that land, not to strip it of its resources. I predict that, in time, those cheap souvenirs stands will be replaced with quality, local, environmentally friendly goods because, with our dollars, we tourists will demand that change. 1 http://adsoftheworld.com/media/print/wwf_blood 2 http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw_united_kingdom/join_campaigns/ fight_illegal_wildlife_trade/think_twice_-_dont_buy_wildlife_souvenirs/ shortcut_of_which_animal_souvenirs_should_you_avoid.php 3 http://support.nature.org/site/PageServer?pagename=holidaygiving_xx_ hgg&gclid=CKDgzry11KoCFQbe4AodWk5f2Q 4 http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/02/reduced-carbon-footprint-souvenirs-concept.php
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| Last Updated ( Thursday, 22 September 2011 ) | ||||
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