1 / 22

Slow Tourism Alison Caffyn – Tourism Research Consultant 30 Oct 2007

Slow Tourism Alison Caffyn – Tourism Research Consultant 30 Oct 2007. Introduction. Background Ludlow Slow tourism. Slow - imagery. Slow tourism imagery?. What is slow?. Reaction against speed and the acceleration of culture Seeking real experiences, enjoying life’s pleasures

Jimmy
Download Presentation

Slow Tourism Alison Caffyn – Tourism Research Consultant 30 Oct 2007

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Slow Tourism Alison Caffyn – Tourism Research Consultant 30 Oct 2007

  2. Introduction • Background • Ludlow • Slow tourism

  3. Slow - imagery

  4. Slow tourism imagery?

  5. What is slow? • Reaction against speed and the acceleration of culture • Seeking real experiences, enjoying life’s pleasures • Avoiding clock watching and perpetual hurry • Appreciating quality of life • Taking time to slow down

  6. Slow movement • Slow Food • treating food products and production as part of cultural heritage, improving public knowledge of food • Cittaslow • Carl HonoréIn Praise of Slow • slow living, health, education, leisure, sex • Slow art, slow design, slow politics • Slow Travel (US)

  7. Cittaslow • Origins in Italy • 60 goals relating to aspects of quality of life - ‘towns where it is good to live’ • Quality infrastructure and environment to help people savour and enjoy life at a human pace • Using best aspects of modern world to preserve tradition, environment and culture • Hospitality and service • Slow Food • Ludlow is first Cittaslow in UK and now UK Cittaslow HQ

  8. Slowing down in everyday life • Reacting against long working hours, busy schedules, multi-tasking, impatience, road rage etc. • Downshifting • De-stressing activities – e.g. yoga • Healthy eating • Gardening, allotments • Local produce, organic boxes • Crafts, book groups, walking • Work-life balance • So why not slow holidays?

  9. Fast Tourism • Long distances for short breaks • Crammed itineraries • Ticking off sites • Keeping in touch – mobiles, email, BlackBerries • Fast food • Advertising and technology • Adrenalin and speed • Superficiality • (Not all bad)

  10. Slow Tourism – in principle • Minimise travel distance (at least by car/plane) • Maximise time for trip • Relax and refresh mind and body • Exploring local area in more depth • Contact with local people, culture and heritage • Food – local restaurants, markets, producers, local beer/wine • Children – creative and unstructured play • Minimum of technology and mechanisation • Quality of experiences and authenticity • Good for the environment – smaller carbon footprint and more sustainable • But also good for you

  11. Slow Tourism - definition Tourism which involves making real and meaningful connections with people, places, culture, food, heritage and the environment. ‘People’ includes: • Local community • Your companions • Yourself

  12. Slow holidays - examples • Wildlife watching • Yoga holidays • Spa breaks • Gastronomic tours or food safaris • Canal trips, sailing • Painting/crafts (eg FSC) • Conservation volunteer holidays (eg NT) • Cycling/walking/riding long distance routes • Canoe trips (eg river Wye) • Abroad by train/ferry

  13. Questions • Is this new? • Is it just a luxury for the wealthy? • Won’t slow holidays be a bit dull?

  14. Market forecasts • Henley Centre work for Visitbritain 2006 • Trends over next 10 years included: • Experience economy • Wellbeing • Environmental impact • Scenarios included: • Deep peace • Growing consumer types included: • Authenti-seeking • The busyness of leisure • The new puritans

  15. Henley Centre for WTB More standardised tourism industry More individualised tourism industry

  16. So what? • It’s a large and growing market – older people, stressed out couples and families, ‘discoverers’ and ‘traditionals’ • There are opportunities for mainstream businesses to make adjustments or offer extras • As well as developing specific slow products

  17. Implications for tourism businesses • Offer relaxation facilities or services • Offer longer tours or extensions • Remove time restrictions and offer more flexibility • Offer discounts/benefits for longer stays • Enhance a relaxed atmosphere • Reduce prominence of technology • Train staff to recognise body language – impatience v relaxation • Offer slower more detailed options for interpretation • Promote public transport options • Provide information about local heritage, culture, landscape and how to explore it locally • Source food and other products locally and promote the fact • Develop specific slow tourism products

  18. Balance • Some tourists want speed • Business tourists, impatient types • Scope to offer choice of speed • To suit timescales, and level of interest • Tempo giusto • The right speed for each activity or context

  19. Implications for destinations e.g. Ludlow • Helping visitors slow down, chill out: • Outdoor cafes, viewpoints, benches, picnic sites, rowing boats, walks and cycle routes • Retain visitors locally and for longer • Heritage and culture, festivals and events • Food, restaurants, markets, specialist shops, Slow Food, local sourcing • Quality environment - Cittaslow - making more of local character and distinctiveness

  20. Implications for holiday makers • Allow time to do justice to a destination • Choose a slow activity or learn something new • Explore the locality, resist whistle-stop tours • Choose genuine local eating places • Leave the BlackBerry at home • Allow time to prepare, research, pack etc – no last minute panics • Relax!

  21. Slow holidays lead to: • More contentment and satisfaction • Better health • More communication • Happier consciences • More fulfilment • Sustained environments and economies

  22. Slow Inpraiseofslow.com Cittaslow.org.uk Slowfood.org.uk Slowmovement.com Slowdownnow.org Slowsociety.se/eng Slowtrav.com Idler.co.uk Ludlow Ludlow.org.uk Localtoludlow.org.uk Foodfestival.co.uk Visitsouthshropshire.co.uk Useful websites

More Related