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Nuestro Compromiso con la Conservación
Una Tradición Familiar en Turismo Sostenible
The
Aspinall Family has a long history of commitment to conservation
and preservation of Costa Rica's precious natural resources.
They have fostered sustainable tourism in their native Costa
Rica - a model of reciprocity that supports and enhances the
local community and environment as it enlightens visitors.
The lodges and the tour operation comply with standards set
by the Ecotourism Society and every effort is made to impact
the environment as little as possible, to recycle and to utilize
renewable energy sources. Expert guides bring profound vision
to the untrained eye and mind. It is their knowledge and insight
that truly allows the mystery of nature to unfold. All guides
follow strict "green ethics." Any waste materials
are packed out of the forest and collection of any kind is
forbidden. Guests are asked not to remove even the tiniest
seashell.
Peter
Aspinall and his wife Lisbeth are the creator and proprietor
of Tiskita Jungle Lodge, and the property is truly his passion.
After finishing high school in Costa Rica, Peter followed
his dream to the wild south of the country and homesteaded
the land that would become Tiskita. He attended The University
of Florida at Gainesville, studying Tropical Horticulture,
where he developed his knowledge of exotic fruits and rainforest
trees. After his graduation, he spent two years traveling
through South America and Asia collecting specimens of rare
fruit trees. These formed the core of his farm at Tiskita.
Peter
returned to Costa Rica and worked with his brothers to launch
a reforestation project at Arenal Observatory Lodge, while
also establishing his tropical fruit farm at Tiskita. By 1989,
Tiskita Jungle Lodge was accepting guests as one of Costa
Rica's first eco-lodges, offering an educational experience
of the pristine jungle, and supporting the local community
through tourist development.
Over
the next decade, Peter Aspinall created many programs, which
are models of conservation and sustainable development. He
has consistently given back to the local community, by opening
the first grocery store, helping with the installation of
roads and electricity to the area, aiding in the construction
and funding of a community school and health clinic and several
programs, which have sustained the Guaymi Indian village in
the remote jungle highlands.
The
Tiskita Foundation, formed by Peter and his family in 1993,
supports many important community and conservation programs,
and initially donated a 150-acre tract of land for reforestation
and preservation. A visitor center managed by sister, Mary
Ann Aspinall, is also a cooperative for Guaymi Indian handicrafts.
Mary Ann, who served on the celebrated Greenpeace ship, Rainbow
Warrior, also heads a community-recycling program in Punta
Banco.
Tiskita's
five-year-old sea turtle program has been extremely successful
on several levels - it encourages local participants to protect
their natural resources since it attracts paying guests to
see the gentle giants. And, in turn, it educates the visitors
to the critical need for conservation and inspires them with
one of the most awesome spectacles in nature - the nesting
ritual of the majestic sea turtle.
The
Tiskita Foundation's most recent conservation effort is to
revive the area's dwindling population of Scarlet Macaws.
Once endemic to nearly all of Costa Rica, destruction of habitat
has seriously threatened these magnificent birds, now found
only in Corcovado National Park and Carara National Park.
Tiskita
Foundation has teamed with Amigos de las Aves, an organization
that has raised breeding pairs of Scarlet Macaws in captivity,
to progress the birds towards successful release and reintroduction
in the wild. The symbol of the rainforest, the Scarlet Macaw
engenders the spirit of nature unrestrained. With the help
of the Aspinalls and Tiskita Foundation, the Scarlet Macaw
will fly free again.
William
Aspinall is the founder and general manager of Arenal Observatory
Lodge and, like his brothers, has spent his career in environmental
pursuits. William received a degree in Forestry from University
of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and worked in the forestry industry
in northern Ontario and British Columbia. He had an eight-year
career with the Tropical Science Center, based out of San
José, Costa Rica that began with four years in the
Amazonian jungle of Peru for a USAID reforestation project.
He then returned to Costa Rica and spent four years as the
director of the renowned Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve.
William
Aspinall was instrumental in introducing the concept of maximum
carrying capacity at Monteverde, thus limiting the impact
of visitors on the delicate ecosystem. This innovative initiative
led to the national program to limit the carrying capacities
of other heavily visited parks in the country.
In
1995, William joined his family's project at Arenal as general
manager of Arenal Observatory Lodge. He developed the facility
that had been originally established as a base camp for scientists
from the Smithsonian, into one of the first lodges to receive
the four-leaf rating for sustainable tourism from the ICT
(Costa Rica Tourist Board). Aspinall has overseen numerous
innovative upgrades to the property including both guest rooms
and rainforest trails that are wheelchair accessible. As at
Tiskita, William Aspinall has spearheaded the protection of
nearly 700 acres in rainforest preserve.
The
common denominator to all the Asinall projects has been brother,
John Aspinall. John is the motivator of the family vision
- integrally involved with all facets of the programs at the
lodges as well as at both tour operators and at Hotel Milvia,
recently acquired as a member of Costa Rica Travel Partners.
John
Aspinall graduated from Queen's University in Ontario. He
lived and worked in Canada for seven years; spending the last
three operating a fishing lodge in northern Ontario. In 1988,
Aspinall returned to Costa Rica and founded Costa Rica Sun
Tours, a nature and adventure tour company and full-service
receptive ground tour operator. He has been a vocal and respected
member of the tourism community and his policies and initiatives
have stood as shining examples to his colleagues. He was elected
an honoree president of Costa Rica's Association of Ground
Tour Operators and a board member of Canatur, the country's
Chamber of Commerce.
In
1995, John purchased Costa Rica Connection, a wholesaler specializing
in travel to Costa Rica and based in San Luis Obispo, California
where he currently resides with his wife and three children.
Still very actively involved in all the family businesses,
John spends about half his time in Costa Rica. In 2001, he
formed Costa Rica Travel Partners to integrate the five companies
and create a complete Costa Rica experience. He heads the
group and serves as its primary spokesman.
In
recognition of his significant contribution to the industry
and as a person "whose conservation victories are helping
us to protect our planet's natural heritage," John Aspinall
received the prestigious Ecotourism Excellence award from
Conservation International in 2000.
There
is an underlying philosophy among all the Aspinall Family
of Costa Rica that true harmony is achieved by nurturing and
protecting our earth and giving back some of what we take
from her and her people. Through understanding comes action.
By educating guests to the need to preserve our precious natural
resources, the message of conservation and protection is spread.
No greater disciples can be found than those who have experienced
nature's pure expression in the wild. "Leave nothing
but footprints; take nothing but photographs; waste nothing
but time."
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