Then I discovered a more meaningful type of outdoor pursuits

Then I discovered a more meaningful type of outdoor pursuits. I became a trainee instructor with the Outward Bound Trust, which is about personal development through outdoor activities. Rather than a kayaking session, for example, you do a seven-mile kayak journey from one end of an estuary to another, which teaches your students about preparation, team work, putting up with the elements, and so on.The MA is about giving you the skills to manage a niche tourism business And an opportunity to research the industry The programme is quite flexible. Take the marketing and communications module – you can look at how these aspects are managed by a company similar to the sort of business you want to manage.My big thing is eco-tourism Helping communities to help themselves. After two years full time at the Trust, I started freelancing for them (or doing my own thing – raft instructor, driving around New Zealand in a van…) and did an expedition in Argentina.We spent a week in a village in the Andes helping the locals to build a greenhouse and become more self-sustaining. I was struck by how their rubbish was suddenly damaging the environment because Western culture had given them access to cola bottles, etc.

In a river bed there was this disgusting, uncompostable pile of rubbish.My MA research will be on the viability of setting up an eco-tourism business. Most adventure-tourism businesses are small to medium-sized, and money is tight. I’m not interested in tourism with a green label, like the big hotels that say they are green because they ask guests to re-use towels – they’re just saving on laundry!A lot of the taught aspects of the course are transferable to other industries We do resource management, decision-making, risk management. That’s risk management in the economic sense, although of course we also look at operational risks Adventure activities are getting more hair-raising. For example canyoning – plunging down a log flume without a log – is a growth area.The course is opening doors for me. I’m making lots of contacts and have had plenty of job offers in the past few months, including one to develop sustainable tourism in north Devon.

I’m funding myself by doing freelance outdoor training – getting executives to climb walls and hang around in trees They learn teamwork skills to relate to their jobs The work correlates beautifully with my course I’m doing just enough paid work to cover my basic costs. I’ve also got a career-development loan, and friends and family buy me beers. I’m working harder than ever, but, to stay sane, I still swim, run or cycle every day before college.g.mccann independent.co.uk. PhD vivas are a traumatic rite of passage that most graduates try hard to forget. Only last week, I attended an Institute of Physics conference and overheard over lunch one PhD viva-survivor proclaiming that she would never want to sit through a viva again. The passion of her conviction dawned on me when I realised that her ordeal was more than three years old, and that her external examiner was by her own admission a very gentle man, a fact I can attest to because I happen to know him.

comment closed

Copyright © 2010 Tong NYC · All rights reserved