Wilderness as Tourism Destination: Place Meanings and Preferences of Tourism Service Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- What place meanings do tourism service providers assign to the Icelandic Central Highlands?
- (2)
- How do these meanings relate to the management and development preferences of the Icelandic Central Highlands and wilderness?
- (3)
- How can knowledge of place meanings contribute to wilderness management?
2. Tourism in the Wilderness of the Icelandic Central Highlands
3. Place Meanings and Wilderness Management Preferences
4. Study Area
5. Methods
- Characteristics of the tourism company, services offered and their customers;
- Their use of the Highlands for business;
- Main attractions of the Highlands to their customers;
- Values and meanings the Highlands contain for the tourism industry;
- The need for further tourism infrastructure and services in the Highlands;
- The need for road improvements in the Highlands;
- Attitudes towards future management and development of the Highlands.
6. Results
6.1. Place Meanings Assigned to the Central Highlands
6.1.1. Diverse Wilderness, Stretching along the Wilderness Continuum
You always want to see what others have seen, and you always want to take pictures that others have taken, the Instagram effect. It’s great, so you can concentrate tourism in spots and they’re not spreading too much, but sometimes you have overtourism on one spot and then you have plenty of spots in the close surroundings where there is no one and you have world class views also where no one is.
6.1.2. Extraordinary Experiences
This is like a different planet from where they come from. Some people cry, some people have like a religious experience, especially when they are seeing the basalt columns, and they take on all kinds of shapes. There is, for example, an angel right next to the waterfall Aldeyjarfoss which people always see in the basalt columns. Especially the religious ones see it.
It’s unique, it’s completely unique to be able to go to the Highlands and travel for… depending on how you’re travelling, but if you are hiking, for example, you can hike for days and you don’t see another person. That’s amazing in Europe.
6.1.3. Freedom and Continuous Access
Regarding tourism, I think that is what people are always mainly thinking about in the Highlands: how to protect it for ourselves, our kids, and the next generations etc. I think it is obviously very important, but we cannot do it at the cost of that no one living today can see it.
6.1.4. Exclusivity
If there was asphalt on the road I would not go there. Then if you can go there on a Yaris, I don’t think it’s interesting, so I always try to sell or go to places where it’s difficult to reach because that’s really what we are selling, something different.
6.1.5. Future Opportunities
There is a lot of talk that has been going on for two—three years now about transformational tourism. Transformational guiding techniques have been a very popular topic in my environment, so the purpose of a trip is not just sweating and working out but to really push people to go towards the inside and open up their senses for nature.
If we are going to build more roads, we should be building bicycle roads. Now we have electric bicycles, and with electric bicycles today, you can bike up to 100 km a day so, bicycle roads, bicycle huts and charging stations. Why not? With an electric bike you can cross the Highlands in three days easily.
6.2. Preferences for Managing and Developing the Central Highlands
6.2.1. Sustainability, Demand for Comfort and Wilderness Preservation
It’s the last remote place in Europe, we can find a little bit like that in Norway, but not so strong. So, I think it’s something that not only Icelandic people, but everyone should protect and try to not destroy more than it was. Of course, I understand that people want to do business with energy, also with tourism, but it would be a shame.
You have to think about the physical landscapes or how many people can walk this path without the path degrading or stop at this point without that point degrading. But then secondly, it’s the social impact, so how many other tourists can you take before you think it’s not interesting anymore?
6.2.2. Roads of the Central Highlands
I think most people that come to visit Iceland, they will talk highly about the experience up in Fjallabak, for example. Because they needed to cross rivers, they needed to do difficult dirt roads, they needed to climb big hills on their 4 × 4 s. So, I think it’s more of an experience to have the roads as they are now than make them better.
I’m trying to sell something that is very wild, so if I bring people where they can see cars or infrastructure, whatever they are, it’s not really in the contract (…), when you are hiking with a big backpack and not so far you see a car that crosses this sand desert that you will cross—you will hike one day, and you see a car just driving through this place and in some minutes.
They can fix the roads where it can damage nature because people are going off-road. But I think one of the charms is that it’s a slow travel because the roads are bad and I think it’s okay for the roads to be bad because that’s the part of the experience, but they shouldn’t be the way that something like nature gets damaged.
Some people were talking about too many tourists, I think that’s just nonsense. It’s not too many tourists. They are just too many in one place or in few places. (…) I think it would help if we would connect the South and North better by one better road.
Some of these people feel like they should have the same rights as others, to go to see the nicest things you find in Iceland. Obviously, you cannot make easily accessible roads on wheelchairs to all the natural wonders we have, but on some of them it is very easy to do it, and we can make the most of it to make it.
6.2.3. Tourist Accommodation
Lowland is already changed, (…) it’s farmland everywhere, and there are houses, accommodation services and food. Up in the Highlands—that is untouched area—we take people to show them the untouched, we teach them about it (…) and let them enjoy it with us and respect it, and then we go back to civilization for services.
Today there are more and more people coming and many people do not want to stay in a tent. They need some sort of quality accommodation and why not offer it to them also? And if you go to Kerlingarfjöll, you have a hotel with proper rooms, but you can experience in the evening, if you go up the hill, you have nothing around, so that is something that people really want us to book, and I could see more hotels like that in the Highlands.
7. Discussion and Conclusions
7.1. Wilderness Place Meanings and Management Preferences
7.2. Implications for Wilderness Preservation and Management
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type of Tourism Business | Capital Area | Rural Areas |
---|---|---|
Travel agency/day tour provider | 19 | 8 |
Travel agency/day tour provider and accommodation | - | 10 |
Accommodation/food service provider | - | 10 |
Total | 19 | 28 |
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Sæþórsdóttir, A.D.; Tverijonaite, E. Wilderness as Tourism Destination: Place Meanings and Preferences of Tourism Service Providers. Sustainability 2024, 16, 3807. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16093807
Sæþórsdóttir AD, Tverijonaite E. Wilderness as Tourism Destination: Place Meanings and Preferences of Tourism Service Providers. Sustainability. 2024; 16(9):3807. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16093807
Chicago/Turabian StyleSæþórsdóttir, Anna Dóra, and Edita Tverijonaite. 2024. "Wilderness as Tourism Destination: Place Meanings and Preferences of Tourism Service Providers" Sustainability 16, no. 9: 3807. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16093807
APA StyleSæþórsdóttir, A. D., & Tverijonaite, E. (2024). Wilderness as Tourism Destination: Place Meanings and Preferences of Tourism Service Providers. Sustainability, 16(9), 3807. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16093807