Saturday, June 17, 2006

And they ALL watch Holland WIN the match!


Some people in the world will never understand the passion of the World Cup.

Go Holland Go!!

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Aruba does it Again


Aruba Resorts Post Top Honors in Caribbean Green-Hotel Awards

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, June 15, 2006 - Green Globe has announced the winners of its first Caribbean Green Globe Awards, honoring Aruba's Amsterdam Manor Beach Resort as Best Overall in environmental performance. Manchebo Beach Resort and Spa, also in Aruba, won the Most Improved category, demonstrating how a business can significantly improve its performance over a one-year period.

Cathy Parsons, CEO of Green Globe Asia Pacific and GGAP International, commended those operations that had shown significant improvement in their Benchmarked performance over the previous 12 months. "Manchebo Beach resort successfully achieved six indicators at or above best practice after its first year of benchmarking. Other wonderful results were achieved by Amsterdam Manor Beach Resort, Playa Linda Beach Resort, and Bucuti Beach Resort," Parsons concluded.

Sir Royston Hopkins, chairman of the Caribbean Alliance for Sustainable Tourism, congratulated the winners and said, "The contest for the top position was extremely tight with a number of operations in contention."

Runners up in the Best Overall category were 3 Rivers Ecolodge in Dominica, Playa Linda Beach Resort in Aruba , Manchebo Beach Resort, and Long Bay Hotel in Antigua and Barbuda.

This is the first time that these Green Globe awards have been made in the Caribbean. It is proposed that similar international awards will be announced during the Green Globe and Green Tourism Caribbean conference, to be held in Jamaica from Nov. 1-3, 2006. All successfully benchmarked and certified operations around the world will be eligible for these awards.

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

The Next Concert in Aruba.

2006 ARUBA MUSIC FESTIVAL
Enjoy sun, fun, and some classic rock music at the 5th Annual Aruba Music Festival. The Festival is held at the Aruba Entertainment Center, which is located 5 minutes by car from downtown Oranjestad, and 15 minutes from the hotel district.
The intimate outdoor venue offers visitors excellent sound quality and unobstructed sight lines of the stage from almost any seat. The venue also has a secondary stage which features entertainment prior to the main stage performance. Add to this the wonderful sights and sounds of Aruba, and you are sure to enjoy this truly unique concert experience.Seating is general admission within the venues three ticketed sections.
Taxi service is available, or you may purchase a private festival bus transfer, which picks you up at your hotel and transfers you to and from the concert venue.

For more information about the Aruba Music Festival, please call 1-800-390-4936.

Friday, October 6 - STYX

Saturday, October 7 - Lionel RichieTickets

Prices are:
• $100 Gold Circle (Limited Availability)
• $60 Preferred
• $40 General Admission
Services Charges May Apply

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Aruba is on the Watch.

Alarm bells ring in tourist paradise

The tiny island of Aruba is a popular attraction for sun, sea worshippers
But officials worry about the effect on island's environment, Jen Ross reports

Jun. 10, 2006. 01:00 AM

JEN ROSS
SPECIAL TO THE STAR


Oranjestad, Aruba—This Caribbean island nation's stunning turquoise waters, white sand beaches and romantic sunsets have lured tourists for decades. Its position outside the hurricane belt allows for a year-round influx, and the constant trade winds have made it a windsurfing, sailing and kite-skiing hotspot.

But in recent years, residents have begun questioning just how much tourism this tiny island (covering less than 200 square kilometres) can sustain, given its impact on the coastline. The local population of 100,000 has almost doubled since 1980. Meanwhile, tourism has grown sixfold, from some 200,000 tourists a year in 1985, to more than 1.2 million in 2005.

After years of emphasizing economic development, Aruba is now on a mission to protect its delicate coastal environment, both for — and from — its booming tourism industry.
Across the Caribbean, scientists have raised alarm bells about the increasing damage to coral reefs and the loss of marine life.

Byron Boekhoudt is a marine biologist and policy adviser to Aruba's minister of labour, culture and sport (which has control over parks). He says human contact has harmed corals and intense hotel development has reduced the population of seabirds, fish and sea turtles.

"Tourism keeps growing, while our beaches aren't projected to grow; in fact, some may be shrinking," says Boekhoudt, who blames cars and all-terrain vehicles for eroding sand dunes. Meanwhile, he says, car rental agencies entice tourists to drive on the dunes.

"We cannot keep selling, or prostituting, ourselves in that way," he says. "Here in Aruba, we built the hotels first and focused on bringing a lot of people, and now we are trying to play catch-up in terms of protecting the environment."

After years of neglect, several Caribbean islands are now jumping on the environmental bandwagon. Aruba has made major strides, and is now in the midst of launching an ambitious plan to protect its delicate coastal waters and marine life. Dubbed "Coastal Zone Management," it would designate all of the island's national waters as a marine park.

Boekhoudt says Aruba's waters are now "a free-for-all" for boats, fishing and water sports. But through specific zoning changes, the government will create sanctuaries in areas with more complex ecosystems, making them off-limits to all human activity, with fines as enforcement.

To operate in specific places, water users will have to get permits, which can be revoked if the users don't comply with environmental standards. Permits will also allow the government to control the number of tour boats, and the government also plans to introduce standardized training for catamaran and scuba diving tour operators.

There will also be more regular beachfront cleanups, using schoolchildren and volunteers instead of paid janitors.

It's a way of expanding the prized Reef Care Initiative of the Aruban Tourism Authority (ATA), which includes a yearly public cleanup of the waters and beaches, as well as school visits to raise awareness about the need to protect the island's precious marine environment. The government will also organize slogan and poster-painting contests to help raise awareness in schools.

"As a diver, I used to see beer bottles and plastic cups, and that's where I got the inspiration," says Castro Perez, ecotourism project manager for the ATA.

Perez says each year there is less garbage to collect. He recalls how a Swedish photographer once came to shoot a magazine cover of Perez collecting garbage underwater for a feature story, but the cleanups were so successful, he says the photographer couldn't find any garbage, so he planted fake litter for the shoot.


`We cannot keep selling, or prostituting, ourselves in that way'
Byron Boekhoudt, Aruban biologist

Perez says dive operators have also helped by cleaning up garbage whenever they are on a dive, and by educating tourists that they cannot touch the corals. The Reef Care Project has the Aruba Watersports Association onboard, and it has created 21 specially designated ocean docking sites for ships to moor.

Aruba has also begun protecting corals with artificial reefing, by sinking treated ships, buses and airplanes, which have become tourist attractions that divert traffic away from the delicate coral reefs themselves. They also attract sponges and spawn new marine life.

Coastal Zone Management also includes initiatives on land, such as a $17.8 million project to create a new park and bike paths stretching 22 kilometres from the airport to the high-rise hotel area around Eagle Beach.

"There is movement but very slow movement," says Shanty Gould, a Greenpeace activist and member of Aruba's main non-governmental environmental agency, Stima.

"If we were an underdeveloped country that is just starting to get tourism, then it might be acceptable, but considering how much tourism we have, I think we should be ashamed."
Gould says the government has been too lax in enforcing environmental standards on the island's oil refinery, which she calls an eyesore on one of the most beautiful parts of the island.
Meanwhile, she says the government continues to allow the hotel industry to expand. Five hotels are enlarging this year and two new hotels are being built downtown.

Local conservationists blame hotel growth for reducing nesting habitats for endangered sea turtles.

"When they hatch at night, all sea turtles go toward the brightest spot, which is normally the sea," explains Edith van der Wal of the Turtugaruba Foundation. "But where you have a lot of tourism, you have lots of artificial lights ... so they go the wrong direction. We found many hatchlings dead before they could reach the sea."

Van der Wall is one of 25 volunteers who set up barricades around sea turtle nesting sites on the beaches until the eggs hatch. Hotels call her group when they see females laying eggs. Some also call if they notice the eggs hatching.

"That's marvellous because they shut off the lights," van der Wal says. "But some hotels never can find the right switch."

She says she hopes Coastal Zone Management will give the government more power to halt or control beachfront development.

Still, not all hotels are keen to expand. Ewald Biemans owns the Bucuti Beach Resort Hotel, which targets environmental travellers. With about 100 rooms, it has made a point of staying small.

"We had the option of building 50 more rooms and we decided not to do it," Biemans says. Bucuti's use of solar power, filtered and recycled water, energy conservation technology, and a host of environmental initiatives has made it the eco-star of the island's hotels.

Biemans, who chairs the environmental committee for the Aruba Hotel and Tourism Association, says Aruba has done more in a few years than many other Caribbean destinations, but Coastal Zone Management will put Aruba way ahead of the pack.

Monday, June 05, 2006

More Flights to Aruba

Avianca Increases Airlift To Aruba Now Daily Flights To Bogotá

Aruba Airport Authority (AAA) in a joint effort with Avianca, our strongest Latin American Airline partner, is very pleased to announce that as of July 1st, 2006 Avianca will increase their 5 weekly flights from Bogotá to Aruba to daily. This will not only offer better service between Bogotá and Aruba but will also increase connections from Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador and Panama to Aruba via Bogotá. The Aruba Tourism Authority’s Office in Colombia has been doing tremendous PR and Marketing in support of the increase in flights and just completed an intensive road show in Colombia together with Avianca and members of AHATA.

In addition, Avianca will also launch twice weekly service from Medellin via Baranquilla to Aruba on Wednesdays and Sundays as of June 18, 2006. The flights will be operated by SAM, an Avianca company, with Fokker-100 aircrafts. At present Aires operates twice weekly service from Baranquilla to Aruba on Thursday and Sundays, with the addition of Avianca flights there will be service four times a week and expanding the connection opportunities via Baranquilla to coastal regions.

Latin America has shown the greatest growth in Load Factor (aircraft occupancy) from 2005 in comparison to 2004 of 11%. The North American market remained flat at 74%, the charter market grew by 4%, and the European market grew by 7%. The AAA remains focused on enhancing Aruba’s air routes towards the demand and needs of the market.

We are delighted to have increased our frequencies to Colombia with our trusted and loyal airline partner, Avianca due to a mutual vision regarding the meeting of the demand and need for additional airlift towards the destination not only from Colombia but other Latin American regions”, a very satisfied Peter Steinmetz, Managing Director of the Aruba Airport Authority N.V. stated