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A
fragment of the Amazon forest in the heart of Alta Floresta.
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Frontier town becomes
ecotourism pioneer
The town of Alta Floresta,
in Brazils state of Mato Grosso, would like to be the ecotourism
capital of the southern Amazon. This is quite remarkable considering
that just a few short years ago, this frontier community epitomized
the forests destruction.
So new it still doesnt
appear on many maps, Alta Floresta was settled in the 1980s by gold
miners, called garimpeiros. These were wild and dangerous
times, when the local airstrip was busy with planes bringing in
miners, supplies, prostitutes, and drugs. As the forest fell to
chain saws, the rivers were poisoned with silt and mercury from
the miners operations.
Something of Alta Florestas
pioneer past remains today. Several neighborhoods are made up of
90 percent former garimpeiros. Though the nearby forests
have long been replaced with cattle ranches, local sawmills still
keep busy with logs trucked in from elsewhere. Smoke rises from
the charcoal burners on the towns outskirts.
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A model town looks to the future
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But for the rest, Alta
Floresta could be any prosperous Brazilian town, the very epitome
of the countrys motto ordem e progresso. Visitors admire its
broad avenues lined with neatly planted trees, their bases painted
white, the busy streets, shops, theaters, and even a music conservatory.
At a rodeo marking the towns 25th anniversary, leathery
cowboys shared the stands with teenage girls wearing designer jeans
and holding cell phones.
Now Alta Floresta is
carving out a leadership niche for itself in the new field of ecotourism.
As anchor of an ecotourism pole for the IDB-financed Proecotur
program, Alta Floresta will be hosting increasing numbers of tourists
wearing comfortable shoes and toting binoculars and field guides.
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but relics of its gold mining past linger nearby.
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Alta Floresta has a
head start. One of the members of the local Proecotur steering committee
is a leading citizen who manages an ecolodge, has created an environmental
foundation, and is planning to bring scientists to a new Amazonian
research center (see A businesswoman
with a mission).
For its part, Alta Floresta
is set to capitalize on an enlightened town plan that includes parks
containing remnants of the original natural forest. The town has
set aside a parcel of land for an ecotourism visitors center, and
will turn an undeveloped park into a nature sanctuary with an interpretative
center and a network of trails. In a municipal building, a temporary
exhibit shows paintings by school children on the effects of forest
fires (see Environmental art...).
Its a place where an
ecotourist can feel at home.
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