ǀ
ISSUE 2
ǀ
2022
ISSN: 2181-1601
Uzbekistan
www.scientificprogress.uz
Page 940
Skiing
Snowboarding
Surfing
Adventure tourism activities sit well with the environment because the natural
world provides us with the resources for many of the activities that provide risk,
challenge, sensory stimulus, novelty, discovery and so on.
A tourism supply chain is the system of people, products, activities, and materials
that get a product or service from its raw state through production and distribution to the
consumer.
As with any sector, volume discounts drive the mass price point, so major
retailers primarily market select trips that sell in high volume. The supply chain for
these mass tourism products is often very simple, comprising only transportation and
accommodation elements. The adventure tourism supply chain is more complex. Niche
products often require specializes in knowledge and operations. Adventure tourism’s
supply chain linkages go very deep, and this is one of the key reasons that adventure
tourism delivers greater benefits at the local level.
Adventure Tourism is a term which is not easily defined. Different people have
different perceptions of what might constitute “adventure”. For one person,
“adventure” may be something as simple as camping outside in a tent, or walking
through a wilderness area for an hour. For another, this would be considered passive
tourism, whereas adventure would mean participating in dangerous and physically (also
maybe emotionally) demanding and challenging activities, such as climbing a sheer
rock face or white water rafting in dangerous waters.
Even for those tourists seeking challenging experiences, the degree of challenge
desired may be quite different. Some will baulk at undertaking potentially dangerous
activities like walking on a rope bridge across a deep ravine, and would find a trek
through the jungle at ground level sufficiently challenging. Whilst some will find
another’s "adventure" de
cidedly unpleasant, disagreeable, foolishly reckless, traumatic
or boring.
People are motivated to undertake adventure tourism activities for different
reasons. Some may enjoy the anticipation of an unknown or uncertain outcome. This
could be undertaking something new and unfamiliar or the presence of a perceived
danger in the activity. This element of risk involved in an activity might be relished by
some and feared by others.
There needs to be a degree of challenge in an activity for it to be considered
adventurous. A challenging event might have an element of danger, unknown outcomes
and degree of difficulty. This will attract different participants to the activity based
upon their expectations and their willingness to cope with challenges.
SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS
VOLUME 3
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |