Slowing down, reporting details in depth and writing at length can produce better and more accurate descriptions of the world, even in the Internet Age.
In Mexico’s vibrant forests, locals adapt to a year without tourists
Ecotourism and conservation efforts go hand-in-hand. What happens when the tourists disappear?
ByAnnelise Jolley
Email
When she was 10 years old, Ana Moreno watched buses full of tourists pull into her village. They had come to see the monarch butterflies, which arrive in flurries each November and stay the winter in the Sierra Madre’s forested peaks. Moreno watched the monarch enthusiasts pour from buses, chattering to each other. She thought to herself, “How is it possible that I don’t speak English?”
Moreno went on to study tourism and learn English at university. Her goal was to become a butterfly guide and lead tours into the forest. Moreno’s father had worked as a forest ranger, and on several occasions she accompanied him up the mountain to see the monarch colonies. “I wanted to be up there every single day,” she says.