and communities you visit, too.
experiences for 2025…
1. Take your kit off
. “Some people use it to recover from sickness; others use it for a good mood and maintaining a strong immune system.” Good for you; good for the environment, too, if the water heats itself.
Be a hot spring tourist… from Japanese onsens to Icelandic lagoons, to the hot springs that fill the bath houses of Budapest and Eastern Europe – your cup runneth over.
Read more: These destinations are giving visitors rewards for being ‘good tourists’
2. Be big on bees
harnessed its famous honey power to draw tourists into the forests – visiting beekeepers and their beautifully painted traditional hives, going honey tasting, and even trying apitherapy (spa treatments using bee products). Apitourism seems niche, but the humble bee can connect you to local producers, to a living cultural heritage, and the wider natural world. Plus, apitourism helps combat the decline of rural areas.
Be an apitourist… by visiting Slovenia . The trend has also spread to countries including Lithuania, the UK and Belarus.
3. Learn the language
. “And you get to support local conservation projects as well as the local community – for example, farmers, cheese producers and accommodation owners.”
Be a language tourist… in rural Spain . Alternatively, learn Spanish in a rainforest in Costa Rica and drop in on various social and conservation projects in the area.
Read more: Eurostar has rebooted their ‘ski train’ – here’s why you should give it a go
4. Keep watching the skies
above your shed in 2024 piqued your interest in what else is out there, consider astrotourism. The solar maximum, the period of solar activity which caused the flurry of aurora activity in 2024, is likely to continue in 2025. DarkSky International works to preserve views of the universe from Earth. There are over 200 dark sky places in the world, often in nature reserves and remote areas away from cities, where fewer people visit, and your presence (and money) is very welcome.
Be an astrotourist… by visiting dark sky spots in the UK and beyond.
5. Stay on a farm; help a farm
in the 1980s: agritourism. It brings tourists to farms, provides farmers with an important income stream, and gives lucky visitors stays surrounded by sunflower fields and vineyards, guaranteed fresh eggs for breakfast, and time to wander in the herb garden after lunch.
Be an agrotourist… at farmstays across Europe . Here in the UK , subsidies help farmers manage more of their land for nature, which visitors – camping in the wildflower meadow or walking in butterfly-rich grassland – can appreciate.
Read more: The best city breaks in Italy
6. Try ‘cupping’ your favourite drink
You won’t miss your commute on holiday, but you might miss your en-route latte. Coffee tourism means visiting smallholdings in biodiverse tropical climates. Coffee farmers often miss out to roasters when it comes to profits. By paying for cupping (tastings) and buying beans, or even booking a homestay, you can help coffee farmers reap the benefits from their beans. Coffee can be grown wild; expect nature watching in forests that have been saved from deforestation.
Be a coffee tourist… in cities which take coffee seriously, like Tokyo and Melbourne . Or go to the source in the Zona Cafetera in Colombia, the forests of Ethiopia , or near Machu Picchu.
7. Follow pilgrim paths
walked the Camino de Santiago. And they’re not just for the religiously devout, but those dedicated to more responsible tourism, too. Pilgrims find themselves engaging meaningfully and mindfully with the history and topography of a place, and with their hosts along the way. Long-distance trails regenerate rural areas; the Camino has sustained countless shops and businesses in the tiny villages along its route.
Be a walker… why not walk a section of the Via Francigena , which connects Canterbury to Rome via Tuscany? Here in the UK, the Athelstan Pilgrim Way has just opened in South West England.
Read more: The amazing holidays you can have that put the planet first
Eloise Barker is a writer at travel company Responsible Travel
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