24 episodes

Under the shadow of the global pandemic and climate crisis, tourism is facing unprecedented uncertainty. But in this time of adaptation and resilience comes an extraordinary opportunity to reset and reimagine - returning to business as usual is no longer an option.
Join Debbie Clarke and Josie Major as we set out on a journey to discover what reimagining tourism looks like in NZ and globally, unpack the nuances of sustainable, responsible, community-led and conscious tourism, and move towards the mindset shift that is regenerative tourism.
We offer this platform of collective discovery for operators, travellers, and communities to share their stories, and we invite you to join us on this journey.

GOOD Awaits GOOD Awaits

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

Under the shadow of the global pandemic and climate crisis, tourism is facing unprecedented uncertainty. But in this time of adaptation and resilience comes an extraordinary opportunity to reset and reimagine - returning to business as usual is no longer an option.
Join Debbie Clarke and Josie Major as we set out on a journey to discover what reimagining tourism looks like in NZ and globally, unpack the nuances of sustainable, responsible, community-led and conscious tourism, and move towards the mindset shift that is regenerative tourism.
We offer this platform of collective discovery for operators, travellers, and communities to share their stories, and we invite you to join us on this journey.

    Announcement: Stories of Active Hope short course + 10,000 downloads!

    Announcement: Stories of Active Hope short course + 10,000 downloads!

    Thank you to our wonderful listeners for 10,000 downloads on the GOOD Awaits podcast! 
     
    The "Stories of Active Hope" short course is starting on October 19th 2023, register here. 
    Watch the video version of the course overview here.
    Stories of Active Hope is a collaborative project from The Centre for GOOD Travel and The Tourism CoLab. We're so grateful for the support and generosity of Dianne Dredge and The Tourism CoLab for inviting us to collaborate on this programme. Learn more about the CoLab's work here. 
     
    More about our evolution and becoming The Centre for GOOD Travel can be found on our website here.
     
    If you'd like to connect or collaborate, we always love to hear from you! 
    Josie Major - josie@good-travel.org 
    Debbie Clarke - debbie@good-travel.org
     
    The GOOD Awaits podcast is produced by Josie Major and Debbie Clarke from The Centre for GOOD Travel. Audio production and music is by Clarrie Macklin. 
     

    • 18 min
    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems - Part 3 with Nate Smith

    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems - Part 3 with Nate Smith

    In our third episode of three exploring how tourism can support regenerative food systems, we’re thrilled to bring you our conversation with Nate Smith of Gravity Fishing, a man who is a force of nature! Nate was concerned that no one else was doing anything about the extractive fishing industry in Aotearoa and took action to transform the industry, while also using food tourism to reconnect his guests with nature. 
     
    Nate speaks to many of the topics we’ve discussed this second season of GOOD Awaits: the power of stories in reshaping our guiding narrative, returning to old ways of knowing, connecting to place through food, educating guests by reconnecting them with the wild, redefining growth, using technology in new and innovative ways, thinking and acting at a systems level, and perhaps most importantly, believing that ‘a small guy’ can change a whole system. 
     
    We can all be inspired by Nate, and ask ourselves, “What won’t happen if you don’t step up and do it?”
     
    Show Notes:
    Join the conversation
    Join our LinkedIn network of like minded professionals exploring what a regenerative future for tourism can look like. We'd love to see you there and hear your thoughts on this episode.
     
    Thanks to 
    Nate Smith - Owner Gravity Fishing
     
    Show notes and links
    https://gravityfishing.co.nz/ 
     
    Want to explore what regenerative tourism could look like in practice? Join our GOOD Awaits Aotearoa New Zealand Experience in March 2023. 
    https://www.good-travel.org/good-trips/good-awaits-new-zealand 
     
    Credits
    GOOD Awaits is hosted by Debbie Clarke and Josie Major. Audio Production and music is by Clarrie Macklin. 
     
    Contact us 
    josie@good-travel.org
    debbie@good-travel.org 
     
    Special Thanks to NZ National Commission for UNESCO for supporting this 2nd season of our podcast. 

    • 41 min
    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems Part 2 - with Amie Young and Kaai Silbery

    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems Part 2 - with Amie Young and Kaai Silbery

    As we continue to explore tourism’s purpose in a VUCA world, and how tourism can add value and capability to other systems, this is the second of three episodes exploring how tourism can support regenerative food systems, local food resiliency, and help shape local food stories. Both guests in this episode work at a systems level - utilising food related stories and experiences to deepen visitors’ connections to place, whilst adding value to local food and biodiversity systems. 
    We speak to Amie Young, Destination Development Manager at Great South, the Regional Development Agency for Southland in New Zealand, who provides a regional perspective on how tourism and food intersect. Amie describes the development of SouthlandNZ’s Food Tourism Strategy that recognises food as a key part of the Southland story. We spoke to Amie about the plan’s goals to strengthen local food networks and support tourism entities in enabling visitors to understand the uniqueness of Southland through food related experiences. 
    We also speak to Kaai Silbery, founder of Go Wild Apiary on the Chatham Islands, who gives us a local food producer and tourism operator perspective of how tourism can support apiculture and biodiversity protection. Kaai is passionate about wild food, endemic plant species, and her bees. She is a beautiful example of how one person can affect change in the systems they are part of by working across sectors and using tourism to tell local stories about the biodiversity and natural ecosystems of her place.
     
    Join the conversation
    Join our LinkedIn network of like minded professionals exploring what a regenerative future for tourism can look like. We'd love to see you there and hear your thoughts on this episode.
     
    Thanks to 
    Amie Young - Destination Development Manager Great South
    Kaai Silbery - Owner Go Wild Apiary
     
    Show notes and links
    Southland NZ (Regional Tourism Organisation) - Southland Regional Tourism Organisation
    Southland Murihiku Food Tourism Strategy
    Go Wild Apiary
     
    Glossary
    (Our guests will often use words from Te Reo Māori, New Zealand's indigenous language, in their interviews. We welcome and celebrate this, and for listeners outside of New Zealand for whom these may be unfamiliar, we offer an interpretation here to aid your understanding. For more detail, you can reference https://maoridictionary.co.nz/. We also offer explanations of acronyms and other industry terminology used in hope of making GOOD Awaits more accessible.)
     
    Aotearoa - New Zealand
    Rakiura - Stewart Island
    Kaimoana - seafood, shellfish
    Rēkohu - Chatham Islands
     
    Want to explore what regenerative tourism could look like in practice? Join our GOOD Awaits Aotearoa New Zealand Experience in March 2023. 
    https://www.good-travel.org/good-trips/good-awaits-new-zealand 
     
    Credits
    GOOD Awaits is hosted by Debbie Clarke and Josie Major. Audio Production and music is by Clarrie Macklin. 
     
    Contact us 
    josie@good-travel.org 
    debbie@good-travel.org
     
    Special Thanks to NZ National Commission for UNESCO for supporting this 2nd season of our podcast. 

    • 49 min
    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems - Part One with Angela Clifford

    Tourism’s Interconnectedness: Regenerative Food Systems - Part One with Angela Clifford

    As we continue to explore tourism’s purpose in a VUCA world, and how tourism can add value and capability to other systems, this is the first of 3 episodes exploring how tourism can support regenerative food systems, local food resiliency, and help shape local food stories. We interview guests who are in both the food and tourism sectors, who think about systems level impact, and who exemplify the potential tourism has to interact with and add value to food systems in particular. 
     
    Angela Clifford is the CEO of Eat NZ, an Aotearoa food collective which spans all aspects of our food system. Angela is a passionate advocate for food as a way to deepen our connections to people and to places, to understand other cultures, and to find our way back to food stories that heal us and the planet. Angela co-owns The Food Farm, a regenerative permaculture property, and has deep wisdom about living systems and regeneration. Angela provides tangible examples for how tourism can help guests discover culture through food and build and strengthen networks between food producers, growers, and hospitality businesses to support community resilience. 
    Our multi-day regenerative tourism experience, GOOD Awaits Aotearoa New Zealand, visits Angela on The Food Farm. This is a unique opportunity to spend time with this inspiring woman who is working at a systems level to create change.  Learn more about this trip here.
     
    Join the conversation
    Join our LinkedIn network of likeminded professionals exploring what a regenerative future for tourism can look like. We'd love to see you there and hear your thoughts on this episode.
     
    Get in touch with Angela: 
    LinkedIn: Angela Clifford
    The Food Farm 
     
    Show notes and links
    Eat New Zealand
    NZ Food Waste Champion 
    Mana Kai Initiative
    Feast Matariki
     
    Want to explore what regenerative tourism looks like in practice? Join our GOOD Awaits multi-day Aotearoa New Zealand Experience in March 2023
    https://www.good-travel.org/good-trips/good-awaits-new-zealand 
     
    Credits:
    GOOD Awaits is hosted by Debbie Clarke and Josie Major. Audio production and music is by Clarrie Macklin.
     
    Contact us: 
    Josie Major - josie@good-travel.org
    Debbie Clarke - debbie@good-travel.org
     
    Special Thanks to NZ National Commission for UNESCO for supporting this 2nd season of our podcast. 

    • 44 min
    Technology Innovations in Tourism - with Michael Nees

    Technology Innovations in Tourism - with Michael Nees

    As we continue to challenge our current mindset about the definition of tourism, and what it has the potential to be, we seek guests who have boldly taken action in new and exciting directions to explore alternative tourism models. In this episode we talk with Michael Nees, an inbound tour operator who is exploring the possibilities and potential of technology to create innovative and immersive tourism experiences. Michael has developed a range of Virtual Journeys that are so much more than just a video - they are an immersive experience for the senses and the closest thing to really being there. 
    Michael’s infinitely curious nature, his ‘imagine this’ approach and long-term thinking place him as an innovative leader in our sector. Michael shares his concerns for the climate challenges we will face, and our need to be adaptive and resilient. He recognises the urgent need to think differently about tourism models, and has a deep desire not to go back to business as usual, but instead to start shifting his mindset to think about how tourism can be different. He asks how tourism can reduce its carbon footprint, and still serve travellers through immersive storytelling. 
    This episode is not an in depth exploration of the various types of technology (virtual, augmented, extended reality) but rather an invitation for listeners to challenge their perceptions of what tourism is, to take a long-term view of our sector, consider the potential that technological innovations offer tourism, and to open our minds to new ways forward for our sector.  
     
    Join the conversation: 
    Join our LinkedIn network of likeminded professionals exploring what a regenerative future for tourism can look like. We'd love to see you there and hear your thoughts on this episode.
     
    Get in touch with Michael: 
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelnees/ 
    Email: vrjourneysnz@gmail.com 
     
    Show notes and links
    Virtual Journeys NZ - Michael’s business 
    Alex Honnold “The Soloist” free-climbing VR Experience
    Research from Jeremy Bailenson and other Standford Researchers 
    New Zealand Nature Highlights - Arthur Chin’s online farm tour 
    “Journey into the deep sea” -  National Geographic virtual experience showing fragile coral ecosystems 
     
    Want to explore what regenerative tourism looks like in practice? Join our GOOD Awaits multi-day Aotearoa New Zealand Experience in March 2023
    https://www.good-travel.org/good-trips/good-awaits-new-zealand 
     
    Credits:
    GOOD Awaits is hosted by Debbie Clarke and Josie Major. Audio production and music is by Clarrie Macklin.
     
    Contact us: 
    Josie Major - josie@good-travel.org
    Debbie Clarke - debbie@good-travel.org
     
    Special Thanks to NZ National Commission for UNESCO for supporting this 2nd season of our podcast. 

    • 46 min
    Destination Management for Regenerative Tourism - Part 2

    Destination Management for Regenerative Tourism - Part 2

    This episode is the second in a two part mini series, with this episode focusing on two regions who share the community engagement processes they’re going through to develop their destination management plans. 
    As destinations globally are starting to think about a regenerative approach to destination management, we’re honoured to share the journey that Aotearoa New Zealand’s 31 Regional Tourism Organisations (RTOs) initiated during the pause of the pandemic. At the request of the NZ government, and with the support of government funding, New Zealand’s RTOs have engaged in destination management planning and many have begun the journey towards a  regenerative approach to tourism. 

    We speak first with Tim Barke, General Manager at Lake Wanaka Tourism. Tim describes the opportunity tourism has now to ‘get it right’ for future generations and also for the industry to remain viable in the future. Tim encourages everyone to get involved in their community, and he’s leading by example, volunteering for multiple organisations across his community, demonstrating his commitment, both personally and professionally, to his place. 
    We also speak with Tania Burt, General Manager at Northland Inc who describes the importance of taking engagement on the road into communities for a highly localised process that results in more authentic, place-specific feedback from residents. Tania also speaks of how Northland’s destination management plan is a living document, part of a living process, that requires regular reviews and iterations in order to be fully committed to both people and living ecosystems.  Tania is deeply involved in her place and stresses the importance that we all work towards net good, “because it’s what the world needs of us right now.”

     
    Join the conversation
    Join our LinkedIn network of likeminded professionals exploring what a regenerative future for tourism can look like. We'd love to see you there and hear your thoughts on this episode.
     
    Thanks to:
    Tim Barke - General Manager at Lake Wanaka Tourism
    Tania Burt - General Manager at Northland Inc
     
    Show notes and links
    Lake Wanaka Tourism
    Lake Wanaka Regenerative Tourism by 2030
    Taitokerau Northland Destination Management Plan
    Wao Summit
     
    Glossary:
    (Our guests will often use words from Te Reo Māori, New Zealand's indigenous language, in their interviews. We welcome and celebrate this, and for listeners outside of New Zealand for whom these may be unfamiliar, we offer an interpretation here to aid your understanding. For more detail, you can reference https://maoridictionary.co.nz/. We also offer explanations of acronyms and other industry terminology used in hope of making GOOD Awaits more accessible.)
    Aotearoa - New Zealand
    Taonga - treasure, socially or cultural valuable objects, resources, phenomenon, ideas and techniques
    Taoka - treasure, anything prized
    Mana - prestige, authority, control, power, influence, status, spiritual power, charisma - mana is a supernatural force in a person, place or object.
    Mauri - life force, vital essence
    Kaupapa - purpose, policy or values
    Ngāi Tahu - tribal group of the South Island, sometimes called Kāi Tahu
    Whakapapa – genealogy, lineage
    Te Ao Māori - The Māori world
    Tangata Whenua - “people of the land”, Māori people local to a particular area
    Mana Whenua - Māori people who have historic and territorial rights over the land
    Iwi - tribe, people
    Hapu - kinship group, clan, subtribe
    Mahi - work
    ____________
    Want to explore what regenerative tourism could look like in practice? Join our GOOD Awaits Aotearoa New Zealand Experience in March 2023. 
    Find out more here: https://www.good-travel.org/good-trips/good-awaits-new-zealand 
    ____________
    Credits
    GOOD Awaits is hosted by Debbie Clarke and Josie Major. Audio Production and music is by Clarrie Macklin. 
    Contact us: 
    josie@good-travel.org
    debbie@good-travel.org 
     
    Special Thanks to NZ National Commission for UNESCO for supporting this

    • 1 hr 15 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
3 Ratings

3 Ratings

cgoddard10 ,

Helpful and Informative, thank you!

This podcast is larger than just the tourism industry, it helps us challenge our notions on what we need to do to create the world we want to live in. I'm hooked, thank you Debbie and Josie!

...HI! ,

Practical regenerative actions for tourism

Great podcast on some of the ways NewZealand tourism industry in implementing sustainable, regenerative tourism !

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