My post was about the Indonesian forest. Not about saving the planet. Primary forest is not yet a renewable resource for high quality hardwood yet here. Coconut wood is not a real wood and is easy renewable. pity you cannot boats out of it. The "wood" used at Divers Lodge since 2006 is all coconut. Most cottages are stone however. Our older boats we built from plywood with epoxy and our newer boats are fyber glass. The main building material in our recently built Weda Resort is Sago palm. But indeed, we used wood as well. We try to compensate this by buying and protecting 300 hectares primary forest at Halmahera and planting thousands of trees at Lembeh. My point is that a wooden boat, made in Indonesia is the opposite of eco friendly. Even if they have sails (which hardly ever been used). Forest has been destroyed to build it. Owners and guests of these boats maybe could consider what they can do for compensation.
About pot meet kettle: old days and new ways. Many of us who ever tasted shark fin soup would not think about ordering it anymore. Former die hard smokers are no defending non smokers rights, who goes out spearfishing anymore?
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Highdersert, Probably everybody agrees that this is a total different discussion. The proven positive impact of dive tourism (money) on reef protection against the negative effects of the interaction between the diver and underwater world. E.g. much improved since moorings have been placed in Lembeh Strait. There was definitely a moment where more divers meant less damaged. But, there is a tipping point. Hard to tell when. How good are these guides trained in monitoring? Any data, or just an impression or telling what they think the guests want to hear?
And then...we still can discuss gloves, long fins, cameras, bubbles versus re breathers. Still, nothing is for me more clear and obvious than an empty field where as primary forest has been before.