Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe (free)
  • Subscribe (free)
  • News
  • Features
  • TravelInfo
  • Columns
  • Community
  • Sponsored
  • Contact Us
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send Us News

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

'Mud' in the face of tourism professionals

25 Jul 2000 - by Dave Marsh
Comments | 0

SEVEN primary and high school pupils from KwaZulu Natal showing initiative and a promising flair for business in tourism - ranging from making unusual African curios and designing brochures to offering cultural tours to international visitors - were awarded cash prizes totalling R8 500 in the Richard's Bay Minerals (RBM) High Road Schools Entrepreneurship Competition last week.
The organisers of the competition, an annual event which has been running for four years now, chose tourism as this year's theme because of its "enormous growth potential" and said the children put even seasoned professionals to shame with their innovative ventures.
"Our aim was to encourage teachers across the province to introduce entrepreneurship programmes in their schools and to teach scholars how to successfully start their own businesses," said Peter Morrison of RBM's Small Business Advice Centre, which organised the programme in conjunction with the provincial daily newspaper, The Natal Mercury.
He explained that entrants had to submit a business plan for a realistic tourism venture, with a budget of less than R1 000. Judging was conducted by representatives from Tourism KwaZulu Natal (TKZN), The Natal Mercury and RBM's Small Business Advice Centre.
One of the five first prize awards of R1 000 went to two brothers, Daniel (13) and Matthew Wagner from Durban who not only make and sell handpainted T-shirts, and kitchen products called Mud Designs - with various African story themes - in a number of curio shops and art museums, but established their own inbound tour operation, Wagtrails. Their first client, a traveller from the UK and a family friend, was treated to a to a well-planned tour of KZN.
Daniel explains: "We arranged accommodation at Injusiti in the Drakensberg, arranged a stay at Hluhluwe and Sodwana and hired a driver to take him around to these areas. We also accompanied him to Injusiti and acted as a guide to the area."
The client was impressed enough to request the two to set up another tour for him when he returns to South Africa next year. "Next time the itinerary will include trips to Cape Town and the Kruger National Park (KNP)."
Other creative prize-winning entries included fridge magnets with vibrant ethnic designs, ballpoint pens covered in fluffy fake fur animal prints, African design candles, African design wrapping paper, the production of a brochure to highlight the tourism potential of the historic town of Verulam and a range of home-made products such as herb vinegar, pineapple jam, lemon juice, pickled onions and chilli, each with a uniquely designed label.

(Adéle Mackenzie)

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.

Cruise overbookings raise concerns

Yesterday
Comments | 0

Tanzanian airlines banned from EU airspace

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Feature: Sporting thrills in Seychelles

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

New EU flight compensation rules tabled

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

G Adventures heads back to the Arctic

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Supersonic flights ‘one step closer to reality’

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Latest Changes on Travelinfo (11Jun25)

11 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

NDC: Agents left carrying the can

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Cathay goes daily on JNB route

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Edelweiss ups seasonal CPT flights

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Flight emissions data now available in Amadeus

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Feature: SAA’s Dar es Salaam route – a gateway to Tanzania

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0

Celebrity to upgrade Solstice ships

10 Jun 2025
Comments | 0
  • Load more

FeatureClick to view

Southeast Asia June 2025

Poll

Are you turning away clients who want to travel to Ireland due to the visa delays?
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Travel News on Facebook
  • eTNW Twitter
  • Travel News RSS
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send Us News