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Our History
The dreams of so many
travellers to Baikal finally began to be realized in the summer
of 2002 through the foundation of the Great Baikal Trail
Association (GBTA). Among these travellers were the Sibiryaki –
proud Siberian woodsmen and adventurers - Oleg Gusev and
Valentin Bryanskii, whose stories captivate Russian children to
this day.
During that summer,
the Federation of Sport Tourism and Mountaineering (Republic of
Buryatia, Russia) and Baikal Watch (San Francisco, USA) received
a joint grant from the Foundation for Russian–American Economic
Cooperation to support the exchange of experience and knowledge,
with the aim of building trails on Lake Baikal. In the autumn
of 2002, trail building specialists from the Tahoe Rim Trail
Association, the US Forest Service, and Earth Corps travelled to
Baikal. They met with representatives from nature reserves,
talked about trail building in America, and fell in love with
the Siberian wilderness and our lake.
In January of 2003, a
group of interested people from all around Baikal travelled to
the American West Coast to discover what it takes to build a
trail. In February, after observing American trail-building
projects, Arkady Kalikhman, Andrei Suknev, Evgenii Mar’yasov,
Vera Butorova, Vasilii Sutula, Sergei Baldanov, and Ariadna
Reida gathered in the small, quiet town of Carlson City, Nevada
to discuss the possibility of building the Great Baikal Trail.
This meeting resulted in a consensus to go ahead with the GBT
project. With the help of volunteers, international volunteer
camps would be set up, where one could work, rest and get to
know people from other countries and cultures, and all of this
while building trails on the shores of our magnificent lake.
So it was decided, and
so it was done!
During the summer of
2003, the first six volunteer groups set out around Baikal, with
the support of six independent organizations - the Baikal
Reserve, the Zabaikalskii National Park, the community
organisation “Ust’e” from Bolshoe Goloustnoe, the club
“Laboratory of Active Tourism” from Ulan-Ude, the NGO “GRIN,”
and the Severobaikalsk School of Tourism and Ecological
Education - to begin building the trail. In the first season of
GBTA’s existence, 136 volunteers took part in our projects. Of
the Russian volunteers, the majority were students who had the
unique opportunity to visit different corners of Baikal and to
do something productive with their own hands. In the autumn,
after many requests from the students, a GBT Club was
established. Foreign and local volunteers came to the club
meetings each week, and together prepared for the coming
trail-building season.
In February of 2004,
three Russian volunteers (potential crew leaders) were sent on a
placement with Earth Corps in Seattle, USA to gain skills in
trail building and leadership. They returned from their travels
just in time for the beginning of the 2004 season. A pair of
trail specialists from Earth Corps accompanied them back to
Irkutsk, and helped with the work for 3 whole months on 14
different projects. These were not our only international
volunteers. We also had: Josh Hartshorn, Alan Meyer, Alastair
Locke and John Green, who all left their hearts with new friends
around Baikal, to be sure that they would return to the shores
of Baikal the next year. The year of 2004 was a significant
year, as Rotary International ”adopted” 100km of trail and sent
along their wonderful project leader, Dave Brann, to oversee the
project. This was not all, as Baikal Plan in Germany joined up
with the GBT, offering to send 100 Germans (many of whom we
simply did not have spaces for) to help build the trail. GBT
was also established as a non-profit organization during this
year.
During the winter of
2004-2005, the GBT club began to involve itself in more serious
activities. They travelled to local schools to give
presentations to children about ecology, prepared for
exhibitions, and, most importantly, our volunteers developed the
desire to become leaders and interpreters themselves. To
achieve this goal, they organised brigadier (crew leader )
courses, which kept them occupied every weekend in the spring.
In the spring of
2005, a group of Russian national park employees and GBT staff
toured the American West Coast on a program, sponsored by the
Trust for Mutual Understanding and conducted by the Earth Island
Institute. While there, they were exposed to many
trail-building organizations, and observed how they operate in
the United States.
The 2005 summer season
flew by. There were 30 projects, in many of which we expanded
our activities beyond trail building. Some projects included
repair work on a datsan (Buryat Buddhist Monastery), helping
local farmers bring in the harvest, clearing abandoned
buildings, and making information signs. Alongside these
projects, GBT also organized its first ecotour. With the support
of Earth Island Institute and Boyd Norton, we led a group of
twenty tourists to the most breathtaking places in the Baikal
region. The travellers learned about Russian, Buryat, and Old
Believer cultures, while experiencing the unique wilderness of
Lake Baikal. The tour was highly successful, both for the
participants, and also for GBT. The group members had a great
time, and appreciated getting to know our area from the
perspective of local environmentalists. The tour also
constituted important financial support for local small
businesses associated with ecotourism and provided GBT with
funds to help us continue working throughout the year.
In September, we
hosted a group of Australian volunteers from Rotary clubs in the
Sydney area. They came on a good-will tour of the area, and
spent a week with GBT. We took them to Bolshoe Goloustnoe to
start building a trail to Sacred Mountain, and they worked
magnificently with local kids, teaching them crafts, such as
painting and knitting, and English. The kids had a wonderful
time, and our Australian volunteers provided much needed revenue
for the villagers by staying in several local bed and
breakfasts.
In March and April of
2006, three GBT staff members travelled to the USA to learn
about non-profit organization management. They had the
opportunity to observe many non-profits in the United States,
and spent most of their time learning about how these programs
cooperate with for-profit and governmental organizations in
their fields.
In April and May, GBT
continued with the city project that was started in 2005. We
partnered with the Irkutsk City Administration to restore the
old Pushkin Grove. We collected trash, trimmed trees, and
constructed trails. The idea was that, if GBT cleaned up,
people would actually use the park, learn to appreciate it, and
then take care of it themselves.
An interpretive trail
seminar took place in Ulan-Ude in May of 2006. GBT collaborated
with the Republic of Buryatia Center of Biology and Ecology to
start building an interpretive trail in Ulan-Ude with the goal
of teaching new crew leaders how to organize trail-building
camps. Later in September two trail interpretation specialists
from the United States Forest Service visited the ongoing
trail-building project at Sacred Mountain in Bolshoe Goloustnoe
and designed a new route for this trail. They also went to the
Republic of Buryatia Center of Biology and Ecology and designed
the interpretive education trail there. A month before this was
happening, the International Building Organization from Belgium
built a trail in cooperation with GBT, and later became an
official partner organization.
Spring of 2007 began
with the preparation for GBT’s first winter project, which was
centered around exposing local kids to active volunteerism by
making trail signs with them in Severobaikalsk. This project
was a great success, and we will increase our winter project
participation in the future. At this time, RUSAL, a Russian
aluminium company, awarded GBT a grant for developing the
volunteer movement in the Baikal region. We used this grant to
recruit new volunteers and further develop our leadership
training program. With the help of this grant, we began taking
our crew leader and interpreter responsibilities more seriously,
and effective training became much more important for those
wanting to become GBT leaders. We also implemented the concept
of assistant leaders to help crew leaders on projects. Also in
2007, GBT was invited to participate in the Russian-German
Forum, an annual event that alternates in location between
Russia and Germany. This year, the theme was leadership skills.
In the spring of 2007,
GBT conducted another city park project, in which we cleaned up
the Paris Commune Park in the city of Irkutsk. This increased
local awareness of GBT, due to television coverage, and made the
park a much nicer place. We also held our annual Spring Seminar
for new crew leaders, which was organized at the Youth
Educational Center in Irkutsk.
Before the summer
projects started, two GBT staff members travelled to Australia
with the support of Australian Rotary clubs to learn bout trail
building in the National Parks and Wildlife Service areas of New
South Whales. Another of GBT’s members also went to Australia
later in the summer with Oxfam International Youth Partnerships
(OIYP) and the Rotary club to attend a conference and learn
about children’s environmental programs.
John Shoubert, a trail
building specialist from the Oregon Forest Service, joined us in
the summer of 2007 to go to Holy Nose and the Pribaikalskii
National Park, where he scouted new trail routes and inspected
our existing trails. He also shared his knowledge about trail
classification and trail building techniques. Also at this
time, three GBT staff members went to the American West Coast on
our ongoing international learning program with the Earth Island
Institute.
In addition to our
usual projects in the summer of 2007, we also added a new
program with the Drug Rehabilitation Center in Angarsk (an
industrial center located 60 km from Irkutsk). A group of
Belgian volunteers from IBO joined GBT crew leaders in working
at the center for one week. After the first week, the group
took three Drug Rehabilitation Center residents to the field,
where they helped to build trails for another week.
In the spring of 2008,
GBT was awarded a grant from IREX to develop an environmental
awareness and volunteerism program for children at four
different schools in villages around Baikal. Our volunteers go
to a different school each weekend to lead projects with
students. The schools consist of an art school in Miget,
elementary schools in Tankhoi and Bolshoe Goloustnoe, and a
rehabilitation center for children with unstable families in
Irkutsk.
Another winter project
in Severobaikalsk is scheduled for mid-March 2008. On this
project, children from area schools will help to build trails
and enjoy the lake with an environmentally conscious attitude.
This opportunity is made possible through private and corporate
donations.
In 5 summer seasons,
some 2300 volunteers have taken part in GBT projects, more than
500 km of trial have been built, and steps, gutters, bridges of
all shapes and sizes have been added to existing trails. Many
paths have crossed, many stories have been told, and all this is
just the beginning.
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