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Why contribute?

Because you can:

  • promote your own work and activity in the field of lake tourism
  • comment, discuss the topics
  • integrate and add value to the whole community
Contribute to Laketourism.org

Would you like to become a contributor of this website?
Would you like to share the experience your organization and you might have?

Would you like to get in touch with the Destination Management network and community through this site?

We are looking forward to receive more and more contributions that can make this website grow and develop further. Sharing contents , expertise and contacts is very important to enlarge the network of Destination Management organizations and strengthening it.

The contributes should be inherent with the contents of Laketourism.org (case studies, academic material and researches, events info, etc.) and the materials that deal with environmental and sustainability concepts or approaches and that are not directly related to the lake tourism will not be taken into account.

 

What?

Everithing that is inherent with the contents of Laketourism.org, such as:

  • case studies
  • academic and research papers
  • events info or updates

How?

Becoming a Laketourism.org's contributor takes only few steps:

Water

Water is an essential aesthetic and recreational element that attracts millions of people worldwide especially during their leisure time. Coastal and marine tourism play an important role in the global tourism business but there are also a number of well-known lake tourism destinations. Interestingly, however, compared with coastal or mountain tourism, for example, lakes are still a relatively unknown entity as far as academic tourism research is concerned.

Lakes

Finland is known as The Land of the Thousand Lakes. In fact, there are 187,888 lakes in Finland, 60,000 of which are considered large. Minnesota on the other hand is known as The Land of Ten Thousand Lakes. The Great Lakes of North America originated in the ice age. Over 60% of the world's lakes are in Canada; this is because of the deranged drainage system that dominates the country.