FILE PHOTO: The Macarenia clavigera plant is seen inside the Cano Sabana river, a large area protected for its archaeological importance, in San Jose de Guaviare, Colombia September 24, 2024.
FILE PHOTO: The Macarenia clavigera plant is seen inside the Cano Sabana river, a large area protected for its archaeological importance, in San Jose de Guaviare, Colombia September 24, 2024. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez/File Photo

Colombian farmers trade coca for eco-tourism

In Colombia's jungle heartland, a transformation unfolds as former coca farmers once engaged in cultivation and deforestation switch to eco-tourism, creating new livelihoods for hundreds of residents.
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(Reuters) - A transformation has taken root in Colombia's jungle heartland, as farmers once engaged in coca cultivation and deforestation are switching to eco-tourism, which is offering new livelihoods for hundreds of residents.

Thanks to farmers transitioning to tour guides, visitors can now marvel at the ancient cave paintings of Cerro Azul or the vibrant pink aquatic plants that grace Cano Sabana in San Jose del Guaviare, located about 400 km (250 miles) southeast of capital Bogota.

"Some of the people who are local guides today were great deforesters," says Joaquin Vargas, who works for local farmer organization Fantasias de Cerro Azul Puerta del Chiribiquete.

Operating in an area previously gripped by guerrilla warfare and illicit drug production, the region has steadily opened up following the 2016 peace agreement between a major armed rebel group known as the FARC and the Colombian government.

(This story has been corrected to fix the year of the peace agreement to 2016, not 2017, in paragraph 4)

(Reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Raúl Cortés Fernández; Editing by Sandra Maler)

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