User talk:Dave220039127

culture and tourism in Namibia
culture is the lens through which we view our world, every waking moment of every day. As such, it can be difficult to see your own culture when you are living in it. It’s as if everyone is born with color-tinted contacts on their eyes which they cannot remove until much later. Most people don’t remove them until they are adults. Many people remove them, and then put them back on because they are more comfortable that way (admittedly, this probably applies to me personally). Some people never remove them at all. At any point, one could be forgiven for thinking that the world just is that way. If I had purple-tinted lenses on my eyes from the moment I was born, would I be all that crazy if I thought the whole world was purple? How could I even conceive of what it would look like without my purple lenses?

Tourism' is the activity of travelling to destination outside one usual environment for leisure and businesses or other purposes. Tourism offers great opportunities for emerging economies and developing countries. It creates jobs, strengthens the local economy, contributes to local infrastructure development and can help to conserve the natural environment and cultural assets and traditions, and to reduce poverty and inequality.''

Cultural tourism can have many positive socio-cultural benefits1234. These benefits include: Infrastructure development Improvement of community services, Leisure, recreation and support for cultural activities, Intercultural communication and Conservation of local culture and heritage

Dave220039127 (talk) 12:06, 11 October 2023 (UTC) some places to attract tourism in Namibia

https://www.tourismupdate.co.za/sites/default/files/styles/article-large/public/images/article/201803/top-5-family-activities-namibia.jpg?itok=e4VdnvJw

edu blogger URL
https://culturalandtourism.edublogs.org/wp-admin/edit.php Dave220039127 (talk) 23:17, 12 October 2023 (UTC)

oshiwambo traditional attires
ELA'''. The women of Ovambo wear long dresses, skirts and puffy short sleeves while the men wear shirts made from Odelela. Dave220039127 (talk) 23:22, 12 October 2023 (UTC)

finnd the ondelela images on the following Link

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/aa/9f/30/aa9f300cac523d3679a20543c1f7cee6.jpg

Ovahimba traditional attires
The OvaHimba people wear traditional clothing. The women cover themselves with otjize paste, a mixture of butterfat, and ochre pigment. The women who have given birth attach a small backpack of skin to their traditional outfit with shoes made of cow skin. The men’s shoes are made from old car tires. Dave220039127 (talk) 23:27, 12 October 2023 (UTC)

find the image of himba traditional attire on the following link: https://th.bing.com/th/id/R.833989ae96a2d0b0c926cf3c6bfb2ac4?rik=rJV%2b68xjxZNlDA&riu=http%3a%2f%2fmedia.gettyimages.com%2fphotos%2fhimba-tribe-girls-and-young-women-dancing-namibia-picture-id97534268&ehk=7eDETAEaovGF1u4WgjMCbhZOBIl7aHRAVelCe4Jy1VQ%3d&risl=&pid=ImgRaw&r=0