During my stay in Bahía Solano, I also had the opportunity to collaborate with the Mecana community school, a small coastal village near the Pacific Botanical Garden.
The collaboration involved supporting small initiatives aimed at improving the educational environment for the community’s children, including creating signage with educational messages and values related to respect, shared learning, and care for nature.


These actions were developed alongside members of the local community and are part of the commitment to work on projects where tourism and conservation also generate a positive impact on the communities that inhabit the territory.
This type of collaboration reflects a way of understanding work on sustainable tourism projects: not only from the digital perspective, but also through direct involvement with the people and places where these projects take place.