Agriculture and tourism are Australia’s third and sixth largest export industries. Together, they provide a unique opportunity for growth – and there is also an opportunity for Indigenous tourism to connect with agritourism.
Agritourism is a growing sector, expected to be worth $18.6b to the economy by 2030.
Australian Regional Tourism has just hosted a national agritourism conference.SEE THE PROGRAM
Australian Regional Tourism launched a National Agritourism Strategy Framework and Action Plan at the conference, as well as a toolkit for farmers looking to diversify into agritourism, and a toolkit to help Councils support agritourism development.
This has been a long time coming and this will be a game changer for regional and rural tourism! Agritourism is an ecosystem, and ART are taking a holistic approach to agritourism development.
Many farmers do not even realise they are on an agritourism journey until they reach an advanced stage in the years-long process because farmers are doers and when you give them a project they just get on and do it.
The Strategy Framework has identified six priorities
There are great partnerships to make this project possible – the National Farmers Federation, Tourism Australia, the state tourism organisations, and Airbnb. LEARN MORE
Agritourism needs an ecosystem that encourages stakeholders to work collectively if it is to succeed
Challenges for agritourism innovation include
The first thing a farmer should do is to articulate their why – Why do they want to offer agritourism?
What is your REAL why for doing this….really think about this…everything flows from your why and your reason for doing something.
If you’re only doing it for the money, then you will not succeed…money is an outcome not a purpose.
Out of 187,000 businesses, 70% are sole traders. Connections have value – discover the power of ‘more than one’. Interactions and connections make a difference and will help your business and will support innovation. Find mentors and friends to talk to.
When you give someone information and help for free, and you do that four times in a row (without expecting to get something back), the fifth time they will come to you and then you can start to talk about collaboration and ideas – this is a way for farmers to start to collaborate with each other.
Some best-practice agritourism businesses that already exist in regional Australia mentioned during the Convention include the following
Caroline is from a traditional farm run by three generations of her family, farming beef, lamb, malting barley, wheat, and oats. They diversified into tourism to supplement their farming income, and are now attracting 2,500 high yield guests to their accommodation each year
98% of Scotland is rural, 2% is urban, but most people live in the urban areas. Scottish agritourism invested in consumer facing website to promote
The core of Scottish agritourism is real farmers, real farms, rearing livestock, and growing crops – no fakes! Their ‘Go rural’ brand guarantees that.
Investment by the public sector into knowledge exchange via the Scottish Enterprise Agritourism Monitor Farm Programme has really helped support the growth and development of agritourism in Scotland. Agritourism makes farming businesses more sustainable in Scotland.
The sharing of knowledge amongst farmers enables them to grow their existing agritourism business and develop new experiences.
Another thing that really helped Scotland was defining what agritourism is: tourism or leisure on a working farm, croft or estate which produces food.
Scottish Agritourism is now a membership body which commenced operation in 2020…a great model for Australian agritourism development. There’s an opportunity for the two countries to work together to grow agritourism.
Scotland has a new Agritourism Growth Strategy.
There’s positive movement taking place in NSW – perhaps it’s not perfect, but it is a step forward in the right direction. Let’s hope other jurisdictions follow and reduce red tape for farmers looking to diversify into tourism.
Their Agritourism and small-scale agriculture development report provides an explanation of the intended effect.
Reforms will start on 1 December, 2022
1. New land use terms and definitions introduced:
2. Agritourism must be associated with a commercial farm
3. Tailored approval pathways (approvals depend on the scale and type of development – low impact development, small scale building work, larger developments)
The next step in reforms will be working with Councils to permit agritourism in more places.
There are also resources and a toolkit available online
Join our free Australian Agritourism Development Facebook group JOIN THE AUSTRALIAN AGRITOURISM DEVELOPMENT FACEBOOK GROUP
What were your key takeaways from the agritourism convention?