
I was born in Bavaria, Germany, in 1978 and spent my entire childhood there. Growing up in a region that values landscape, community, and a slower rhythm of life shaped how I later approached travel. I began traveling early—first with my family, then independently—and over time, travel became less about destinations and more about understanding places on their own terms.
My first journey to Latin America took place in 2002. What began as curiosity turned into a long-term relationship with the continent. Over the past 24 years, I have traveled extensively throughout Latin America, visiting every country and spending time far beyond the usual routes. Alongside my studies in Germany, I also explored other regions of the world, including Australia and Oceania, large parts of Asia, Africa, and, of course, Europe. These experiences gave me perspective—but it was Latin America that consistently drew me back.
In 2018, after years of returning to the region, I made a conscious decision to relocate permanently. I settled in Quito, where I have lived ever since. Quito offers something increasingly rare: altitude, a mild year-round climate, strong local culture, and a sense of continuity between past and future. It is a city that is changing—slowly, imperfectly, but for the better—and it serves as an ideal base for understanding and navigating Ecuador and the wider region.
Throughout my travels, I deliberately avoided mass-tourism environments. Large resorts, all-inclusive beach destinations, and places shaped almost exclusively around tourist demand never interested me. Instead, I gravitated toward rural regions and lesser-visited areas—places where I was often the only foreigner for many miles. There, curiosity flowed both ways. People were open, conversations were honest, and daily life existed independently of tourism. Coming myself from a rural background, these environments felt familiar and grounding.
This perspective also made the consequences of mass tourism impossible to ignore. In many destinations, local economies become dependent on tourism alone, cultural expression is flattened, and environmental pressure increases beyond recovery. Travel can bring opportunity, but only when it respects limits. When it doesn’t, it erodes exactly what made a place worth visiting.
Terra Sur Travels was founded as a response to this tension. The idea was never to build volume, but to support local partners who work responsibly within their environment and community. Ecuador, in particular, remains one of South America’s least understood destinations internationally, and that relative obscurity has protected much of its cultural and ecological richness. In places like the Galapagos, where access is strictly regulated, those limits are not a disadvantage—they are the reason the destination still exists at all.
At Terra Sur Travels, we do not engage in illegal, unethical, or extractive tourism practices. We do not promote or arrange activities that fall outside local law or responsible standards, and we explicitly distance ourselves from practices—such as unregulated Ayahuasca tourism—that we believe are too often handled without adequate medical, ethical, or cultural safeguards.
The past years have not been easy for tourism in Ecuador or the wider region. Political uncertainty, global disruptions, and economic pressure have tested both travelers and local partners. Still, I am confident that the future of travel here lies in slower, more thoughtful growth. Terra Sur Travels works with partners selected deliberately and maintained through long-term relationships, not volume contracts.
The agency is currently founder-led. Growth, when it happens, will be intentional. Additional team members will be brought on only when it strengthens quality, judgment, and responsibility—not simply scale. Travel deserves that restraint.
Good journeys are not defined by how much ground is covered, but by how carefully decisions are made. That principle guides every trip planned through Terra Sur Travels.
Ultimately, every journey planned through Terra Sur Travels reflects my personal judgment and responsibility.
The following principles guide every trip planned through Terra Sur Travels.
Every journey planned through Terra Sur Travels begins with evaluation, not assumption. Travel is not treated as a product to be sold, but as a decision that must make sense—for the traveler, for local partners, and for the places involved.
The first question is always fit. This includes expectations, timing, physical requirements, flexibility, and mindset. Not every destination is right for every traveler, and not every moment is the right moment to go. When expectations and realities do not align, we will recommend adjustments—or advise against traveling altogether.
Decisions are also shaped by context. Weather patterns, seasonal changes, political conditions, conservation regulations, and local capacity all matter. Especially in South and Latin America, circumstances can shift quickly. Plans must remain adaptable, and itineraries are designed with room for change rather than rigid guarantees.
Local partnerships play a central role in decision-making. Accommodations, guides, and operators are selected based on long-term relationships, legal compliance, and responsible practices—not on volume or lowest price. If a service does not meet ethical, environmental, or safety standards, it is not included, regardless of demand.
Saying no is part of responsible planning. Requests that would encourage mass tourism, place undue pressure on fragile environments, or rely on illegal or unethical practices are declined. This includes activities that fall outside local law or lack adequate safeguards.
Finally, decisions are guided by long-term impact rather than short-term convenience. The goal is not to maximize itineraries, but to ensure that travel remains meaningful, realistic, and respectful—today and in the future.
Last updated: February 2026 · Written and reviewed by Christian Greiner, founder of Terra Sur Travels, based in Quito, Ecuador.