Monday 27 July 2020

Quarentino


Spanish tourism, or the art of putting all one’s eggs in the same basket, has taken another massive knock this week from the slightly odd British decision to oblige all those who come from Spain, returning tourists included, to spend fourteen days in self-quarantine - or maybe just ten days, if The Telegraph is to be believed. 
Another group inconvenienced by the sudden decision are those Spaniards resident in the UK who are either in Spain at the moment, or were planning to visit their family and friends in the coming weeks.
There were only a few hours of warning before Foreign Office advice for Britons to avoid Spain plus the quarantine obligation swung into place on midnight Saturday and despite repeated figures from Facebook warriors and elsewhere showing that more people were being diagnosed with Covid-19 in the UK than they were in Spain.
Adding to the worry, the Anglo-German travel company TUI says that, for the moment, it has cancelled all Britons’ holidays to mainland Spain up to and including Sunday 9 August. Jet2 quickly followed suit, in their case until August 16th.
The Spanish are understandably concerned about losing most or all of the usual 5,000 million euros (2019 figures) that the Brits habitually spend on their Spanish hols. That’s 20% of all foreign visitors.
Norway, Belgium and France are all recommending their subjects to stay away from Spain at this time, adding more woes to the hoteliers.
It’s true that not much of this windfall makes its way to the ordinary, interior bits of Spain, the places without interesting castles, museums, hot springs or wineries to visit. They must make do as they can, but the rest of the country, plus of course its coast and islands, clamour for more tourism each year – the one industry which sells you pleasure, and where the only things you take away in exchange for your cash are a pair of plastic castanets, a touch of sunburn, some stories to tell and a hangover to forget. Come, they say, spend your money (at our slight inconvenience), but then go home again until next time.
Someone who buys a house in a resort or maybe a moribund interior village, along with a car and who plans to live all year round, will clearly be spending a lot more than a visitor. But Spain doesn’t have a ministry or an agency or a budget for them, even though, in these times of pestilence and plague, settlers are even more useful than ever to the Spanish exchequer.
For those Spaniards who work in the tourist sector – waiters, room-cleaners, barmen, tour-bus and taxi-drivers – it means less work, more unemployment. For the owners of many pubs, discos and tee-shirt shops, already beaten down by the past few months, it can mean final closure.
Spain was hoping to persuade the British to allow returning visitors to the Canaries to be let off, with ‘safe corridors’ between the airports – and then, ‘what about us?’ simultaneously asked the Andalucía tourist minister and the Valencian president (here and here), ‘we are pretty safe too!’ they said.
In the end, briefly held talks with Spain on Monday about introducing air bridges with the Balearic and Canary Islands were quickly dismissed by the Foreign Office.

Wednesday 22 July 2020

It's Not Looking Good, Captain


From The Local (firewall) here, ‘Is it worth booking a beach holiday in Spain right now?’ And there’s the rub. A number of bars, beach-bars and clubs have been closed down in tourist ‘hotspots’ while the beaches themselves – in some cases – have been given limited access due to the coronavirus fears, or even closed down entirely due to the pressing crowds.  The Spanish authorities don’t want an escalation – or the bad press associated with infections either from or to the tourists.
The trippers, who won’t find the same laisser-faire in 2020 Spain as they found in other years, may consider it too much of a hassle and decide to keep away, preferring instead to visit their own beaches and spas with a ‘staycation’.
At least if the infections were to suddenly soar, it’d be easier to get home.
Maybe too, a fresh threat from the British government to re-introduce a two-week quarantine for returning holidaymakers from Spain might dampen their enthusiasm.
The forlorn hope back in March of a hot summer reducing the Covid-19 has not panned out; indeed, between one thing and another, we appear to be heading towards a second wave of infection and France is considering closing its border with Catalonia (and its high number of Covid cases).  
Spaniards also need a holiday, and much is being written of the Catalonians driving off over the weekend to their favourite resorts (and, in many cases, not returning).
Will tourism keep things ticking over? A brief trip to the local resort (Mojácar) on Monday appeared to suggest that business is doing pretty well considering, but – away from the beach – many companies are foundering.  La Información says that ‘658 major companies closed in June’.

Wednesday 15 July 2020

They're Back: The Brits, Unmasked


Andalucía has now joined certain other regions of Spain, including Mallorca, Navarra, Cantabria and Aragón, and has decreed that one must wear a face-mask when outside. It’s a bit of politics – now the health responsibilities have been passed (at their insistence) to the regional governments – mixed with a lot of common-sense.
However, we are now in the high tourist season, such as it is this year, and many potential visitors may be thinking that it won’t be like other years. Indeed it won’t, with rationing and booking bits of beach and half the pools closed and no disco dancing (or apparently singing!). Others won’t take kindly to being fined for not wearing their face-mask, which – needless to say – is only allowed to be removed when one is sat in front of a beer or a chicken sandwich. 
It being the season, we have been inundated with stories of Brits leaping off roofs of hotels, or jumping onto the roofs of cars, or coughing on their fellow diners, or falling about drunk in one or another way: the subject for yet another indignant story on the Spanish news.
The Telegraph claims that ‘Spaniards are most opposed to the arrival of UK holidaymakers, with nearly two thirds (61 per cent), keen on Britons to stay away this year, 15 percentage points more than any other European nationality…’.
Do other nationalities feel as bad about their own fellow-citizens as we British resident in Spain seem to feel about ours?
Spain needs the tourism, both for the income and the jobs, but no doubt it could do with a bit better behaviour from its guests.