Scots flock to book foreign holidays for as early as this summer
The Scottish Passenger Agents’ Association (SPAA), the umbrella body for the country’s leading travel agents, said the majority of its members placed new bookings last month for upcoming holidays.
In what may be a sign of the public’s growing desire to escape the restrictions, close in one in three travel agents surveyed (29.6 per cent) said they had made a booking for this summer, despite the fact there is no guarantee people will be able to travel freely by then.
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Hide AdMore than half (52 per cent) have fulfilled a booking for the upcoming winter season, with the majority of agents (59 per cent) arranging holidays for next summer.
Some six out of ten travel agents booked breaks for customers in April, more than half of which (55 per cent) were for beach holidays.
Despite the spread of Covid-19 across cruise ships, many of which remain at sea during the pandemic, more than one in four (28 per cent) of travel agents surveyed said they had made new bookings for a cruise trip.
The SPAA said the lion’s share of holiday reservations were for European destinations, with 83 per cent of its members making such a booking.
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Hide AdHowever, further flung places such as the Caribbean (40 per cent) and North America (37 per cent) also proved popular, with one in five making a booking for a trip to either Australia, New Zealand, or the Far East.
Joanne Dooey, president of the SPAA says, “The customers who our member agents are dealing with have remained optimistic about travel.
“We’re finding that, after a period of enforced lockdown, travellers want something to look forward to and are looking to their bucket list of destinations for the holiday of a lifetime as a reward.”
“We are also seeing customers paying balances for their holidays in July and August 2020. People very much still wish to travel, if they can, this year.”
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Hide AdIt comes amid warnings that the 14-day quarantine for travellers coming into the UK, while sensible, should have been brought in long ago.
The UK government will reportedly enforce the mandatory quarantine for all UK arrivals within weeks as part of measures aimed at avoiding a second peak of the outbreak.
Dr Peter Drobac, a medical doctor specialising in infectious diseases and an academic at the University of Oxford, said there is merit to the idea, but said it will require a lot of planning and infrastructure at a "really fragile" stage.
He said the country has to figure out how to keep down the R value, the number of people the average infected individual would spread the virus to, outside of a lockdown.
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Hide AdDr Drobac explained: “You can't wave a magic wand and say we're having a quarantine and expect it to work. There's got to be a lot of infrastructure in place to make that effective."
"To me, this intervention of a mandatory quarantine for returning travellers is probably a smart middle ground, as opposed to closing borders entirely which has a much more significant impact on limiting the flow of goods and economic pain and things like that.
"So, I think, in short, yes, this should have been done a long time ago, but given the current state of affairs, it makes sense to consider this now."
The SPAA accepted that whatever measures are put in place, it was “uncertain” what “safe travel” will look like.
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Hide AdMs Dooey said any further measures, such as temperature screening and tightened boarding measures for air travellers, must be designed to give people “confidence to fly” and ensure the cost to operators remains affordable.
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