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Tuesday, 19 January 2021

If not the 19th, when, how?

Back in mid-November I must have been feeling naïvely optimistic, I booked a crossing from Portsmouth to Santander for January 19th figuring that it would be preferable to be locked-down somewhere warm and sunny than in the cold, rainy Pennines.  Back then it was not a pipe-dream, friends who headed south in early December managed to dodge the restrictions on foriegn travel. We now receive a steady stream of pictures from the Costa Luz or Cabo de Gata of fellow travellers living an outdoorsy existence under bright blue skies.


By mid-December it was becoming clear that our window of opportunity had closed,  so at some point between Christmas and New Year I changed the Brittany Ferry booking to 24th March. However, right now as I stare out of the window, storm 'Christos' soaking the the garden and the ash trees beyond blowing about like crazy, I am happily imagining feeling queasy on a ferry heading south across the tempetuous Bay of Biscay. However in reality it is difficult not to conclude that our new departure date in late March now seems as  much a misapprehension as today's did  two months ago.

So many unknowns - Covid cases do seem to have reached their peak here and the lockdown measures are working, but they are going have to be in place for weeks before any kind of normality returns. In many parts of Europe the spike we have experienced since the New Year has only just begun. Spain's measures are in place until May, no-one knows when we will be free to travel again.

Then on a more personal note, there is the question of our vaccinations. For once the government's plans seem to be on track and all over 70s will have received their first jab by mid February. We are in the following group, there is a realistic chance we might be vaccinated by mid March. Even so, we will probably have to adjust the Brittany Ferry booking yet again, as any change has to be made two weeks before the departure date, and since the vaccine can take up to three weeks to trigger anti-bodies we would still be  unprotected if we headed off in late March.

This leaves us with a conundrum. Perhaps it would be nice to head for Northern Spain in mid-April for a six week trip. Even if travel is possible, tempting as it would be to spend May in Asturias and Galicia, we still would have had only one of our jabs, so maybe the most sensible thing to do would be to give up on going to Europe until the Autumn.

'Cornwall looks nice,' we keep telling ourselves as we watch, along with half the population, Rick Stein's 15 episode series showcasing its delights. The place does look glorious and, apart from one May Bank Holiday short break in the mid-nineties, we don't know Cornwall at all. I suppose the only downside is we will not be the only ones thinking this way. It could be packed, sites busy and its infamous narrow lanes jammed.

So, if we opted for a spring staycation that would mean changing our Santander crossing to the autumn. Yet again we would have to postpone our planned return to Greece. Frustrating, but perhaps sensible for now. Covid is not magically going to vanish later in the year, mass vaccinations will make it less deadly and not so prevalent, but the risk will not be eradicated nor restrictions removed entirely. Heading to Greece involves crossing six international borders unless you are prepared to pay for a return on the ferry from Italy to Greece. The long crossing to Santander means you get straight to your destination and the drive back through France, all familiar territory; even so there are still places there we have yet to visit.  Nonetheless it not as exciting as discovering a new country like Montenegro or Albania. The question is, for the moment should we be adventurous or sensible?

Gill had an interesting idea. The rules around changing Brittany Ferry bookings allow you to move dates as many times as you wish within a calendar year. She had the bright idea that we could change the ticket originally bought for the January 2021 crossing to late December, we still could have a family Christmas, catch the Santander ferry before New Year, using our 'spare' ticket as the outward leg of next winter's Iberian escape. This would have worked any year up until now. Sadly such a common sense solution has been kiboshed by Brexit. 

Indeed the ideal provides a good illustration of how post-Brexit the Schengen visa waiver will impact on travel plans. At first sight these new arrangements can be a  confusing, and the shorthand version often quoted in the media that in future travellers will be 'limited to a stay of 90 days within a period if 180 days' glosses over the complexities of the rules in practice. Helpfully the European Commission had developed a handy on-line ready reckoner to assist bewildered tourists.


So, back to Gill's idea about using our spare Brittany Ferries ticket sometime in late December - say the '27th' for the sake of argument. The 180 day Schengen waiver period is calculated back from  your planned entry day into the Schengen area (27/12/21), in this case that would be 1st July 2021 Any  days you have spent in the Schengen zone since that date are  subtracted from 90 (the maximum days you are allowed to stay within a 180 day period). The resultant sum is the number of days you are authorised to stay beyond your planned entry date  on 27/12/21 - in this case 29 days because you have already visited for 61 days previously earlier in the autumn. It is just as well there is an on-line spreadsheet, because working from first principles it is very easy to become utterly flummoxed..  

In fact, the regulations are even more complicated. If  at any point you leave a gap of over 90 days between exiting the Schengen Zone and re-entering then your slate gets wiped and you are authorised to stay for up to 90 days. In effect, both the 180 days and the 90 days work as a 'moveable feast' calculated from your entry date into the Schengen zone. To be honest, I can't get my head around it properly and only can see how it works through  examples.....


In this imagined near future, fully vaccinated we  head off  across the Channel in mid-April wandering about for 45 days, perhaps to Brittany and France's Atlantic islands, or a return to Denmark, or maybe take the trip to Sardinia we scaled back last autumn. June to mid August back here, enjoying the odd warm sunny day we get 1000 feet up in the Pennines while dodging the showers to tend the garden.. Then a late summer jaunt, perhaps to Croatia, it is more than 20 years now since our last visit and we have not been to Split or Dubrovnik - both cities are on our 'wish list'. If we returned home by the 26th September we get the 90 day break between then and heading back to Spain just before New Year..

In truth nobody knows what restrictions might be in place over the coming months, but we must live in hope. Brexit and Covid have been a double whammy for those of us whose 'happy place' involves wandering freely around Europe. Regret is pointless. All we can do is to make the most of the opportunities the future brings without unduly putting ourselves or others at risk. 


4 comments:

Paul Jackson said...

We've been watching Rick Stein too. Have you visited the Llŷn Peninsula in North Wales? If you avoid Abersoch - and the orange-skinned Cheshire Set who flock there - the north coast in particular is like Cornwall but without the crowds.

Paul

Pete Turpie said...

It must be 40 years since we visited the Llyn Peninsula - on a cycle camping trip. We have a photo somewhere of Gill opening a bottle of Anjou Rose sitting on the beach which at that point we regarded as the pinnacle of style and sophistication! Abersoch was empty and peaceful. Not anymore. So yes, we are definitely overdue a return visit. We've been to Anglesey a few times with the van, it's an easy drive from Buxton. At the moment I assert something on the blog only for circumstances to change immediately and contradict it. In this case musing about trips to Europe later in the spring. That is looking increasingly unlikely. In fact there are loys of places in the British Isles we don't know, Ireland, most of Scotland, North Norfolk, Lincolnshire - lots of options...along with everyone else.

Peak Walker said...

I see that travel to France and some other countries such as Belgium and Denmark from the UK is currently restricted. Presumably because of the new variant and our high rate of infection. While the vaccine will I hope reduce UK deaths among the elderly, I think that infections will continue at a high level until the younger cohorts are vaccinated, especially if Johnson reverts to his instincts and makes the mistake -again- of releasing restrictions too early. If this turns out to be the case, then why would European countries release their restrictions on UK travellers?

Even if you got your jab in March, your second dose would not be for another 12 weeks, so no full immunity until June at the earliest. Given that vaccine roll out in Europe appears slow, then you would be risking infection by visiting any earlier.

I hope you can achieve your early summer trip but I think a staycation beckons.
We expect to be doing the same and trying to find quiet sites in less visited parts of the UK. Given that sales of caravans, campers and motorhomes have boomed in 2020, that may be difficult.
Pete Scott

Pete Turpie said...

It's true, it is all too easy to drive yourself to distraction trying to second guess what might or might not be possible over the coming months. Our next 'crunch date' is around the 10th of March when we will have to change our Brittany Ferries booking. Maybe by then it will be a little clearer how things might pan out by late spring or summer. Until then, grounded!