Tourists Adjust to a Harsh European Summer

Tourists Adjust to a Harsh European Summer


As our hot, stuffy plane approached Bodrum, the seaside‍ resort city on Turkey’s southwest ​coast, ‌I closed my eyes and⁢ imagined ⁣a cool plunge into ⁣the crystalline turquoise waters ⁣of the ⁤Aegean. It​ was⁢ late July, and I was going home for vacation, ⁣despite warnings about the record⁣ heat. Southern Turkey is always hot in the‌ summer, but the thought of sea​ breezes and swimming made it seem a desirable destination — especially after spending the‍ last month in a heat wave in​ Geneva where air-conditioning is​ all but banned.

But when the plane door opened⁢ at Milas⁤ Bodrum Airport ⁤and I‌ was hit by the ⁢instant scorch of a 113-degree Fahrenheit wind, I knew this summer would be different. My‍ 1-year-old immediately started crying and other passengers gasped‌ as they rushed to the bus that would take us​ to the⁤ terminal.

We weren’t the only ones feeling the heat.

“I can’t say ‍we had a real vacation. We just melted, it was ‍brutal,” said Cem Tosunoglu, a 28-year-old computer‌ engineer from Istanbul. A⁢ week earlier, he had cut short‌ a​ luxury sailboat cruise around Bodrum’s secluded bays because⁣ of the excessive heat⁤ and the unexpected onslaught of ⁤vicious biting horse flies, which thrive in hot environments.

“There‌ was nowhere‍ to escape, we were ​under attack⁣ and had no choice but to go back to the A.C. in our villas,” he said. “Even the seawater‌ was⁣ too warm.”

It is the summer of​ Europe’s tourism rebound, with travelers flocking to the continent in large numbers ⁤after three years of pandemic restrictions, despite⁢ high airfares ‍and limited accommodations. But the excessive and prolonged heat — which reached 118‍ degrees Fahrenheit in southern Europe in July — along with​ wildfires that caused areas​ to be evacuated⁤ in Greece, Italy⁢ and Spain, has been ruining vacations.

In recent years, Europe has been experiencing persistent heat waves with the record⁣ hitting⁣ 119.8 degrees in Sicily on Aug.⁤ 11, ⁤2021, according to the World Meteorological Organization, which​ said⁣ the record could be broken this summer as the heat is expected to intensify.

In mid-July, tourists waiting​ in line at the Acropolis in Athens collapsed from heat exhaustion, forcing the‌ city’s top attraction⁢ to close in the afternoons until the cooler ‍evening hours.⁣ Visitors to the Colosseum in Rome fainted while​ waiting in line. On ⁤the Italian island of Sardinia, a man had to be airlifted off a beach after losing consciousness, according to the local newspaper La Nuova Sardegna.

“I’m telling my clients to adapt their itineraries and take advantage of the after-lunch siesta and ⁢then ⁣push their tours to later in ⁢the​ day when⁤ it’s cooler,” ⁣said Sarah Johnson, who owns Paper Ink & Passports Travel, a luxury travel company based in Pennsylvania. “There’s a reason they’ve been doing it in Spain and Italy for generations. Walking ​around in the midday heat and waiting in ​line could really hurt some people.”

One of her clients, ‍Scott Maxwell, ​a…

2023-08-14 ⁤04:00:31
Original from www.nytimes.com
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