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British Travel Journal | Summer 2020

As we went to print with our last issue never could we have imagined a world in which travel would be completely stopped in its tracks. Never again will we take for granted our freedom to visit our magnificent cityscapes, captivating coastlines and peaceful countryside. It has been a difficult year for the hospitality and travel sector, but as this issue of British Travel Journal shows many are beginning to reopen, delighted to welcome back visitors and guests once more. We speak to these resilient hoteliers, destination managers, and others in the UK tourism industry about how they have responded to COVID-19. Our Cultural Agenda takes on a new direction, exchanging theatre performances for outdoor art, sculptures and natural wonders. And, in a time when remote locations are being sought after, all you need to know about wild (and nearly wild) camping is covered in our Sustainable Travel series. If camping isn’t for you, help is at hand to find the perfect holiday home in our 10 of the Best Self-Catering Properties. If you’re dreaming of strolls along the shore, fresh sea air and gently lapping waves, then you will love our coastal specials; Revival of the Beach Hut, England’s Coast, Wild Swimming and Secret Islands. Enjoy a taste of Cornwall in our Interview with Rick Stein before heading to the beach workshop of wooden bellyboards in our Meet the Maker: Wave Rider article with Dick Pearce. Finally, thank you to all our subscribers for your support, keeping our spirits high with words of encouragement and understanding the unusual delay in receiving this issue. Together we continued to dream of the extraordinary places we can explore, staying inspired with online and digital features, and hopefully by the time of reading this issue our next great adventures will have become reality.Travel safely, and together we will continue to support our wonderful tourism industry.

As we went to print with our last issue never could we have imagined a world in which travel would be completely stopped in its tracks. Never again will we take for granted our freedom to visit our magnificent cityscapes, captivating coastlines and peaceful countryside. It has been a difficult year for the hospitality and travel sector, but as this issue of British Travel Journal shows many are beginning to reopen, delighted to welcome back visitors and guests once more. We speak to these resilient hoteliers, destination managers, and others in the UK tourism industry about how they have responded to COVID-19. Our Cultural Agenda takes on a new direction, exchanging theatre performances for outdoor art, sculptures and natural wonders. And, in a time when remote locations are being sought after, all you need to know about wild (and nearly wild) camping is covered in our Sustainable Travel series. If camping isn’t for you, help is at hand to find the perfect holiday home in our 10 of the Best Self-Catering Properties. If you’re dreaming of strolls along the shore, fresh sea air and gently lapping waves, then you will love our coastal specials; Revival of the Beach Hut, England’s Coast, Wild Swimming and Secret Islands. Enjoy a taste of Cornwall in our Interview with Rick Stein before heading to the beach workshop of wooden bellyboards in our Meet the Maker: Wave Rider article with Dick Pearce. Finally, thank you to all our subscribers for your support, keeping our spirits high with words of encouragement and understanding the unusual delay in receiving this issue. Together we continued to dream of the extraordinary places we can explore, staying inspired with online and digital features, and hopefully by the time of reading this issue our next great adventures will have become reality.Travel safely, and together we will continue to support our wonderful tourism industry.

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THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS is predicted to cost<br />

the UK tourism industry at least £22bn in lost<br />

revenue. Domestic tourism has always been<br />

a booming industry for a nation that loves to<br />

explore its beaches, forests, lakes, moors and mountains.<br />

But in the face of a global pandemic, stories about<br />

closures and empty beauty spots make for grim reading.<br />

Tourism is one of the UK’s most successful economic<br />

sectors, employing 3.1 million people and supporting<br />

200,000 small businesses and entrepreneurs right<br />

across the country, as well as being the main employer<br />

in many coastal towns and rural communities. For two<br />

months, most of those staff have been furloughed and<br />

the businesses shut. Many businesses with shorter spring<br />

or summer seasons have seen that timeframe radically<br />

reduced, while also considering how to offer their services<br />

or experiences in the light of social distancing and<br />

government safety measures. It has been a lot to consider.<br />

And yet, in the midst of uncertainty came ingenuity,<br />

creativity and a deep and renewed sense of community.<br />

For the <strong>British</strong> tourism and hospitality industry, this is a<br />

challenge, but not an unassailable one. David Adams,<br />

general manager at the Cary Arms Hotel & Spa in Devon,<br />

explains that uncertainty, on some level, is something<br />

they’ve always been prepared for. “We get thrown<br />

curveballs all the time in this industry. Yes, this was a<br />

particularly big one, but being a success in hospitality<br />

gives you a lot of practice at being caught off guard and<br />

adjusting to the situation.”<br />

BRAND NEW BEACH HUTS AT CARY ARMS & SPA, DEVON<br />

22 <strong>British</strong><strong>Travel</strong><strong>Journal</strong>.com

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