Travel and Leisure
Ok, not THE Tour de France. However, it is currently postponed - but I think it will ultimately be cancelled. What I'm referring to, is our own tour that we had planned for France this September. Back when we had booked at the start of February, the coronavirus had not spread very far, and we didn't even give it a second thought. What was motivating us, was the excellent price we were getting for non-stop service with Air Canada from YVR to CDG.I was getting pretty excited - I ordered the Rick Steves guidebooks, and started mapping out an itinerary that would take us on a circle route, leaving Paris after 5 days, heading East through the Champagne region, then on to the Alsace wine route, continuing to Burgundy, and then back to Paris to fly home. We had picked great boutique hotels in Paris, and carefully selected AirBnB suites for the rest of our journey. I was even starting to plan our days, so that we wouldn't run into issues where we went to Versailles on the same day that the Louvre was closed, for example.
Sept. 2020 itinerary through Eastern France |
The first big hint of things to come for us, was when Air Canada cancelled our mid-September non-stop flights to Paris (mid-April). We were placed on one-stop flights via Montreal and through Toronto on the return; not a huge deal-breaker, but the non-stop flights were definitely bonus factors for booking into Paris. That's when I started seriously looking into AC's flight cancellation policy. At first, they were talking about giving credits that could be used only until March 31, 2021. 2021? We may not even have a widely-available vaccine by then, I thought. Where would we be able to go in early 2021 that would not have crowds and social distancing measures prohibiting tourism? But with a recent change to the cancellation policy, and a confirmation message from AC, they are now going to allow flight credits to be used up to 24-months after the flight cancellation date.
Looking like we won't be seeing the inside of a plane anytime soon |
And then the other day, the WHO came out with a statement essentially saying that post-infection antibodies are not a proven thing yet, so don't count on herd-immunity to stop the spread of COVID-19. So that was the death blow - not just for our French vacation, but for life in general, to return to some sense of normalcy in the next several months. Maybe there will be travel in Europe at the end of the summer, but it certainly won't look anything like what we had planned for. While technically we haven't cancelled our flights yet - we want to extend the 24-month window into the end of Spring 2022 - we've ruled it out in our minds.
We will see Europe again in the future, just not for a long while. In the meantime, in the words of our Provincial Health Officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, "Be kind, be calm and stay safe".