French holidaymakers take up slack as vacation season like no other kicks off

Source: AFP Published: 2020/8/20 16:43:44

People wearing face masks walk past Le Cafe Senequier, situated along the Quai Jean Jaures, on the Saint-Tropez harbor on August 8, as the city made wearing a protective mask mandatory in the town center. Photo: AFP

 

French resorts and holiday destinations are buzzing at the height of the season despite the pandemic but, with foreigners staying away and the shadow of the coronavirus looming large, this is no ordinary summer.

A weeks-long summer holiday, often taken at home rather than abroad, is an annual sacred ritual for the French and the government actively encouraged people to go on vacation to help prop up an economy already ravaged by the pandemic.

The glitzy Mediterranean resort of Saint-Tropez - usually a magnet for the international jet set - is far from empty but it is domestic tourists who are filling the town and not free-spending foreign visitors.

"In summer, we normally have 85 percent international visitors and 15 percent French visitors. This year, 60 percent of the visitors are French," Claude Maniscalco, the head of the Saint-Tropez tourist office told AFP.

There are foreign visitors from neighboring countries but the absence of tourists from further afield is the most marked difference, said senior municipal official Georges Giraud.

"We have a wealthy French and ­European clientele, who stay in high-end establishments. But they do not spend lavishly like our Russian or American visitors," he told AFP.

The resort of Saint-Tropez remains a byword for decadent glamor thanks to its associations with artists Matisse and Picasso but above all with the actress Brigitte Bardot who fell in love with the town while filming 1950s erotic classic And God Created Woman and still lives there.

Jean-Francois Tourret, head of the Saint-Tropez marina, said that his port was even busier than last year but the trends were indeed very different with more French boats and no super yachts from Russia or the Gulf docking.

"We are doing better than last summer, our port is almost full every evening, however we have fewer yachts and more boats under 40 meters," he said.

'Masks in the heat' 

But this, as President Emmanuel Macron had already warned France, is a "summer like no other" and not even holidaymakers can escape the shadow of the coronavirus.

With infection rates now on the rise across France, Saint-Tropez this month made mask-wearing obligatory outside after a spate of cases in bars and restaurants.

Night clubs are still shut across France but this has not stopped impromptu parties taking place on beaches and in homes which can then become clusters for the spread of infections. 

More bad news came this week when the British government imposed 14-day quarantine on travellers from France, which is likely to reduce the number of UK visitors to just a trickle.

"Having to wear a mask in this heat is going to make tourists cancel," fretted Chloe Coulomb, who said that until now sales in the high-end leather goods shop that she manages had been steady.

At the Trois-Palmiers hotel, the receptionist says she has taken a dozen cancellations since the mask measure was announced. "It's a shame, the hotel was full every night, it needed to stay that way," she said.

The famous Senequier Cafe, a favoured haunt of Bardot, has been temporarily shuttered after some staff tested positive for the coronavirus. 



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