Just in time for mates Grealish and Maddison to book escorts.
The Year Brighton went up Saw the whole squad minus a few at a couple, sadly no escorts
Just in time for mates Grealish and Maddison to book escorts.
I've resisted the urge to book flights when I'd normally join in, not 'falling' for the last two stampedes - Easyjet releasing a wide array flights in January and the one last week when the UK governments announced their roadmaps. Not wanting to add the stock of credits I have .
I'm sure plenty of flights will be available as the pandemic unwinds.
On the topic of EasyJet vouchers I have quite a few from last season, a bunch were due to expire shortly but the company unexpectedly extended their validity by 6 months, same happened to a friend. I also received some inflight vouchers for these a while back. Credit where it’s due (pun obvs intended)
Biden administration eyes mid-May to begin relaxing Covid travel restrictions, sources say
The Biden administration is looking toward the middle of May to relax restrictions on travel across the borders with Mexico and Canada and on inbound international travel from the U.K., Europe and Brazil, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/18/bid...g-covid-travel-restrictions-sources-say-.html
We'd always planned to do the Orlando thing with the kids this year, with a short stop-off in NYC on the way as it's where my new HQ is, but we sacked that idea off some time ago. I'm still cautious about it, as I'd hate to be in the midst of a family holiday only for a sudden news development to cock everything up, however I'm slightly backtracking from having entirely ruled the idea out.
If you were thinking of doing Disney parks this Summer for the first / possibly only time, I wouldn't do it. The whole experience is very scaled back to what it was a year ago. Briefly...
- Most in-park shows closed
- No character meets
- No parades
- No night-time fireworks
- Some restaurants closed
- Some hotels closed
- No FastPasses (ride queue-jumping)
- Park reservations (you have to "book" which park you are going to in advance. Some days there is choice and you can change but other times, such as right now, parks are essentially booked up due to the reduced capacity)
- No Dining Plans (a previous regular attraction of booking early, from the UK, to stay in a Disney hotel was some inclusive meals/snacks/drinks)
- Masks everywhere, inside and out (unless eating/drinking) which on a humid 100 degree day is not going to be a huge amount of fun
- Socially-distanced attraction queues, meaning many lines extend outside in the sun (again in the summer in a mask won't be fun)
Many of these things will change as things progress, but quite how many will change by July/August is unknown, and I'd not want to risk that for a first/only visit.
Completely agree with you. I think it’s still 99% likely we won’t go this year for all those reasons - we want it to be a special trip and I don’t want to spend five figures on a holiday and have a half-baked experience. That said, the situation in both the UK and US looks so much healthier now than I could have imagined at the turn of the year, I just thought it was worth noting.
My wife’s sister and her family are in a slightly trickier position. They were due to go last August, had it cancelled (obvs), but opted to move the dates rather than take a refund. They’re due to go in early July now, so there’s a danger that the holiday is honoured but in a very watered down fashion. I’m not sure where they would stand on that front.
Best experience I've ever had at the parks in Florida last month, all pretty much empty.I guess you don't miss what you never had, to a degree. Going to Disney World is always going to be special, but I would feel for those taking their trip-of-a-lifetime and missing out on some of the things that were previously on offer.
If our flights in late July go ahead and we are able to take them based on any requirements for vaccination/negative tests/whatever, we'd still go, but I think we'd give the Disney parks a swerve if things aren't much different to how they are today. Things are loosening up slowly though - Blizzard Beach (one of the two water parks) has just re-opened, for example.
I guess you don't miss what you never had, to a degree. Going to Disney World is always going to be special, but I would feel for those taking their trip-of-a-lifetime and missing out on some of the things that were previously on offer.
If our flights in late July go ahead and we are able to take them based on any requirements for vaccination/negative tests/whatever, we'd still go, but I think we'd give the Disney parks a swerve if things aren't much different to how they are today. Things are loosening up slowly though - Blizzard Beach (one of the two water parks) has just re-opened, for example.
Biden administration eyes mid-May to begin relaxing Covid travel restrictions, sources say
The Biden administration is looking toward the middle of May to relax restrictions on travel across the borders with Mexico and Canada and on inbound international travel from the U.K., Europe and Brazil, according to two sources familiar with the matter.
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/18/bid...g-covid-travel-restrictions-sources-say-.html
After completely ****ing it up for a full year, at least the vaccinations are moving very quickly here now. Daily infection/hospitalization numbers are really, really down at least in California. Just had my second Moderna shot today and things moving along at a good clip.
Still lots of restrictions everywhere and some states that aren't as organized as CA are starting to see some increases again with the variants so still potentially dicey with booking things. I'd be wary of traveling anywhere domestically, especially Florida with their deranged governor. Just make sure anything booked is fully refundable if I were you. Just booked a weekend in Hawaii for end of April but all cancelable up until 48hrs before etc
If you were thinking of doing Disney parks this Summer for the first / possibly only time, I wouldn't do it. The whole experience is very scaled back to what it was a year ago. Briefly...
- Most in-park shows closed
- No character meets
- No parades
- No night-time fireworks
- Some restaurants closed
- Some hotels closed
- No FastPasses (ride queue-jumping)
- Park reservations (you have to "book" which park you are going to in advance. Some days there is choice and you can change but other times, such as right now, parks are essentially booked up due to the reduced capacity)
- No Dining Plans (a previous regular attraction of booking early, from the UK, to stay in a Disney hotel was some inclusive meals/snacks/drinks)
- Masks everywhere, inside and out (unless eating/drinking) which on a humid 100 degree day is not going to be a huge amount of fun
- Socially-distanced attraction queues, meaning many lines extend outside in the sun (again in the summer in a mask won't be fun)
Many of these things will change as things progress, but quite how many will change by July/August is unknown, and I'd not want to risk that for a first/only visit.
Hi, would you have reticence about any holiday to the US this summer?
At the second time of asking we’re booked for NYC in July.
A major potential obstacle for us is that our 18 year old probably wouldn’t have been vaccinated.
No hesitation here, it just comes down to the practicalities of travel arrangements...
- I should be double-dose vaccinated, as I had the first jab on 17th February, but Mrs B may not - no indication when she'll get her first dose yet. Kids also won't, obviously. If Mrs B isn't fully vaccinated by then, will she need to get a test to go to the US? Will she need a test to come back? Will the kids need tests too? We simply don't know what vaccination/negative test rules may be in place. Tests come at a cost and with a bit of hassle, although not too much.
- Requirement to isolate upon arrival in either direction. Any requirement upon arrival in the US pretty much ruins a holiday. A requirement upon return isn't so bad - I work from home and our holiday is timed such that isolation would not interfere with Mrs B's work, nor the kids' school. It would be a pain in the arse for dealing with the dog though - essentially £30+ per day for dog walking or boarding.
What we'd do there depends on movement of the loosening of restrictions. As above, we could miss out on Disney parks, but maybe visit Universal as the three hotels we like to say in come with queue-hopping rights, which helps. Other than that, we'd be happy to just have a sunny change of scene for a few weeks.
Thanks.
In our one Florida holiday 4 years ago now, we paid for Universal Fast Passes every day we visited. Huge sums paid, but well worth it imho, skipping hour long queues for every attraction.
Hi, would you have reticence about any holiday to the US this summer?
At the second time of asking we’re booked for NYC in July.
A major potential obstacle for us is that our 18 year old probably wouldn’t have been vaccinated.