Every now and then, one reads a human interest story in the
papers about a couple who have taken their annual holiday at the same time, in
the same place, for each of the last thirty, or forty, or even fifty years. The
piece usually goes something like this; "George and Ida Bradley believe
that familiarity breeds contentment. The couple have been married forty years
and for each of those years they have taken their fortnight's summer holiday at
The Seaview Guest House in sunny Skegness, just forty miles from their home up
the coast at Grimsby. Said George, a sprightly 72-year old, "We've simple
tastes so it suits us." Ida (68) added, "We tried Spain one year, but
it wasn't for us; too many foreigners and you couldn't get a decent cup of tea
for love nor money. We decided to stick with Skegness and have never regretted
it."
The same resort, the same guest house, the same bench, year after year, after year. Photo: Alamy |
Whenever I've seen a story like that I've marvelled at the lack
of imagination that makes it possible for people to go on holiday to the same
place year after year, after year, but now I'm wondering if I haven't started
to fall into the same pattern of behaviour myself, since my wife and I have
just returned from our sixth visit to the same hotel, in the same resort,
albeit that we travelled a bit further than the mythical Mr & Mrs Bradley. Back in 2015,
we went to Cyprus for the first time, to stay at The Annabelle Hotel in Paphos.
We liked it so much that we went back in 2016...and 2017...2018...and 2019
(twice, and it's only May!)
View from our hotel room at The Annabelle; this was last year. |
We like The Annabelle for its understated elegance, for the
peace and tranquillity that it provides, for the marvellous restaurants and
wonderful food, and for the staff, who -one gets the impression - are proud to
work at the hotel; this is clear from the exceptional level of service that
they deliver, and the relationship they have with their guests - many of whom
are clearly repeat visitors. Over the years that we have been going to the
Annabelle we have seen a few changes, none drastic, all subtle and clearly made
with the intention of improving the visitor's experience. It is good to see
that the hotel is not content to rest on its laurels, but is constantly
improving, to maintain and surpass its very high standards and quality. The
resort of Paphos is a place that suits us too; it is refreshingly peaceful. Although
there are a number of bars and restaurants by the harbour, the atmosphere is
never raucous. Paphos also benefits from a coastline that affords the opportunity
for some nice walks, which Val and I enjoy, to the extent that on our last
visit, we walked just over seventy-miles - along the coast, and up to the old
town. One of our trips took us by bus to Coral Bay, from where we walked the
eight-and -a-bit miles back to Paphos. Buses on Cyprus are cheap (€1.50 for a
single trip, €5 for a day pass), and fairly frequent, well worth using to get
around.
On the walk from Coral Bay |
A cold beer after a long walk...bliss! |
Unusually, we booked this trip to Cyprus through a travel
company (TUI), our normal practice in recent years has been to book direct
with the hotel and arrange flights and transfers ourselves. Back in the 1980s,
when I took my first overseas holidays, there was little choice in how you
arranged your holiday. The normal practice was to go to a travel agent, arm
yourself with a pile of brochures, pick a resort and a hotel, then go back to
the agents where you would try and shoe-horn your requirements into what was
available, which normally meant compromising on which resort, which hotel, or
when you could travel. Saturday to Saturday bookings were the norm; customising
dates was tricky, choosing your flights nigh on impossible, and since all
transfers seemed to be by coach, it could be a couple of hours or more between
landing and reaching your hotel, even if it was only a few miles from the
airport, after all the other holidaymakers had been dropped off at their
accommodation. Then came the internet and the budget airlines and suddenly, the
need to use a travel agent and fit in with what they wanted to sell you went by
the wayside. Customising holidays and dealing direct with hotels and airlines
became easier and more flexible than using a travel agent.
In the years since I
retired and Val went part-time at work, we have been able to be much more
flexible in when we travel, which means that booking holidays normally starts
with finding when the cheapest flights are to wherever we want to go, then
matching the dates with hotel availability. That is when the chicken and egg
situation arises; which to book first, the flights or the hotel? Book the
flights first and there is the chance the hotel won't have vacancies - or not
in the class of room you want - between those dates; book the hotel first and
there's a risk that the flights will either be unavailable or suddenly
hideously expensive. There's always a frisson of excitement as having booked
the flights (our normal practice), we then try to book the room that was available
just a few minutes before we paid for the flights. While my first overseas
holidays involved fitting in with what travel agents had on offer, today the
travel agents offer much greater flexibility, and it is probably moot as to
whether it is better to book oneself or use an agent. The greater purchasing
power that travel companies have tends to drive prices down and our last trip
to The Annabelle was, thanks to TUI, slightly cheaper than the last one we
booked independently. Mind you, we could have saved ourselves a few bob when we
went independently had we not made the basic error of paying our bill in Euros
and paying a hefty Non-Sterling Transaction Fee to the credit card company.
The Annabelle is part of the Thanos Group... |
...nothing to do with the Marvel Comics character! |
The major advantage to booking independently however, has
been that for two out of our last three trips to Cyprus, Val has travelled a
day or two before me, something that it might be a little trickier to arrange
through a travel company. Also - and this might just be a coincidence - all the
times that we have travelled independently, our plane has been the only one on
the tarmac when we have arrived, making it easy to get a cab, even if we
haven't booked a transfer, and I haven't bothered the last couple of times I
have travelled alone; this time however six planes had landed in a short period
of time and the arrivals hall was bedlam.
I have no doubt that at some point in the not too distant
future we will be planning another trip to The Annabelle, and no doubt this
will involve comparing the benefits of the package holiday v the unpackaged
holiday; it's the sort of thing that spreadsheets were made for!
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