Thursday 12 June 2014

How to... Plan a holiday

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France seven years ago: one of only two days we did not receive rain of biblical proportions.



I am looking down the barrel of two fast-approaching weeks of annual leave, which means I am compelled to start Planning Our Holiday. If there is a more stressful way of spending three week’s salary, I can't think of it. How do you choose between literally millions of options?

The trouble is that most people’s concept of a pleasant way to spend a week off fills me with dread. I genuinely envy those sunny-natured souls who are happy as long as their holiday involves a pool, a sunlounger and a variety of brightly coloured cocktails. Unfortunately I am cursed with a low boredom threshold, a mistrust of swimwear and a dislike of sweaty strangers in close proximity to me. (Imagine Eeyore in a sarong.)

I'm never going camping either, despite my husband’s pleas. There is no way I'm sleeping on the ground, with naught but a thin piece of nylon separating me from a hostile world, the nearest toilet a field away by torchlight. If those conditions occurred in normal life it would be considered a humanitarian crisis.

I've had some great holidays afloat, to be fair, but narrowboat hire is eye-wateringly expensive and can be ruined by wet weather. It’s very hard to feel carefree in a cagoule. Canals are also full of self-righteous real ale drinkers with bad beards and worse hats, always ready to tell you when you’re using your windlass wrong (until the offending tool is swung at them at head level.)

Because we live in a tiny village where an unfamiliar dog is something to be remarked upon, I don't want to go anywhere too rural; we might as well just be at home with the central heating turned up. Obviously Butlins, and middle-class Butlins AKA Center Parcs, are out of the question if you’re not a parent. Long-haul destinations are full of snakes, Canada full of bears, America full of Americans.

Maybe I should just stick a pin in a map. Ah, fantastic - glamorous Rotterdam, here we come!

4 comments:

  1. You're not seriously going to Rotterdam are you? I once had the chance to go there, just paying for the flight there, and I was told that it is the worst possible place in the Netherlands to visit. Riven with racial tension, crap architecture, and all the sleaze (the bad type) that comes from having -- what, the fourth? largest port in the world.

    I've been to Brittany every year for a decade and love it. But we go to SE Brittany, where the climate is better.

    I completely agree with you about prancing around in your underwear drinking flourescent cocktails, which is almost as bad as camping. I simply don't understand it.

    I like a small town / large village, where basically, short walks of twenty minutes max then demand a recovery session of three hours in the local crêperie and then onto the bar. In the evening, I read, drink cider, play hide the teddy with the girls, then fall asleep.

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  2. No, we're not going to Rotterdam. I've spent so much time in the Fens that I think I've probably experienced all the Low Countries have to offer already.

    I like cities. Catalan cities for preference. Very close to thinking "sod it" and going to Barcelona again.

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  3. Enjoyed your article. We're watching Michael Wood's Story of England and it's great. And we're Americans! I grinned at your comment about us, but it's unfortunate. We love British history and have a deep appreciation for your contribution to the world. Don't judge us all!

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  4. Thanks for your comment Clint! I would take most of what I say on here with a pinch of salt; heaven knows my neighbours have to.

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