Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Majority of favourite winter travel spots are up and running

Those booked on Caribbean cruises could see changes to their itinerary

- ERIN PETROW epetrow@postmedia.com twitter.com/petr0w

Most Saskatchew­an travellers will not see any changes to their winter travel plans even after natural disasters rocked much of the Caribbean and Mexico during the past few months.

Mira Laprell-Elliott, a travel adviser at Ixtapa Travel in Saskatoon, said travelling to the eastern Caribbean, where the majority of the destructio­n occurred, is not as easily accessible to travellers from this province because there are no direct or chartered flights to the majority of the islands.

But, she said the people who will likely see the biggest changes to their itinerarie­s would be people who have booked cruises through the Caribbean.

“I have had a few clients affected,” Laprell-Elliott explained. “They were supposed to go during the February break, and I do know the cruise lines, most of them at least, have replaced St. Maarten with St. Croix. But the cruise lines are saying that the ships and the dates are going as planned, but they might add an extra sea day if a port has been scrapped or change it to another port.”

Popular hot spots for travellers like the Dominican Republic and Cuba also saw some destructio­n, but the majority of the tourist destinatio­ns — including Punta Cana and Puerto Plata in the Dominican and Varadero in Cuba — are back up and running, she confirmed.

Mexico, which was hit by a devastatin­g earthquake on Sept. 19, is also a safe bet for travellers as the epicentre of the earthquake was far enough away from most popular tourist destinatio­ns and left them largely unaffected.

Although hurricane season ends in November, Laprell-Elliott said if people are still hesitant about booking an island vacation, travel advisers always have suggestion­s for low-risk options. Barbados is a good example she said, because it lies outside of the hurricane belt and hasn’t been hit since 1955.

She also suggests making sure you know how much your insurance will cover if an unexpected disaster strikes before your trip or purchase a premium protection plan at your travel agency, which will cover any unexpected incidents.

Ixtapa travel has also not seen a drop in travellers interested in heading to Las Vegas, even after it became the site of the largest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

“We haven’t had any calls to cancel,” said Ixtapa Travel president Barb Crowe. “I think people realize these are isolated incidents.”

Although, if you are able to travel to any of the affected areas in the Caribbean in the next few years, Laprell-Elliott suggests it.

“It’s really saddened us to hear of the devastatio­n. A lot of these islands are quite poor to begin with and it was tourism that kept them going and helped them thrive over the years,” she said.

“I think it’s important that as soon as these places are back up and running that we start going there again just to help their economy get back up and running. It is still a beautiful part of the world to go to and with some of these islands sometimes these storms bring better sand and better beaches — like we are seeing in the Dominican right now.”

 ?? JOSE JIMENEZ/GETTY IMAGES ?? A man looks at what is left of his St. Maarten home after the Caribbean island suffered extensive damage from hurricane Irma in September. The storm has put some islands off-limits to tourists.
JOSE JIMENEZ/GETTY IMAGES A man looks at what is left of his St. Maarten home after the Caribbean island suffered extensive damage from hurricane Irma in September. The storm has put some islands off-limits to tourists.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada