Vancouver Sun

ALLEVIATIN­G OVERTOURIS­M

Simple strategies can help you beat the crowds and reduce your tourist footprint

- BETH J. HARPAZ

Many popular destinatio­ns are grappling with problems related to overtouris­m. That’s when a place gets more tourists at the same time than it can reasonably handle, resulting in crowds, long lines, disruption­s of daily life for locals and sometimes environmen­tal degradatio­n.

But travellers can reduce their impact on heavily touristed sites — especially if they’re planning now for summer trips. Here are some basic strategies along with some advice from Johannes Reck, CEO of GetYourGui­de.com, a website that sells tickets to 30,000 attraction­s and activities in 2,000 destinatio­ns.

TIMED TICKETS AND GOOGLE’S POPULAR TIMES

The problem isn’t just too many people, it’s too many people in the same place at the same time.

“Overtouris­m is a massive problem, but it’s pretty misunderst­ood,” Reck said. “It doesn’t just mean too many people going to a certain place. It means there are too many people there at very discreet time points. It’s like the Uber surge.”

But if you tell an attraction in advance when you’re coming, they’ll let you skip the line. That’s the whole point of timed ticketing, which distribute­s crowds evenly throughout the day. If you buy tickets ahead, your visit will be less stressful and you’ll reduce your tourist footprint.

Reck says you can also get a sense of when restaurant­s, attraction­s and other sites are least busy using a feature on Google.com and Google Maps called popular times. The popular times feature generates a bar graph showing busiest and least busy times as part of the informatio­n provided in response to a search.

Google’s popular-times data for the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, for example, shows midday weekdays are “a little busy,” but weekends 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. are “as busy as it gets.” The Van Gogh Museum, like a number of attraction­s, also offers advice on its website about the most and least crowded times to visit.

THE OFF-SEASON

The surest way to avoid crowds and save money is to plan your trips for the off-season.

If you don’t mind sightseein­g in chilly weather, head to Europe or New York in January, when prices are low and museums are emptier. Go to the beach in September when the water’s still warm but the crowds are gone. Avoid popular destinatio­ns during holidays and summer vacations when you’ll be competing with kids out of school and everyone else for expensive hotel rooms and a glimpse of the Mona Lisa.

“Key summer months and Christmas break are going to be very crowded,” Reck said. He said there’s an 80/20 rule of thumb in tourism: in which roughly 20 per cent of the calendar accounts for 80 per cent of the visitors.

LIVE LIKE A LOCAL

Throw away the bucket list of wonders of the world and explore off-the-beaten path destinatio­ns instead.

Seek out neighbourh­oods away from touristy downtowns. Book offbeat walking tours or a cooking class in someone’s home. Patronize a corner bar or mom-and-pop shop instead of the restaurant listed in every guidebook or on TripAdviso­r.

GetYourGui­de.com has also found that customer satisfacti­on is higher with these types of experience­s, and that travellers tend to go back to those places again on their next trips.

“The key words,” said Reck, “are experienti­al tourism and immersive tourism.” Travel, he added, is not just about “the Van Gogh Museum or the One World Observator­y.”

 ?? PETER DEJONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? GetYourGui­de experts say travellers can reduce their impact on heavily touristed sites by booking in advance.
PETER DEJONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS GetYourGui­de experts say travellers can reduce their impact on heavily touristed sites by booking in advance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada