Manchester Evening News

As package holidays resume to the Balearic party hotspot, finds out how Ibiza is operating post-lockdown

SARAH MARSHALL

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CHEERING low-flying aircraft as they cruised overhead became a bit of a tradition at clubs along Playa d’en Bossa, Ibiza’s longest and liveliest beach. Whoops of joy welcomed a new influx of clubbers and applauded the fact someone somewhere in the venue had probably missed their flight home.

But today, only gulls spread their wings against the deep blue sky. Standing alone on an empty beach, I’m an audience of one.

Spain, including the Balearic Islands, experience­d one of the strictest lockdowns in Europe, and Ibiza’s famous club scene has been put on hold for this year. Mass gatherings are forbidden, dancing banned, and bars can no longer stay open until the early hours.

It paints a very different picture of the Ibiza familiar to most.

When I land at the airport, only a scattering of people fills the terminal. Outside, weathered posters advertise parties that ended months ago.

Foreigners, though, are starting to return.

Borders are open to visitors from the UK, and inclusion in the government’s safe list (meaning no quarantine restrictio­ns in either direction) has given a green light for tourism to the island (though Scots still currently need to isolate), with the first influx of fly ‘n’ flop tourists arriving on TUI flights from Manchester and Gatwick on July 10.

Several weeks ago, the idea of a summer holiday in Europe felt like a fantasy, but leading package holiday operator TUI promise 2020’s summer is back on, with regional departures to increase over the next few weeks. In terms of destinatio­ns, by August, Greece and Turkey will be sold alongside their Spanish programme.

Newly refurbishe­d during lockdown, 495-room dual tower resort The Ibiza Twiins is one of the properties hosting TUI guests. Perspex screens on reception and multiple hand sanitiser dispensers are designed to keep Covid-19 at bay; in every room, slippers and bathrobes come with a compliment­ary disposable face mask. It’s a useful gift and a hint at the new normal here.

From July 13, mask wearing became mandatory in all public areas across the Balearics. Beaches, swimming pools and sun loungers are exempt; when sitting down to eat or drink, face coverings can also be removed. Anyone who breaks the rules could be fined 10 euros (£89).

In the absence of crowds, social distancing is easy, and I never struggle to find ample space in the sun. I’m one of only 90 guests – a fraction of the capped 70% capacity, and Ricardo Munoz, commercial and marketing director of the Sirenis hotel group, admits they probably won’t see big bookings until 2021. “None of us are here to make money this summer,” he laments.

The other surprise is the breakfast buffet, which most hoteliers have retired in our new germophobi­c world. When I enter the restaurant, a member of staff registers my temperatur­e with an electronic zapper; anything above 37.5C and I’ll be whisked into quarantine. Inside, a one-way system weaves past counters of food, although only serving staff can plate items, and even bananas must be picked up with tongs.

Along with sickness, fear of quarantine is one of the big stumbling blocks preventing people from booking holidays in 2020. TUI recently announced details of a new Covid-19 Cover programme, available to every guest until the end of the year, which promises to take care of costs associated with self-isolation abroad. It provides some reassuranc­e during unpredicta­ble times.

Most tourists I meet are simply relieved to be on holiday. It’s unanimousl­y agreed the only peculiarit­y is how normal it feels to be away.

Like everywhere in 2020, though, Ibiza looks different.

Local guide Pepe Costa, who’s been leading tours for 38 years, says this is the quietest he’s ever seen the island. “But it’s still as beautiful as ever,” he says from beneath a plastic visor, as we explore the breezy, hilltop ramparts of Dalt Vila, Ibiza’s fortified old town. “Many people think we have only the nightlife, but there’s the history, the culture, the gastronomy; there are many things to do.”

Perhaps it’s a trick of the soft, Mediterran­ean sunlight, but in the absence of busy ferry traffic, the sea

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Bam Bu Ku
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Cafés are open

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