Yorkshire Post

Great outdoors is main attraction

- PAUL JEEVES HEAD OF NEWS ■ Email: paul.jeeves@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @jeeves_paul

IN A year quite like no other, the desire to be outdoors has never been greater.

The chance to escape the confines of home has seen droves of people turn to outdoor venues, with membership of some of Yorkshire’s leading tourism attraction­s showing a dramatic rise.

While the tourism sector has been decimated throughout the past 12 months, with many venues having to remain closed during the repeated lockdowns, those attraction­s which have offered the chance to explore gardens or parklands have fared far better.

Figures from the Associatio­n of Leading Visitor Attraction­s (Alva) have revealed that some of the region’s destinatio­ns such as Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Water Garden, near Ripon, and RHS Harlow Carr, near Harrogate, have risen up the leaderboar­d of the nation’s most visited locations.

Overall, Alva’s figures have shown that the UK’s leading tourist attraction­s suffered a “devastatin­gly hard year” due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Some 45.4m visits were recorded across 294 sites last year, down from 151.3m during 2019. However, Alva’s chief executive, Bernard Donoghue, told The Yorkshire Post that people’s desire to re-engage with nature and the outdoors had minimised the impact on some attraction­s.

He said: “It has been an extraordin­arily tough year for the tourism sector, it was the first to be hit by coronaviru­s, it has been hit the hardest and it will take the longest to recover.

“However, people have been cooped up for so long that they are desperate to get out and enjoy what is often on their doorsteps.

“It may well take another 18 months for tourism to recover, especially as there will not be any overseas tourists for the foreseeabl­e future. But if there is ever a summer to get out and enjoy attraction­s, it is this year. This is the summer to enjoy culture, heritage and the arts without the queues.”

While Harlow Carr saw a 34 per cent fall in visitor numbers to 296,043 last year compared to 2019, it still rose up Alva’s national rankings from 83rd place to 39th spot.

Meanwhile, Fountains Abbey rose from 87th place to the 42nd position in the national league table, despite visitor numbers falling to 287,900 – a 30 per cent reduction in 2020 compared to the previous 12 months. Some of Yorkshire’s attraction­s have witnessed a significan­t rise in membership, as more people look towards supporting local tourism. Castle Howard has witnessed a 35 per cent increase in membership, rising from 10,000 members in March last year before the first lockdown to more than 15,000.

Abbigail Ollive, inset, the head of marketing and sales at the North Yorkshire estate, said: “It has been an unexpected bonus for us. Everyone does want to get out and enjoy the outdoors, but there are also a significan­t number of people who have signed up for membership on more philanthro­pic grounds because they want to help support us financiall­y. That has been really heartening, and we are so grateful after such a difficult year for everyone.”

People have been cooped up for so long, they are desperate to get out. Bernard Donoghue, chief executive of the Associatio­n of Leading Visitor Attraction­s.

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 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/ JONATHAN GAWTHORPE/JAMES HARDISTY ?? WALK ON THE MILD SIDE: Left, Will Merrison with monkey puzzle trees in RHS Harlow Carr; above, Fountains Abbey; below, Castle Howard; inset, Abbigail Ollive, from Castle Howard.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON/ JONATHAN GAWTHORPE/JAMES HARDISTY WALK ON THE MILD SIDE: Left, Will Merrison with monkey puzzle trees in RHS Harlow Carr; above, Fountains Abbey; below, Castle Howard; inset, Abbigail Ollive, from Castle Howard.

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