The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Expert in traveling through Europe is ready to talk again

After virus shutdown, tours back in business, but vaccinatio­ns key.

- By Andrea Sachs

Since the Nixon era, Rick Steves has spent about 100 days out of each year in Europe. Between last March and this September, he logged zero minutes abroad, though Europe was always on his mind.

While hunkering down in his home north of Seattle, the travel expert and multimedia personalit­y created public television shows and hosted virtual events about a world nearly 5,000 miles away. In June, traditiona­lly the beginning of the high tourist season, he started accepting reservatio­ns for tours departing the following year. Travelers moved fast, snapping up 95% of nearly 31,000 spots on about 1,100 group tours running February through December.

As for Steves, he finally crossed the Atlantic 18 months after the shutdown and is quickly making up for lost time: This fall, he hiked the Alps and dropped in on Paris and then returned five weeks later to lead new guides through Italy and to film in Rome, Florence and Athens. His tally for the last quarter of 2021: 30 days.

We caught up with Steves while he was at home in Edmonds, Wash., to discuss his recent forays in Europe; his approach to keeping his staff and guests safe, especially as we face omicron, a new variant that was identified a week after our initial conversati­on; and whether his trademark optimism is running high for 2022.

Q: How did the pandemic affect your tour operation?

A: It’s been a challengin­g

time for anybody in the tourism industry. We came off our best year ever in 2019. On the eve of the pandemic shutdown, we had our annual tour guide summit. I had 100 tour guides in my living room, celebratin­g how we were all ready to go for 2020. We broke from that annual huddle and everybody flew back to their hometowns in Europe. Two weeks later, we realized that we were going to have to cancel our entire season for 2020. But our mantra was, “The pandemic can derail our travel plans, but it cannot stop our travel dreams.”

Q: How did you occupy yourself during the shutdown?

A: I’ve been very busy during the downtime, writing and producing. I produced a TV show called “Why We Travel,” a love note to travel. It’s a timely topic because it talks about the value of travel as we go forward after COVID.

My priorities were taking care of my staff and our community. We created the Rick Steves’ Volunteer Corps. My

employees use their paid time at food banks and senior centers and to help clean up parks. During the pandemic, there is a lot of need in our community.

Q: You waited longer than many others in the industry to travel internatio­nally. Why?

A: For a long time, “patience” was my middle name. It’s not an American forte, and it certainly isn’t Rick Steves’s forte, but for a year and a half, I was being very conservati­ve about travel. I thought that before the vaccinatio­ns, we should not be traveling. We should be staying safe, staying healthy and looking after our loved ones and neighbors.

Q: What developmen­ts or conditions eased your concerns about traveling abroad?

A: It was still premature to start group travel, but I wanted to go over there and see what it was like. I felt that in Europe, it was an ever-smaller world for people who were not getting vaccinated. Everywhere I went, it seemed like there were safeguards keeping unvaccinat­ed people away from (vaccinated people).

Q: Tell us about your longawaite­d return to Europe.

A: The first trip was a vacation. I wanted to hike around Mont Blanc with my girlfriend. It was six days, with 10 miles of hiking each day. We had sherpa service that shuttled our bags from one mountain hotel to the next. Then we went to Paris. I wanted to see what it was like from a COVID point of view and how things were surviving. Several weeks later, I went back for a 20-day work trip. I wanted to do a guides mentoring tour. (The group, led by Steves, followed his nine-day Heart of Italy itinerary.) We have 100 guides in Europe. They are all profession­al guides, but I wanted them to know exactly what distinguis­hed a Rick Steves tour.

Q: Based on your experience, how has Europe fared during the pandemic?

A: I was worried that we were going to be raking away the corpses of businesses that had died during the pandemic. But I happily discovered that almost all of them have survived. The other thing I noticed is that the ambiance of Europe, the passeggiat­a (Italy’s traditiona­l evening walk), the energy on the streets, the cafe scene — they are just like they were before. The love of life is vibrant in Europe.

Q: Did you see many Americans during your travels?

A: Half the people hiking around Mont Blanc were Americans, and they were filled with joy. Half the people I met while I was waiting in line to see the Pantheon (in Rome) were

Americans, and they were having the time of their life. Half the people I met at the top of the Acropolis (in Athens) were Americans, and they were having a great time. The smiles on their faces didn’t say COVID; they said we’re living, we’re traveling.

Q: How are the countries you visited keeping their residents and tourists safe?

A: If you go to a museum, you wear a mask. If you go to a restaurant, you show your CDC card, and you know that everybody in there has their vaccinatio­n. I was pretty impressed.

Q: In addition to proof of vaccinatio­n, what other documents do Americans need to visit Europe?

A: To get to Europe and fly home from Europe, you generally need to have a negative coronaviru­s test. People wonder how they get their test in Europe. It’s easy: Just ask at the hotel desk. Some countries also have a passenger locator form. I pooh-poohed it and the airline asked for my passenger locator form and I hadn’t completed it. So I had to stand aside at check-in and fill it out. I could have missed my flight. Before you leave for the airport, go online and fill it out.

Q: Will you make any adjustment­s to your tours to conform to local rules and to ensure the overall safety of your staff and guests?

A: We decided about a month ago that everybody on our tours — the bus drivers, the tour guides and the participan­ts — must be vaccinated. I don’t want to take people to Europe and have them standing out in the street while we go inside and have a good dinner. You cannot function efficientl­y in Europe without having your vaccinatio­n.

 ?? RICK STEVES’ EUROPE ?? Rick Steves waited 18 months before returning abroad. This fall, he made up for lost time by spending 30 days in the Alps, France, Greece and Italy, home of the Roman Forum.
RICK STEVES’ EUROPE Rick Steves waited 18 months before returning abroad. This fall, he made up for lost time by spending 30 days in the Alps, France, Greece and Italy, home of the Roman Forum.

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