USA TODAY International Edition

Americans torn between vacation, isolation

Surveys say many in US unsure amid pandemic

- Chris Woodyard

Americans would love to go on vacation. They’re just not sure they should.

Two surveys found many travelers express hesitation during the coronaviru­s pandemic about taking a trip.

Sixty- seven percent of those responding to an AAA Travel survey released Thursday say they are uncertain about whether to take a vacation.

Online booking site Travelocit­y found 57% of Americans say they won’t travel for the year- end holidays.

The findings are in line with advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which offers a world map that indicates the coronaviru­s is a threat in just about every country, including the USA.

The AAA survey points to a trend that has become a theme of travel since the pandemic started causing broad shutdowns in March – more trips by car, often to outdoor destinatio­ns and planned days or a week, not months, ahead of time.

About 80% of vacation trips will be by car, and places “known for outdoor recreation and socially distanced fun” will be particular­ly popular, AAA says.

As if to prove the point, two new outdoor- oriented destinatio­ns show up on AAA’s list of most popular driving vacation destinatio­ns. Keystone, South Dakota, gateway to Mount Rushmore, takes sixth place. Colorado, the Rocky Mountain State, adds Colorado Springs in 10th place.

The top 10 are:

1. Denver

2. Las Vegas

3. Los Angeles

4. San Diego

5. Seattle

6. Keystone, South Dakota

7. Portland, Oregon

8. Phoenix

9. Colorado Springs

10. Myrtle Beach, South Carolina “Trips that allow people to take advantage of the great outdoors are particular­ly appealing this fall,” Paula Twidale, senior vice president of AAA Travel, said in a statement.

She cited state and national parks, beaches and gardens as the kind of COVID- 19- safe attraction­s that are popular.

The Travelocit­y survey found 25% of respondent­s surveyed in mid- September had planned to take a vacation by the end of the year.

Despite the general trend toward booking trips on short notice, Travelocit­y found about 60% of those planning Thanksgivi­ng or December holiday trips planned to book by the end of September. Those planning travel said they had already made travel arrangemen­ts.

“It’s going to be a nontraditi­onal holiday season this year, so families are gearing up to make the most of it by planning a holiday away from home and using their vacation days to travel,” Katie Junod, Travelocit­y’s general manager, said in a statement.

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