The Daily Telegraph

It’s a costly adieu as 160,000 tourists make the dash home

- By Izzy Lyons, Max Stephens, Brendan Mcfadden and Alex Shipman

‘We couldn’t get tickets, all the sites crashed. We had to buy business class tickets so it cost nearly £1,000’

FOR tens of thousands of holidaymak­ers in France, that relaxing summer trip across the Channel had suddenly become rather stressful.

Such was the scramble to get back to Britain that private jet companies reported a trebling in requests – including, one firm claimed, from teachers worried about being stuck in quarantine for the start of term.

Brides-to-be, families and students made up some of the 160,000 tourists who were forced to attempt to make a hasty dash over the border. And even for those not hiring their own jets, it proved expensive after the demand for flights, trains and Eurotunnel tickets soared as Britons went to desperate lengths to get home before the new measures came into place.

The news forced Kate, an events organiser from Croydon, south London, to cancel her wedding in Marseille, where she was due to get married on Sept 12, because the restrictio­ns have made it impossible for friends and family in the UK to fly to France.

“I am absolutely gutted,” she told The Daily Telegraph in London Gatwick airport, where she arrived yesterday afternoon after making a last-minute dash for the UK to avoid quarantine. “I had my meltdown last night [after the travel restrictio­ns were announced].

“For us, it is not just about the money we have paid, but all of our guests have hotels that won’t be refunded now.”

Those who travelled back to the UK by water faced a race against time. Ferry operator Stena Line was last night desperatel­y trying to get confirmati­on from the Border Force and the Foreign Office that its passengers would be exempt from quarantine. The boat left at 10pm from

Hook of Holland in Rotterdam to Harwich, where it was due to be back in UK waters by 4am, the time the quarantine rule entered into force – even though it would not land until 6.30am.

Thousands of others made the unexpected journey back to the UK via the Eurostar, which sold out of capacity on its last three trains a matter of hours after the Government’s announceme­nt.

Stuart and Anna Buntine, a couple who own a farm in the Midlands, spent nearly £1,000 to make it home via the Eurostar from France to London’s St Pancras Station. Mr Buntine, 58, said:

“We didn’t get our notificati­on until this morning, where we were staying in Burgundy there wasn’t a lot of internet.

“I went to bed last night thinking it was all OK, woke up at 7am to find we had to get back here pretty sharpish.

“We couldn’t get tickets, all the sites had crashed. We had to buy business class tickets back today so it cost nearly £1,000.”

Ashley Bateson, 54, and Katarina Bateson, 52, from south-west London, also arrived in France on Thursday just hours before the Government announced it would be added to the coronaviru­s red-list. The couple, who

‘We don’t have the luxury of going on the holiday as the girls start school two days after we were due to get back’

were meant to return from Paris on Monday, described efforts to purchase last-minute tickets online as “mayhem”. Those who chose to fly were faced with price increases of up to 1,000 per cent.

Privatefly, a private jet provider, reported three times the number of inquiries and bookings for flights out of France and other countries including the Netherland­s that were added to the quarantine list.

Adam Twidell, its chief executive, said that the increase in demand was “instant”, and that new and existing customers wanted to change their flight plans as soon as the announceme­nt was made. “A typical emergency flight might be for a footballer who has missed the airline and needs to get to training, but now we’re seeing the same inquiries from teachers realising they need to get back in a week’s time to start school, and headmaster­s are not going to appreciate it if they’re stuck in quarantine,” he said.

Mark Barnes, a preparator­y school teacher from Isleworth, west London, was holidaying with his wife and two young children, aged six and eight, in Dijon, France, but bagged a seat on a flight from Paris so he can go back to work on Aug 26. “I have got to get back to school. I would have to isolate for 14 days if I left it any later, which would be a pain,” Mr Barnes, 51, said after arriving at Gatwick.

Ben Hillman, 42, who presents A Place in the Sun on Channel 4, was forced to cancel a two-week road trip across France with his wife Gabby, 40, and their two daughters Honor, four, and Hope, five.

“We don’t have the luxury of going on the holiday as the girls start school two days after we were due to get back,” he said.

“For our youngest, it is going to be her first year of school and that settling week is so important for her.”

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 ??  ?? Thousands of British holidaymak­ers scrambled to travel back home from France yesterday by train, ferry and plane, after the Government gave them until 4am this morning to beat newly imposed quarantine restrictio­ns.
Thousands of British holidaymak­ers scrambled to travel back home from France yesterday by train, ferry and plane, after the Government gave them until 4am this morning to beat newly imposed quarantine restrictio­ns.
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