T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV4 mins ago
Ok I get it I get fed up with the grockles in my home town but they do bring a lot of dosh with them to spend!
No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.So if the holiday makers tripled, or quadrupled in numbers and stayed year round you'd still be happy Aunty?
After all, your little shops, pubs, cafe's etc owners could become very wealthy at the cost of your beloved lifestyle whilst all the children stayed and became slaves to tourism.
What a wonderful life for all.
A lot of the hotels are owned by non-Spanish companies and employ non-Spanish staff. Many of the self-catering appartments are owned by British, German, Belgian and Dutch people and the holiday makers drink and eat in British, German, Belgian and Dutch bars and cafes. They meet ex-pat residents who offer to take them to the airport at a cut price and pretend they are friends/relatives at the drop off in front of the cameras. Ex-pats open shops that sell British 'essentials'. The black market is strong. I understand the locals frustrations.
I once had a weeks holiday in Cornwall, so, along with lots of others, I am a true grockle. But never again folks! We had a week in St Keverne. My daughter had been invited to play in the local band during a festival that they hold every year in August called The Ox Roast. I found the locals very frosty and not very welcoming but my daughter enjoyed it, which was the main thing. But we aint been back and never will!
I live in Torbay. A friend who was born here said to me "we depend on the holiday makers, so for six weeks we let them have our towns and beaches, then around the middle of September until July, we have it to ourselves." And it is true. I quite enjoy seeing families enjoying themselves on holiday here.
Clearly their gripe is with their authorities, and provided it is directed towards them and not towards the innocent tourists, then fine.
It's when a group inappropriately causes issues to those who aren't part of the problem that authorities need to act. (Cue police standing by allowing questionable behaviour while protesters cause a regular (daily ?) nuisance about something happening in a different nation miles away.)
Proresting in the streets of a resort seems likely to affect the tourists though, they need to take it to outside the relevant government office and hand their petition in.
It's fair enough to decide to limit something you offer to manageable proportions.