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Time for a ‘coolcation’

TROLLSTIGEN (AFP) – Far from her home in the tourist mecca of Tenerife, Cati Padilla is one of the growing number of travellers escaping heatwaves for cooler holidays in Nordic countries.

Countries like Norway and Sweden in northern Europe are now promoting “coolcations” to attract visitors to their temperate climates.

Why leave the Canaries in the warm season? “To escape the heat,” said Padilla while on holiday with her friends.

“Norway attracted our attention a long time ago because of the green landscape, the mountains and the ice,” added the civil servant in her 50s on the so-called “troll path”, a serpentine mountain route towards the fjords.

In 2023, foreign overnight stays rose by 22 per cent in Norway and 11 per cent in Sweden according to official statistics, mainly driven by the end of COVID-related restrictions in 2022 and a slump in Scandinavian currencies.

But a survey in Germany for tourist organisation Visit Sweden also found that two out of five people plan to change their travel habits due to the southern European heat, opting for different seasons or cooler destinations.

ABOVE & BELOW: Tourists on snow mobiles on Spitsbergen island, northern Norway; and snow mobiles parked next to wooden buildings. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
A cruise ship moors in the harbour in Hellesylt, in the Geiranger fjord, Norway. PHOTO: AFP
An airplane prepares to land at Longyearbyen airport. PHOTO: AFP
ABOVE & BELOW: A small iceberg on the lake of Djupvatnet, Norway; and a small boat anchored in the fjord in Valldal. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP

“Coolcation is not just about the weather,” said head of Visit Sweden Susanne Andersson.

“It’s about travelling to places where it’s a bit cooler both in the weather but also cooler in the sense of not that many people.”

For some people, gone are the overcrowded Mediterranean beaches and heatwaves causing forest fires and the partial closure of the Acropolis in the Greek capital in June.

Nowadays, many prefer to take a dip in a lake or a fjord, or fill their lungs with fresh air on a mountain hike in relative isolation.

When British tourist Pam disembarked from a cruise ship on the majestic Geiranger Fjord, a UNESCO World Heritage site, she expected to find cool weather.

But she found herself in sandals and a t-shirt, rather than the raincoat and woollen clothes she packed. “It’s been wonderful,” said the resident of Lichfield city in west-central England. “It’s still not that hot that you can’t walk.”

“It just does not interest me now to sit on a sunbed, read a book, get up, go and have something to eat and come back to the sunbed. I’d rather visit places, find the history and just look at beautiful places.”

The frequency and intensity of extreme heat events and the duration of heatwaves have “almost certainly” increased since 1950 and will continue to do so with global warming, according to United Nations (UN) climate experts.

By 2050, half of Europe’s population could face high or very high risk heat stress in summer, with heat-related deaths potentially doubling or tripling with temperature rises of between 1.5 degrees Celsius (oC) to 3oC.

“Spain is a no. Greece is a no,” said 74-year-old French pensioner Gerard Grollier, as he disembarked from a coach in Geiranger village in western Norway.

Why Norway? “The climate is much more pleasant,” explained his daughter, Virginie, a financial adviser. “We have not protected our planet, and now that is impacting tourism.”

The capital of Lapland in northern Finland, Rovaniemi, recorded a 29 per cent jump in overnight stays last year.

“You can feel the ‘coolcation’ here, the trend started years ago but it has increased with the hot summers in southern and central Europe,” said tourism promoter in Rovaniemi Sanna Karkkainen.

The coolcation influx has its issues, including a surge in Airbnb properties and unruly tourists.

“Our main concern is to have too many people at the same time,” emphasised former mayor of a Norwegian village Jan Ove Tryggestad.

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