October 12th, 2007
Americans are still exploring Europe — and venturing into its
NEW YORK — Sure, air travel is a hassle. And no, the U.S. dollar doesn’t go very far in Paris or London. But none of that is keeping Americans away from Europe.
Nearly 13 million Americans visited Europe in 2006, a 4 percent increase from the previous year, according to preliminary data from the U.S. Commerce Department’s Office of Travel & Tourism Industries. The European Travel Commission expects those numbers will increase another 2 or 3 percent this year.
SHORT TRIPS AND BYWAYS: Now that you need a passport just to visit the Caribbean, some Americans — especially those already on the East Coast — are opting to spend a few more hours in the air to take a long weekend in Western Europe, according to Conrad Van Tiggelen, chairman of the European Travel Commission, www.visiteurope.com. “Traditional destinations like Paris and London are really going through the roof for short breaks,” he said.
Another trend is “combining the known and the unknown” by visiting landmarks in a major city, then heading off to the countryside, said Van Tiggelen.
“Seeing the Eiffel Tower is still a great thrill, as is going to the Vatican. But there is a subset of more sophisticated travelers yearning to see a more authentic side of Europe,” said Pauline Frommer, the travel writer and editor.
In Italy, a program called agriturismo allows travelers to “stay in a farmhouse set up for tourism and take part in the daily life and the making of particular products like cheese and wine,” according to Cosmo Frasca, spokesman for the Italian Government Tourist Board in New York. In Amsterdam, take a ferry across the Amstel River, rent a bike and “after 10 minutes, you’re in 17th- and 18th-century villages,” said Van Tiggelen, who is also the Netherlands tourism director.
Americans are also increasingly taking “experiential vacations,” said Peter Frank, editor of Concierge.com. “They want to engage in an activity — windsurfing in Croatia, hiking the pilgrim’s trail to Santiago de Compostela (in Spain) or taking a cookery class in Italy.”
For city visits, here’s a money-saving tip: Stay in an apartment instead of a hotel. The new “Pauline Frommer’s London” guidebook lists agencies that can set “you up in a room in someone’s apartment for 20 pounds a night,” with a private bathroom, said Frommer. “It makes Europe affordable again.”
ITALY: The United Kingdom and France each gets more tourists from the United States than Italy does, according to Commerce Department statistics. Nonetheless, many travel experts say Italy is the country American travelers are most interested in learning about.
“Italy with a capital I, that’s where the action is,” said Mike Weingart, a Carlson Wagonlit travel agent in Houston.
AAA Travel booked more trips to Italy this year than any other destination in Western Europe, with a 9 percent growth over last year and a whopping 34 percent of all AAA bookings to the region.
“One of the top questions we have been getting is, ‘Where in Italy do I go?”‘ said Frommer, who hosts a radio show with her father Arthur. “It seems to be very popular among first-time visitors.”
Fodor’s has just come out with a new guide called “Essential Italy: Rome, Florence, Venice & The Top Spots In Between.” “The inspiration for the book came from just looking at our Web site and the reader comment boards,” said “Essential Italy” editor Matthew Lombardi. “There were all these little headers saying, ‘Rome, Florence, Venice, help me plan my itinerary.’”
Americans are “more savvy now about the pleasures of contemporary Italian culture,” Lombardi added. “They can go and see the Pantheon, but they also realize that great Italian food is not spaghetti and meatballs.” They want to sample regional identities, cuisine and villages in places like Tuscany and Umbria.
EASTERN EUROPE: “People keep heading east,” said Concierge.com’s Frank. “People who’ve done Paris and Rome and Florence and Madrid, they want to see what else is out there.”
Publishers are responding with a slew of new books, like Frommer’s “Eastern Europe,” out April 2, and new DK Eyewitness Travel guides on the “Czech & Slovak Republics,” “Cracow” and a “Top 10 Dubrovnik & the Dalmatian Coast.”
“There’s still a curiosity about the former Communist countries and what they are really like,” said Douglas Amrine, DK Eyewitness Travel publisher. Yet with so many of these countries now in the European Union, travelers rightly perceive that “the infrastructure will be there” in terms of hotels, restaurants and customer service to accommodate them, Amrine added.
For bargain-hunters, the U.S. dollar goes further in Eastern Europe than in Western Europe. But high-end travelers will also feel at home in a spate of new luxury hotels, from the Mandarin Oriental Prague to a Four Seasons in Budapest to the high-tech Domina Grand in Ljubljana, Slovenia, Frank said.
And while the number of Americans visiting places like Croatia is still relatively small –154,000 in 2006 compared to more than 2 million to Italy — growth is strong, up from 115,289 Americans who visited in 2005 and more than 200,000 expected in 2007, according to the Croatian National Tourist Office. AAA’s bookings to Croatia increased an astounding 440 percent this year over last.