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https://www.telegraph.co.uk/family/life/visitors-go-home-fear-loathing-uk-holiday-villages/

'Visitors go home': Fear and loathing in UK holiday villages

The long-standing tensions between locals and second home-owners has been exacerbated by Covid-19, with resentment bubbling to the surface

Some of the warnings are blunt: “Locals Only”, etched in the sand on a beach in St Ives, Cornwall, or “Visitors Go Home”, daubed onto a sign on the outskirts of the Suffolk seaside town of Aldeburgh. Others convey the same sentiment but in a rhyming couplet. “Don’t infect us,” implored a yellow banner outside the town hall in genteel Southwold, where 60 per cent of properties are holiday homes, “respect us”.

All, though, give voice to the same fear that those escaping soaring levels of infection in our big cities during the Covid-19 lockdown, to take up residence in a bolthole in sparsely-populated coastal and countryside areas, will bring the contagion with them.

Reports of open hostility to such coronavirus evacuees are legion: the village shop in sleepy Devon refusing to serve “outsiders”; the notices under windscreen wipers of cars parked in a north Norfolk seaside town popular with second homers telling them to “b----- off”: and a Cotswolds’ village Facebook group labelling those retreating there from London “irresponsible idiots who should be locked up to save the rest of us from them”.

Enforced social isolation and the ever-present fear of catching the deadly virus from neighbours who are not playing by the rules is having an impact on every community during lockdown, often alongside the “We Are All In It Together” spirit. But in holiday-home areas, the impact is greater because it exacerbates long-standing tensions between permanent and “irregular” residents.

Gordon Ramsay has this week become the public face of this wave of fear and loathing. The celebrity chef and his wife Tana have decanted their five children, aged from one to 22, from the family’s Wandsworth Common home in the virus hotspot of London to sit out Covid-19 at their luxury beach house close to the “Chelsea-by-Sea” hub of Padstow in Cornwall.

Locals are up in arms. There have been threatening posts on community social media sites and pictures of Ramsay in a finger-wagging altercation next to his Land Rover in a local high street.

Government guidance during lockdown is that everyone should stay in their “principal residence”. Cabinet minister, Brandon Lewis, who represents the Norfolk coastal town of Great Yarmouth, has explicitly told those with holiday homes to stay away.

Yet Ramsay – like many second-homers – has argued that with his grown-up children now living in their own places, the Cornish property is where the family gathers and therefore counts as its main base. And, he adds, they arrived before the government issued instructions for everyone to stay put.

To prove he isn’t a complete leper in Cornwall, he has also tweeted a picture of the freshly grown asparagus left on his doorstep by a well-wisher, complete with a note that reads: “A little gift from the fields across [from] your house”.

Some do seem to accept that these are nuanced decisions, tied up in family connections, but within affected communities, on both sides of the insider-outsider divide, no one is denying the tensions right now. “It is worse in the towns rather than the villages,” says one Londoner staying at his cottage in rural Suffolk, “but we’re keeping a low profile.” He doesn’t want to give his name.

Further up the East Anglian coast in north Norfolk, where some prime locations have only 13 per cent of houses permanently occupied, matters are closer to boiling point. “I have been coming here since 1948, and have lived here all the year round for two decades,” reports one home-owner, “and I have never witnessed such an undercurrent of animosity.”

The public “vitriol” makes her, too, want to remain anonymous, but she echoes locals’ fears that the influx of well-heeled city-dwellers could cause a spike in infection rates, with social distancing rules hard to follow on country footpaths and beaches. “The community here is mainly elderly and many are acutely worried right now about how our nearest already overstretched hospitals will cope.”

Friction between locals and holiday-homers is nothing new in such areas. Even if the part-timers do push up property prices, many argue that they contribute to the community by boosting the local economy. What lockdown has done, however, is close many of the pubs, cafes and amenities where they would spend their money and sustain jobs.

“It has always been a fine balance,” reflects one local mother in Norfolk, whose grown-up children, like her, work in servicing the second-homers, “but when we hear about someone dying from the virus who worked at our local community hospital, it inevitably makes people very anxious. They look for someone to blame.”

The blame-game, though, can get “rather silly”, suggests John James, who, with his wife Mary, runs the Aldeburgh Bookshop. “We rely on second homers, many of whom spend a lot of time and money here. Many of the people who complain [at the moment] have not lived here very long and are trying to prove how local they are by being cross with outsiders.”

And when you get angry, you can lash out indiscriminately. In the Lake District, a local nurse, self-isolating in a friend’s holiday home, woke up one morning to find her car types had been slashed, and had to miss her next shift. Meanwhile, pictures of Sue Skyba’s yellow VW Beetle convertible in Duporth in Cornwall, with a pot of white paint poured down the front of it, have made headlines.

The 63-year-old is convinced the vandalism was intended as a warning to second-homers. “I can only assume,” she says, “people thought it [belonged] to someone on holiday.” In fact, it was her son who was staying in the holiday rental because he suffers from an autoimmune condition.

“We don’t want to turn into a vigilante society,” warns Sarah Butikofer, the Liberal Democrat leader of North Norfolk District Council. She has been “hearing reports pretty much on a daily basis” about outsiders who are accused of flouting the rules in lockdown.

Some of the suspicions, even if they sound outlandish, do prove to have something in them. North Wales Police have tweeted about their officers stopping courier vans that are delivering suitcases from cities to second homes. Their owners, it seems, were anxious to avoid being caught with the luggage in their own cars en route and turned back.

“Surely,” the police appealed to our public-spiritedness, “people aren’t that selfish and cunning?”
 
We have seen lots of cars arriving late at night in this area and suddenly many families have increased in size overnight normally with relatives from the South East. Also some of the sneaky cheats are using parcel delivery companies to deliver their luggage to their second homes or relatives home so if the cops stop to check them they appear to only be driving someplace not bugging out.
 
I read an article about some mega rich owners of shelters in New Zealand couldn’t reach their bug out locations as they waited too long and international travel was shut down. I can’t say I had an abundance of sympathy but at the same time if I had the resources I would likely be there right now! I understand locals being wary of outsiders, hell, I don’t trust anyone at Walmart right now... all I’m certain of is you don’t want to be the center of attention for an angry mob. Practicing the gray man theory is wise wherever you are.
 
I have the utmost confidence that there won't be anyone trying to keep me away from my BOL no matter how bad things get. There aren't any locals to speak of. One house between the nearest highway and the BOL. The next house is several miles down the road. Who's going to stop me???
 
OH NO!

Panic time in the UK, LOL!

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/coronavirus-threatens-british-cuppa-tea-21892810
Coronavirus threatens British cuppa as tea providers hit by pandemic

Coronavirus is now threatening the great British cuppa.

The world’s largest tea-producing regions have been locked down in a bid to combat the pandemic.

It means the cost of the 100million cups slurped by Brits every day is set to soar.

Buyers are desperately trying to secure stocks of leaves as plantations in Kenya – the UK’s largest tea supplier – and other African countries are hit.

Major producers in India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia have already been affected.

The biggest price increases will hit lovers of premium teas like Darjeeling, the first harvest of which has already been missed. The cost of that could quadruple.
 
OH NO!

Panic time in the UK, LOL!

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/coronavirus-threatens-british-cuppa-tea-21892810
Coronavirus threatens British cuppa as tea providers hit by pandemic

Coronavirus is now threatening the great British cuppa.

The world’s largest tea-producing regions have been locked down in a bid to combat the pandemic.

It means the cost of the 100million cups slurped by Brits every day is set to soar.

Buyers are desperately trying to secure stocks of leaves as plantations in Kenya – the UK’s largest tea supplier – and other African countries are hit.

Major producers in India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia have already been affected.

The biggest price increases will hit lovers of premium teas like Darjeeling, the first harvest of which has already been missed. The cost of that could quadruple.


F*** me pink with a banana that is serious, more serious than North Korea or China. Glad I have many thousands of Yorkshire Tea bags stashed away alongside my Douwe Egberts Coffee.
 
Why oh why oh why could it not be imported Beers or Wines, we can live without them, but without tea most brit workers will kick off big style.
 
This is an existential threat to Englishness, LOL.

To bloody right mate, without tea we would not have created, settled, conquered, defeated or liberated over a quarter of the world. They may take our ale and our fish n chips but to deprive us of tea is apocalyptic, it is like depriving a fish its water. :) Hmmmmmmm now was'nt Virginia suitable for growing Tea and Tobacco ??? :).
 
Damn I think our total death toll in the UK has gone past 32,000 if I heard the radion right. No bloody way on earth will I set foot in ant British city now.
 

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