WATCH: Planning to travel soon or wondering what air travel will be like in the future? We find out answers to your travel related questions with Gurleen Chhatwal of Spring Travels in Surrey from requirements, prices and more.
WATCH: Planning to travel soon or wondering what air travel will be like in the future? We find out answers to your travel related questions with Gurleen Chhatwal of Spring Travels in Surrey from requirements, prices and more.
Working from home. Unwilling to go anywhere. Getting tired of the pine trees outside my spare bedroom window.
Others raised eyebrows in Zoom calls, silently judging our desire to spend a nonessential week at the beach in South Florida, the U.S. epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic.
With stringent stay-at-home orders, countries sealing borders, drop in the number of operational flights — we have been forced to abandon the travel bug within us.
The first cruise in an already decimated southeast Alaska cruise season came to a devastating end Wednesday when a small ship carrying 36 passengers had to return to Juneau because one of the guests had tested positive for COVID-19.
I moved to London in 1997. I was 31. So, measuring by my London years, I’m only 24.
The first Friday after schools in Britain close for the summer is always one of the busiest for the country’s airports as families escape for the warmer climes of southern Europe, from Portugal’s Algarve in the west to the island nation of Cyprus to the east. Not this year. The coronavirus pandemic has ended all that.