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Experts predict 11 ways the pandemic will change travel
Will we get over virus fears and return to travel joys, such as eating street food in Bangkok, dancing in crowded Tel Aviv nightclubs or staying in a South African hostel with bunk beds?
Will we get over virus fears and return to travel joys, such as eating street food in Bangkok, dancing in crowded Tel Aviv nightclubs or staying in a South African hostel with bunk beds?
Sunday Life's columnists tell where they want to be when the world is safe once more.
Aren't we passengers responsible for ensuring our paperwork is correct when we travel, rather than the airline we book with?
Are you an expert traveller? Test your knowledge with our travel quiz.
We're coming to drink at your pubs and eat at your cafes and stay in your B&Bs; and peruse your shops and wander your streets. And we're going to be a bit of a nightmare.
Travel has changed considerably since European travel expert Rick Steves published his first guidebook in 1979.
Travel, as we knew it, is making its first tentative steps out of enforced hibernation.
Expecting to transit, these travellers found themselves on the wrong side of the terminal and without the visa they needed...
Are you an expert traveller? Test your knowledge with our travel quiz.
Painful though it might be, missing out on a refund from a hotel booking could be down to us.
New technology on planes could create "air curtains" around passengers to reduce the risk of contracting Covid-19.
If the ugly parts of a country don't affect you, you don't have to worry about them. What a luxury.
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