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Travelling to Thailand during Covid-19: four visitors – fully vaccinated – describe their experiences in Bangkok, Phuket and Chiang Mai


Jonathan Fairfield

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Shiori Kumagai from Japan at Wat Arun in Bangkok. Compared to her first visit nine years ago, attractions were empty - good for photo taking, she says. Kumagai is in Thailand to work remotely. Photo: Thomas Bird

 

 

By Thomas Bird

 

  • Tourism-dependent Thailand reopened to fully vaccinated travellers from designated countries on November 1. The Post asks four visitors about their trips
  • The paperwork for entry can be a pain and tours cost more, they report, but destinations are quieter, the food as good as ever and Thais all wear face masks

 

Few countries have been affected by the shutdown of global travel to fight coronavirus more than Thailand. Bangkok was the most visited city in the world in 2019, ahead of Paris, France, and that year the country received 39.8 million visitors. The number plummeted to 6.7 million in 2020.

 

But the country is emerging from isolation. Beginning with the Phuket Sandbox scheme in July, Thailand has been reviving its battered tourist industry. As of November 1, fully vaccinated travellers from eligible countries – China (including Hong Kong), Malaysia and the United States among them – have been able to enter via the Test and Go programme (also known as the Quarantine Exemption Scheme). After a night in an accredited hotel, visitors with a negative PCR test result are free to roam.

 

The numbers look promising. As domestic Covid-19 cases have fallen, Thailand has seen the highest growth in internet searches among all destinations: a 75 per cent jump between October 10 and November 19, according to Travel Insights with Google. On December 1 and 2 alone, 16,210 travellers entered Thailand, including 13,203 under the Test and Go programme.

 

But the trickle of visitors has yet to become the flood Thailand needs to rehydrate its parched tourist industry. Bangkok hubs for travellers are lined by closed shopfronts displaying “For Sale” and “For Rent” signs. The country’s tuk-tuks sit idle, drivers snoozing or fondling their phones.

 

Full story: https://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/travel-leisure/article/3158877/travelling-thailand-during-covid-19-four-visitors-fully

 

 

 

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If you read the linked article, there are enough comments from those four. The fact is that it's an article meant for overseas readers, there's absolutely nothing of interest for us in Thailand and especially it's outdated, the interviews must be from months ago.

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Having read the whole story, it sounds like Thailand is a zombie country with very few true international tourists arriving so far.  Maybe several hundreds, but not the thousands of tourists needed to restart the tourism industry.  My friends who have gone back to Thailand tell me that, in Pattaya, and Hua Hin areas, there are so many places that are still closed that except for the weekends when some local domestic tourists and travelers from Bangkok

and some other Thai cities, most tourist places are pretty empty during the week days.

 

This December and the early part of 2022 will be a real eye opener for travelers who  visit Thailand, and I believe many other touristy countries, as it was mentioned that other parts of Asia are not fully open, if opened at all either.  The COVID pandemic is not over yet as well, something else to consider.

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