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N.Y. Times article on Brit. tourists


june11

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I guess the author doesn't like Brits. .

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Travel Advisory: British Abroad, Staggering About

NY Times

September 4, 2003

By SARAH LYALL

 

 

 

 

 

 

PRAGUE, Aug. 30 - The party started early on Friday, when

EasyJet's 6:15 a.m. flight to Prague took off from Stansted

Airport in Britain.

 

"We looked on the Internet and these were the flights that

were available," said a 30-ish passenger whose breakfast,

three cans of Kronenborg, was lined up in front of him.

 

"I thought we were going to Barcelona, but apparently

Prague is quite a historical and cultural city." He

snickered.

 

Meanwhile, his friend had already finished his own first

round. "Bring the trolley to me with a big straw!" he

shouted, then laid out his goals for the weekend: "Get

drunk, I suppose; have some drinks and have a good time."

 

In the last few years, a new kind of British tourist, lured

by cut-rate airlines whose flights can cost as little as

$25 or less, has descended on Prague in unprecedented

numbers, apparently with one goal in mind: to drink as much

as possible. Wasted and aggressive, in drag or wearing only

underpants, they spend weekends staggering in packs from

bar to bar near Wenceslas Square. So troublesome have they

become that some places refuse to serve Britons who arrive

in large groups.

 

"It's disgusting," said Martina Tajdusova, who works in a

hotel downtown. "They spend a lot of money here, but the

British don't know when to stop, when is enough. They drink

and drink and drink."

 

Tour groups encourage the business by portraying Prague as

a center for cheap beer and loose women, and by organizing

pub crawls whose participants set out to drink in as many

places as possible before stumbling (if they can still

stumble) on to the return flight home.

 

"As a friend of mine said the other day, the British treat

every day as if it were New Year's Eve," said Ivo Lorenc,

who rents out apartments to tourists, and who once cleaned

up after a party of four Britons who stayed for two nights

and left 100 empty bottles behind.

 

In other places, too, Britons are earning a reputation for

bad behavior.

 

In Greece, several British tourists died this summer after

bar fights or drunken pranks gone amiss. In one incident

that was videotaped by a local businessman and provoked

widespread disgust, three British women leading a tour

group on Corfu performed flamboyant oral sex on fellow

employees in front of a cheering crowd.

 

In Spain, where more than 600 Britons are in jail, many for

offenses committed while on vacation, Lloret de Mar on the

Costa Brava has been moved to ban drinking on the streets

and beaches. Even hard-drinking Dublin, long a popular

destination for British stag parties, began to discourage

them in the Temple Bar neighborhood in 1998.

 

Officials in Prague are in something of a quandary: after a

downturn in tourism after Sept. 11 and disastrous floods

last year, they are loath to offend the free-spending

British visitors, who make up more than 10 percent of the

city's tourist trade.

 

"There's nothing shameful about spending a lot of time in a

restaurant or a pub - we are grateful for every tourist,"

Hana Cermakova, a spokeswoman for the tourist authority,

said. "It's true that we have had some complaints about

groups of young people, but it's not just the British. It's

not possible to divide troublemakers according to nation."

 

Perhaps not, but the British, particularly those on stag

weekends, certainly stand out. They travel in groups. They

wear unifying items of clothing, like custom-printed

T-shirts or humorous costumes. Residents are still talking

about the time a group of 53 women arrived from Wales, each

one dressed like Tom Jones.

 

After the plane landed, the increasingly merry EasyJet

passengers were unleashed into the greater community. One

group, in Prague to celebrate the coming nuptials of

31-year-old Andy Briault, headed to Rocky O'Reilly's, an

Irish bar and first on their print-out list of prime

drinking establishments.

 

Playing drinking games and compelling Mr. Briault to change

into an obscene shirt, the group was still on the

pleasantly coherent side of drunk, although that would

change after a few hours. The pub's owner, Robbie Norton,

said that though there was some truth to the complaints,

most groups were harmless.

 

Also, they are big business. For instance, he said, a party

of 23 men drank 180 vodkas and 60 cans of Red Bull one

Friday. "I know that sounds totally insane, but they came

back and did the same thing on Saturday and the same thing

on Sunday," he said.

 

Jonathan Weinstein, the Brooklyn-born owner of the

Pricnyrez cafe, has his share of British horror stories.

 

Once, he said, a group of 20 or so mixed absinthe and vodka

until they started throwing up, driving away even those

customers who had endured their noise and obnoxiousness.

Members of another group stripped and ran around in their

underpants. At a bar nearby, he said, two dozen Britons,

angry at being served warm beer, upended their glasses en

masse and walked out without paying.

 

Once, he said, three separate groups - from Manchester,

Leeds and Birmingham, each supporting their city's soccer

team - arrived simultaneously and had to be separated when

they began brawling drunkenly in the bathrooms.

 

Back at Rocky O'Reilly's, another stag party settled in.

Having taken a bus tour of Prague that morning ("we're not

just philistines," declared the groom, Marty Neley), they

had concluded that it was time to get down to the real

business of the weekend.

 

They planned to remain indoors, they said, so as not to

offend people in the street. But it raised an interesting

question: If all they wanted to do was drink at an Irish

pub, why not just stay home?

 

"It's cheaper to come here than to go to Blackpool," said

one of Mr.

 

Neley's friends, "and nobody knows us here."

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/04/international/04PRAG.html?ex=1063707835&ei=1&en=eb653178f9bfc4c3

 

 

 

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"As a friend of mine said the other day, the British treat

every day as if it were New Year's Eve," said Ivo Lorenc,

who rents out apartments to tourists, and who once cleaned

up after a party of four Britons who stayed for two nights

and left 100 empty bottles behind.

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thats only a dozen each a night....wot were these geezers bloody homos then???? :dunno:

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