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It’s part of the travel writer’s lot. People can’t wait to tell you their travel woes. If you’re Simon Calder, you listen eagerly and come up with a ton of useful advice. If you’re me, you mutter something about being rather busy and move in the general direction of away.
Except when one subject is raised: winter sun. For some reason, that annual headache for the holidaying public brings out the travel evangelist and sympathetic counsellor in me.
This is high season for rip-off prices. Only this week, a colleague came up with a familiar tale. She, her husband and two kids are planning a half term trip to Tenerife. Flights: £2,300. Hotels: £3,500.
Did I have any alternative ideas? Sure I do. I’ll reveal how well they went down at the end.
The Middle East
Let’s forget for the moment that a place called Dubai exists: half term there will make my friend’s £6,000 quote look bargain basement.
As for the rest: this is one of those all-too-regular times when you mention the Arab world and you get that fine old English phrase, “not on your nelly”.
But if your nelly can be persuaded to be a bit more flexible and a lot less fearful, the region offers a golden combination of reliable warmth at low season prices. Even the ever-present political turmoil brings the prices down. The former holiday staple, the Red Sea resort of Sharm-el-Sheikh in Egypt, is coming back on stream. If you struggle to find direct flights, change at Cairo: it’s worth it for the eye-popping hotel bargains at your final destination.
If you can be lured from the pool, this is the ideal time to visit Luxor and Petra – or, if you are super intrepid and doing dry January, get one of Saudi Arabia’s superfast new tourist visas and head to Al Ula.
I’ve also just come back from Qatar. Hotels in Doha are still struggling with the effects of the Saudi/UAE boycott of 2017, so prices are keen. Warm days, cool nights: and even if the beaches aren’t top notch, there’s plenty of nice sand in the middle. It’s called “the desert”.
Spain and North Africa
Malaga at present is showing temperatures in the high teens and no rain forecast. You can be unlucky: sometimes a weather system funnels in from the Atlantic and gets stuck around Gibraltar. But having gone down to Andalucía virtually every winter of the past 20, drizzle and greyness are the exception rather than the rule.
You won’t be baring your belly in Marbella. But it’s a great time to avoid the usual crowds at the Alhambra and Cordoba or explore the mountainous hinterland – especially the white villages of the Axarquia. Almond blossom time is upon us: how this sublime annual phenomenon hasn’t come to rival Japan’s cherry trees and New England’s fall foliage is beyond me.
And because Spain and Portugal are much further west as well as south, you get sunlight until 6.30ish. That’s a good cure for those dreary, miserly daylight-saving afternoons back home.
Head further south into Morocco and Tunisia and your chances of showing off your beautiful pale limbs – in a culturally sensitive manner, of course – are so much greater. You can get an all-inclusive week in Sousse or Marrakech for not much more than £200.
The Amalfi Coast
Cooler than southern Spain in more than one sense. But my weather app shows hardly a cloud for the next week: you’ll need your SPF30 with those keen winds and that brilliant sunlight.
You get to avoid the notorious traffic, find a beachside table in a Positano restaurant without any hassle and wander straight to the front to the queue at Pompeii. Only Capri feels a bit forlorn and out of season.
California and Arizona
A while back I had a superb San Franciscan new year – clear skies, low 20s – and the locals assured me winter is more reliable than the foggy spring and early summer months. If you think that’s stretching meteorological credibility, head further south. LA has clearer skies these days and the winter days are the clearest of all. As for Arizona, the south of the State broils for much of the year: now’s the time to tick Scottsdale, Bisbee, Sedona and the Grand Canyon off your list.
Hong Kong
What the hell – be a blatant opportunist. Hotel prices in poor, fractious Hong Kong have been hit for six. But your chances of getting caught up in the protests are between slim and non-existent. In the meantime, you get to enjoy the outlying islands and multiple hiking trails as well as the better-known food, drink and all-out hedonism scene. A warning if you’re planning an Airbnb, though: Hong Kong flats are not built for cold weather. It can get down to the low teens and if it does, you’ll find yourself living in a fridge.
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1/10 Mali
Mamadou Kassé travels by donkey cart with vaccines for miles to reach remote villages in Mali, where families are waiting with their children. Mamadou is a community health worker in Mali's increasingly volatile central region of Mopti, where fear, insecurity and a partial ban on travelling by motorcycle between towns have all significantly limited access to lifesaving vaccinations
Photos Unicef
2/10 Vanuatu
Far up a hillside on the mountainous Pentecost Island of Vanuatu, General Nurse Dominic, from Melsisi Mini Hospital, treks to deliver vaccinations to remote communities. The weather and the difficult terrain make the delivery of life-changing vaccines extremely challenging
Unicef/Chute
3/10 India
Dole Singh, who works for a primary health centre in Northern India, carries vaccines via a trolley to reach isolated communities in District Mandi
Unicef/Sharma
4/10 Democratic Republic of the Congo
A community relay crosses a stream with his bike to vaccinate children in remote areas of the Tanganyika Province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Despite significant progress in recent years, many children in the DRC still die before the age of five due to preventable or treatable diseases
Unicef/Wingi
5/10 Mongolia
A team of measles and rubella vaccinators use a hand-drawn ferry to transport a jeep across an icy body of water in Mongolia. They have just returned from a remote area of the ‘soum’ district of Tsagaannur, in the northern Khövsgöl ‘Aimag’ province. In wintery conditions, the team travels by automobile, hand-drawn ferry, reindeer and foot in order to vaccinate children from a nomadic herder community living in the area
Unicef
6/10 Ethiopia
Tsehay Haile, a health extension worker in Ethiopia, transports a measles vaccine carrier box on a motorcycle from the Armenia Health post to Gashu Amba sub-village in the North Shoa zone
Unicef/Ayene
7/10 Leste
Health workers deliver vaccines as part of a national immunisation campaign against Measles, Rubella and Polio diseases. They are traveling from Baucau health centre to a village in Laga sub district, which is extremely remote and can only be accessed on foot
Unicef/Soares
8/10 Bangladesh
Dalal Rudro, a vaccine porter, carrying vaccines in Ramu, a sub-district of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. He delivers vaccine carriers to community health workers in rural areas. They in turn raise awareness about immunisation and vaccinate children against preventable diseases
Unicef/Krishan
9/10 Yemen
In Aden, Yemen, health workers go door-to-door to provide vaccination against cholera. The first-ever Oral Cholera Vaccination (OCV) campaign in Yemen was launched in 2018., which aims to prevent the resurgence of the world’s largest cholera outbreak. The volatile mix of conflict, a deteriorating economic situation, and little to no access to clean drinking water and sanitation have resulted in more than a million suspected cholera cases since the outbreak began in April 2017
Unicef/Bafaqeh
10/10 Papua New Guinea
Polio vaccinators from the Papua New Guinea Department of Health arrive on a boat at Toskol island in New Ireland Province to vaccinate children against polio. In the last year twenty-six children contracted polio and there is now a country wide vaccination campaign taking place that is being supported by Unicef and partners
Unicef/Holt
1/10 Mali
Mamadou Kassé travels by donkey cart with vaccines for miles to reach remote villages in Mali, where families are waiting with their children. Mamadou is a community health worker in Mali's increasingly volatile central region of Mopti, where fear, insecurity and a partial ban on travelling by motorcycle between towns have all significantly limited access to lifesaving vaccinations
Photos Unicef
2/10 Vanuatu
Far up a hillside on the mountainous Pentecost Island of Vanuatu, General Nurse Dominic, from Melsisi Mini Hospital, treks to deliver vaccinations to remote communities. The weather and the difficult terrain make the delivery of life-changing vaccines extremely challenging
Unicef/Chute
3/10 India
Dole Singh, who works for a primary health centre in Northern India, carries vaccines via a trolley to reach isolated communities in District Mandi
Unicef/Sharma
4/10 Democratic Republic of the Congo
A community relay crosses a stream with his bike to vaccinate children in remote areas of the Tanganyika Province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Despite significant progress in recent years, many children in the DRC still die before the age of five due to preventable or treatable diseases
Unicef/Wingi
5/10 Mongolia
A team of measles and rubella vaccinators use a hand-drawn ferry to transport a jeep across an icy body of water in Mongolia. They have just returned from a remote area of the ‘soum’ district of Tsagaannur, in the northern Khövsgöl ‘Aimag’ province. In wintery conditions, the team travels by automobile, hand-drawn ferry, reindeer and foot in order to vaccinate children from a nomadic herder community living in the area
Unicef
6/10 Ethiopia
Tsehay Haile, a health extension worker in Ethiopia, transports a measles vaccine carrier box on a motorcycle from the Armenia Health post to Gashu Amba sub-village in the North Shoa zone
Unicef/Ayene
7/10 Leste
Health workers deliver vaccines as part of a national immunisation campaign against Measles, Rubella and Polio diseases. They are traveling from Baucau health centre to a village in Laga sub district, which is extremely remote and can only be accessed on foot
Unicef/Soares
8/10 Bangladesh
Dalal Rudro, a vaccine porter, carrying vaccines in Ramu, a sub-district of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. He delivers vaccine carriers to community health workers in rural areas. They in turn raise awareness about immunisation and vaccinate children against preventable diseases
Unicef/Krishan
9/10 Yemen
In Aden, Yemen, health workers go door-to-door to provide vaccination against cholera. The first-ever Oral Cholera Vaccination (OCV) campaign in Yemen was launched in 2018., which aims to prevent the resurgence of the world’s largest cholera outbreak. The volatile mix of conflict, a deteriorating economic situation, and little to no access to clean drinking water and sanitation have resulted in more than a million suspected cholera cases since the outbreak began in April 2017
Unicef/Bafaqeh
10/10 Papua New Guinea
Polio vaccinators from the Papua New Guinea Department of Health arrive on a boat at Toskol island in New Ireland Province to vaccinate children against polio. In the last year twenty-six children contracted polio and there is now a country wide vaccination campaign taking place that is being supported by Unicef and partners
Unicef/Holt
So that was my advice. Was it taken? No. The Middle East and Egypt? “Not on your nelly.” The Med, California, North Africa? “I just need to lie on a beach”. So a patch of black grit in Tenerife it is, then. I’m sure it’ll be worth every penny.