Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

 

US travel agents visit Inishowen 14.10.09

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

INISHOWEN'S tourism industry received a timely boost this week with the visit of a group of American travel agents to the peninsula.
Five travel agents, from North Carolina, Las Vegas, Chicago, Napa Valley and Salt Lake City, visited the Inishowen Maritime Museum last night. Today (Tuesday) they will take a tour of the peninsula. They group stayed at the Carlton Redcastle Hotel.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent, Catherine Elliott, the travel agent from the Chicago area, said that Americans were still keen to come to Ireland on vacation.
“From my own point of view there is no substitute for seeing a destination with your own eyes. The enthusiasm of the [travel agent] is what sells a location. Having seen somewhere you can then make a valid case for it.”
Mrs Elliott said she hoped to be impressed by what Inishowen had to offer.
“Americans who book their holidays through my company are big into what you might call ‘upscale’ accommodation. Many are golfers. I am fascinated to see the hotels and try out the cuisine you have here. I also want to see how easy it is to get around.”
The group of American travel agents who are visiting Inishowen.
With US visitor numbers to Ireland in decline, Inishowen is fighting for a slice of a smaller tourist pie.
“For their first trip to Europe, Americans don’t tend to come Ireland, they choose somewhere like [Paris], but for subsequent trips many are attracted to somewhere like Ireland. Of course there are always those Americans who come here to look up their Irish roots. My own husband, who is with me this week, has roots in the Belfast area,” said Mrs Elliott who insisted that Americans still wanted to know if it was safe to come to Northern Ireland. The US travel agents opinion on this question is bound to have implications for visitors considering coming this far north.
The US travel agents are in Ireland for six days. They have already visited Dublin and the Giants Causeway, and the Ulster American Folk Park, among other places.
Their visit was made possible by California’s In Quest of the Classics, a company that specialises in custom-designed travel arrangements for ‘the discerning client.’
What Inishowen lacks in internationally renowned landmarks, it can make up for in hospitality, according to Mrs Elliott. “The welcome of the people is what can sell somewhere like this peninsula.”
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home