There won’t be a tourist backlash on Tenerife

Whilst strolling the calm and historic cloisters of the hilltop university buildings in Coimbra in Portugal recently we came across steps with a message written on them aimed at us and people like us.

“dear tourist, it’s like I live in a f****** zoo”

Having grown up on a Scottish island where tourism was vitally important to the economy, my first thought was ‘don’t we all? Get over yourself’.

Coimbra Zoo

As we descended into the main centre, there were more messages, same author. The second asked if it felt good to be treated like a walking money bag whilst the third accused us of being in league with the devil. It all looked like the work of a single disgruntled student who was too naïve to realise the importance income from visitors meant to the city, or too privileged to care. But a fourth message made me think again. I’ll come back to that in a bit.

A couple of years ago I wouldn’t have given the graffiti a second thought, but with current news headlines of an anti-tourist backlash at some popular destinations it stood out more than it would have otherwise.

Dubrovnik

As well as writing about Tenerife on the Real Tenerife, we also write about other Canary Islands and various destinations around Europe on our Buzz Trips website, for newspapers, magazines and a specialist slow travel company. This work has involved visiting some of the most popular cities in Europe. The harsh reality is that a backlash against impossible to manage tourist numbers, as well as inappropriate behaviour by some visitors, is not a surprise.

Four years ago we wrote about Dubrovnik being ruined by the sheer volume of cruise passengers which swamped the old town daily. We saw a similar impact at the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Carcassonne in France, and at Hallstatt in Austria, a town so beautiful it’s been replicated in China. The last time I was in Barcelona, La Rambla was not a good place to be at night. It had become the domain of leery stag and hen parties who showed no respect for the locals and treated the city as though it had been purpose built for their pleasure. But I have limited sympathy. The authorities in these locations haven’t managed the situation as well as they could or should have. Greater numbers of tourists meant big buck signs flashing in front of a few eyes. Dubrovnik is now taking the sort of action it should have taken years ago by capping the number of cruise visitors.

Hallstatt

Which brings me to why a tourist backlash won’t happen on Tenerife.

One of the reasons why there has been a backlash against tourists in some locations is the balance of locals to tourists has switched, usually as a result of a massive influx caused by armies of coach excursions or cruise ships depositing literally thousands of visitors.

These are historic towns and cities whose personalities are being eroded by this new imbalance, the sheer volume of visitors are stopping locals doing what people in these cities have been doing for generations. We’d all soon start to resent not being able to go about our daily business.

Playa Fañabe, Tenerife

In the case of Tenerife, on the other hand, resorts have been built purely for tourists’ pleasure. It is their sole reason to exist. Neither culture nor local life is eroded by the number of visitors who enjoy their holidays in Playa de las Américas or Costa Adeje. The more, the merrier. I have a Tenerife guidebook from the late 60s when Playa de las Américas didn’t exist. The most upmarket parts of Costa Adeje are years younger than Millennials. There’s no danger of ‘locals’ backlashing against tourism because just about every person who lives there is only there because of tourism. Places may have changed in the last few decades, but that happens everywhere whether tourism is involved or not.

Puerto Colon, Tenerife

As the Tenerife authorities have commented in the Spanish press, there’s no real concern about there being a tourist backlash on Tenerife because it is simply not like most other destinations which are experiencing issues. The majority of Canarios don’t live where most tourists stay, subsequently the impact on their daily lives is not the same. In a way both visitors and locals on Tenerife co-exist symbiotically. It’s a healthy combination which doesn’t erode tradition, culture or, importantly, community.

San Abad, Buenavista del Norte, Tenerife

The only anti-visitor graffiti I’ve seen on Tenerife has been aimed at Spanish mainlanders, and it’s been on crumbling walls since we first set foot on the island.

But that didn’t stop one British tabloid from trying to bring the Canary Islands into the tourist backlash story with a dodgy and weak link. There’s one very good reason for that. The Canary Islands are massively popular, mention them in an article, even when it’s a tenuous connection at best, and you pull in more readers. It’s what is known online as clickbait – hooking the fish.

Playa de las Americas, Tenerife

But that’s not to say tourism hasn’t had a negative impact on the life of some locals, especially ‘new locals’ in resort areas of Tenerife. Which takes me back to the fourth message from the disgruntled student in Coimbra – “I’ve been kicked out of my apartment because the landlord makes far more money renting out to tourists.”

That’s when I became sympathetic. Apartment rental companies like Airbnb are having a dramatic impact on communities in popular destinations. As a result the availability of rented accommodation for people who live and work in these areas is more limited/expensive. That is causing resentment in many locations. But even that isn’t likely to result in any backlash on Tenerife as the people who are affected most are likely also to be people earning an income from tourism.

Who’s going to be crazy enough to bite the only hand that feeds them?

About Jack 434 Articles
Jack is co-editor, writer and photographer for BuzzTrips and the Real Tenerife series of travel websites as well as a contributor to online travel sites and travel magazines. Follow Jack on Facebook

3 Comments

  1. I absolutely love Tenerife and have been coming to this Island for the past 10 years. I travel regularly to various world destinations but I must have my once a year ‘fix’ in Puerto de la Cruz. I have only ever been met with kindness and openness from locals and visitors alike. I enjoy using my ( very best) Spanish and I know the locals appreciate it when I try to engage with their language and culture. I come from a very historic and picturesque town in Ireland and we very much appreciate and welcome visitors to our town. We welcome the economic effect that tourism brings. So too in Tenerife- long may the mutual understanding survive.

  2. I found this post because I was trying to understand why indeed there *has* been a tourist backlash in Tenerife.
    Visiting reddit’s r/tenerife page, it’s pretty clear that some of the locals really resent tourists being there.
    I tend to agree with your arguments though. Almost everything in the south was built for tourists, and if the tourists were taken away in any number, many tenerifeans couldn’t even survive here (as it as before). So it does seem short-sighted and somewhat childish to lash out at tourists.

    • The tabloids in the UK always exaggerate things. The majority of Canarios don’t come into contact with mass tourism so the impact of tourism isn’t an issue for most of the island. I find it quite bizarre when anyone who lives in a tourist resort area criticises tourism in general. I remember a situation a few years back when some residents in Costa Adeje were complaining about the noise from bars. But Costa Adeje only exists because of tourism. It’s like those folk who move to Glastonbury and then complain about the festival. But I also understand why there’s a frustration at a significant amount of the money from tourism not actually benefitting the local population. Some say that’s what any protests are really about.

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