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Fears wind could worsen Crete wildfire as temperatures soar to 38C

Fears wind could worsen Crete wildfire as temperatures soar to 38C

Independenta day ago
Firefighters on the Greek island of Crete are in their third day of battling a wildfire which has already razed forests and olive groves, forcing thousands of residents and tourists to evacuate.
Around 130 firefighters, 48 vehicles, and six helicopters are deployed, contending with gale-force winds and dry conditions.
An anonymous fire brigade official warned that gusts could fan embers from smouldering trees, threatening to reignite contained areas.
The Crete fire comes as Europe endures an early summer heatwave, which has been linked by officials to at least eight deaths across the continent.
The fire, which broke out in a village about 16 kilometres (10 miles) east of Ierapetra on Wednesday, has consumed swathes of agricultural land in the southeastern corner of the island.
It has left dead animals and scorched farmhouses in its wake.
Some 1,000 residents evacuated on Wednesday found temporary shelter at an indoor stadium and in nearby hotels and about 5,000 holidaymakers left the area.
Many of the evacuees were expected to make their way back home later on Friday as the situation improved, George Tsapakos, a deputy civil protection governor for Crete, said.
Tourism is a key earner in Crete, the largest island in Greece, and local hoteliers were concerned about the impact on future bookings as the fire hit at the start of the peak summer holiday season.
Separately, some 148 firefighters battled a fire that broke out in the Athens suburb of Pikermi on Thursday, threatening many homes, causing power cuts and prompting authorities to move more than 300 people to safety. The fire was contained but not extinguished, the fire brigade official said.
Temperatures in Greece were forecast to reach up to 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) on Friday, the Greek weather service said.
In Italy, the health ministry put 20 of the 27 cities it monitors for heatwaves on red alert on Friday. RAI public broadcaster said temperatures would go as high as 38 C in Florence and 37 C in Rome, Bologna and Perugia.
With the heat comes a higher risk of wildfires.
Greece and other Mediterranean countries are in an area dubbed "a wildfire hotspot" by scientists - with blazes common during hot and dry summers. These have become more destructive in recent years due to a fast-changing climate.
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My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris
My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

My Grand Tour part 1: How I learnt the art of decorum in Paris

'En garde!' I cry, brandishing an épée I don't know how to use. I'm at a fencing club in Paris's Latin Quarter, its walls glinting with sabres and coats of arms. Club members in armchairs watch me with amusement: a swaggering Englishman about to lunge into a Grand Tour of Europe. It'll take a master swordsman to cut me down to size. Unfortunately, I'm up against one. Jean-Pierre de Pinel de la Taule dares me to attack. I spring off the piste; he parries with flicks of his blade. So I advance. 'Go back!' the club's general secretary commands. 'To England?' I ask. 'Eventually, yes,' she retorts. I'm being skewered on all sides. I'm on a two-week odyssey through western Europe, taking in Paris, Geneva, Rome, Venice and Vienna. It's my stab at the Grand Tour, the 17th to 19th-century rite of passage for young aristocrats, such as Shelley and Byron, who wanted to become more cultured. I'm hoping it'll give me finesse, once I stop tripping over my own feet. Thankfully Jean-Pierre, spry at 82, corrects my footwork and shows me how to beat and trap blades. Lesson over, we salute and bow. He tells me that the club, Salle d'Armes Coudurier, Paris's oldest fencing hall, is under threat ( I wonder how Parisians will settle disputes without it. • Discover our full guide to Paris Starting their journey to Paris, many aristos were sick on the ferry from Dover. I too felt queasy crossing the Channel — I had eaten an ignoble quantity of cheese in my first class carriage on the Eurostar. At Gare du Nord my chauffeur, Alain Cacheux, picked me up in a vintage Citroën DS: stylish and high on horsepower, it was the closest I could find to a Grand Tourist's cabriolet (£137 an hour; The roof stayed shut. Black clouds were marbling the sky and Paris was soon strafed by hailstones the size of macarons. 'I've never seen weather like this!' Cacheux shouted. I watched, monarch-like, as chic Parisians were papier-mâchéd by wet leaves. We arrived at Le Bristol, named after the 4th Earl of Bristol, a Grand Tourist with exacting standards. The hotel lives up to them, from its courtyard garden to its ancien-régime-style suites. With chandeliers and baroque furniture, mine was so gorgeous I nearly swooned. Good thing there was a chaise longue to catch me. Le Bristol is on Rue du Faubourg St Honoré, where mansions sprang up when Louis XIV's court moved to Paris from Versailles in 1715, bringing etiquette with it. These rules still govern France's elite — now wielded in boardrooms, not ballrooms. To prepare me for my social elevation, Thomas Ka, an etiquette guru, has summoned me to his decorum dojo. • Best hotels in Paris Only in France can ignoring someone count as good manners and gifting wine be considered an insult. 'It's like saying, 'Your wine is not good; I've brought my own,'' says Ka, the founder of the finishing school En Toute Élégance (from £80 an hour; drilling me in dinner party etiquette. And if someone sneezes, don't bless them — blank them. Anything else, Ka explains, would draw attention to the fact it happened. 'I'm teaching you not to jump into traps,' he says as our food arrives. How hard can this be, I think, preparing to slice a tomato. 'Your knife will not touch your salad,' Ka snaps. I set my knife down, switch my fork to my right hand, delicately prong a chip and slowly move it to my mouth. Now I'm in for it. My knife's bladed edge is facing Ka, a signal of hostility. He bears the insult with patience. Two hundred years ago he would have had me horsewhipped. Ka moves on to feudal foreplay: the baisemain, or hand-kiss. 'It's for married women, in private places,' he warns (unless the woman is gloved and standing in front of a church). 'You must kiss but not kiss, touch but not touch,' he instructs. His voice thins to a whisper. 'It takes guts. You've just got to do it.' • Great affordable hotels in Paris And, as we bid farewell, he does do it — kissing my hand so softly I blush like a debutante. Touché, fencers: Ka doesn't need a weapon to disarm a man. While etiquette lessons prepared aristocrats for leadership, knowledge of art conferred cultural bragging rights. But not all tourists appreciated Paris's oeuvre. 'In general rubbish to 'em,' harrumphed the English playwright David Garrick of its collections in 1751. I'm more receptive on my private tour of Musée d'Orsay, which opens with a luminous nude (private tours from £266; 'What do you see?' asks my cicerone, Hugo Loyon, as we ponder La Source by Ingres: a painting of a damsel with an urn. 'Probably not just a naked lady,' I say, sensing intellectual ambush. 'Oui,' he purrs. 'It's an idea.' The subject is naked, but veiled in allegory. There's nothing realistic about her: her skin glows like bone china and her posture is classical. She and her urn are symbols of nature and fertility. • Where to eat in Paris These themes were approved by the Académie Royale, founded in 1648, which insisted art be idealistic, pious, didactic — a cordon sanitaire between patrons and the masses they instructed. But as we near modernity, rebellion brews: artists reject elite ideals for personal expression. The vestal canvas is defiled with lurid strokes of colour; abstract sculpture loosens the elite's monopoly on meaning by inviting the viewer to supply their own. Life imitates art. By 1789, revolution grips France. The Académie is suppressed and toffs like me are abridged on the guillotine. But liberty's triumph over superstition doesn't bring heaven on earth. Instead my tour ends at The Gates of Hell, Rodin's 20th-century labour in plaster. Human figures writhe, reach, suffer — each representing a torment: lust, rage, longing. It's modern man, stripped of guiding faith. No longer looking upwards, he turns inward. I leave on the 18.18 to Geneva. In the dining car, I lift my soup spoon … and pause. Is this the one for consommé? I half expect Ka to burst in and swat it from my hand. But no one is there. Just my reflection in the window, the outline of mountains rising in the dusk. Jack Ling was a guest of Byway, which has ten nights' B&B from £2,423pp, including rail tickets and accommodation ( and Le Bristol, which has room-only doubles from £1,860 (

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Huge smoke plume over Nottingham as firefighters tackle blaze

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Huge smoke plume over Nottingham as firefighters tackle blaze

Fire crews have been called to a blaze in Nottingham on Saturday 20 firefighters were called to Abbotsford Drive in St Ann's at about 19:30 Fire and Rescue Service confirmed it was attending a blaze with four fire engines on the scene but could give no further details as it was an ongoing case.A plume of smoke could be seen rising up into the sky over the city and with "reports of heavy smoke" people were urged to keep their windows and doors closed by the brigade.

Avoid the heatwaves with these 15 great ideas for a coolcation
Avoid the heatwaves with these 15 great ideas for a coolcation

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

Avoid the heatwaves with these 15 great ideas for a coolcation

Stay cool everyone — it won't be 46C in Spain all summer, as it was last weekend in the Andalusian town of El Granado. The recent incendiary temperatures across southern Europe are not yet the norm and temperatures have dropped back down in most places since alarming records were set last week. Even so, having to worry about weather that is frankly dangerous is not the ideal prelude to a holiday. So if, like me, you'd rather not have that stress, can I suggest you look elsewhere for your summer holidays? The Med is magnificent in April, May and early June, and can be blissful in late September and October too, but for July and August how about looking north or into the Alps instead? Here, I've suggested 15 holidays that do just that. Some plunge into sparkling Alpine lakes; others dig their toes into the soft-sand beaches of Denmark and Sweden. There are even one or two that embrace the wilds of Iceland and Norway. All still have availability this summer and, while I can't guarantee that the sun will be shining while you're there, each offers magnificent landscapes or serene seascapes worth exploring whatever the weather. This article contains affiliate links, which can earn us revenue Family fun in France's first eco-poolEveryone loves the new Biotope in Combloux, in the Alps south of Geneva. The first eco-swimming lake in France is lined with a membrane (so no one gets muddy toes) and filtered by the surrounding plants. And with gently shelving play areas and surrounding lawns for picnics, it'll keep your kids entertained for hours. Use in conjunction with the local pump track for wannabe mountain bikers, as well as an Alpine rollercoaster in neighbouring Megève, and you have the makings of a multifaceted mountain holiday, with sensational views of Mont Blanc to boot. Nearby, the modern apartments at Les Fermes du Mont Blanc offer a convenient Seven nights' room only from £195pp, including ferry crossing ( Beach holiday on a Swedish islandLow-key, leafy and quietly upmarket, the seaside village of Ljugarn is peppered with refurbished villas and home to a beach. Accommodation is in short supply in July but frees up in August, especially from the middle of the month, when Swedish schools reopen. And with sea temperatures near their late-summer peak (about 19C), it's a great time for a week of carefree, sand-between-your-toes serenity on Sweden's favourite holiday island. Family groups will be tempted by Airbnbs such as the neat, four-bedroom villa from £269 a night ( couples might prefer one of the simple but pretty rooms at the Smakrike Krog & Logi B&B doubles from £150 ( Fly to Stockholm and take the ferry from Nynashamn • Read our full guide to Sweden Cycling and swimming in the SalzkammergutThis self-guided Austrian Lakes Activities holiday is focused primarily on gentle bike rides, with a week's cycle hire included in the price. It has wisely chosen the celebrated Austrian lake district (aka the Salzkammergut) as its base, so you can take the plunge whenever it gets toasty. The Wolfgangsee is the lake nearest your base at the chic, four-star Bergrose Hideaway, and it is edged with bathing areas, as well as a circular cycle track. This year the water temperature in its shallower areas has already hit Seven nights' B&B from £1,169pp, including flights • 13 of the best Alpine resorts for a summer holiday Icebergs, mountains and Viking historySurprise, surprise: bookings are up sharply for Greenland holidays this year, with most programmes sold out — but not this eight-day, self-guided Explore South Greenland tour, which combines majestic landscapes with a fascinating insight into Viking history. En route you'll stay at hotels in Narsarsuaq, Qaqortoq and Narsaq, as well as having the chance to explore fjords filled with icebergs, hike mountains and (at extra cost) visit the retreating ice cap. Meanwhile, with the help of local museums and archaeological remains, you'll learn why the Vikings vanished from Greenland after 450 years of Seven nights' B&B from £2,495pp, including flights ( A chic new hotel with lake viewsArosa has a lovely new summer base, the four-star superior Valsana Hotel, which overlooks the Obersee lake in the middle of town. Inside, the hotel's double rooms are huge by Alpine standards, and feature industrial lighting, vintage vinyl and a mix of Swiss and North American design motifs. Outside, Arosa's other lake, the Untersee, is the place for swimming, while free mountain bike hire allows you to explore the region's vast network of waymarked trails. The hotel also offers a range of guided mountain experiences, including sunrise hiking, fire-building and B&B doubles from £233 ( Fly to Zurich • 10 of the most beautiful places in Switzerland Beach days and biking on the Danish RivieraThirty miles northwest of Copenhagen, the island of Zealand meets the sea in a sweep of forested bluffs, cute second homes and long sand-and-pebble beaches. This is the Danish Riviera, and the resort town of Tisvilde gives you the best of it, with a mix of bike rides, beach days, forest walks and a buzzing restaurant scene. One of its elegant seaside hostelries, the Tisvildeleje Strandhotel, still has summer availability too, especially in August, so you can sink gratefully into the embrace of its beach-toned bedrooms once you've dusted the sand off your B&B doubles from £121. Fly to Copenhagen A spectacular landscape of white sand beaches and jagged peaksOn a clear day, the soft-sand beaches of Senja seem to glow as white as those in the Caribbean. But even so, this is not a place for sunbathing — more than 150 miles north of the Arctic Circle, the second-largest Norwegian island is a place of cool midsummer temperatures, variable weather and jagged peaks that rise straight out of the sea, and it begs to be explored. This one-week, self-guided walking tour sticks to the north coast and offers short but spectacular coastal walks from three bases, two of which are in converted fisherman's Seven nights' half-board from £2,375pp ( Fly to Tromso • 10 of the best places to visit in Norway Adrenaline-soaked adventure In summer the long Alpine valley of the Ötz River is best known for its hell-for-leather mountain biking, courtesy of the swooping downhill trails of Bike Republic Sölden ( But it's a treat for water-loving thrill-seekers too. Not only can you try canyoning and whitewater rafting here, but its Area 47 waterpark is awash with adrenaline; giant water slides, a water cannon, bouldering walls, high-diving — they're all here (£46; Meanwhile, more serene swims are available at the Piburgersee, one of the warmest swimming lakes in the Tyrol, where the water temperature can reach 25C. In Sautens, the four-star Daniel hotel is near both and has a Half-board doubles from £274. Fly to Innsbruck or Zurich Beach club vibes Add a touch of Nordic noir to your summer — as well as soft sand and wind-in-your-hair bike rides — by heading to Ystad, at the southern tip of Sweden. It is best reached from Copenhagen airport, across the Oresund Bridge, which starred in the detective series The Bridge. And once there you can explore the many settings of Ystad's fictional crimewave, portrayed in another hit series, Wallander. In between times the South Coast Trail cycling route beckons ( as well as the considerable comfort of the Ystad Saltsjobad hotel. This New England-style beach club — with four restaurants, 11 pools and contemporary country-house interiors — has long been a hit with well-to-do Danes and Swedes. Details B&B doubles from £200 ( Fly to Copenhagen Spot seals where two seas meetUndulating dunes and endless beaches dominate the wild, windswept north of Jutland, where a 20-mile spit of sand marks the meeting of the Skagerrak and Kattegat seas. Walking to the tip of the peninsula at Grenen to spot basking seals and watch the seas intermingle is an essential activity. So too are kite-flying, bike riding and sea-swimming (on the more sheltered eastern coast). But this is Denmark, so you're never far from a cute hotel room and a freshly made cinnamon bun to go with your coffee. In town the Skagen Harbour Hotel supplies the former and the Skagen Bakery has all the cakes you'll ever want ( while the Skagens Museum celebrates the Danish art scene's long love affair with the area's sparkling seaside light (£16; B&B doubles from £173. Fly to Aalborg Dip into Lake MontriondNearly 30 miles east of Geneva, on the northern edge of the Alps, Morzine is a place of fragrant forests and lush meadows, and it's the perfect summer venue for an energetic family of hikers and/or bikers — not least because when you've had enough uphill work you can throw yourselves into Lake Montriond. Squirrelled away up a nearby valley it offers a lifeguarded, child-friendly swimming area, as well as paddleboard rental (£17 an hour; and on a sunny day in August the water temperature can hit 25C. Stay at the characterful and recently refurbished Hotel du Lac, at the western end of the lake, and you can be first in for a dip each morning B&B doubles from £220. Fly to Geneva or take the ferry to Calais and drive Europe's largest national park Many hotels in Iceland may now be full for summer, but you can still hire a camper van at Keflavik, the main airport. What's more, if you head eastwards, towards Vatnajokull, you'll find the crowds thinning too. This is Europe's largest national park, where a vast ice-cap glacier and its many tongues interact with extinct and active volcanoes. Expect thunderous waterfalls, soaring peaks and abrupt canyons carved out by sudden floods. There is plenty of good hiking in between, as well as a mix of national park and private campsites — at the Skaftafell visitor centre in the south, pitches cost £17pp a night ( at the private Tjaldsvadid Myllulakur, pitches are from £12pp a night ( Seven days' rental of a four-berth camper van from £1,430 ( Fly to Keflavik • 15 best tours of Iceland No wonder accommodation around Lake Bohinj, in the Triglav National Park, is hard to find this summer — word is spreading about this spectacular and underdeveloped region of deep forests and limestone mountains, and hotels and apartments are struggling to cope with the demand, especially for family-friendly accommodation. Couples and friends should, however, take note of the adults-only Vila Park B&B in Ukanc. Crisp, friendly and beautifully kept, it stands beside the crystal-clear Sava Bohinjka River at the quiet, western end of the lake, and is an idyllic launchpad for gentle woodland walks or lung-bursting ascents of mountains such as the Tolminski Kuk, at 2,085m (6,841ft). There are plenty of wild-swimming spots nearby B&B doubles from £208. Fly to Ljubljana Sailing in the midnight sunFor a unique perspective on Norway's Arctic outpost, halfway between the mainland and the North Pole, step aboard the Noorderlicht. This two-masted, 153ft schooner spends summers cruising the Svalbard coastline from Longyearbyen with a professional crew of four, two walking guides and up to 12 guests. Berths are still available on some of the voyages this year. You'll do a little less sailing than is normal on a tall ship because each day is anchored around an onshore excursion, from visiting glaciers and observing walrus colonies to exploring a disused marble mine. But time on board is essential too — it's by far the safest way to spot polar Eight nights' full board from £3,735pp ( Fly to Svalbard A riviera with a differenceSure, there's plenty of sand at Huuhanranta, but this mile-long beach on what is jokingly referred to as the Saimaa Riviera is the very opposite of the Côte d'Azur. A freshwater strand on one of Europe's biggest lakes, three and a half hours' drive from Helsinki, it has nothing on its shoreline but picnic spots, local kayakers and the odd hammock slung between its pine trees. Visit it as part of an easy-going, family-friendly week at the nearby Koskenselka holiday park. Its superior lakefront cabins have private saunas, just in case you need to warm up before your morning swim. Details One night's self-catering for four from £138 ( Fly to Helsinki Where will you be going to keep cool this summer? Let us know in the comments below

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