Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Thursday Ramble: Tourist Season


 There was a really tasteless joke in Miami 30 years ago that went something like this, "They say it is tourist season, yet they get so upset when one gets shot, not at all like deer season in New Jersey." 

I lived in Florida for almost 20 years, tourist season was a very real part of life. With Disney and the world of Worlds, there were actually several tourist seasons, Thanksgiving through New Years, snowbirds from November through March, spring breakers for a month around easter, and Brits broiling in the sun in summer (only mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the Florida heat and humidity in July and August.) 

Washington DC has a couple of defininate tourist seasons.  Summer, starting in late May, though the end of August is family season. This crowd is filled with disheveled parents, bored children, most with sore feet in shoes that were stylish and not made for walking. You look at the Lincoln Memorial to the Capitol building and think that is a nice 15 minute walk, not knowing it is over two-miles of hellscape. They think they can "see the Smithsonian" on Thursday before lunch, not realizing that the Smithsonian is eight museums in well over one-million square feet of space, and that does not include the National Gallery of Art - with two additional buildings or the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center out at Dulles with nearly 300,000 sq ft of aircraft and spacecraft displays. 

School group seasons, there are two - mid-October through mid-November, and March-April when masses of middle and high school groups from across the eastern half of the country descend on the city. These are marked by large numbers of clearly distracted students, trying to be cool and fit in, led by either overly concerned chaperons or chaperones who are clearly glad they got a free trip to DC and don't really care if the kid wander off never to be seen before the bus leaves to go back to Iowa. They travel in packs of about 35, the number of seats on a tour bus, and all try to squeeze into the same door of a subway car, out of fear that if they go in a different door, they won't go to the same place. 

Then there is Cherry Blossom season, also known as the season of disappointment. The Cherry Blossom festival is scheduled, the dates published, tours are booked, hotel prices are doubled about a year in advance, and the trees pay absolutely no attention to the schedule. Half the time the trees bloom two weeks before the festival and the trees are nice and green when the tourists arrive, about half the time, the trees bloom two weeks after the festival, leaving the tourists straining to see the pink buds and wondering what all of the hype is about. If the weather suddenly turns hot for three or four days, the trees may bloom, go into leaf and drop all of the blossoms - falling and drifting like snow, in three days. Maybe one in ten years, the peak bloom, matches the dates of the festival, the other nine out of ten years tourists wonder why they didn't book the Mardi Gras package instead, the parades always occur on the scheduled day (but seldom on time.) 

19 comments:

  1. I’ve lived in so many places with very busy tourist seasons. In Fuengirola, we dreaded it. My family went to DC every year for cherry blossoms season.

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    1. I try to avoid tourist season, at home and away.

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  2. The only way to truly enjoy the cherry blossoms in DC is if you live there! I don't recall Philadelphia having a tourist season. People from all over came all year long since there's so many different events and things to see in Philly. But New Hope on the other hand.... the locals would have New Hope during the winter and spring, but come summer and fall look out. The only major attraction in Harrisburg Area really is the capital building and of course most of Hershey.

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    1. Philly should be extra busy this summer.

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  3. I worked in concierge and banquets at the Loews Miami Beach Hotel so I know all too well about tourist season. The people at the hotel would complain about the tourists without realizing that's who paid their bills!!

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    1. Yep, I have been known to complain about tourists, when I was one.

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  4. Signed, jaded old man TP.

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  5. "The Season of Disappointment," LOL! Yes, blossoming trees are on THEIR schedule, not ours.

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    1. Mother nature does things her way.

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  6. There are two or three webcams pointed at DC and if I time it correctly, I can see the cherry blossoms on my lap top. The last time I was there is was January. Not many tourists then but I was there to hear a case at the Supreme Court. A great experience.

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    1. January is a nice time to visit. I used to take student interns to the Supreme Court.

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  7. Back in the teaching days I was part of the middle school tour groups. It was fun to see the students' reactions to the monuments that most of them had only seen in photos and the "bigness" of Washington DC as compared to Dayton, Ohio. It wasn't a relaxing trip...middle school drama never stops...but it was cool to see how the trip was a growing up experience for many of them.

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    1. Today, you have to get the students to look up from their phones.

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  8. Carl Hiaasen wrote a darkly humorous novel called "Tourist Season" about tourist murders in Miami, as I recall. In Southwest Florida, where I used to live, the "season" really means winter. That's when traffic is hell. Pretty much any other time of the year is manageable.

    When my family used to visit the Smithsonian we'd pick one museum and do it in a day. I can't imagine trying to do more than that!

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    1. Snow bird season in Florida, that is how my family started going there.

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  9. I worked for the Smithsonian for over twenty years. One of the best things about visiting DC is that most everything is free. And the expanse of the Mall is beautiful with or without the cherry blossoms. You can keep Mardi Gras.

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    1. Free access to world class museums and lots of them, is one of the reasons we chose to live here.

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  10. To help naive tourists enjoy their D.C. experience, I think it would be really nice if senior residents of the D.C. area could act as friendly ambassadors, directing tourists hither and thither and being mines of information. The ambassadors would need to wear pressed khaki uniforms and boy scout hats with name badges on their lapels. I can think of two guys from Alexandria who would fit this role perfectly..."Hi! I'm David - how may I help you?"

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