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Guiding with Covid Restrictions

How to Guide with Covid Restrictions

Conwy-United Kingdom
Amanda

Tour Guide, North Wales, United Kingdom

| 4 mins read

I have applied for and received the badge from the UK to show my tourism business is good to go. Safety and comfort of my clients could only be assured by implementing several measures. Some are fairly easy such as cleanliness and sanitising. As the tours I am running are in the open air with room for social distancing, I opted not to use a mask unless clients' requested it. Not only would it ruin the traditional costume effect but would impede lip reading and communication of my expressions.

However, the most important measure of maintaining social distancing brings extra challenges. I teach tour guides and I am always stressing the fact that in the days of apps and recordings, we have to use the advantage of being real people - show our personality, read our audience's mood, use eye contact and body language. This gets more difficult the further away our clients are - as does another important role of a guide keeping clients both safe, away from traffic etc. and comfortable out of the sun, rain wind whilst also doing our best to not disturb businesses and other members of the public.

At the time of writing, in Wales, we are only able to guide one other household but I hope that soon this will be lifted as, after all, there is more than one household in the shops at any one time and that is inside. I planned for when we can have many households but every household in the group will have to be two metres away from every other so my first measure was to limit the number in a tour to 8. Also, though I have a loud voice, it is not fair on people outside the tour if they have to endure a loud commentary ruining their quiet enjoyment of the streets.


I also have to be heard and know from previous experience, clients generally like the technology of listening devices where the guide speaks into a microphone and clients have earpieces and can hang back to walk slowly or take a photograph without missing the commentary. It also means a commentary can take place whilst moving along.


However, this technology does require guides to change their techniques. For instance, we can't do our usual "on your right.." as you don't know which way they are looking and you have to be extra careful with safety advice as if they look up at say, a rooftop, whilst walking so they come to no harm. I have also had clients lose me as they hang well back reassured by my voice and then find in a crowded place or roads with lots of alleyways they don't know which way I've gone if directions are not spelt out. 


Box of Commentary receivers and a guide transmitter

10 wireless receivers and one guide transmitter and microphone: My first decision was to decide between apps on phones or self-sufficient machines.  There are quite a few apps that work between the guide's phone and the clients. Some use Bluetooth, some data and some wi-fi - locally if available or via the guide carrying a portable router.  There are disadvantages and advantages to all of them. Overseas clients would find data expensive and in parts of Wales, you cannot even get 3G. The apps are evolving quickly with an add-on such as "find me" if clients get lost or the ability to download images such as "what this ruin looked like".  However, the main disadvantage I could see was the time and complications for clients who would have to download an app. My tours are short generally less than two hours and I didn't want a large portion of that time to be wasted setting up the technology.  Also, my primary reason for using them being constant social distancing and the variety of ages and operating systems on clients' phones meant that I wouldn't be able to just say "give me your phone and I'll sort it". So I decided to purchase "play and go" hardware.  

The main disadvantage of this - for me - was cost and thereafter maintenance. I then had a techie friend look at specifications and bit the bullet, swallowing the cost of several hundred pounds and ordering a set from China. They took two months to arrive. Testing will be awkward as again, I am only allowed to meet one other household. How will it go? I'll let you know!