THOUSANDS of Brits were left fuming on Saturday after missing the last ferries out of France before the new 14-day quarantine rule came into force.
One group managed to charter a fishing boat to get home as massive tailbacks formed heading to the Channel Tunnel and the ferry ports.
Brittany Ferries ship the Normandie arrives from France at Portsmouth on August 15[/caption]But another family missed the 4am deadline as they were refused entry to a boat because their dog’s passport had the wrong stamp.
Some 160,000 Brits attempted the last-minute return because France had been taken off the UK Government’s safe list following a spike in coronavirus cases there.
But many were left stranded as tickets home quickly sold out or rocketed in price.
The ferry due to leave Calais at 3.30am, French time, was delayed by 45 minutes, meaning unlucky travellers will now have to isolate.
Brits in a dash to return home from Calais as they try to beat the 4am quarantine deadline[/caption] The 03.30 ferry from Calais is delayed by 45 mins which means passengers will now have to isolate for 14 days[/caption] Eurostar travellers arrive at St Pancras International after France was removed from the list of Covid-safe countries[/caption] Scots ensemble the Dunedin Consort ‘sailing back to the UK on a fishing boat overnight to beat the quarantine’[/caption]The last ferries to arrive back in Dover on time had left on schedule an hour earlier at 2.30am.
Some of those desperate to make the dash home drove hundreds of miles and even left children behind.
Officials at the port had to bring in extra security staff to cope with the demand.
One source said: “Traffic levels are far higher than usual. There has been a lot of upset and anger from those missing out.”
Flights from France to the UK were reported to have sold out within hours of Thursday evening’s quarantine announcement.
Channel Tunnel operator Getlink reported 12,000 rebooking attempts to beat the deadline.
Eurotunnel booking staff had been besieged with 3,000 calls at one point while there were 8,000 online searches for P&O Ferries on Friday alone.
The Chlebiej family, from Coventry, missed the chance to avoid quarantine because of vet’s error.
They gave a worm-treatment pill to their dog Cassie on Thursday, so they could travel home 24 to 48 hours later.
But an inaccurate certificate from the vet in Poland, where they were visiting family, meant they were turned away by authorities in France and now face two weeks indoors.
Jakub Chlebiej and his family missed the deadline because of an error on his dog Cassie’s certificate[/caption] Passengers disembark from the penultimate ferry to Newhaven from Dieppe before quarantine rules come in[/caption] Brits return home to Edinburgh airport from France, the Netherlands and Malta, now all on the quarantine list[/caption] St Pancras International station in London was busy in the early hours of August 15, 2020[/caption]The Chlebiejs were originally booked on a 8.30am crossing on Saturday. But they spent £300 booking a 2.30am crossing from Dunkirk once they heard the quarantine news — and drove for 20 hours to reach northern France.
Had it gone to plan, they would have been back in England one hour before the cut-off but were scuppered by Cassie’s documents.
Engineer Thomas Chlebiej, 49, said: “I’m fuming. I have to be at work on Monday but now I have to quarantine. It’s so wrong.”
Son Jakub, 18, starting university later this month, said: “It’s a massive inconvenience. My parents have jobs where they can’t work from home. It’s shocking.”
Simon Parkinson, 40, left Calais to Dover on a ferry on Saturday and was gutted he must now isolate. The car salesman said: “I tried on Friday with no joy. When I saw all the chaos, I thought I’d leave it and come back today. I’ve accepted it — but it’s very frustrating.”
Yet one story of success came from the Dunedin Consort — a musical ensemble from Scotland.
They revealed on Twitter: “Au revoir France. As exits from concerts go, this one is quite unique.
“We’re sailing back to the UK on a fishing boat overnight to beat the quarantine.”
Couple Matt Barlow and Nicola Booth were due on the 3.30am delayed ferry after cutting short their holiday but scrambled on to an earlier one to get them into the UK just in time.
A FAMILY of seven will have to quarantine after their ferry home from France left just as the rules came into force.
The Fuguetts could only get a 4am cross-Channel boat home.
Daughter Arantza said: “What? So if we got in at 3:59am we would be safe but 4.01am we wouldn’t? That’s crazy. None of this makes sense. It’s mad.” But dad Ruben and wife Francis, pictured, accepted that the family would obey the rules when they got home to Stockport, Gtr Manchester.
He added: “That is very unlucky and frustrating, as we’re only going to be an hour late.
“This could’ve been organised better. But we have lots of food and groceries in the house so we will be OK.”
The university lecturer, 43, said: “It has been organised poorly. We should have got more time.”
Chelsea boss Frank Lampard and wife Christine were among those who also made it back after cutting short their holiday at Antibes in the south of France.
On Saturday, there were some queues to get back into the UK at the ferry ports but nothing compared with Friday’s mayhem.
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