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Europe Tourists Swap Scorching Summer Streets For Finland’s Lakes, Forests And Cooler Nights

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Finland’s lakes and forests are becoming part of Europe’s cooler summer escape. Credit: Juho Luomala / Unsplash

As southern Europe is facing a summer of dangerous heat, new travel and climate research suggests more holidaymakers are looking north for cooler, calmer breaks. Finland’s lakes, forests and summer cottages are being marketed as an escape, but the shift also shows how heat is changing the way Europeans plan holidays.

How extreme heat is changing Europeans summer holiday planning

For many European travellers, the traditional summer formula of sun, sea and packed Mediterranean resorts is starting to feel a little more sweaty.

Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal and southern France remain hugely popular. But the reality of travelling during a heatwave is getting harder to ignore. Walking around cities becomes exhausting, children and older relatives need more shade and rest, terrace meals can become uncomfortable, and sightseeing often has to be pushed into early mornings or late evenings.

That discomfort is now showing up in people’s travel behaviour. Trip.com Group reported a 74 per cent year-on-year rise in searches for cooler destinations and “coolcations” since the start of 2026, with summer searches for cooler escapes up 237 per cent from June to August last year compared with the same period in 2024.

The European Travel Commission also said in April that 82 per cent of Europeans planned to travel between April and September 2026, the highest level since 2020. Yet the same report found travellers are becoming more selective, with safety, stable weather and value for money influencing destination choices.

Could Finland become one of Europe’s alternative summer escapes?

Finland is well placed to benefit from that shift because its summer offer is the opposite of a crowded beach break.

Visit Finland’s 2026 “Chill Like a Finn” campaign is focused on Finnish Lakeland, promoting lakeside cottages, sauna, cold dips, forest walks, local food and time away from screens. The tourism body describes Finnish Lakeland as Europe’s largest lake district, with hundreds of lakes and islands surrounded by forests.

Heli Jimenez, Senior Director of International Marketing at Business Finland, said Lakeland remains “an undiscovered gem for many” and described it as the region Finns return to when they want to relax.

That is what’s creating the pull for heat-weary travellers: not just lower temperatures, but the promise of space, sleep, quiet evenings and outdoor activity that does not revolve around avoiding the midday sun and over-crowded beaches.

How the latest heatwave is adding urgency for travellers

The timing is important. Europe has entered summer 2026 with serious heat warnings already affecting travel and daily life.

Spain recorded 1,029 excess deaths attributed to heat in June, after a five-day heatwave with temperatures above 40°C made it the country’s second-hottest June on record. Spain’s state meteorological agency, AEMET, said average temperatures were 3.2°C above normal.

World Weather Attribution, a scientific collaboration that studies the role of climate change in extreme weather, said that temperatures across France, Germany, Italy, Spain and southern England during the first heatwave ranged from 5°C to 12°C above seasonal averages.

Copernicus Marine Service data also showed sea surface temperature anomalies of about 6°C in parts of the western Mediterranean at the end of June, particularly off southern France and western Italy.

For holidaymakers, these figures turn into important practical questions: whether accommodation has reliable air-con, if travel insurance covers disruption, whether sightseeing is realistic in peak afternoon heat, and whether a cooler destination might make the trip easier for children, older travellers or anyone sensitive to heat.

Some things to bear in mind before booking a coolcation

Finland’s rise as a cooler summer alternative does not mean the north is untouched by the same climate pressures reshaping holidays elsewhere in Europe.

Northern Europe has also faced unusually warm spells, and a Finnish summer is not always the effortless escape suggested by postcard images of lakes, forests and empty cabins. Rural trips can mean higher costs, mosquitoes, long distances and limited public transport once travellers move beyond Helsinki and the main cities.

The coolcation trend is less about replacing the Mediterranean than adding a new option to summer travel. Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal remain among Europe’s strongest holiday draws, but heat now sits alongside price, flight access, accommodation and family comfort when people decide where to go.

For Finland, the opportunity is there for the taking. Its lakes and forests are no longer being sold only as scenery, but as relief: space to sleep, walk, swim and spend time outside when parts of southern Europe are struggling through hotter, harder summers.

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How A Local Charity Is Helping Struggling Mothers In Cartagena

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Charity delivers essential baby supplies to support vulnerable local mothers. Photo Credit: HELP Murcia Mar Menor

Local Costa Calida charity, HELP Murcia Mar Menor, has recently completed another delivery of essential supplies to RedMadre, a charity dedicated to helping struggling mothers in the municipality of Cartagena. The charity sent a van loaded with vital supplies to support more than two dozen local mothers in vulnerable situations.

Essential supplies for mothers in need

The delivery included a haul of practical and essential items for new mothers: more than 1,500 nappies, nearly 30 packs of wet wipes, and five tins of powdered milk, as well as bags of children’s clothes, toys, and nursery equipment. All these items have been generously donated by residents of the Costa Calida, specifically at the HELP Murcia Mar Menor main outlet in San Javier.

Some of the more touching items delivered to the vulnerable mothers included hand-crocheted blankets and cardigans, each crafted by the charity’s dedicated team of volunteer knitters.

Handcrafted care from local volunteers

Many of the essential items were collected during the HELP Murcia Mar Menor monthly fundraising lunch, which took place in June. Attendees were asked to bring items for babies rather than traditional donations. Local donor Diane got a special mention from the charity organisers, as she has made continuous and generous contributions of children’s items to the organisation.

RedMadre is estimated to go through thousands of nappies per month, meaning that each donation is profoundly impactful and appreciated.

A community united by fundraising and generosity

Debbie, the president of HELP Murcia Mar Menor, emphasised that these donations happen every few months and are only possible due to the unrelenting generosity of donors and the hard work of local volunteers. Founded in 2002, HELP Murcia Mar Menor operates entirely on public donations and fundraising efforts.

Proving their wide-reaching community impact, the organisation also separately donated €1,000 this month to the “Forget Me Not” day care and respite charity in Camposol, which helps a range of people with health conditions but especially those with dementia. The charity also pledged an additional €1,000 for them, to be turned in this coming December.

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Google Loses €4.1bn EU Fight Over The Apps Android Users See First

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Android phone defaults are back under EU scrutiny. Credit: L-51 / Shutterstock

Many Android users never actively choose the browser or search app their phone opens first. On Thursday, July 2, Europe’s top court confirmed Google’s €4.125 billion Android fine, turning an old competition case into a fresh reminder of how phone defaults shape our digital habits, and the corporate slight-of-hand going on behind the curtains. 

How Android phone defaults became a €4.1bn EU case

The Court of Justice of the European Union, known in Spain as the Tribunal de Justicia de la Unión Europea (TJUE), has dismissed the final appeal by Google and its parent company Alphabet in a long-running Android competition case.

The Luxembourg-based court confirmed the penalty imposed over Google Search’s abuse of a dominant position in the context of the Android operating system, according to the court’s own press release listing for the case of Google and Alphabet v Commission. The fine, widely reported as €4.125 billion, remains the European Union’s largest antitrust penalty.

The case began with a European Commission decision in 2018, when Brussels fined Google €4.34 billion for restrictions linked to Android mobile devices. The Commission said Google had used Android to strengthen the position of its own search engine by imposing conditions on manufacturers and mobile network operators. 

The fine was later reduced by the EU’s General Court in 2022, before Google took the case to the EU’s highest court. Reuters reported that Thursday’s decision dismissed Google’s final appeal and confirmed the lower penalty.

Google’s monopoly on Android pre-installed apps 

The dispute was not simply about Google Search or Chrome appearing on Android phones. It centred on whether Google used the popularity of Android to make its own services harder to avoid and rival services harder to reach.

According to the Commission’s original 2018 decision, Google required manufacturers to pre-install Google Search and Chrome as a condition for licensing the Google Play Store. It also objected to payments linked to exclusive pre-installation of Google Search and restrictions on devices using alternative versions of Android, often called Android forks.

The Commission stressed in 2018 that its decision did not challenge Android as an open-source system or the Android operating system itself. Its case was about specific contractual restrictions imposed around Google’s own apps and services.

Google has argued that Android created choice and helped keep mobile devices competitive. After Thursday’s ruling, Reuters reported that the company said the judgment failed to recognise its investment in keeping Android open, interoperable and free, adding that it had adapted its agreements after the original 2018 decision.

Anyone using an Android phone can check which apps are set as defaults. Google’s own Android Help pages say the default browser can be changed through Settings, then Apps, then Default apps or Choose default apps, before selecting the Browser app.

The ruling isn’t a dramatic household event, but it has given people another perspective on the ongoing changes occurring in the tech industry today. The infamous search engine is now being called out and fined €4 billion for their abuse of power over Android phones, they are competing heavily with other up and coming search engines, and AI services are rapidly becoming many people’s default go-to for general enquiries. 

Android AI services are already the next EU battleground

The Android case also lands at a moment when Brussels is looking beyond browsers and search bars.

In April 2026, the European Commission said it had sent preliminary findings to Google under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), the EU law designed to make large digital platforms, known as gatekeepers, fairer and more open. The Commission said the proposed Android measures were aimed at ensuring third parties have effective access and interoperability with key Android capabilities.

That newer process includes competing artificial intelligence (AI) services. The Commission said the proposed measures would help rival AI services interact with apps on Android devices, such as sending an email through a user’s preferred email app, ordering food or sharing a photo.

This is where the story becomes more forward-looking. The browser and search engine battles of the past are now moving into AI assistants, voice tools and automated phone tasks. And the next changes may be less about a fine already imposed and more about whether future phones make it easier to choose the services that open, search, answer and act first.

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Ibiza Residents Strike Back As Illegal 1,000-Guest Villa Party Raided By Police

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Police raid massive unpermitted Ibiza villa party, sparking resident fury. Photo Credit: David Loong / Wikimedia Commons

The party is over: a recent illegal villa rager in Ibiza has made waves in the local community after several complaints and even a police raid put a stop to the event. The incident highlights a new reality for residents and visitors of the Balearic Island, as well as holidaymakers and expatriates in other parts of Spain where summer partying is as much a part of daily life as gastronomy and sightseeing.

The massive unpermitted festival grounds in Ibiza: Hundreds of thousands of euros in fines

The Spanish Guardia Civil and the local police descended on the massive villa party on an estate along the Camí Vell de Sant Mateu, which reportedly had some 1,000 guests with many wearing commercial wristbands, as guests at a festival would. The party had lasted for two days, a full-scale, commercial operation disguised as a private gathering, and lacking the necessary permit to be carried out.

The massive, blowout party featured a purpose-built mini-festival ground, including restaurant and dining areas, multiple fully stocked bars, private security teams, black shuttle vans transporting guests from covert meetup points, an on-site ambulance and private medical staff, and even an amusement carousel.

Despite the complexity of the operation, the festival lacked a single legal permit, and the local Sant Antoni Town Hall launched harsh sanction proceedings against the organisers, who now face up to €300,000 in fines for severe violations.

A boiling point for local expat communities

The incident, which happened in mid-June, has highlighted a growing friction between the luxury party industry of Ibiza, and the local and expatriate communities caught in the middle. For Britons living in rural hubs on the Balearic Islands and other Spanish partying hotspots, the raid signals a boiling point.

Illegal villa parties like the large one experienced in June are not uncommon on the Balearic Islands, particularly Ibiza; summer clubbing strips like San Antonio and Playa d’en Bossa are increasingly becoming hotspots for party planners, who use private messaging channels and social media to organise massive parties in rural estates.

Summers of loud parties, nuisances, and stress for locals and holidaymakers on the islands

These parties often cause severe disruptions for locals and other holidaymakers, who may sleep with the windows open during the hot nights on the islands and are disturbed by loud music, have their roads blocked by illegal taxis and an influx of partying visitors, or experience mountains of rubbish left in their local neighbourhoods and on public beaches.

Additionally, according to a report about the same party by El País, local residents claim that the police do not always come to the scene when local residents complain about a party, especially when they deem that the music is not too loud or when it is too early in the afternoon. By the time residents file formal complaints, the problem has usually already been ongoing.

How expat property owners can protect themselves

For expatriate communities experiencing disturbances from villa parties nearby, especially in the Balearic Islands, there are still things that can be done to report them. Primarily:

  • Expats should report suspicious behaviour in their neighbourhoods, including an unusual amount of transport shuttles, makeshift parking lots in nearby fields, and other unusual happenings.
  • Log the nuisance. Keeping a detailed record of the recurring disturbances and turning it in to the local Neighbours’ Association (Asociación de Vecinos) could help the complaints to carry significantly more weight.
  • For expats renting out their villas or otherwise managing properties, it is important to be aware of the laws and restrictions around parties. If a tenant throws an unpermitted commercial event on your property, Spanish authorities could potentially hold the property owner legally and financially liable for the massive fines, regardless of who signed the rental contract.

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