Nothing to see here…Lago di Baies in the Italian Dolomites ((Photo: Vera Petrunina/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

Look up images of Alpe di Siuse and Lago di Braies on Instagram, and you will find thousands of posts showing what appears to be a glorious alpine meadow and a captivatingly secluded glacial lake, ringed by the peaks of the Dolomites. It’s almost always the same view — the mountain money shot. Sometimes in the foreground of the image, there is a solitary hiker or, in winter, a lonely skier; on the lake, there may be a single, un-manned boat. They are images that would warm the cockles of any searcher for the Romantic experience of the sublime for the last 200 years, of humanity thrillingly put into perspective by the grandeur of nature.
The reality behind the view, however, is somewhat different. The peaks are there, all right; the meadow is indeed beautiful, the lake is crystalline. But a visitor to Alpe di Siuse or Lago di Braies will have to contend with some of the largest crowds of tourists in Europe; a staggering 34 million people a year. If you yearn for a solitary communing with nature, you will find many, many others have had the same idea.
Now the local population of the region of Trentino Alto Adige, which amounts to only a million people, have had enough. This summer, the local tourist board has instigated a cap on visitor numbers, and between July and September, anyone wanting to come in by car will need an online permit. Entry to the meadow will be restricted to the hours between 9am and 5pm, and to the lake between 9am and 4pm. It will put paid to getting your own Insta-breaking shot of the sunset over the mountains. Bureaucracy has stepped in to keep the romantic touristic ideal alive.
“Over-tourism” is killing — in some cases, has long since killed — what tourists think they seek: the sightseeing industry has become a snake compelled to eat its own tail. Venice, now simply a palimpsest of a real, living city, charges an entrance fee to day-trippers, because they add to the stifling crush of people but less to the economy that overnighters.
Sooner or later, any place advertised as “unspoilt” must buckle under the weight of visitors looking for unspoiltness. On the once-mysterious island of Santorini, the coast road is crammed, nose to tail, with coaches full of cruise passengers who’ve disembarked for a couple of hours. The clifftop over the caldera is blocked three-deep with tourists taking selfies at sunset. Wedding parties queue to get photographs with the view behind them. It feels less like a place than a backdrop.
In France, which attracts 90 million tourists a year (the highest number of any country in Europe), regional tourist boards have now resorted to begging visitors to stay away from the obvious and over-stuffed destinations, such as Mont-Saint-Michel, and spread the load of numbers to lesser-known routes. Pressures of infrastructure, of water, health services and traffic make once-lovely places often disappointing for the holidaymaker (so very unlike the promise of those Insta images) and both impossible and expensive for the people who must actually make a home there.
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