Britons in Brussels get lucky with Christmas turkeys delivery

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Britons In Brussels Get Lucky With Christmas Turkeys Delivery
British butcher and owner of Wesley’s Butcher Shop Julia Craig-McQuaide in Brussels, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Mark Carlson, Associated Press

Some Britons in Europe are getting just a little taste of home despite coronavirus-related travel restrictions.

Just a stone’s throw from the European quarter in Brussels, a British butcher has managed to secure a delivery of poultry just in time for Christmas.

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It comes as many lorry drivers were kicking their heels in England after France shut its borders to freight and passenger travel to try to prevent the spread of a new variant of coronavirus.


British butcher and owner of Wesley’s Butcher shop, Julia Craig-McQuaide, shows off a British ham at Wesley’s Butcher shop in Brussels
Julia Craig-McQuaide shows off a British ham at Wesley’s Butcher shop in Brussels (Virginia Mayo/AP)

Julia Craig-McQuaide, who along with her husband Wesley Morais de Souza owns Wesley’s Butcher Shop, told the Associated Press that they had received around 500 orders, including from a number of British and Irish citizens, and that missing out on this year’s Christmas delivery “would have been a disaster”.

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But after a bit of panic when the French trucking company warned her of queues at the UK border with France, Ms Craig-McQuaide received her order of 110 turkeys and 35 geese from the UK on Monday, along with a load of Irish lamb and beef included in the shipment.

“We’re incredibly lucky for the food situation,” she said.

“I couldn’t possibly get 100 turkeys at short notice and they would have been, you know, not the right type, not the right size.”


A man waits to pick up an order at Wesley’s Butcher Shop in Brussels
A man waits to pick up an order (Virginia Mayo/AP)

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With people already struggling through one of the most challenging years of their lives, Ms Craig-McQuaide was worried about the prospect of having to tell her customers that she would not be able to put food on their table during the festive season.

“You have to disappoint all those families when they’re already having, most of them, the Christmas that they didn’t want. They probably want to be at home in Ireland or Britain or France, and they’re stuck here. So it would not have been a happy email to send,” she said.

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