“Brexit Means Brexit!”

The New York Times was drawing some mockery on Tuesday over the above-titled $5,995 tour based on last summer’s shocker of a decision by slightly more than half of U.K. voters to break the chains with the European Union.

So what’s in this exclusive tour of the post-Brexit wasteland/heartland for you and “your fellow Times Journeys” travelers?

How about a tour of Westminster (with a history grad from the London School of Economics), and a “pub lunch” at a spot where members of Parliament have been known to frequent, or a stroll through The City of London and a chance to “admire how London has attracted global firms and banks and led to a wealth of new buildings.” How about foreign affairs with tea and clotted cream, and a stroll around the Supreme Court where Article 50 was decided?

The trip, which includes a four-star hotel, is dotted with experts, and hey it’s far cheaper than the Times’s Alaska Cruise, but probably in the ballpark of the “Chernobyl, 30 Years Later” tour, which offers the chance to meet survivors of the disaster and check out the abandoned homes and buildings.

As for the reaction, some eyebrows were raised over the 4-digit price tag on that all-encompassing Brexit walk about:

“The incredible (and we mean that literally) “Brexit Means Brexit!” tour lets excessively well-heeled Americans delude themselves into thinking they are visiting the very sites key to the UK’s narrow vote to leave the EU last June,” wrote The Register, a global online tech publication, in an article mocking the tour. “Bless the cousins, they’re really trying hard with this one.”

Mind you, it seems the U.K. is losing little of its tour-allure over post-Brexit fallout, even if some choose to rough it without the NYT’s guidance. The country’s hotel and the leisure industry are set for a “record year” with 63% more international tourists keen on a British vacation, while 30% of Brits themselves plan to take home-based vacations, according to a Barclays survey from late April.

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Meanwhile, data from the U.K.’s Office for National Statistics shows overseas residents made 2.3 million visits to the U.K. in February 2017, unchanged from a year ago. And they spent about £1.2 billion, a 6% gain versus a year ago. Those billions might just come in handy considering the EU wants to charge Britain €100 billion for the Brexit door. See: No way, we won’t pay.

Office for National Statistics

U.K. residents made about 2% fewer visits abroad from a year ago, though that's still about 4.2 million trips. That number may have something to do with a weaker pound, which is down about 13% against the dollar US:GBPUSD since last summer’s Brexit split. That’s still up from its lowest point, when it lost around 20%.

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Now if six days and five nights for $6,000 doesn’t appeal, then it’s worth checking out Budget Your Trip, which calculates the average daily cost of traveling to different destinations around the world., from budget to luxury. Average daily cost for the U.K. is about $144, and a one-week stay about $1,008 for one person.

Oh and the fine print on that “Brexit means Brexit” tour doesn’t include international airfare, so boo hoo Americans.

According to Kayak.com, the best flight from New York to London for a week in early June starts at around $700. More on when to book a summer flight for a cheap fare here.

And really, if you want to bypass the experts and get a cheapish view on Brexit, you stand a pretty good chance of getting an earful by pouring yourself into a Black Cab just about anywhere in Old Blighty.

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— Carla Mozee contributed to this report.