Solutions to Hotel Room Annoyances
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Solutions to Hotel Room Annoyances
Can you add to this list?
Alarm goes off unexpectedly—Before retiring, check to make certain the alarm is off.
Sheets become untucked—Before retiring, check sheets and re-make bed if necessary.
Bedspread may be dirty—Remove and store the bedspread (and hope for triple sheeting).
Carpet may be dirty—Carry slippers.
Light is too dim for reading--Carry a 100-watt light bulb.
Coffee provided is inferior—Carry your favorite coffee and filters.
Pillow is lumpy—Request a different pillow (or carry your own pillow).
Shower curtain is mildewed—request a clean shower curtain.
Sink has no drain plug--Carry a universal sink plug.
No nightlight in bathroom--Carry a small flashlight.
Alarm may not hard to set or unreliable--Carry a travel alarm clock.
Alarm goes off unexpectedly—Before retiring, check to make certain the alarm is off.
Sheets become untucked—Before retiring, check sheets and re-make bed if necessary.
Bedspread may be dirty—Remove and store the bedspread (and hope for triple sheeting).
Carpet may be dirty—Carry slippers.
Light is too dim for reading--Carry a 100-watt light bulb.
Coffee provided is inferior—Carry your favorite coffee and filters.
Pillow is lumpy—Request a different pillow (or carry your own pillow).
Shower curtain is mildewed—request a clean shower curtain.
Sink has no drain plug--Carry a universal sink plug.
No nightlight in bathroom--Carry a small flashlight.
Alarm may not hard to set or unreliable--Carry a travel alarm clock.
#5
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 383
Likes: 0
I just used this travel tip this past weekend in Chicago. (a tip that I gleaned from this very chatline!!) The curtains wouldn't shut entirely, so I clipped them together with one of those big hair "claws" that I now always keep in my travel bag. Thanks again to whoever posted that one----I've used it many times!
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#9
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 16,067
Likes: 0
Please don't take this as sour, as it's not intended to be. I think the comments just come from having different perspectives of what's important. I traveled a lot and stayed in a lot of hotels over the years. A couple of months ago my wife and I traveled around Romania and are in the process of planning a trip to Cambodia and it wouldn't have occurred to us to bring any of those things except a flashlight (in case the car broke down in the rural transylvania). I only say this to point out that we're all different, so, you might choose to accept those comments as a sign that some others would suggest NOT taking extra things. I'd be among those people, but it wouldn't be intended as a criticism of your choice to carry things along.
#10
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 34,738
Likes: 0
I am not known to be a SourPuss nor am I being sour now - but-
I think most people know to pull down the bedspread and to turn off the alarm.
I just cannot imagine carrying light bulbs, sink plugs ,coffee filters and shower curtains and sheets and slippers and lights in addition to the 5 pair of shoes I will bring and the two suitcases that are already straining at the seams!
My solution to Hotel Room Annoyances would be to stay in a slightly better hotel, where one does not have to go through all of this.
I think most people know to pull down the bedspread and to turn off the alarm.
I just cannot imagine carrying light bulbs, sink plugs ,coffee filters and shower curtains and sheets and slippers and lights in addition to the 5 pair of shoes I will bring and the two suitcases that are already straining at the seams!
My solution to Hotel Room Annoyances would be to stay in a slightly better hotel, where one does not have to go through all of this.
#12
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 11,449
Likes: 0
I might add to my list "have realistic expectations of the chain I've picked. - Remember adage "You get what you pay for."
If I'm paying $49 at a Red Roof Inn or Days Inn, and I find things like mildew on the shower curtain, my first thought is "this is why I don't mind paying extra for a nice hotel."
If I'm paying $49 at a Red Roof Inn or Days Inn, and I find things like mildew on the shower curtain, my first thought is "this is why I don't mind paying extra for a nice hotel."
#13
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 8,981
Likes: 0
lovingheart
Regarding your comment: "I wonder why some Fodorites use their enery to make sour comments. Are they trying to bolster empty lives by making people wince around the globe? If you figure it out, let me know."
I don't get it, first you start a thread ASKING us to list our hotel room annoyances, then you chastise us for following your request? What's up with that?
Regarding your comment: "I wonder why some Fodorites use their enery to make sour comments. Are they trying to bolster empty lives by making people wince around the globe? If you figure it out, let me know."
I don't get it, first you start a thread ASKING us to list our hotel room annoyances, then you chastise us for following your request? What's up with that?
#14
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 9,232
Likes: 0
How or why would anyone carry with them slippers (wear your socks!), light bulbs, pillow, drain plug (!), flashlight (well, maybe...), alarm clock, coffee and filters, etc? Too much luggage! I'd feel like I was moving in.
Perhaps my biggest comlaint in hotels is when we are travelling with our kids and there's free porn on the tv. So I just ask about that when making reserves.
Perhaps my biggest comlaint in hotels is when we are travelling with our kids and there's free porn on the tv. So I just ask about that when making reserves.
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
I rereading my post, I can’t see where I said I stay at bottom-of-the-line motels. I don’t.
I do check the alarm clock, I do remake a bed likely to become undone at night, and I do remove bedspreads and store them upon check-in.
I do carry the flip-flops I wear around the house, coffee and filters (I like a good cup of coffee first thing in the morning), a small flashlight, and a travel alarm (because I trust my little alarm and, when traveling abroad, a clock is sometimes not provided).
I do not travel with a light bulb, a pillow, or a universal sink plug, and I do not worry whether drapes close completely because I like to rise with the sun. However, others do, and my post wasn’t about me, it was about coping with problems that annoy some travelers.
I do check the alarm clock, I do remake a bed likely to become undone at night, and I do remove bedspreads and store them upon check-in.
I do carry the flip-flops I wear around the house, coffee and filters (I like a good cup of coffee first thing in the morning), a small flashlight, and a travel alarm (because I trust my little alarm and, when traveling abroad, a clock is sometimes not provided).
I do not travel with a light bulb, a pillow, or a universal sink plug, and I do not worry whether drapes close completely because I like to rise with the sun. However, others do, and my post wasn’t about me, it was about coping with problems that annoy some travelers.
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
You know, lovingheart, you've kind of set us up for a Fodor-style "gotcha". You posted not once but twice asking for people's pet peeves in hotel rooms, and like the good Fodorites we are, we responded with what I think was a pretty reasonable array of inconveniences and annoyances.
Now you post "solutions" that has now amounted to saying we should just cope with those inconveniences and annoyances (carry lightbulbs, slippers, coffee, pillows, drain plugs!!??). And we've now got the beginning of a typical Fodor brawl about whether people are spoiled brats for complaining about something, or whether travelers are entitled to better treatment and higher expectations of the hotels.
I may think twice before I respond to any such "trawling" post from you again ("trawling" isn't exactly like a "troll" designed to provoke people with a possibly faked post -- but rather a general, sweeping question designed to get a broad spectrum of points of view).
(Colette - I think I might be able to take credit for the first posting re: claw hair clips a couple of years ago when Elvira was still present. I use them for curtains and lots of other things, including leaving notes for travel-mates on lampshades. What a wonderful invention!)
Now you post "solutions" that has now amounted to saying we should just cope with those inconveniences and annoyances (carry lightbulbs, slippers, coffee, pillows, drain plugs!!??). And we've now got the beginning of a typical Fodor brawl about whether people are spoiled brats for complaining about something, or whether travelers are entitled to better treatment and higher expectations of the hotels.
I may think twice before I respond to any such "trawling" post from you again ("trawling" isn't exactly like a "troll" designed to provoke people with a possibly faked post -- but rather a general, sweeping question designed to get a broad spectrum of points of view).
(Colette - I think I might be able to take credit for the first posting re: claw hair clips a couple of years ago when Elvira was still present. I use them for curtains and lots of other things, including leaving notes for travel-mates on lampshades. What a wonderful invention!)
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Cassandra, dear prophet,
For every kvetch, such as yours, I have received three good ideas.
Please add to the list to check for the location of exit routes to use in case of emergency.
OldSouthernBelle once found the stairwells locked at MGM Grand.
Lovingheart
For every kvetch, such as yours, I have received three good ideas.
Please add to the list to check for the location of exit routes to use in case of emergency.
OldSouthernBelle once found the stairwells locked at MGM Grand.
Lovingheart
#19
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,356
Likes: 0
IMO, Casandra is right on--there is no way to please lovingheart, or respond reasonably to his/her oddball post. Carry a lightbulb? I guess I'm glad to hear you don't, lovingheart, but the fact that you offer it as an idea at all is, uh, strange.

