Suliaocaomei
August 19, 2024
I'm really sorry, but I have to give this beautiful hotel 1 point, and I think it's a fair score for the following reasons:
- I got H1N1 during this visit to Chiang Mai. In a responsible manner, I asked if I could cancel and change my flight ticket back to China, but the conclusion was no.
- So I was still allowed to stay, and I didn't take off my mask the whole time. The attitude of the people at the front desk was uncomfortable. I am a patient, not a prisoner. In addition to repeatedly reminding me to wear a mask and stay in the room in an imperative tone, they also kept emphasizing that I should make it known to everyone in the hotel. Fine, I understand. But I don't want to get sick either, can you change your tone?
- I'm sick but it doesn't mean I won't pay. There is no welcome at all. I stayed in several other good hotels in Chiang Mai, all of which had a warm welcome ceremony. There was no introduction to the hotel here. When I was waiting for the room, they pointed to the distance and told me to wait there. There was no guide at all, and I was left sitting on a small bench at the door. If you really don't welcome me, why don't you let me cancel, or cancel part of it.
- I checked out at night, with four luggages, no one helped, and one woman and two men stood beside me and watched. I understand that I am afraid of being infected, but I can explain it with my mouth, right?
- The female supervisor whispered something in Thai to the Thai driver we booked with Ctrip, and the driver didn't want to take us on the spot. Later, Ctrip customer service sent me a message and I learned that she told the local driver that I had an infectious disease... I believe that this reminder is well-intentioned and necessary, but why use such a sneaky way?
If there is no special incident, would I recommend rachamankha? The answer is still: NO. Unless you fly to Chiang Mai and want to stay in the comfort zone of the urban middle class, or you have a little money and just want to take some beautiful photos, just ignore what I said.
- From the design point of view, I think it is very beautiful, but it can't be called deep. Thai antique furniture with a little Japanese gardening, but when you enter the house, the noisy air conditioner and the shower floor drain with some water stains are just for show.
- This price is not very expensive in Shanghai, but it is definitely not cheap in Chiang Mai. A few days ago, we used only 1/3 of this price to experience a Thai design accommodation with an area x2, more authentic and better attitude. It's hard to find but it definitely exists.
What puzzles me is that this hotel has the energy to wrap every mineral water bottle with handmade linen, but it doesn't bother to send a plate of welcome fruit. This suddenly makes me miss domestic hotels. No matter what the price is, there will definitely be someone to help with the luggage after getting off the car, just a glance. Not to mention the fruit plate, there may be various small gifts. Although most of them are not valuable, they are really priceless for a good mood.
I remember that I got sick when I stayed in a hotel while traveling in China. I also reported it, and the housekeeper immediately sent masks, thermometers, brown sugar, and a lot of mineral water. There was no nonsense, and those who understand naturally understand.
No one wants to take a year off to travel abroad and only lie in the room and watch TV. Hotels cannot expect all guests to be healthy, beautiful, have good personalities, and spend more money and less. Guests are people, and people have problems. A good hotel can not only embrace the beauty of guests, but also deal with the unpleasantness of guests.
If I were to summarize my negative review in one sentence, it would be:
I came to Chiang Mai from tense Shanghai to find a real sense of relaxation, but this hotel was trying its best to pretend to relax!
Original TextTranslation provided by Google