Guest User
January 31, 2023
A sudden emergency demanded that I seek out accommodations at the last minute, on a Saturday, during the busy season. With most typical options for lodging of this nature being either fully occupied or priced outside of a reasonable range, I stumbled upon the Rock Lake Resort, used my credit card of choice to hold my third-party reservation, and then (as I had done many times in the past) left the card with an individual who may have needed it in my absence, relying on the Capital One app functionality of showing the credit card number in full, as well as the card's integration with my Apple Pay, as tantamount to physical possession of the card. The Front Desk staff disagreed, and when I demonstrated the Capital One app, the woman scoffed/laughed, as though I had developed the program myself in order to execute this massive ruse. In any case, I acquiesced to their demands that I use a different card (compliance which resulted in a new avenue of nonsensical questioning, "did you just pay it?" -- as though crcard balance is the only factor at play). Overwhelmingly pleased with herself -- a new demand was created on the spot, seeing as how I am a local resident (this was the reasoning that she came up with after several minutes of referring to the circumstance as "our situation"), I was required to place a $200 security deposit, seeing as how I am likely to 'trash the room'. Amazing how quickly I shifted from having developed the Capital One smartphone application to being an unpredictable vagrant. At this point, amazed by the unwavering confidence with which incorrect assumptions were being made, I agreed to providing this deposit -- which was then immediately decided to be required in cash. I have some degree of familiarity with multiple facets of hospitality, and I cannot think of a single circumstance where a property would prefer a limited cash deposit as opposed to placing an authorizstion on a credit card (subject to increase). It seems that the intent of the staff was to prevent me from staying there -- which would have been much simpler expressed as a single statement refusing service, rather than an absurd bit of sadistic theater. I have to appreciate them for this, however, as I was able to find an alternate accomodation at the Tween Waters Resort, which accepted my form of payment (taking only $25 in incidentals), made no strange accusations, and provided a much better selection of amenities (kayaks, bicycles). Stay away.