Guest User
January 6, 2024
Onjuku Senozaki I gave this rating because the grilled fish for dinner was delicious. The innkeeper dressed as a diver skillfully grilled it. They also served sashimi, boiled fish, chawanmushi, miso soup, etc., all with homely seasoning. Not a professional taste. For dessert, they served something like a bavarois made in a Tupperware. The toilets were terrible. They were all Japanese style, or like a Japanese style with a chamber pot on top. The toilet in the room was hard to flush, so I was instructed to hit the water pipe with a wrench that was placed there. There is a large public bath in the basement. The blue curtain is for women, and the pink curtain is for men. As expected, a man entered the women's bath. The innkeeper said, "It must be because he drank alcohol." I should have called the police. The room had a refrigerator that couldn't be used, a bath that couldn't be used, and a hand washing machine that only had water. I was too scared to go into the women's bath, so I ended up not being able to wash my hair or body. The next morning, I managed to wash my face with a small hand washing machine. And the whole room smelled like an old public toilet, which was unpleasant. The toilet in the room was hard to use, so I went to the shared toilet in the hallway. When you open the women's door, there is a Japanese-style toilet. There is no wall, and it is connected to the men's toilet at the back. In other words, if you open the men's door, you can also go to the women's toilet. It is a mysterious structure. Moreover, it is so old and dirty that it is scary. It is so old that you will feel as if you are in a ******* ruin. I am surprised that such an inn exists these days. At breakfast, when I was eating home-cooked food in the large hall, I heard rattling sounds from all over. It was the sound of plates when eating grilled fish. All the bowls except for the rice bowl are deformed plastic, so they tilt and rattle. Moreover, some of them are so old that they are cracked (such as plastic teapots). This costs just over 16,000 yen per person per night. And only cash. What a joke? In a way, it was a dreamlike night.
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