In India medium priced hotels at below say £25 per night are
a little chancy for the traveller. Standards are not high, maintenance and
redecoration often non-existent. Many of these places started life reasonably
well –lasting just long enough for those inviting photos to be taken for the
web page – then declined rapidly in a non-virtuous pact between the owners and
the local customers. There are exceptions of course, and I am about to describe
one.
The Kunjpur Guest House on the northern outskirts of Allahabad
seemed too good to be true when I found it on the web: around £20 a night for a
de-luxe room (most of the rooms in India are de-luxe), breakfast included, free
Wi-Fi and picturesque. “Things that seem too good to be true are usually not
true,” I warned myself as we disembarked from the ‘mouse train’ (see last
blog). Yet we were picked up as promise. Our driver was Anil, the owner of the place;
he had a doctorate in economics and spoke good English.
The journey to the hotel was as depressing as usual. We left
the scruffy and slightly threatening surroundings of the railway station and passed
through narrow rutted streets to emerge onto a wide road next to the polo
ground. “That looks nice, let’s hope our hotel is here somewhere,” I thought to
myself. But it wasn’t. And anyway, India
is deceptive: the polo ground has not seen a match for many years and is now
owned by the army (No Photographs Allowed) and the houses on the other side of
the road may have been superior residences in their time, but later, in the
light of day, they looked rather sad.
The roads became narrower and more rutted as we neared our
goal and expectations fell accordingly. Then we stopped. Was that really a tall
characterful house gleaming whitely beyond the line of tall palms and thick
hedge? Surely not. But it was. Anil sounded the horn and the gates were opened
so that we could drive forward.
The place was amazing: a large colonial-baroque house with
imposing frontage and neat garden.
Surely this was a facade, but no: the lobby was equally impressive with its
large, high-ceilinged reception room, tasteful furniture, paintings and object
d’art. Partially in shock we were shown,
through double doors into our palatial room, or should I say suite (it had an
extra double bedroom which we would have found more than adequate). Our bedroom
room was at least eight by six metres in area excluding the arched extensions
alongside the grandly arched recessed doorway leading to the side of the house.
It had a very large double bed, large wardrobe and cupboard plus two, yes two
ornate settees (3 and 4 seaters). There were also four casual tables and a full
sized fridge! Set back from the external doors was a second archway spanning
the whole of the room and supported by two fluted ionic pillars. The bathroom was as long as it was clean and
had a huge fan inset into an external door which seem capable of extracting
small children. I could not believe it. All this for 2000 rupees a night? Was
there a zero missing? Was this like the Hotel California where “You can
check-out any time you like, But you can never leave!"?
There were two menus in the room for breakfast and dinner.
The breakfast offering included ‘Eggs anyway’. Great, I needed a change. Next
morning, in the elegant dining room with its oval table in the centre of which
was a silver bowl of fresh fruit, I ordered scrambled eggs on toast. Margaret
ordered an omelette. We both got omelettes. I ate my omelette. Next day I
ordered boiled eggs and Margaret, very sensibly, ordered omelette. We both got omelettes.
I ate my omelette. On the third day I took my lap top along to breakfast. I ordered
poached eggs on toast and so did Margaret. I then played a video
entitled ‘How to make a perfect poached egg’ to the bemused waiters who looked
on with growing excitement. And we did get poached eggs in toast, which
was nice. Next day we ordered omelettes and got them.