Typically Tyrollean style and hospitality

After the warmest weekend of the year it feels a little odd to be sharing this post from my trip to Germany in January when there was snow on the ground, but I'm going to anyway as if you believe the forecast today's going to be ten degrees cooler than the weekend, but hopefully it won't drop so much that we'll have any of the white stuff. 

Usually I'm not a fan, but I think that's because we just don't know how to deal with it. In Germany, and Austria, as you'd expect it's dealt with without a fuss. And that's admirable. 

Today I'm sharing pictures from the hotel we stayed in, although in honesty, like many hotel rooms I didn't spend much time in it. I wasn't surprised to see the duvets folded and pillows karate chopped (that's what it looks like anyway) as I remembered this from our trip to Bavaria, a couple of years before. It still made me smile though.

pillows tyrol style in my austrian hotel room
IMG_8848.jpg

After a flight delay and a long day at the Viking factory, I had twenty minutes in the hotel room before meeting for dinner. But it made quite an impression. I was impressed with the coffee machine, but didn't have enough time to work out how to use it sadly.

the coffee machine in the hotel room which stumped
espresso cups but I couldn't make head nor tail of the instructions

After a quick selfie in the bathroom and a change of clothes I headed back to reception to meet the rest of the party for our dinner at Fortress Kufstein, which I'd spotted out of my hotel window just a few moments before.

as you know I can't resist a bathroom, especially a hotel bathroom
A lovely - and typically large hotel sink in Austria
a basket of bath robes

It wasn't until gone midnight that I got back to the room, completely full after a great meal, including some local specialities, and after a nightcap in the bar. It's as well that MOH called me as I realised then I'd set my alarm for the morning an hour out, whoops.

In the room I was very taken with the open wardrobe - and the light that came one every time you walked past it, now that was useful and saved having to scrabble around for the bathroom light switch.  The room was hot though - I find hotel rooms often are, but this was super hot. In the twenty minutes I'd had in the room earlier I couldn't find a thermostat, nor a valve on the radiators so even with the temperature at minus ten, there was only one thing for it. And that was to open the window. I slept with the window open all night, something that I don't even manage at home, but I'm pretty sure the heating has been racked up to combat the minus temperatures. But I was melting...

a hanging rail with a difference, the inbuilt light lit up as you approached

From my room I got a great view of the Fortress in Kufstein, which is where we ate earlier than evening. And the view was just as great in the early daylight hours too.  The food was so good, and so plentiful that I opted to skip breakfast the next morning as I was simply just not hungry. And knowing there was a typical Bavarian lunch ahead of us in Munich, I wanted to be sure to leave enough room for that (and this was a great move on my part as I discovered later - phew!).

The view out of the window at night towards the Fortress at Kufstein
Looking out of the hotel bedroom towards the Fortress in Kufstein in the early morning

Looking in the alternative direction there were the alps and yet more snow. The air just felt clean, and the temperatures felt nowhere near like I'd expected them to feel, which I was grateful for. And sometimes the overactive thyroid - and always being hot - comes in useful! 

Looking out of the hotel window towards the alps
Looking more closely at the snow in January in Austria

Before we left the hotel I had a wander around to check out their decor. This was the bar which I'd spent some time in the previous night hugging my schnapps. I'd seen the candles, but not necessarily the gin bottle - that's a lot of wax isn't it?

some candles on the bar in the austrian hotel
Comfy sofas and an oversized clock in one part of the hotel bar

The big clock worked well, but I was less sure about the cushions on the sofa. I think I prefer how we space them along, rather than piling them out like this, what do you think?  But open shelved units speak in any language, and I'd happily have this one (and its contents) as well as they leather oyster-like chair in front of it.

I'm rather partial to an open storage unit and the contents of this one in the hotel bar appealed somewhat

And it's only now that I look again at the photo above that I've spotted some more dripped wax, I kind of like it but have never managed to get candles to go like that.  It's got quite a ghostly feel to it doesn't it?

 

* While this post isn't in collaboration with Viking or Stihl, it was only possible because of the UK press trip arranged by them. 

There's something about a hotel room isn't there?

The trend for hotels still seems to be dark and moody. And done well it's a very good look for a hotel. Recently we stayed in the Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge and they do the dark and moody look well. Much better than the hotel I stayed in once that did dark so well that I needed to use the torch on my iPhone to check that I'd not left anything in the wardrobe. 

I knew we were in for a treat when I looked up and spotted this sculptural light. 

The lights in the foyer in the Brooklands Hotel in Surrey

And when I say there's something about a hotel room, I mean luxury. And comfort. And often a whopping great big bed. 

Our room at Brooklands hotel in Weybridge

And this room was no different. The fresh linen. The big bed. So big that I managed to lose my phone in the middle of it and neither MOH or I slept on it all night. Bliss. 

A leather shaped headboard on a hotel king-sized bed with plumped up cushions
Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge - a bedside light a leather headboard and now I'm off to bed zzzzz

And there's always a desk isn't there?

Brooklands Hotel Weybridge - there's always a desk in a hotel room isn't there

And often a standard lamp. This one was great and had the look of giant bubble wrap according to MOH. He doesn't get out much, but I can kind of see what he means.

Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge, and a funky standard light too

And the bathroom. That excelled at dark and moody, but also sparkling too. A nice large sink, a huge mirror, toiletries that made me smile. 

Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge, like me do you check out the bathroom too
Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge with Pecksniff's Happy toiletries - which made me smile

And a stunning shower. This I would happily have at home.

Brooklands Hotel in Weybridge - oh what a beautiful shower

It's the excitement isn't it. Of hotel rooms. To see what you've been allocated. To see its decor. To see if that matches up to the style of the public areas. And this one did, and more. 

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* With thanks to STIHL, whose guests we were at the Brooklands Hotel in Surrey.