Rachel
4 marca 2024 r.
What was advertised was not reality. There was absolutely NO WiFi access in our room. You had to go to the lobby or the dinning hall (and pay for food) if you wanted access. This frustrated us mostly because we generally do our planning for the next day the night before. We also had a phone plan but the signal was too weak to do anything in the room.
The people working in the dining hall could not ever decide when dinner was served, what would be served or how much it cost. I asked 4 different employees and got 4 different answers. The food was good, but expensive.
There is nothing to do in the city at all except go to chichen itza. We walked around the whole city to get the lay of the land and there was just nothing.
The front desk lady was nice but spoke ONLY Spanish. Thankfully I know some Spanish, so I was able to get by, but I was floored that she legitimately didn’t know a single English word working at the front desk of a hotel. I recognize I am in Mexico so I don’t ever expect people to speak English everywhere at all—but in hospitality, it’s generally expected to at least have broken English or a few choice words known as it’s the universal travel language… and it’s a hotel.
I am thankful we just spent 1 night there.
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