I wanted to test the famous mud springs. This hotel reportedly has one of the best spas. Tips:
- I decided to stay overnight in the hotel (2 spa entry tickets with a double room + bfast for $2800) instead of using a day ticket to the spa (400$). The village is far from the city, so staying overnight may cost slightly more than a cheap city hotel, but you're not in a rush and looking for buses etc.
- Each spa ticket is basically 2x tickets (1 for the normal spa, and 1 for the naked single-sex spa), so if there are 2 of you, you could go to the naked spa one day and the main spa the next.
- The spa has about 15 different hot spring pools, of different temperatures + ingredients, some clear and some "mud". There's also mud facials and fish-cleaning for your feet. The electric pools send electric shocks through your body too. There's a swimming pool.
- They speak English (basic but enough).
- You need a swimming hat and a towel. I took mine but the spa front desk also offered them to borrow.
- Plan on spending 3 hours. I'm not a spa lover, but even i found myself taking long.
- I went in May and the weather is not at all hot at that height.
- Most ********* take their instant noodles in, so that they can eat inside and stay all day.
- The hotel is quite beautiful, made from wood (on the face of it). It's got lovely seating areas and they put nice fairy lights everywhere at night.
- The hotel room is comparatively expensive for Taiwan at $2800 for 3* (minus the 2x spa tickets of $400 each), but the cheapest "no window" room (it has 2 windows, but no view) is big and has 2 large concrete baths in (1 for hot mud water + 1 for cold water to dip in and out). Therefore, given that it is a beautiful location too, I do think it's very reasonable.
- The breakfast is mostly chinese but there's some western bits. It's standard for 3* but the location of the eating area has beautiful views of the jungle.
- It's a 15 minute nice walk to lots of restaurants and a convenience shop.
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