Yesterday, Sherrylee and I had a good meeting with Yuriy Aniper, who is another of the young preachers working in Eastern Europe today. He inherited the work when Rick Pinchuk, a long-time worker, died. Yuriy has prepared himself well, having completed a degree at Kiev Theological Seminary and has good support from the States, so we pray that his work will be fruitful and he will be faithful for all of his life.
By the way, have I ever told you how hard it is to choose hotels in foreign countries over the internet. I’ve always booked our own travel because I’ve done it so much, I think I can do it better than everyone else. After all, you have to consider several important factors in choosing a hotel over the internet:
- location – You don’t want to be on the opposite side of a city from the people you are wanting to see if it takes a couple of hours to cross by tram. You also don’t want to be too isolated when your friends are not around. And, finally, you want to be relatively convenient to getting to the airport, preferably not a 50 dollar cab ride away.
- cleanliness and comfort – All turkish hotels have hard beds because that is what they think is standard. All London hotel rooms are tiny, crowded, and have marginal bath/showers. You have to allow a wide range of acceptability here, but still you have to look for something that works for you. We have found that the date the hotel was built and/or when the rooms were updated are probably the only way to really tell anything about the hotel on the internet.
- restaurant, internet access, and airport shuttle are all important to us, but not 100% essential
- cost – Cost is the hardest. I always try to balance the above factors with what I think is reasonable.
When I make a hotel mistake, it is always because I thought cost was more important than what I was giving up–and it never was. That is exactly what happened with the hotel I had booked in Kiev. It was a two-star hotel, which didn’t look too far from the center of town, but the only reason it won in the finals was because of price. We took a taxi from the airport–it is always a bad sign when the taxi drivers don’t have a clue where the hotel is. As he started slowing down, I started peering out the taxi window into the darkness–the eastern European darkness that is just a little scary. The only businesses anywhere near were the little tin sheds selling cigarettes, magazines, and whatever.
As we got ready to stop, Sherry said, I don’t think we can stay here. That is all it took for us to just keep on driving. Hotel mistakes are expensive mistakes. Our only choice in the middle of the night was to ask the taxi driver to take us to a big name hotel, so we ended up at the Radisson–a very nice, but pretty expensive hotel. So, anyway, my only advice to you about choosing hotels is that you may save money in the long run by not being quite so stingy when you are searching.
And, yes, I did look on Tripadvisor.com and I will be writing my own review as soon as we get back. So my final words of advice on this subject are
- Never believe the pictures on the internet. Just remember that they are all glamor shots.
- Make sure you read reviews on neutral sites–and make sure those reviews are recent. (I almost chose one hotel in Kiev until I got to the fourth review that said something like, “Oh yea, if it makes any difference to you, the hotel is above a pretty loud strip club.” )
- If your gut says “maybe not,” listen to it.
We are in the best hotel ever in Budapest, so I’m batting 3 for 4 so far. I’ll keep you posted though.
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