Regular readers will be aware of my views of the Best Western hotel chain. Not only did I have the very great pleasure of staying in one in Southport, but some weeks later, fortune drew me to Cheadle, where I stayed in another of their 'establishments'. "Why the bad hotels in dodgy parts of the North of England?", I hear you cry. A simple reason: dear friends marrying in places a very great distance from any other available hotel, a limited budget, a small car and a boot full of M&S patterned sockettes. But I digress.
It will come as no surprise that the news that the only hotel room available in Toronto this week was at the Best Western Primrose was met with some dismay. It is bad enough having to leave Montreal (interesting, fun, nice to look at, full of Frenchies) and go to Toronto (wishes it was New York; contains the CN Tower) to work, but having to leave Montreal to stay in a hotel that smells of death makes the whole commuting-to-Toronto-once-a-week arrangement make even less sense than it did at the beginning.
Still, in some ways my visit at the Best Western is pleasing, if only because it is reliably ghastly. For e.g.:
I check in
The receptionist is called Lindsay. She does not smile, or look at me in the face. The transaction is brief. The room card is left on the reception. I do not move. She glances up and shoves it at me. "This is your key". I leave.
I attempt to find a drink and light snack
I ring the button marked "Reception". There is an automated voice, much in the usual Best Western style. Eventually I speak to a real person.
Me: Do you have room service?
Person: No.
Me: Do you know where I can get a drink?
Person: No.
Me: Right. Just out of interest, if someone was desperate for a ham sandwich, could you do it?
Person: There is a Tim Hortons. Goodbye.
There is always a Tim Hortons, but I do not eat at Tim Hortons unless I am recovering from food poisoning and feel faint at Montreal airport.
I look about my room
It smells of death. The bathroom has black mouldy grout. The 'toiletries' have been used. There are two beds, and a kitchen that has nothing in it, not even a paper plate.
I make tea
It smells like an old ashtray.
I try to find the internets
It does not exist, unless I take it from the hotel next door.
I check the room rate
It is $209 a night. I am glad I am not paying.












