Getting our hands dirty: the crappiest hotel rooms we’ve ever slept in

When you’re dirt tired from travelling, a roof over your head is enough. It’s during these moments that you realise – too late – that your standards have dropped a bit too low. You’re sleeping in a horrid place. And no, I’m not talking about slow wifi or cold coffee. More about cockroach corpses and fellow guests that seem fresh out of prison. Although daily life was probably more comfortable in the can than in these hell holes:

[Disclaimer: alas, I haven’t taken many pictures of crappy rooms. I will start doing so.]

Unknown hotel, Chiang Khong, Thailand

A solo trip through Southeast Asia gives me an early experience of deplorable sleeping conditions. I candidly remember a guesthouse in Laos where the walls are so paper-thin that even a set of earplugs and the fan on the highest setting cannot drown out the snoring of a guest down the hall. To add injury to insult, he turns his television to volume ten at six in the morning. At least the snoring is over.

But that is not too bad. I have little objection to Spartan hotel rooms. On the contrary, I like simple places. I don’t mind sleeping on a wooden board, as long as it is a properly maintained wooden board. Filth, however, is something else.

Worse is the ruin at the Thai-Laotian border in which a bunch of slumlords/tour operators accommodate me and a fellow traveller. An old, bloody plaster sticks to the wall and snails crawl all across the ceiling. An army’s supply of pubic hair from previous guests lingers in every corner of the bathroom. As soon as I lie down in the bed, it collapses like a jelly pudding. A TripAdvisor reviewer calls it “literally the worst place on earth”. Damn hard words, since Auschwitz, Guantanamo Bay and the football stadium of RSC Anderlecht are, undeniably, also places on earth.

room in village in Laos
This is a palace compared to the room I just described.

Hotel Oasis, Ampana, Indonesia

To reach the Togean Islands, one of the most paradisical places on earth, we’re sentenced to a night in the port city of Ampana. Lonely Planet recommends staying in Hotel Oasis and we follow that advice. All the more because we find a cockroach corpse on the floor when checking out another inn. I myself can handle quite a bit of dirt while travelling, to save a few bucks of drinking money, but I can’t get away with that in the company of a lady.

Oasis it is. The name sounds good and according to Lonely Planet this hotel has clean rooms and good service, “but don’t expect to sleep before the karaoke bar next-doors closes at 11 pm.” We are not killjoys. If it keeps the local youth off the streets, we can live with that. At a quarter to eleven, we brush our teeth and put on our nightwear. We forgot for a moment that we’re in Indonesia, where “rubber” time applies. The Indonesian word for ‘tomorrow’, ‘besok’, can literally mean any time in the future, from tomorrow to a few years from now.

At three in the morning, we’re still shaking in our beds to bad dangdut. It frustrates me so much that I rush into the bar in my underpants to ask them if the hell they know what time it is. When the karaoke finally calms down an hour later… it is time for the morning prayer in the mosque a little further.

View from our room on the Togean Islands.
View from the room in the Togean Islands, the real Oasis.

NY Loft Hostel, New York, USA

It’s harder to find an affordable hotel room in New York City than a safety razor in Lena Dunham’s bathroom. In the end, we cough up 140 dollars for a private room in a hostel. For that money, the two of us could stay for a week in full-board on the aforementioned Togean Islands. Is the NY Loft Hostel at least okay? Uh. Well, let’s just say that the hostel is like the city itself: no love at first sight.

Compared to New Yorkers, people in Antwerp, the most arrogant city in Belgium, are modest and don’t take themselves too seriously. I will never forget the black bulldozer who, after I lifted her laundry bag from the only available chair in a laundromat, approached me and sneered at me that I “must earn the right to be in New York”. Nope, thank you very much, I’d rather scoop out a horse stable with a dessert spoon.

Tom on Coney Island
Aargh, one of those tourists. Definitely hasn’t earned the right to be here yet.

The welcome in NY Loft Hostel isn’t exactly open-armed either. The receptionist, a whale in a tracksuit, barely looks up from her phone. Worse is the room, so hot you can easily grill a turkey in it. I open a window. Loud bachata wafts in all night. The accompanying dance is, according to Anete, sensual, partly because women push a knee between those of their male dance partner.

Which is exactly the procedure I have in mind for the deejay, with the necessary addition that I would also make a rapid upwards movement with that knee towards his manhood. Because the deejay shouts so spiritedly that he resembles the type of Latin American football commentators who are paid by the vowel. Add the tiny beds, so small that even overnighting hobbits would lament them with bloodshot eyes, and I consider 140 dollars daylight robbery even by capitalist New York standards.

Hotel Maya, Benque Viejo del Carmen

Most budget hotels in Central America are concrete bunkers. At best, they are clean and contain a fan that provides the necessary respite from the heat. At worst, you risk electrocution when taking a shower and you have to step over drunk prison types to enter your room.

In San Vincente, a provincial town in El Salvador, the innkeeper, dressed in a dirty tank top, searches for the correct key for tens of minutes. Right, this is the kind of place where no one ever closes the door from the outside. When he finally finds it, he drags a gigantic bucket of water towards the room. No tap works in the bathroom, which is separated from the bedroom with a shower curtain. Also in San Ignacio (Belize), El Estor and Playa Grande (both Guatemala), we do not necessarily have the time of our lives.

But nothing beats Hotel Maya in the sleepy border town Benque Viejo del Carmen. The mattress in our poky room is so worn out that even the most ragged bum would turn his nose up. All night long, I struggle with the springs that torment my back through the mattress fabrics. Even bed bugs don’t get near. No, you shouldn’t be afraid of pests here, but rather of venereal diseases.

Bathroom in Hotel Maya, Benque Viejo del Carmen, Belize
Not exactly lady-like.

The shared bathroom is laughable, although we’re closer to crying. Faeces from previous guests still float in the toilet bowl. We soon discover why: flushing is impossible. When we report this to the manager, a man with a throat problem, he pushes a spot on his neck in order to get a hoarse word out of it: “I will take care of it.” After which he asks his son to solve the problem. It looks like a scene from Breaking Bad. That evening, we find a bucket next to the toilet.

And if that isn’t enough, our neighbours are blasting ranchera music at six in the morning. Hello? Is this the UN Human Rights Council?

In Flanders Fields: border-hopping between Bruges and Antwerp on the GR5A

The GR5A, the Hiking Route of Flanders, loops along the provincial borders of East and West Flanders. For a magazine story, I walked 165 kilometres from Bruges to Antwerp. In the shadowless polders, I discovered that a Flemish Indian summer is no longer what it once was.

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The joys of winter hiking in Estonia + our tips

On short and cold winter days, you’re forgiven for wanting to stay indoors all day, tucked under a blanket in front of Netflix. For us, however, winter is as beautiful a season as any for hiking in Estonia. From the first snowfall in December until now, barely a week has passed that we didn’t set out for a winter hike.

Winter hiking isn’t always a walk in the park. Unlike at summer outings, there are no picnics in photogenic spots, lazy breaks for reading or swimming in a lake. There are none of those rewards in winter.

Instead, we’ve sunk until our knees into deep snow. We’ve had to deal with freezing temperatures, wind chill, cold toes and icy trails. We’ve gnawed on frozen muesli bars and have tried to suck liquid from a solidly frozen water bottle. Tom’s beard has looked like Santa Claus’.

Then why did we go winter hiking so often? For the sound of snow crunching under our boots, the fumes our breaths made, the stillness in the air and the beauty of nature asleep. And most of all, for that wonderful feeling of being alive!

Here are nine more reasons why winter hiking is the bomb:

1/ The landscapes are out of this world

Frosty river landscape somewhere near Paekna

Frozen lakes and frosty rivers, pine trees covered with powder-sugar, a white blanket over the fields. Snow transforms a landscape into something entirely new and gorgeous.

2/ The golden hour is permanent

golden sky near Kose-Uuemõisa, Estonia

Because the sun rises so late, it’s much easier to witness how the sun smears an orange glow across the horizon. The golden hour stays for the entire day. All pictures come out heavily.

3/ You have the trails to yourself

Anete winter hiking in Riisa bog, Soomaa, Estonia

Last weekend, we took a train to Aegviidu. We walked all day through the thick forests of Kõrvemaa and we saw no other hikers. Zero. Crowds are definitely thinner in wintertime.

The only trails we’ve had to share with others were the ones near parking. For most people, nature is a short loop around a car park. This knowledge gives you so much freedom to get away from everyone.

4/ You can really get distances done

Anete on a trail near Paekna

Usually, we seldom rush to get from start to finish. Instead we take time for picnics, reading breaks and a plunge in every swimming hole we encounter.

Winter forces us to take a different approach. We’ve had to keep moving to stay warm. The one time we tried to have a proper picnic, we nearly froze our asses off. Since then, we hastily chew away a sandwich and a bar of granola and gulp down some coffee before hurrying on.

Despite the short days, we’ve regularly hiked 30+ kilometres this winter.

5/ You get a peek into the book of tracks

animal tracks in Kõrvemaa, near Aegviidu

The presence of animals is so much more pronounced when a thick layer of snow covers the soil. We’ve seen the footprints of animals everywhere, big and small. Foxes, moose, rabbits, hundreds of birds. Despite (3), this gave us the sense we were never truly alone.

6/ Winter hiking makes you feel like a pioneer

Anete in a snowy landscape in Harjumaa, Estonia

Entering a virginal white track, untouched by human boots, and printing the first foot into it: this is how the world explorers must’ve felt.

7/ Estonia has no mountains

Tom near Tuhala, Harjumaa, Estonia

So no fancy gear, like crampons or ice axes, is needed.

8/ Yes, winter hiking is a challenge…

RMK trail between Kose-Uuemõisa and Alavere
Find the trail

Somewhere between Kose-Uuemõisa and Alavere, we entered a small trail through the forest. ‘Trail’ is too big a word, as the snow covered any indications of where we were headed. We ducked under tree trunks, sank knee-deep into the snow and jumped over frozen streams.

Like that, we trudged at a snail’s pace through the landscape, vigilantly keeping our eyes out for the green and white markers we were following. Green and white! What a brilliant colour combo in a snowy pine forest! After hours, we emerged back into civilisation.

9/ … but the reward is glorious

We sat down in the comfortable chairs of a warm café. Crashed down is more like it. Outside it snowed, the windows foggy with condensation. When the friendly waitress brought us beers and burgers, we looked at each other. We had just walked 34 kilometres in sub-zero conditions, first in a bog in Vissuvere and then all the way back to Paide. Without saying anything, we both knew: if we didn’t deserve this now, then when?

Tips for winter hiking

Although it’s always easier to stay indoors, getting out and being active in wintertime works miracles for your physical and mental health.

  • Daylight hours are fewer, so start your hike as early as you can.
  • Dress in layers. You’d be surprised how quickly your body warms up during a brisk hike.
  • Thermal underwear is a must.
  • Consider winter hiking boots with extra insulation (this proved a lifesaver for Anete).
  • Choose wool and synthetic clothes over cotton ones. The latter dry slowly.
  • It’s tempting to pile layer upon layer, but avoid dressing too tightly. Poor blood circulation increases your chances of getting frostbite.
  • Prepare accordingly. Look up temperatures and weather conditions. Research options to warm up in shops or cafés. Double-check bus and train times.
  • In spite of what we said in (4), it’s likely you’ll do fewer kilometres. Deep snow can really slow you down.
  • We don’t rely on a phone or GPS. If you do, be aware that batteries drain quickly in the cold. Have a back-up map or another way of navigation.
  • Carry coffee, tea or another warm drink in a thermos.
  • Drink enough water, even if it means more toilet breaks in the snow. In the cold, you can sometimes dehydrate without realising it. Also, regular sips from your bottle stop the water from freezing so quickly.
  • Prepare snacks you can eat without breaking for too long, such as muesli bars. Eat regularly, your body consumes up to 50 per cent more calories in the cold.
  • Take a headlamp, just in case. Once, we underestimated the length of our hike and walked for an hour in the dark. Luckily, a snow landscape reflects the last daylight well.
  • Learn to understand the symptoms of hypothermia (uncontrollable or violent shivering, clumsiness, slurred speech) and frostbite (cold, pale skin, numbness, tingling) and act upon them. Get warm as soon as you can.

Soomaa National Park: exploring Estonia’s Amazon by canoe

As we headed straight for the pillar of a bridge, I tried to recall Algis’ advice. We sat in a shaky canoe on the Raudna river and collision was unavoidable. But with the best will in the world, I couldn’t remember what Algis had told us to do in case the boat tipped over. The chatty local, who had picked us up in the darkness with his rickety car, had shared with us so much that morning. From facts about nature to the number of children which he could push into a canoe in one minute (30).

I did know that the water was freezing cold. I didn’t have to go under for that. It was the end of October. Winter was upon us. You may be wondering, dear reader, why we went canoeing in the first place? Wouldn’t it be better to stay in, with a good book and a cup of hot cocoa? In other words, wouldn’t be better to be normal? Thanks for the concern, but our mental health is fine. No, we explored Soomaa National Park, one of the wildest areas in Estonia, of our own free will. More specifically, it was a birthday present for Anete from my parents. If we ended up wet, or worse, it was all their fault.

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9 remarkable reasons why we love the Yucatan

After all that whining about the Riviera Maya, you might suspect that I dragged myself with a long face through the Yucatan for five weeks. Couldn’t be further from the truth. Even though we only discovered a small piece of Mexico, it left us craving to see more of this land of cacti and cartels, mescal and peyote, Maya and Aztec, spicy candies and delicious food, Frida Kahlo and pint-sized, moustachioed guys with funny sombreros playing mariachi. After the lament, the eulogy. These are the reasons why we adore the Yucatan peninsula.

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