dwayneb236 wrote:
Here's mine and my wife's take on hotels. We are both police officers. She's is actually in crime scene now. There are so many things that go on in hotel rooms, you would be shocked, or maybe you wouldn't. We've both seen the lowest form of human existence in these places. We tend to avoid hotels as much as possible. Definitely no lower rent hotel/motels. We will take our trailer when we can. Not always possible of course. Just nice knowing who's slept in the bed before us, preferably us. Going to Boston in a couple of weeks, will be staying in a hotel, but at $400 bucks a night I'm assuming it's ok. (famous last words)
I've heard plenty of stuff about hotel rooms being used as meth labs... and nothing gets those nasty chemicals out of a room unless it is completely torn down to the walls.
Believe it or not, one can come out ahead using a RV than hotels. After this next winter, I will have slept in my TT over 100 nights on weekends. At the price I paid for it, the cost per night compares pretty favorably to a hotel. To boot, if I unloaded my rig right now, and only factored in the cost of deprecation, the TT actually would be cheaper than staying those nights in a hotel (cheapest in my neck of the woods would be $100 a night when all the fees are added up.)
In general, RVs are more expensive, but there are plenty of advantages:
1: You can cook your own meals, as opposed to hoping the local greasy spoon adheres to health standards.
2: The useful pesticides that work on bedbugs are all banned, so they have made a comeback with a vengeance. Even just three years ago, bedbugs were the exception, not the rule. Now, they are epidemic.
3: RVs do have common keys (CH-751), but there is no maid wandering around with a master key that can make stuff vanish. Yes, in theory, they have surety bonds, but it gets tough to prove one had a laptop, that it vanished, and that a maid did it. With my TT, a thief would have to get in, then try to pry open a strongbox. Not impossible, but a lot harder than swiping a card and tossing it in a laundry cart.
4: You know the bathroom/shower will work. One never knows this with a hotel, if there is hot water, or if there might be
surprises in the hotel's water.
5: Stocking up the bar area with one's favorite beverages is cheaper than cracking open a hotel's minibar.
6: No need to worry about looking under ever crevice to make sure there is nothing forgotten.
7: Less time waiting in line, and no need to hand keys over for check-out.
8: The nefarious people tend to go where the pickings are. In general (as there are always exceptions), hotels are easier spots for thieves to make income than CGs.
9: Sick building syndrome, mold in the air ducts, and other airborne sicknesses that are a problem with old buildings tend to not be a problem with a RV.
10: Hotels can be located pretty far away from where one needs to be.
Of course, there are times where a hotel is a must, for example, an urban area, or flying to a different region of the US too far to drive. But, it is nice to use one's own rig instead of having to get a hotel (or driving back/forth) if at an event 100-200 miles away.