Have you ever walked into a hotel, spent a night or two, then fondly thought of it many times after you'd checked out? If a hotel impresses you, then you've found something to write about. The hotel above is in a small village outside of Munich, Germany. It did impress me and I did write about it and the essay placed in a contest and has been published.
It's such a small thing--a stay at a hotel--in the relative hugeness of our world. But if you write about the personal and the way things/places affect you, then you have a perfect inspiration. My personal essay and a few more pictures of this hotel are below. One suggestion is to write about the place soon after you have stayed there while the details are fresh in your mind.
A Hungarian Hotel in Germany
Our heads were fuzzy
and our legs like jelly when we left the long, overnight flight from Kansas City to Munich ,
Germany . After
clearing passport control and getting our luggage, my husband and I headed to
the rental car area of the airport. Despite our fatigue, we managed the
paperwork and check-out with only a minimum of frustration. An hour later, we
settled into a Mercedes C Class sedan and made our way out of the city, Ken at
the wheel and map in my hand. Our second job of the day was to locate the hotel
we’d booked on the internet. I’d searched diligently for a reasonably priced
hotel not too far from the Munich
airport. I found many, but somehow one kept calling to me, so I clicked and
clicked until we were booked for the first three nights of our three week stay
in Germany .
The half hour drive to Hohenlinden turned into an hour, then
another hour. We learned that German roadways are excellent but that German
road signs leave a great deal to be desired. We also discovered that the GPS in our rental
car was programmed in German. Useless for us. Round and round we went, on
highways and byways, roundabouts and little traveled pathways. I was near tears
and Ken near eruption point when we somehow
pulled into the small,
rural village of Hohenlinden . Relief is far too mild a
word to describe our feelings. Surely the Hotel Zur Linde would soon appear.
“I think it’s on the outskirts of the town,” I told Ken as
he gripped the steering wheel more firmly.
“Not so,” he said slowing down in front of a three-story stucco
building with Hotel Zur Linde painted on
the side, right in the middle of town. He pulled into the side drive and around
the back to a minuscule parking area, and we walked wearily into the hotel. A small
reception area appeared dark and rather uninviting, but a young girl in the
office cubicle smiled and greeted us so warmly, our spirits rose like a hot air
balloon on a sunny day.
All we wanted was to go to our room, take a shower and
change clothes, but it was not to be.
“Oh, I’m so sorry,”
the young woman said in perfect English. “You cannot go to your room until 2 p.m. But you can have lunch first.
Her smile erased any irritation we might have had as she led us to the outdoor biergarten surrounded by greenery, an
arbor and sweet-smelling flowers. We could easily kill an hour and a half here.
A tall glass of the local beer and a bowl of Hungarian soup
helped revive us. We lingered in the pleasant outdoor garden until 2 p.m. when we unloaded our luggage
and stepped into a tiny elevator to go to our room. It was small but clean and
nicely furnished. A big window looked out on a church across the road. The bed
with the snowy white duvet, sheet and soft pillows looked so inviting.
Showered and clothes changed, we set off on a walk around
the town. Quaint houses, small shops, and flower gardens brought smiles to our
faces and cooled our blood pressure back to normal. In one front garden, a man
wearing a long cotton coat, worked with wood using a standing saw. Seeing him
thrilled Ken. He told me he’d seen pictures of men doing work like that and
wearing the coat to protect their clothes. As we walked, we discussed our plan
for the next day when we were to go back to the Munich
airport to pick up good friends from South Africa , who would be
traveling with us.
In the evening, we went to the formal dining room and
enjoyed a leisurely and excellent meal served by a waitress who had charm plus.
Several patrons ate with well-behaved dogs lying next to them. The girl who had
checked us in that afternoon was gone, and her mother was the dining room
hostess and hotel clerk for the evening. Mama was tall, slender and blonde,
wearing spike heels and a low-cut blouse. We chatted with her and were a bit
surprised to learn we had booked into a Hungarian hotel. Good German beer and German food like roast
pork, red cabbage and potato dumplings and a few Hungarian items on the menu,
so not a problem, especially with the special way we’d been welcomed.
When our waitress brought our food, she asked what we would
say in English to wish someone a good meal. “Enjoy!” I told her, “or even
Bon Appetit!” With eyes sparkling, she called out “Enjoy!” as she hurried back
to the kitchen. Our food proved to be as satisfying as the hotel itself.
We’d noticed the church across the street filled the summer
air with its bells every hour on the hour--lovely bells which chimed for a
couple of minutes. We strolled over to the church after dinner and found a
small cemetery on one side of the building. Each plot was outlined in paving
stones and perennial flowers, some with stone angels adorning the area where
the marker sat. We were taken with the care each grave had been given and the
gentle, dainty look the flowers and statues added. Hand in hand, we crossed the
road to our hotel and bed. “I can’t wait to see Mike and Mavis tomorrow,” I
said to Ken.
At 6 a.m. ,
the church bells began to peal. Nice, I thought, as I pulled up the duvet and
snuggled deeper into my feather pillow. But the bells went on and on and…. fifteen
minutes worth! Enough to wake the entire town! Surely, no one in Hohenlinden
needed an alarm clock.
After a pleasing breakfast, we zipped into Munich in less than half an hour. Amazing what
you can do when you have the proper directions. We picked up our friends at the
architecturally impressive airport and brought them to Hotel Zur Linde. Our
innkeeper greeted them warmly as new guests and we as old friends, having been
there an entire 24 hours.
“Oh, what a nice
place this is,” Mavis said to me as we helped them to their room down the hall
from ours. We met in the biergarten for
a tall glass of beer to toast the beginning of our time together. Living
halfway across the world from one another, our times together are treasured. We
ate outdoors that night with many of the locals who were having a good time if
judged by the chatter and laughter.
The next morning I asked if there was a guest computer. “Oh
yes,” the innkeeper said, and she led me to a folding screen in the breakfast
room which hid the computer. I tried and tried to get onto the internet but
could not find the @ on the keyboard. I finally gave up, and went to the office
to ask for help. “That is a Hungarian keyboard,” the woman told me. “Come, I’ll
show you what to do.” Hit Shift and q and the @ comes up. Success at last, but
the y and z were in the opposite places of our keyboards. Otherwise, they were
the same. I finally got it figured out and was able to check my e-mail.
We woke up each morning to the 6 o’clock bell concert. By the third morning, I was awake
and waiting. Instead of being irritated at the early awakening, I looked
forward to it, knowing a wonderful German buffet breakfast awaited us on the
floor below. Fresh fruit, cereal, cold meats, cheeses, and hard rolls
accompanied by strong coffee and a few pastries filled us to satisfaction as we
lingered in the sunlit dining room.
Before we checked out of the hotel, we booked it again for
our last night in Germany ,
negotiating a lower price for our return.
After touring the back roads, small towns and villages of
southern Germany ,
for three weeks, we returned to Hohenlinden. When we pulled into the parking
area, it almost felt like coming home. The four of us strolled into the
reception area, and our Hungarian innkeeper came to greet us, three inch heels
clicking on the tile floor, her face alight with a warm welcome. We were
definitely home.
A rainy night meant dinner in the formal dining room with a
fire burning to take the chill out of the air. Good food and drink and a recap
of all we’d done while touring Germany
gave us a lovely final evening in the Hotel Zur Linde.
The grand finale came at six the next morning when the
church bell concert began. I lay in the comfortable bed, listening to the swell
of the bell tones, pleased that I’d found this charming small hotel, or did it
find me? With so many choices, why did this one keep calling out to me?
We checked out after breakfast and loaded the car, ready to
go to the airport. The four of us made one last trip inside for a warm farewell
from the Hungarian hostess of this special hotel. The church bells rang to let
us know it was eight o’clock
as we drove out of town.
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