Me on vacations
-
That's the thing I hate the most about free hotel breakfast: by the time normal people get up, they've already shut it down for the day. I swear they do it on purpose to save money.
Me who wakes up for work at 4am but doesn't eat anything till 11am.
-
They'll still stop serving breakfast at 9 sharp and you'll be hungry until lunch.
The extra hours of sleep are well worth the cost of a non-complimentary breakfast whenever I'm ready for it.
-
They'll still stop serving breakfast at 9 sharp and you'll be hungry until lunch.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I'm not one of those people that needs to eat at precise intervals or even every day. I just eat when in hungry for something.
In summer dinner is usually my first (and often only) meal.
I almost never eat breakfasts (especially if I woke up "only" a few hours ago). Never could, even parents wanted me to but I just had better days without breakfast as a kid so they stopped insisting.I assume that when I travel I have access to food basically everywhere or else I know I have to plan that - which again I do in a way that I eat when I want.
-
We're built different
Me when checkout is at 12:00
-
Just how late do you wake up?
I often stay at hotels for work, and by 8AM I'm leaving so I can be wherever I need to be at by 9, so yeah, breakfast needs to be around 7h30.
Even at home this is a usual schedule, since commuting is a pain.
By 10AM at the latest probably most places also need to wrap up service so they can clear up and prepare to serve lunches in a couple of hours.
It's not that unreasonable...
wrote on last edited by [email protected].
-
They'll still stop serving breakfast at 9 sharp and you'll be hungry until lunch.
Go get breakfast before you go to sleep, or set alarm, grab breakfast, and have a second round of sleep.
-
Pre pandemic 52% of hotel nights were booked by business travelers.
-
Pre pandemic 52% of hotel nights were booked by business travelers.
wrote on last edited by [email protected].
-
Even if that were true, hotel use is pretty evenly split between business travelers and tourists, both are "normal"
-
A change in environment often energizes people.
The energy:
-
Pre pandemic 52% of hotel nights were booked by business travelers.
Whereโd you get that number?
-
We're built different
Nailed it
-
Whereโd you get that number?
A site called Business Travel News
-
Me when checkout is at 12:00
Dam, where you going that has 12 checkouts? I see mostly 11 with some being 10.
-
They'll still stop serving breakfast at 9 sharp and you'll be hungry until lunch.
Nah, I hate breakfast. Give me that extra sleep anyway. It's not like they are very good either.
-
Even if that were true, hotel use is pretty evenly split between business travelers and tourists, both are "normal"
wrote on last edited by [email protected].
-
Just how late do you wake up?
I often stay at hotels for work, and by 8AM I'm leaving so I can be wherever I need to be at by 9, so yeah, breakfast needs to be around 7h30.
Even at home this is a usual schedule, since commuting is a pain.
By 10AM at the latest probably most places also need to wrap up service so they can clear up and prepare to serve lunches in a couple of hours.
It's not that unreasonable...
I wake up naturally around 8:30, typically donโt eat until about 10, breakfast should be served until 11 considering brunch is from 11-2 most places
-
A change in environment often energizes people.
That and you pay good money to go on vacation. Why would you waste it sleeping, which you can do anywhere?
-
Many guests are actually there for work. If breakfast opens at 7, that's a little late for my liking. I gotta finish and drive over to the client and start timely.
Even if they aren't there for work they're there for something, I can't really think of any times I slept in a hotel room and didn't have an early morning.
-
The globe? Sure. A region, or even a country? It's more common than you think. Sales, 'professionals' with conferences, and people that work for large companies that have people meeting.... these all move large amounts of folks around for work, and hotels are easy to book, invoice to the company, and are generally next to a conference center or have it in the same building.