mochilaverde
Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Portuguese 2023, Ingles 2024
Has anyone had experiences with private accommodations canceling reservations?
I'm fresh off the Camino Ingles. I stayed at public albergues the whole trip, except for the last two nights in Bruma and Siguero, where I booked a bed in a private albergue about a month before I started walking. The day before I walked to Siguero, I got an email from the staff at the albergue I'd booked (O Segue do Camino) saying that they didn't have any space for me and that they were canceling my reservation. At the time the email was sent, I was walking and had put my phone on airplane mode. 40 minutes later I got another email saying that they had booked me a bed in Albergue Miras.
It was nice that the staff at O Segue do Camino didn't abandon me completely, but the situation still seemed like a "bait and switch". It was also weird that I ended up being the only woman at Albergue Miras. When I arrived at Miras, I got the impression that the staff weren't expecting a woman traveling alone and they ended up putting me in a room by myself. The whole situation felt kind of dodgy and I was kind of upset at feeling abandoned. Happily, other pilgrims started showing up whom I'd met previous nights and I felt a bit safer. I ended up having a wonderful dinner with Takashi from Japan and Jose from Argentina. Albergue Miras is perfectly adequate, but on a noisy road - the choice is either to have the window open for fresh air and traffic noise, or to close the window and have the room quiet but hot and stuffy.
I spoke to another couple from Australia who'd had accomodations near Betanzos canceled - and the host there hadn't gone to the trouble of booking them somewhere else to stay! Perhaps private accomodations have developed a policy of overbooking and then hoping that there are enough cancelations that they end up with enough beds. I also wondered if booking 5 weeks in advance over the O Segue do Camino website meant that my reservation got "lost" in a system where humans take reservations over the phone without checking the online bookings. Of course, I also wondered if O Segue do Camino was "referring" pilgrims to Albergue Miras for some fee....
edit to add:
Thanks everyone for your comments, I'm now more optimistic that the albergue that canceled my reservation made a genuine error and did their best to make sure that I had a place to sleep. In any case, my suspicions about a "bait and switch" are now well-documented here in case anyone has this experience in the future. I'm in awe of the hospitaliero whose daughter had died and who still managed to find new accommodations for a group of 14!
For clarity, my booking was done directly on the albergue website, not through a third party like booking.com.
One of the things I've enjoyed about being a pilgrim is that people are very generous with their hospitality. However, I don't think appreciation of this goodwill should stop people from questioning behaviour that might indicate corruption, even if it is benign as sending business to another albergue. I've stayed in a dozen public albergues in Galicia and several of them had so few beds occupied that I wondered why the albergue was even there! (That, and the presence of a beautiful kitchen with no cookware, so that pilgrims are obliged to eat hot meals in a nearby restaurant....)
I'm fresh off the Camino Ingles. I stayed at public albergues the whole trip, except for the last two nights in Bruma and Siguero, where I booked a bed in a private albergue about a month before I started walking. The day before I walked to Siguero, I got an email from the staff at the albergue I'd booked (O Segue do Camino) saying that they didn't have any space for me and that they were canceling my reservation. At the time the email was sent, I was walking and had put my phone on airplane mode. 40 minutes later I got another email saying that they had booked me a bed in Albergue Miras.
It was nice that the staff at O Segue do Camino didn't abandon me completely, but the situation still seemed like a "bait and switch". It was also weird that I ended up being the only woman at Albergue Miras. When I arrived at Miras, I got the impression that the staff weren't expecting a woman traveling alone and they ended up putting me in a room by myself. The whole situation felt kind of dodgy and I was kind of upset at feeling abandoned. Happily, other pilgrims started showing up whom I'd met previous nights and I felt a bit safer. I ended up having a wonderful dinner with Takashi from Japan and Jose from Argentina. Albergue Miras is perfectly adequate, but on a noisy road - the choice is either to have the window open for fresh air and traffic noise, or to close the window and have the room quiet but hot and stuffy.
I spoke to another couple from Australia who'd had accomodations near Betanzos canceled - and the host there hadn't gone to the trouble of booking them somewhere else to stay! Perhaps private accomodations have developed a policy of overbooking and then hoping that there are enough cancelations that they end up with enough beds. I also wondered if booking 5 weeks in advance over the O Segue do Camino website meant that my reservation got "lost" in a system where humans take reservations over the phone without checking the online bookings. Of course, I also wondered if O Segue do Camino was "referring" pilgrims to Albergue Miras for some fee....
edit to add:
Thanks everyone for your comments, I'm now more optimistic that the albergue that canceled my reservation made a genuine error and did their best to make sure that I had a place to sleep. In any case, my suspicions about a "bait and switch" are now well-documented here in case anyone has this experience in the future. I'm in awe of the hospitaliero whose daughter had died and who still managed to find new accommodations for a group of 14!
For clarity, my booking was done directly on the albergue website, not through a third party like booking.com.
One of the things I've enjoyed about being a pilgrim is that people are very generous with their hospitality. However, I don't think appreciation of this goodwill should stop people from questioning behaviour that might indicate corruption, even if it is benign as sending business to another albergue. I've stayed in a dozen public albergues in Galicia and several of them had so few beds occupied that I wondered why the albergue was even there! (That, and the presence of a beautiful kitchen with no cookware, so that pilgrims are obliged to eat hot meals in a nearby restaurant....)
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