Beyond Fawlty Towers
Nyanga was the Zimbabwe town set in beautiful countryside ravaged by wildfires, our hotel nestled in woodland with neat lawns and its own trout pool. Apart from a suspiciously empty car park there was at first nothing to tell us that we were about to step into a place so badly run that its comedy of errors would lead us to dub the place “Beyond Fawlty Towers”. Just how many issues can one hotel cram into three nights?
It begins in reception, where for the first time in all of Africa we are met with straight faces instead of welcoming smiles. Having confirmed in advance that we could pay by Visa card, the looks of disdain on those straight faces tells a different story. Cue a 3-hour round trip next morning to the nearest international card friendly ATM, with a distinct lack of sympathy or contrition from hotel staff.
The Towers is another isolated lodge where our only realistic dining option is to eat in, as has often been the case on this trip. With just us and one other couple in the dining room, we order our food and a bottle of red. A few minutes later, the doors from the kitchen swing open and, without anybody coming through, swing shut again. From the other side comes a bang, a brief yell and the sound of smashing glass and crockery. Lots of it.
Next, in comes a young lad waiter, a bottle of South African red and two glasses on a silver tray. As he approaches our table, for some inexplicable reason he tilts the tray forwards: both of the wine glasses smash into smithereens and the whole bottle of red BOUNCES across the table in my direction. Incredibly, I catch it. Even more incredibly, the cork which has been released and placed back in the neck, stays in place and no wine escapes. Had it done so, I would have received a very large red wine shower.
And talking of showers, the next morning we are unable to take one, on account of the fact that the water from the taps is a deep brown colour, thick with some kind of foreign body.
“Yes”, says the manager when we complain, “we have a problem in the piping. Leave it running and it will clear”. Some fifty minutes later it’s still running a colour so deep brown that no self respecting hippo would bathe in it. And then the power goes off. He tells us the generator will kick in shortly. It hasn’t done so by the time we head out for the day.
That evening, now the only guests in the hotel, we saunter into the bar, startling the tall manager and the young waitress who are in the middle of a surreptitious snog and grapple behind the door. He is, by the way, considerably older than her – we’d like to bet that if he has a wife, this young lady isn’t it. Boy does the girl look embarrassed as she rearranges her skirt. We stay straight faced and simply order a beer. When a few minutes later we ask for a second, the young girl tells us they only keep two in the fridge, so if we want another, it’ll be a warm one. OK, that doesn’t sound nice, we’ll have a red wine instead.
“We don’t have any red wine”, she says.
“Really? But we had some last night”.
“I know you did. That’s why we haven’t got any”.
“…………..!”
As we head to the dining room, the power goes off and we are plunged into darkness once more. It’s almost half an hour before the generator kicks in and the kitchen is again operational. I’ve ordered trout, expecting something freshly plucked from the pool outside and slapped straight on to the grill. What I actually get is more like a stickleback than a trout – it is utterly laughable, the smallest and least fleshy fish I’ve ever been served. I’ve seen more meat in a crab claw. After it’s been eaten.
Just as we’re staring at my stickleback in disbelief, the young waitress, the one who’d been snogging the manager, arrives behind me with an array of sauces and accompaniments on a silver tray. As she approaches our table, for some inexplicable reason she tilts the tray forwards……I think you probably now know where this sentence is going. Yep, in an unbelievable repeat of last night’s boy waiter calamity, she drops the whole lot, but this time everything misses the table and smashes on the floor in a huge mix of broken glass, smashed plates and multiple sauces. The home made tartar, bright yellow in colour, splashes huge vivid streaks across my shoes and trousers. The girl runs off in tears.
Out comes the lanky manager, he who snogs his staff, full of apology and offering to take away my shoes for cleaning. There is, of course, no way I’m leaving my precious sneakers in his calamitous possession. On day three, we opt to drive forty minutes to a different eatery rather than take part in another Fawlty Towers circus. The trout at the new place is delicious and, joy upon joy, fully grown.
And so it’s finally time to leave. I suggest to the lanky manager that he might like to forget the charge for the second night’s meal by way of compensation. He says he doesn’t have the authority to do any such thing and insists that I pay in full. Unbelievably he also gives an exaggerated glance at the tips box. You’ve got to be joking, sunshine.
So we now have Beyond Fawlty Towers in our book of travel stories for ever. Of course it’s not really called that – nope, stand up and be counted, named and shamed….the Rhodes Nyanga Hotel.
34 Comments
Lynette d'Arty-Cross
OMG!! What a mess of a hotel, literally. I remember Fawlty Towers and enjoyed it immensely but I wouldn’t want to have to pay to experience a stay there!
Phil & Michaela
As each incident unfolded, we just couldn’t believe that every time we thought it couldn’t get any worse….
Gilda Baxter
Sorry guys, but I can’t stop laughing. This post is hilarious. I used to watch the Faulty Towers program and loved all the funny incidents, I can see why you would make the correlations. We have had our fair share of bad hotels, but I think you win with this one.
Phil & Michaela
In the end you just have to laugh!
Terrie Wright Chrones
You really needed to come home. Amazing!
Phil & Michaela
Ha ha well we’re home now, Terrie….but that hotel was a real one-off!
Helen Devries
I am sorry, but I could not help laughing….until I thought about having to pay for the experience!
Phil & Michaela
There’s not really any alternative but to laugh these things off!
Helen Devries
Apart from running amok….or would that be cultural misappropriation….
Phil & Michaela
Ha…was probably more a case of good ol’ stiff upper lip and carry on regardless!
restlessjo
Funny for everyone but yourselves.
Phil & Michaela
Well, all you can do in those situations is see the funny side!
wetanddustyroads
It’s funny for those of us reading this, but I reckon that wasn’t necessarily the case while you were there. But hey, you lived to tell the story – thank goodness for that!
Phil & Michaela
In the end you just have to roll with it and see the funny side
Toonsarah
I’m sure you’ll be recounting this tale for years to come and laughing at it along with your listeners, but I know it won’t have been quite so funny at the time. But hey, travellers’ tales are the best, aren’t they?!
Phil & Michaela
Absolutely. There comes a point where the ridiculous becomes sublime and you just start to see the funny side, plus of course knowing at the time that you have one of those travel stories unfolding around you
Christie
I know it was not funny, but I had to laugh.. you are such a story teller🙂
Hope this experience will never repeat again!
Phil & Michaela
Well it just kinda got funny in the end. You have to laugh, what else can you do!?
Christie
Right😍
grandmisadventures
Seems like a real mess of a place. I love though how you said ‘name and be shamed’! That is probably the best line to describe this place
Phil & Michaela
What a place!!
WanderingCanadians
Wow … what an … experience. It sure makes for an entertaining story though! I bet no self-respecting hippo would have eaten that trout either!
Phil & Michaela
You’re probably right 😂😂😂
Annie Berger
An hilarious story I hindsight but perhaps not as it unfolded, I’d suspect. Do you normally write reviews of your accommodating? If so, I hope managed trads that you wrote and takes steps to remedy some of the issues!
Phil & Michaela
We do sometimes, can’t remember whether we did for this one just now, but it became a story worth telling!
Heyjude
As others have said, this made for amusing reading, but I guess quite frustrating at the time. A great tale to tell for many years to come! One bottle of red wine? Two cold beers? What were these people thinking!
Phil & Michaela
Well it reached the stage where so many things had happened that we started to see the funny side even as it unfolded. By the way, I’ve been trying to comment on your post today, but as per your footnote warning, it’s not letting me. As of yet we haven’t even been able to suss out how to log in, because it seems to be saying that we’ve got to log in under our old ID which is long since defunct!
Heyjude
Mmm… that having to log in happens on so many blogs, even when you know you are logged in! It’s not consistent either. You can try copying your comment and then going back to the post, refresh the page, and paste the comment. It sometimes works. If not, I usually comment via the Reader.
Hope you are happy to be in your own bed, though I imagine the cold may have come as a bit of a shock!
Phil & Michaela
I’ll keep trying to conquer the Jude barrier we currently have. Ah no, Michaela will keep trying. The comment I’ve been trying to make is that we will be down next week to see autumn dawning for ourselves, my Cornwall homesickness is about to be cured…
Heyjude
Make sure you have wet weather clothing!
leightontravels
Well this gave me several laugh-out-loud moments as I sit here with my tea and cake. I went to check their TripAdvisor reviews, half expecting to see you there, but apparently nobody has done so yet. Tempted?
Phil & Michaela
Michaela is now very tempted now prompted. Glad to give you some LOL moments, I mean, you have to see the funny side even as it unfolds. And I have to admit that while it was happening, I was picturing writing a blog post. I’m sure you know that feeling!
leightontravels
I absolutely do. Which is kind of cool because instead of getting furious you can’t help but think of what a great tale it’s going to be.
Phil & Michaela
I could not agree more. Plus, take it from me, being retired brings a new level of feeling chilled.