We stayed in Malaika, which is the best
room in the house! It’s so enormous--like a grand ballroom with the
hardwood ceilings and floors. There are two separate seating
arrangements, each with two sofas and a chair, huge four-poster canopy
bed, large terrace with two lounge chairs (the cushions are in the
closet), enormous closet and dressing room. The bathroom is huge, too,
with separate shower and soaking tub and double vanity (no separate
water closet for the toilet). I don’t recall a bidet. Basic toiletries
were provided, along with robes and slippers, also a hairdryer with a
diffuser (I’ve never seen a diffuser in a hotel room, but since I use
one daily at home, I was overjoyed to find it). There is a complimentary
non-alcoholic mini-bar containing water, juice boxes, and a chocolate
bar. There are also some bagged snacks (not sure if they were included,
but I believe so), a fruit plate, and a dessert plate (cookies and
bread, replenished daily). We spent two nights here, arriving around
9:00 pm on the first night but still eating dinner in the restaurant.
The food was wonderful and plentiful. Breakfast is included, but the
half-board plan (which includes dinner or lunch) was another $30 per
night. Well worth the money--we could never have eaten an multi-course
dinner (appetizer, salad, entree, dessert) for that amount of money on
our own. There are separate dining rooms for dinner and breakfast, and a
small bar area. Drink prices (not included) were very reasonable, so
don’t be afraid to enjoy. The pool is lovely, but we didn’t have a
chance to use it. There is a nightly fire in the living room area. We
didn’t see any afternoon tea even though we looked around at the
appropriate time, but supposedly one is offered. (Perhaps you have to
request it beforehand?) There is a nice terrace on the second floor that
can be used by all rooms, where smoking is allowed (this was the same
size as the separate terrace for Malaika). The rooms have old-fashioned
keys, which were a unique touch (but hard to get used to!). Security
around the property is tight (not sure if it’s needed), and it is
centrally located to KWS, Sheldrick Orphanage, Langatta Giraffe Center,
Karen Blixen Museum, and Wilson Airport, yet still quite remote to other
hotels and restaurants (I would definitely take at least the half-board
plan if staying at the HoW: it didn’t seem easy to pop out to another
restaurant for a meal). I think it took about an hour to get there from
the Kenyatta Airport (JKIA). Roads in Nairobi (in the suburb of Karen)
were reasonably good. Would recommend the House of Waine highly! It was
necessary to do a bank transfer (telegraphic wire transfer) to pre-pay,
however, since they couldn’t take a credit card without us being present
(we did use a credit card to pay the incidentals/bar bill, though,
while there). They arranged our transportation from the airport, which
cost about $30 one-way. That was a great idea, for JKIA was a bit of a
mob scene upon our arrival, and seeing one’s name on a placard is a
comforting way to begin one’s journey rather than waiting for a cab.
There was 24-hour electricity and hot water here, as expected. Don’t
forget an adapter (you will need the 3-prong English/Great British
adapter for all of Kenya and Tanzania--not the Africa adapter); a
converter was not necessary.
No comments:
Post a Comment