Adios to the Casa Excéntrico

Today in Alcampo I saw breakfast bars on special and thought ooh, good, a chance to stock up. I always stock at least 4 types of breakfast bars for guests, in case they get the munchies before they can get to the shops and stock up.

I’m beginning to wonder how long it will take before that automatic reflex disappears. I don’t need to buy loo rolls in bulk anymore. I don’t need six-packs of long-life milk (I drink fresh) or 12 packs of bottled water (I drink filtered) and I can walk past the special offers on bedlinen or towels, because I’m no longer in the hosting business and never again need to wonder what on earth was in the hair oil which permanently stained a pillowslip and put an entire set of guest linen off the usable list. Guests – hungry, thirsty, oily, infuriating or delightful – are literally no longer my business. The Casa Excéntrico has been sold, this month, eight years after I bought it in October 2017, and I thought I had completely come to grips with that until I found myself chucking breakfast bars into my shopping cart.

I’ve just deleted the Casa tab off this website. I wanted to hide it, get used to the idea, but the only option to lose the tab was ‘trash’. Ouch. The last eight years owning a small guesthouse – two guest suites, a shared guest kitchen – has been a fair chunk of my life. I’ll miss the income, I’ll miss some, most, of the guests – fun, zany, eccentric, charming, shy, borderline bonkers, hilarious, lonely, gregarious, adventurous – or recovering from life giving them a sharp smack up the head. The sour, greedy, or uneasily alarming, ones, I won’t miss, but they were very much in the minority. Many were house-hunting in the general area, and some who bought locally became genuine friends. I promoted the house as quirky, a bit peculiar, because frankly it was, and as a result nearly everyone who stayed embraced its oddities.

Twice the atrium and hallway were flooded by heavy rains – the first time, I heard my French guest running down the stairs as I struggled to slosh ankle-deep floodwater up the slight slope out of the hallway towards the drain and thought ‘complain all you like, mate, I don’t control the weather.’ Instead he seized the other heavy yard brush and wordlessly helped – his English was even worse than my French. Many of my guests were Spanish, back to visit family for special occasions, and out nearly all the time as a result. Very few of the rest were English, since when the English come to Spain on holiday they either take a villa or want to be walking distance from the beaches and not have to drive on the ‘wrong’ side of the road. Instead I had Americans wanting to explore ‘real’ Spain, and Canadians, Scottish, Irish, French, German, Egyptian, Vietnamese, Czech, Polish, Estonian, Swiss, the full range of Scandis, Italian, quite a few South Americans. Lots with pets, none with small children unless I was personally related to them. I didn’t ask a lot, since I couldn’t offer a lot (my listing said in large letters, no pool, no aircon, no TV) so guests tended to be young, or generally on a tight budget. Many were travelling alone, some very self-contained, some bursting to chat about the events of each day. They were hikers, cyclists, bikers, writers, students, house-hunters, explorers, restless or recuperating. My very first guest was Danish, 30-something, very good-looking, working on his Masters thesis, and asked diffidently if I’d ‘introduce’ him to the nearest bar. The older woman who’d sold me the house entered the bar a few minutes after we sat down, looked at him with huge interest, then leered approvingly at me. Neither she nor anyone else believed there would ever be any ‘real’ guests, that the house could possibly succeed, but then I never expected to live on its income, I asked only that it supported itself – paid its own overheads and, so far as possible, its own ongoing maintenance, and it did. The pandemic was tough, but as soon as any guests at all were allowed, I could advertise that they would be the only ones at any one time. As lockdown lifted, stage by stage, I had my busiest year to date. There were, over the years, several hundred guests and I kept detailed notes on every one. At first I thought of that as research, maybe a book in it, but some were definitely stranger than fiction.

I won’t miss trudging up and down those stairs with their high risers, or the cleaning, or ironing guest linen. I certainly won’t miss the few crappy guests – one bad guest effortlessly outweighs ten, twenty, lovely ones. The buyers are Spanish, and will continue to run it as a guesthouse, I suspect rather more efficiently and luxuriously than I did. They’re significantly younger, so have much more energy and more enthusiasm than I can drum up, these days. I have no idea if they will play up its eccentricity, as I did, but you know what, if you get a chance to stay there, do let me know how you got on. I’m settling comfortably into my little house (in its own ways, just as quirky, I think it must be me) but I’ll miss the Casa Excéntrico for a while yet. In its own quiet way, it was a great adventure.

(Two listings, this was for the front room)

Not a boarding house #livinginSpain finding a synonym – oh, and more guests

I don’t like the term boarding house, it somehow carries an indelible image (for me) of being genteelly shabby and smelling of boiled cabbage and I have no idea why, since I have never, to the best of my knowledge, stayed in a boarding house that fitted such a description.

The hunt was therefore on for synonyms, with a bewildering array of options from the handy website powerthesaurus.org – inn, rooming house, pension, hostel, hotel, lodging house, hospice, guesthouse, ordinary, tavern, fleabag, hostelry, doss house, flophouse and oh so many others – I liked caravansary but reluctantly gave it up when I realized I had to be able to put up 50 camels to really justify the name. It would be too crowded, and the dog would hate them.  The neighbours might get upset, too.

I looked up several, and guesthouse is definitely the answer. Inexpensive lodgings, tick – I’d rather have guests delighted with what they are getting, than finding fault. In a house over a century old, at least in parts, there is fault to find and always will be.  Private home with conversion exclusively for guest accommodation, tick.  So the Casa Excéntrico, with the entire upstairs exclusively for guests, is now officially a guesthouse.  By the way, that’s not a piercingly green carpet in the pic, it is fake grass. One day there will be new tiles but right now, fake grass is adding a suitably eccentric touch and coping nicely with the current, soon-to-be-sorted, occasional alarming mini-floods which burp up out of the overloaded storm drain. Spain doesn’t rain often, doesn’t rain for long, but it does rain hard.

Atrium to hall

After the crazy hubbub of August, where I was stripping rooms in the morning and making them up for the afternoon, one anxious eye on the clock so I didn’t forget  to go teach between 1 and 4, things went abruptly quiet. No more ironing sheets in the laundry, leaning back so the sweat from my nose didn’t drip onto the pristine sheets.  No more steaming the floors with the big fans on full blast so I didn’t pass out from the combination of 40 degree temperatures and the floor-steamer. No more thanking my guardian angel for making me decide on a 3 day minimum, I honestly don’t know how hosts can do this every day.  Utter silence. The French guest who had booked for two weeks backed out two days beforehand saying eh, ‘allo, I ‘ave no memory of booking zees, and that was it until the Estonian lasses arrived.

Just as quickly it has gone back to hectic, it is an absolute mystery. October should be quiet, but I have both rooms booked at the moment, and a week’s break, and then both rooms booked again – I’m not complaining, just puzzled. I scrupulously refresh my calendars on both Airbnb and HomeAway regularly, they are the first options that come up for anyone looking on price, and now the market is booming again. Well, long may it last, although I’m rather hoping to use the week’s break to get the house ready for the anticipated winter guests from November onwards. Radiators have to be carried upstairs, a permanent cover built for the gas geyser (which currently has to be switched off and covered when it rains), and a tumbledrier not only sourced but housed.  320 days of sunshine a year is all well and good but the other 45 days are scattered between September and March, I’m a little behind. Until my builder-buddy Nick can get his car (and heavier tools) to the front door again, it’s all on hold. Grrr!

There’s an American guy in the front room who had originally booked for a weekend and keeps extending his stay – he’s house-hunting in the Lecrin Valley but becoming increasingly charmed by Velez itself  and could even end up changing all his plans and becoming a sort of part-time neighbour. I can remember all too well being utterly bewildered by the variety of the places for sale between here and Granada!  Originally he had short-listed two. One is a tiny (one bedroom) perfect villa just above the Alhambra, with a roof terrace with views of the Palace and Granada itself. The other is at the top of the mountain behind Niguelas, a solid cabin squarely in the national park with fruit and olive trees and  views, on a clear day, to Africa, but it is 45 minutes up a winding unsurfaced track. He’s thinking he will probably buy both. I said he needs to look around more. He has the option of renting the Granada one first so will be off as soon as that lease is signed.

The couple in the back room are absolutely lovely, but he’s French with a little English and a little Spanish, and she’s Spanish with no English and no French. We have the occasional glass of wine together and chatter away in three different languages. Builder-buddy Nick says I should stop being so chatty but I honestly don’t start the conversations. I’ll admit I do enjoy them and don’t run away and hide. And when we had a mini-flood yesterday (I really can’t WAIT for the roadworks to be finished and my non-return valve fitted) my lovely guest insisted on helping brush a substantial pool of water from the hallway back up the slight slope towards the atrium drain. They go today and will be missed.

My birthday falls around Halloween and I always take the day off – this year I have booked off teaching but will have the house full, so it won’t be completely relaxing. Just as well, perhaps. Wouldn’t do to be getting lazy.

grin