Review of the Reindbold Hotel in Munich. The hotel is conveniently located. 5 minutes walk to the main train station and 15 minutes to Munich's main square. At the reception, the staff is mostly Russian-speaking. The rooms are standard. The restrooms are a bit shabby. There are safes in the rooms, but they don't work anywhere.
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Review of the Reindbold Hotel in Munich.
The hotel is conveniently located. 5 minutes walk to the main train station and 15 minutes to Munich's main square. At the reception, the staff is mostly Russian-speaking. The rooms are standard. The restrooms are a bit shabby. There are safes in the rooms, but they don't work anywhere. Money left in the room, do not steal. Cleaned up daily. The pillows are uncomfortable to sleep on - very soft, had to put a few towels. Food for treshka is just excellent. Breakfast - buffet. Lots of fruits and berries, several varieties of cheese, coffee and tea, edible, unlike other countries, sausage, hot, sweet, and much more. If you ate a heavy meal in the morning, then you don’t want to eat until 15 o’clock. There are free apples at the reception. The hotel is mostly Russian groups.
We were in Munich from May 1 to May 7.2009. Economy tour Munich. We did not fly in with the main group, so we took the tickets ourselves. It turned out for 1000 rubles. more expensive, but the hotel was 2 pm local time, and the group arrived at 8 pm, we flew at 13 local time, and the group at 7 am. It took 40 minutes by train from the airport to the train station, 3 adults for 18E. Excursions bought in Bavaria Tours. All of them cost 60E. We were in Salzburg 140 km (the story of Mozart, who died of poisoning with mercury ointment, and Solieri had nothing to do with it), the royal castles of Neuschwanstein and Linderhof, along the way visited the church in the meadow (beautiful, light rococo) and the village of wood carvers. For the first time we tried a venison dish near the church ( 14E). Our excursions were 25-30 people, and the main group of 50 people, and their excursions were noticeably cut off, without visiting any castle. On all excursions, the guides also told a lot about the kings and the history of Germany on the bus. A separate excursion to the Bavarian Verasal to Lake Chiemsee and then further 60 km to the royal lake of Kö nigssee, where Hitler's residence, the Eagle's Nest, was located in the Alps. Indescribable beauty. On the way back we stopped at a schnapps factory (20 varieties) with a tasting. We left at 7 and arrived at 6 pm. Lake Kö nigssee is 3 km long and up to 600 m wide. Boats run on it only on electric traction, at a speed of no more than 12 km per hour, so as not to drive a wave and destroy the shores. At the end of the lake in a restaurant, you can try a dish of freshly caught trout (12E). On the entire lake, only one family of fishermen has the right to fish. In Munich itself, there are huge carps in the Iser River, no one catches them, since you have to go through many months of fishing training courses (how to take a fish off the hook and not hurt her mouth), and then buy a fishing license. The Germans are obsessed with protecting animals. For example, horses that carry tourists to Neuschwanstein Castle should not work for more than 3 hours, then they should be covered with a blanket and taken to rest. Or on the road to Linderhof Castle, on both sides of the asphalt there are grooves for frogs, along which they can cross the road.
The hotel is conveniently located. 5 minutes walk to the main train station and 15 minutes to Munich's main square. At the reception, the staff is mostly Russian-speaking. The rooms are standard. The restrooms are a bit shabby. There are safes in the rooms, but they don't work anywhere. Money left in the room, do not steal. Cleaned up daily. The pillows are uncomfortable to sleep on - very soft, had to put a few towels. Food for treshka is just excellent. Breakfast - buffet. Lots of fruits and berries, several varieties of cheese, coffee and tea, edible, unlike other countries, sausage, hot, sweet, and much more. If you ate a heavy meal in the morning, then you don’t want to eat until 15 o’clock. There are free apples at the reception. The hotel is mostly Russian groups.
We were in Munich from May 1 to May 7.2009. Economy tour Munich. We did not fly in with the main group, so we took the tickets ourselves. It turned out for 1000 rubles. more expensive, but the hotel was 2 pm local time, and the group arrived at 8 pm, we flew at 13 local time, and the group at 7 am. It took 40 minutes by train from the airport to the train station, 3 adults for 18E. Excursions bought in Bavaria Tours. All of them cost 60E. We were in Salzburg 140 km (the story of Mozart, who died of poisoning with mercury ointment, and Solieri had nothing to do with it), the royal castles of Neuschwanstein and Linderhof, along the way visited the church in the meadow (beautiful, light rococo) and the village of wood carvers. For the first time we tried a venison dish near the church ( 14E). Our excursions were 25-30 people, and the main group of 50 people, and their excursions were noticeably cut off, without visiting any castle. On all excursions, the guides also told a lot about the kings and the history of Germany on the bus. A separate excursion to the Bavarian Verasal to Lake Chiemsee and then further 60 km to the royal lake of Kö nigssee, where Hitler's residence, the Eagle's Nest, was located in the Alps. Indescribable beauty. On the way back we stopped at a schnapps factory (20 varieties) with a tasting. We left at 7 and arrived at 6 pm. Lake Kö nigssee is 3 km long and up to 600 m wide. Boats run on it only on electric traction, at a speed of no more than 12 km per hour, so as not to drive a wave and destroy the shores. At the end of the lake in a restaurant, you can try a dish of freshly caught trout (12E). On the entire lake, only one family of fishermen has the right to fish. In Munich itself, there are huge carps in the Iser River, no one catches them, since you have to go through many months of fishing training courses (how to take a fish off the hook and not hurt her mouth), and then buy a fishing license. The Germans are obsessed with protecting animals. For example, horses that carry tourists to Neuschwanstein Castle should not work for more than 3 hours, then they should be covered with a blanket and taken to rest. Or on the road to Linderhof Castle, on both sides of the asphalt there are grooves for frogs, along which they can cross the road.
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