Archive for the ‘Innkeeping’ Category

Change of Season, Season of Change

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

It’s hard to believe it’s Labor Day already. Another summer, gone. Not that I expect business to slow down much, but the pace of life usually does after this weekend.

This summer has both flown and dragged by. The inn, and I, are going through some transitions. My husband and partner, Adam, and I are getting divorced. He will be moving out some time in October. That means I will need to find help to do some of the things Adam has done here over the years and to that end I have hired and am training an assistant innkeeper. She will take over the two breakfast shifts per week that Adam has been doing and cover check ins some afternoons so I can get out and do the shopping, another of Adam’s jobs, and take care of any personal appointments. So that’s one piece of the puzzle. There are many others I’m still figuring out.

Although I am sad and sometimes terrified, I do see the possibilities for positive change in all this. For one thing, I have someone to whom I can delegate certain things. Adam was a partner and would not have been a good choice to delegate some of my projects to, since he considered them my projects. Already Nancy has helped me with two small things that I have been wanting to get done but have been unable to motivate myself to do, even though I had everything I needed to do them. And over the winter I’ll have her work with me to improve organization in my kitchen and office.

Adam and I have made every effort to keep this all behind the scenes. We’re much more sad than angry about the whole thing and we want our guests to have the relaxing vacation they came here for. So far, from the comments in our guest book, we seem to have been successful. I hope arriving guests who read this don’t get weirded out by it. The plan is to continue to provide the hospitality we’ve become known for.

I’m more concerned about the guests who have been here before, some of whom come every year. It will be difficult telling them, but I suppose it’ll get easier with practice. Wish me luck.

Should Have Done it Long Ago

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

I know it’s been a while since my last post. We’ve been insanely busy and somehow August seems to have nearly slipped by already. It’s been a good year for business but I’ll admit to being tired. Although we remain busy into the middle of October, the pace of life slows down somewhat after Labor Day and I look forward to that.

One of the difficult parts about summer is that although the ringing phone means business, it also means frustration. The majority of the phone calls in July, August and September are for dates that are already booked. In particular as each weekend approaches there are numerous phone calls from people seeking rooms for Friday and Saturday night. It’s no fun for them and no fun for us to have to tell them we’re booked. And frequently the caller wants to know if we can suggest another place. We usually can’t. As summer wears on and I get more tired, the impulse to be less than my usual polite, helpful self with the callers gets stronger. No good can come of that!

This past week I added an on-line availability calendar to my website. I had my website designer make the link into nice, big buttons that are easy to find. They very wisely put the link on both the rooms and the reservations pages. The result was almost instantaneous. The phone has almost stopped ringing. When it does ring, it’s much more often someone looking at nights we do have or it’s someone who’s already in town who wants a room for tonight. I can’t help the latter, but at least I’ve got a fair shot at helping the former. What a relief.

I think I’ll now be able to survive the next two months with my sanity intact.

And Then There Were Two

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

I know there’s a downturn in the economy, but people are (thankfully) still coming for their beach vacations. Our bookings have been very strong.

The title refers to the number of room-nights we still have available in August. Yes, that’s right, two. One room, two nights, August 13 & 14. That’s a Wednesday & Thursday.

Anyone want ‘em?

Please Plan Ahead – a cautionary tale

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Dusk, June 29, 2008

A kitchen, anywhere in the Northeast United States. Dinner is on the table, two adults are eating and conversing.

Adult #1: “Honey, don’t we both have Friday, July 4th, off?”

Adult #2: “Why yes, we do! Why don’t we go away for the long weekend?”

Adult #1: “What a great idea! We should probably make a reservation somewhere. Where would you like to go?”

Adult #2: “I’d like to go to the beach. What about Cape Cod?”

Adult #1: “Great idea. Why don’t you get online after dinner and find us someplace nice to stay?”

Adult #2: “I’ll do that.”

****** Two Hours Later ******

Adult #2: “I found this great little B&B in Wellfleet, I checked it out on Trip Advisor and it’s the #1 rated place there. It’s got great reviews! Would you call them in the morning and make us a reservation?”

Adult #1: “That sounds great, I’ll do it!”

****** Curtain ******

I swear, that little scenario must have played out in hundreds of kitchens in the past couple of weeks because I’ve gotten literally dozens of phone calls for the weekend of July 4th. A holiday virtually everyone in America gets off. What makes people think they can call a week or less in advance for a holiday weekend and get a room? Especially in a B&B, which has only a few rooms to start with!

I try really hard not to laugh when these folks call, but the closer it gets to the 4th, the more difficult that is. I do try to suggest they book for next year, but so far nobody has wanted to do so. Not that I’m surprised. Clearly, these are not plan-ahead people and they may still harbor the illusion that they’ll find a room somewhere so they want to get on to the next phone call as quickly as possible. They’ll probably play out the same scenario for Labor Day weekend.

If you can’t plan to go away on the big holiday weekends well in advance, you should probably learn to enjoy spending them quietly at home. There are plenty of weekends between late October and the middle of June where you absolutely can get a room with only a couple of days notice. Come see us then.

So to answer your questions in advance:

No, we don’t have a room for the 4th & 5th. In fact, that weekend typically books up before Memorial Day.

No, I don’t know anyone who has a room available. Since you’re about the 25th person to call me about it this week, my guess is that you’re going to be out of luck, but I’ll direct you to the Chamber of Commerce anyway. If anyone has a room, they’ll know about it.

No, I don’t think there’s much of a chance anyone will cancel. If someone does, it’ll be the day before they’re scheduled to arrive and you’ll already have made other plans, so I’m not going to put your name on a waiting list.

Yes, if someone DOES cancel, one of these last minute callers is going to get very, very lucky. But don’t count on it.

How To Get Rid of Fruit Flies

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

From an email exchange between two innkeeper friends:

Innkeeper #1
“Anybody have a way to get rid of the buggers?”

Innkeeper #2
“Our standard is to drink almost all the wine from a bottle, then set the bottle with a little wine in it on the counter near where the fruit flies congregate. They’ll go for the wine (smart little buggers) and then can’t find the way out of the bottle (dumb little buggers)–but at least they die happy.”

Innkeeper #1 (late the next day)
i hav dlunk the wyine, and cnnott see any moorre floot fries. It wroks!

Bed Linens: Proof of an Alternate Universe

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

For those of you who go about your lives buying the occasional set of sheets, a blanket or quilt here or there, perhaps a bed skirt or duvet cover once or twice in your lives, you’ve probably never really pondered some of the oddities of bed linens. For those of us who buy linens in quantities and make multiple beds each day, there are far more opportunities to discover/question/curse the bizarre inconsistencies and randomness of the bed linen industry.

Here are some of the things I cannot explain:
- 100% cotton sheets. Okay, they feel nice but even if you pull them out of the dryer before it finishes spinning and put them right on the bed, they’re still wrinkled. Okay for home, not so much for a B&B. Life is too short to iron sheets.

- Blanket sizing. A queen size mattress is 60″ x 80″. A queen size blanket is 90″ x 90″. How, exactly, does one tuck in the blanket at the bottom? I’m on my third batch of blankets, the current ones are “King” size. I can’t even imagine using anything smaller.

- Duvets & Duvet Covers. Same issue. My queen size duvet covers have a lot more fabric than a queen size duvet will fill. Last year, as an experiment, I replaced the queen size down comforter on my personal bed with a king size one. Wouldn’t you know, it filled the queen size duvet cover perfectly. When I replace the comforters for the inn bedrooms, the new ones will be king size.

It’s as if mattresses, sheets and duvet covers come from one planet with one set of standards and blankets & duvets/comforters come from a different planet with a different set of standards.

When we were getting ready to open the inn I made the decision that all our beds would be the same size (queen) and that all of the linens would be the same. I just don’t have the patience to match sets of sheets to decor and I wanted to not have to take an entire set of sheets out of service if one piece got stained or torn. I found a sheet that I liked and bought in case quantities. A year or two later, realizing that linens go out of fashion and these would not always be available, I called the manufacturer and purchased most of the rest of the existing stock. They were already discontinued by then, I was lucky to have gotten what I did.

Coming into our 9th year of operation, we really need new sheets. I don’t have enough still in service to do a full-house changeover, which is a problem. I’ve been on the hunt for new sheets for two years and still haven’t found one that meets all my requirements. I actually thought I had found sheets I could live with and ordered them but when they arrived they were a totally different color from the swatch I’d been sent and they looked simply awful in the rooms. I sent them back. This week I requested samples of another sheet that I thought might work; the samples arrived and the fabric is SHINY. Not only that, despite being labeled as having a 55% cotton / 45% polyester content, they feel as if they’re 100% poly. Ew.

I am in sheet hell.

The Psychology of Muffins

Monday, April 21st, 2008

I make really good muffins. I’m not bragging, it’s just fact. And it’s my job, or part of it. Granted I still haven’t figured out how to get them to reliably dome on top, but they taste really, really good. They’re made from scratch with real butter from recipes I’ve adapted or developed.

About a year ago I tried an experiment with my banana coconut muffins. The recipe calls for two cups of all-purpose flour, I replaced one cup with a cup of whole-wheat flour to add some fiber/nutrition to the mix. There was no change in taste or texture, so I deemed the experiment a success and have continued to make them that way. It wasn’t something I mentioned to guests, I just did it.

One morning last fall, after watching several guests look at the muffins on the buffet and pass them by, I spoke up. “These muffins are made with whole-wheat flour” I said. Immediately two or three of my guests got up and got muffins, which they proceeded to inhale enjoy. Interesting. I had thought a lot of my guests pretty much left their diets at home and ate what they wanted on vacation, but clearly the desire to eat healthy will stop some from enjoying a treat unless they think there might be some nutritional value to it. Since I was making them with the whole wheat flour anyway, I’ve started letting guests know. Muffin consumption has definitely increased. This morning, seven guests ate ten peach muffins.

For anyone wanting to make this substitution, whole wheat flour is darker than all-purpose so if there’s already something in the batter that makes it dark, like bananas or mashed peaches, it works fine. I wouldn’t add it into my blueberry muffins, which are white except for the berries (and I like them that way), but if you don’t care about the color then go right ahead.

Water, water all around

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

There has been a lot of ink lately devoted to the issue of why Americans, who have some of the best and safest drinking water in the world, consume so much bottled water. Indeed, all those bottles create a series of issues including resources used to make those bottles (plastic is made from petrochemicals and requires additional energy – from fossil fuels – in the manufacturing process), fuel for transporting the bottles and the disposal problem of all those bottles once empty. The vast majority of states do not include bottles from still water in their deposit programs, so they are thrown away after a single use.

Although we don’t advertise it, we try very hard here to reduce waste and recycle wherever possible. We would probably fall into the category of a “Green” lodging establishment. We compost all vegetable matter from the kitchen in the months where the compost isn’t likely to freeze, we make extremely limited use of chemical cleaners preferring natural products as much as possible, and we sort and recycle as much material as we are able.

Our town does not make recycling easy. We are required to sort glass from plastic and metal, returnables from everything else, remove caps and rinse everything so it does not attract critters. We then bag them and take them to the transfer station, where they must be removed from the bags and placed in the appropriate bins. Newspapers must be bundled and cardboard flattened. We do it because I feel it is my duty as a responsible citizen to recycle and reuse to conserve energy and resources. I pull bottles and cans from guest room trash baskets (unless they are truly icky), rinse when necessary and sort them.

It does not bother me at all when guests bring beer, wine or soda to drink during their stay. Even a couple of bottles of water aren’t a big issue. It does, however, distress me when guests bring cases of 1-liter or smaller bottles of water with them. Do people really think we don’t have good water here? Or is it just a habit?

Our water comes from a private well. There are no additives; no chlorine or fluoride. There is no mineral or sulfur smell to our water. We test it monthly in the busy season as required by the town and the test results are consistently fine. The only thing we test slightly high for is sodium, which is not surprising considering our proximity to salt water. And even that is not something that would bother anyone unless they are on an extremely low sodium regime for some reason.

A couple of years ago we installed a water cooler with a hot water spigot in our dining room. We did it for our own convenience so that we don’t have to put out a pitcher of water in the mornings (a pitcher that would have to be washed) and so that guests desiring a hot beverage in the evening could make one without us having to put out either an electric kettle or an insulated pitcher of hot water. Several guests have asked me if the cooler is there because our tap water is not good to drink and my guess is that quite a few more just make that assumption. Truly, that is not the reason. And if you want your water cold, all you have to do is let it run for a minute and it’ll come out cold from the tap – another advantage of a well.

So I put the issue in your hands, folks. Leave the water bottles at the store. Bring ONE you can re-use and fill it from the tap. If you absolutely must, you can even refill it from the cooler. But help me out here. Those small plastic water bottles make up about 70% of my recyclables in the busy season. I shudder to think of what happens to the ones people bring to establishments that are less conscientious about recycling.

Two by Two

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Winter business is so very different from summer business here. It makes sense when you think about it… this is, after all, a summer vacation area. People come for sun, surf and fried seafood. The fact that any come in the winter at all is somewhat amazing, really.

When they learn that we are open all year, the next question guests ask is almost always “Do you have any guests?” Followed by “Why do they come?” Here are the answers:

Yes, we do have guests. We are rarely full in the winter, but there are few weekends that we have nobody here. They come for very specific reasons:
1) Visiting family (but want their own space);
2) Looking for property – either to rent over the summer or to buy;
3) They own a 2nd home here and it is being renovated so they can’t stay there;
4) A quiet getaway.

Nearly all our winter guests are last-minute reservations. Sometimes they call a day or two in advance, sometimes they call in the morning on the day they wish to arrive. Many are coming just for one night, although the ones visiting family usually stay two or three nights if they’ve traveled any real distance to get here and especially if there are grandchildren. Why so last-minute, you ask? Weather. They are waiting for the weather forecast to make sure they’re not going to be driving in snow or ice. It took a couple of winters for us to figure this out, but it makes perfect sense.

This past week we had guests Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights, one couple each night. In all honesty I would much prefer to make breakfast for a full house than just two people, but it is what it is and we adapt.

I’m handling breakfast a little differently this winter when we have only two guests. Normally, our breakfast is set up as a buffet with fresh fruit salad, yogurt, bread for the toaster, scones or muffins and a main dish. For a number of years we’ve used a simple form to help us plan a scaled-down breakfast when we’ve had just one couple in the house, which has helped, but I’m making further improvements on the system. For one thing, I’ve started to do some more interesting things with fruit that become individual servings rather than a buffet item. This allows me to take better advantage of the best of the winter produce and it cuts down on waste. Two of my new offerings are broiled grapefruit with brown sugar and coconut, and poached pears with creme fraische. Both have been hits. I’ve also been making more egg dishes in individual ramekins. I still set scones, bread, butter, jam and yogurt on the buffet if any of these items are requested. So our winter guests are getting some things that our summer guests will never see and a little extra personalized attention as well. Not bad for the time of year when our rates are lowest as well!

Are you thinking about a winter visit? Call us! The weather out here is typically 5 – 10 degrees warmer than in Boston, the beaches are deserted and lovely for walking, a few good restaurants are open and Mother Nature saves her most spectacular sunsets for the colder months.

And so it begins…

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

New year, new post. This one is a little unfocused, please bear with me. Think of it as a buffet.

Before I get rolling, happy new year to anyone who actually reads my ramblings. Post a comment now and then so I know you’re there, okay?

We had a lovely New Year’s eve. We hosted a party at Adam’s mom’s house so as not to disturb our inn guests. It was a nice mix of local and out-of-town friends, good wine and way too much food. Oddly, the party really coalesced around a game brought by one of our guests. It was a lot of fun and it didn’t seem to matter to anyone that we simply left off where we were at midnight to ring in the new year and we never got back to it.

The sky last night was gorgeous. The quarter-moon was low in the sky and the stars stood out in such clear relief against the inky blue-black of the night it looked like you could prick your finger on their sharp points.

Driving home at an hour that was far too late for someone who had to get up and make breakfast this morning, I saw a coyote trotting down the middle of our street. I’ve seen them a number of times before on side streets or along the state highway, but this is the closest I’ve ever seen one to the house. It got out of the road when I switched on my high beams about 30′ behind it, but didn’t seem particularly concerned about me until I stopped my car to get a good look at it. At that point it bounded off behind a house and I continued home. Adam followed about an hour later. I’m not sure how he got up at his usual hour of 6 a.m., but he did.

Inn guests and out-of-town friends had all left by about 12:30 this afternoon, leaving us free to attend a New Year’s day brunch hosted by some friends. Late in the afternoon I indulged in a much-needed nap. Room cleaning will wait until tomorrow since we aren’t expecting anyone for a few days.

Today marks a bleak two-week period in which NOT ONE restaurant in Wellfleet is open. I find this distressing both for myself and for any potential guests. In order to hold a year-round liquor license in this town, restaurants must stay open all year (sounds logical, right?). They are permitted to close for up to four weeks for “renovations”. I put the term inside quotation marks because it is interpreted pretty loosely by the local population and the Selectboard that governs the town. Everyone understands that restaurants are barely breaking even in the winter and nobody begrudges them a period of downtime, but in the past few years it seems that several of the restaurant owners have begun to take advantage of local goodwill in this matter.

One year-round restaurant closed for a major kitchen overhaul a few years ago that lasted about three months. That was completely understandable as the project was large and delays do happen, but something changed after that. Up until then they had adhered pretty carefully to the 4-week rule but in years subsequent to the kitchen renovation they have closed after New Year’s eve and not reopened until Valentine’s day; far more than four weeks by my calendar. Another restaurant with a year-round license closed for a full winter for the first time three years ago because the owners decided they were tired and they wanted to sell. I’m not quite sure why they felt they had to close other than burn-out – which I do understand – but the restaurant did not sell that year or the year after or this year, yet they have closed each of these years in October and not reopened until April. This really seems like flaunting the rules to the detrimient of the locals. If it were up to me, I’d yank their year-round liquor license and make them reapply for a seasonal one. A third restaurant, one of our favorites, kind of arbitrarily decided to take six weeks off this winter. A fourth is taking the permitted four weeks and no more and doing it at exactly the same time he always has, it just happens to coincide with all the other closings.

It used to be that the year-round restaurants would coordinate with each other so that at least one restaurant would be open at all times – possibly not seven days a week, but at least Thursday through Sunday. This is the first time in eight years I’ve seen all the restaurants in town closed at the same time. We’ve had discussions with several friends about having pot-luck dinners and that could be a lovely way to pass some of these evenings; I hope one or more come to pass. Unfortunately that won’t help anyone from out of town. If anyone calls us for a reservation during this time we will have to explain that they will need to plan their dinners in Orleans or Provincetown unless they’re here visiting friends or family who will cook. That’s liable to loose us a couple of reservations, but we’ll see what happens. I’m not too happy about it in any case.

I’ve rambled on enough for one post. Tomorrow is back to work on winter projects; more about that another time.

Stone Lion Inn of Cape Cod | 130 Commercial Street Wellfleet, Massachusetts 02667 | Phone: 508-349-9565 | e-mail: info@stonelioncapecod.com