Excellent location, right on the banks of the Ganges. The room has everything you need. The shower, as in most gests in India, is a watering can without a fence plus a bucket with a ladle. There was toilet paper and bath accessories. You can only walk to the guest house, no rickshaw will pass through these narrow streets, the staff carried luggage back and forth from the "big" road. In the hotel, you can eat in their cafe. The hotel itself consists of 2 buildings. There are a lot of monkeys around, calmly walking around the balconies, so take care of things. Wi-Fi is not very good, but there is. There is a problem with sockets, the plugs of our devices fall out, we have to figure out how to fix them. I didn't take photos of the room, only the view from the balcony.
It's great for India! But you must definitely look at what you take - with a view of the river or not. With a view - there is a terrace and a panorama opens! If there is no view, then the room has almost no window at all - there is a window, but it rests against the wall)) Check-out is at 12. Breakfast on the roof on the amazing view terrace. From 8 to 10:30. But you can always negotiate. And if you overslept, and if you need to earlier. The main one in the kitchen is called God in translation. A very friendly man. While you are having dinner, he carefully drives away the monkeys 😆
I ate only there all the days, they cook very tasty. The prices are reasonable.
Do not be afraid of strange bathrooms, in general, the main thing here is the atmosphere!!! I liked the attitude, the hotel, the food, I bet 5+❤
Be careful, there are rooms with access to a terrace overlooking the Ganges, and there are rooms without windows. Sooooo modest pretty hotel. We lived in room 204 - a beautiful room. When they clean the room, they don't even touch your things, no matter how they were scattered, they didn't ask for tips, like in a hotel in Manali, where they frankly hid some of your things, hinting that they would have to pay. The staff is polite, but in Indian with special features.So, for example, multitasking is not the specialty of Hindus, so set tasks one at a time, as important as possible. The food for breakfast is very modest, even extremely modest, a lot of flour. The bed linen is snow-white, and for example, in Delhi we spent one night in a 3-star hotel, where the linen was gray and leaky like a sieve. in Varanasi I really liked it, although it is of course a hellish city. when I go next time, I will most likely return to this guest house