The owners were honest and welcoming; their enthusiasm wasn't overly overbearing, making the experience quite comfortable. We only exchanged a few words during check-in and check-out. Otherwise, we mostly just nodded and smiled at each other. It was a nice place. However, the word "hotel" felt a bit inappropriate 😂 It's a self-built guesthouse. Fortunately, there's an elevator and the hygiene is acceptable. Its strength lies in its value for money, as we had a 65+ year old mother and a 5-year-old son with us. So, four people sharing a room was perfect. There were two 1.5-meter twin beds. A large restaurant connected to the hotel above enthusiastically solicits guests to eat there, but you can avoid it 😂 It's really not good; the cooking is worse than my family's. I don't know how such a large restaurant can survive; maybe it's all one-off business like ours. Searching on Dianping (a Chinese review platform), "Chen Ji" is indeed a good option nearby. Anyway, all the restaurants have similar menus. For rice noodles, you have to go through a back alley to "Hao Niu Dao" beef bone rice noodle shop, which has a wider selection and is also one of the better-tasting in the area. I suddenly had an epiphany about food: when you're out of town, you can still join the crowds and check reviews. Good restaurants don't necessarily offer delivery, but those that don't offer delivery yet aggressively solicit customers are definitely not good. 🤣
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