Question about hotel policies
Hi all. I'm coming to BA for the first time next week. Can someone tell me if hotels will limit the number of times a day I can have a chica visit me in my room? One chica already told me my hotel won't allow two women at a time. But will there be a problem if I want to spend time with one chica in the morning, another in the afternoon, and another in the evening? Want to have maximum fun, of course, and sample a number of the local beauties to find a favorite or two for my future visits.
I am staying at the Sheraton Hotel and Convention Center in Microcentro.
I suppose if the hotel doesn't allow this there are always the privados, but I have a number of independent chicas already lined up and would prefer to be at my hotel.
A quick response would be most appreciated!
Thanks
It depends from hotel to hotel
Some have 'guest fees" like the Emperador while others do not. Check out the hotel threads.
Very few chicas expect to go to the the hotel without checking in at the desk. The policy is there for protection of the guests (including you) and the hotel. I also think that it serves to protect the women, too. I was leery of the process at first, not really wanting to create a written log of my trip (other than on AP). I nearly soiled myself several years ago when I received my bill at the Emperador and it had a line item "guest fee," considering that I needed to submit the bill for work. Thankfully, that was just the itemized bill and the final bill seemed to omit that item. Only once in my Bs As experiences did this pose a problem getting to the room. I had dinner with a friend and when we got to the desk, she didn't have I'd and the guy at the desk wouldn't cut me any slack. He was correct and we were out of compliance. No biggie, so we went to a telo.
*Writer's tangent: I chronicled the above-mentioned trip to the telo and am currently laughing at the memory. We ordered some drinks to be sent up and when the door bell rang, I opened it, expecting I guess a bell hop (not knowing that the supplies were passed through a little door (like a dumb waiter). By opening the door, I switched off all the power (including lights) in the room and we had to fumble around in the dark to find the phone and get power restored. Now back to our regularly scheduled programming*
If the staff at the desk isn't familiar with exactly who you are and whether or not you are staying there alone (when not entertaining a guest) , is going to be taking a very big risk by stopping you on the way to the elevator and asking you to register the woman on your arm. I usually stay at one of the same two places, both of which are chica-friendly, where most of the staff recognizes me. They can conclude that it is highly unlikely that the woman on my arm is my niece, unless I have a very large extended family. At one of the two places, if I don't stop at the desk, they don't ask. At the other, it is a little more awkward to get into the elevator without exchanging greetings with the desk staff and therefore, I usually just stop. The female staff at the latter get a good chuckle out me and my high jinx.
As Mia pointed out, how the lady dresses and conducts herself makes a difference. Lucianna and Jasmine and the other well-regarded women on the forum are well dressed and fit right in at any hotel. Lulo speaks better English than most of the staff at most hotels. Time of day may also play a roll. While the club chicas usually change into something less provocative prior to leaving the club, I seem to get more sideways glances when returning to the hotel with a friend around 3 or 4am (regardless of how she is dressed). That said, Argentine women, regardless of socio-economic status, generally take pride in their appearance and dressing stylishly and appropriate to the occasion. Rarely have I had a friend come visit me that was inappropriately dressed upon her arrival.
All of that said, if you can't live with the check-in process, rent an apartment.