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Okay, OP here.
I just went ahead and sent a reply. Kept it diplomatic, cut-and-pasted what was suggested in the previous post. However, I was a little more barbed. I started thinking about a couple of the false accusations and addressed them directly... cleared those up. Diplomatically, but contested it.
Hotels from now on doesn't sound like a bad idea in the future.
You turned the heat to 76 degrees and then left it there for 9 days - all night long and all day long when you weren't there? If yes, then I'd be mad at you too. That's unreasonable. Did you leave your heat on at home at 76 degrees while you were staying in Cleveland?
I tend to prefer hotels, where there are staff around to take care of issues when they arise. I have stayed in house rentals with groups of people and a couple of times it was just our family. When something is really cheap, there is usually a reason! Be prepared to be... ahem... "flexible" when renting places like this.
I've looked on Airbnb a few times, but the places I was interested in were certainly not cheap at all, especially once all of the taxes and fees were added in. If one is traveling solo and doesn't mind crashing on random futons and such I can imagine it's quite cost effective. If I were 20 years old.... maybe, but I wouldn't do it today.
You turned the heat to 76 degrees and then left it there for 9 days - all night long and all day long when you weren't there? If yes, then I'd be mad at you too. That's unreasonable. Did you leave your heat on at home at 76 degrees while you were staying in Cleveland?
OP, I was kind of thinking this ^^^ too. 76 degrees? I don't know ANYONE who keeps their heat that high (and as another poster pointed out, when it's 50 degrees when you get there, turning the thermostat to 76 is NOT going to warm it up any faster -- it will just make the heat stay on longer until it reaches that number).
So DID you keep it at 76 day/night for the entire time (even when you weren't there)? And do you know what kind of heat he had? If it's electric, then the $270 you paid him will likely ALL go to his electric bill -- and that might not even cover it! So I hope it's not electric heat!
I DO understand your being upset about his nasty review (without him even TALKING to you first) -- I don't think you deserved that -- but honestly, I was pretty horrified when I saw that you put the thermostat on 76!
OP, I was kind of thinking this ^^^ too. 76 degrees? I don't know ANYONE who keeps their heat that high (and as another poster pointed out, when it's 50 degrees when you get there, turning the thermostat to 76 is NOT going to warm it up any faster -- it will just make the heat stay on longer until it reaches that number).
So DID you keep it at 76 day/night for the entire time (even when you weren't there)? And do you know what kind of heat he had? If it's electric, then the $270 you paid him will likely ALL go to his electric bill -- and that might not even cover it! So I hope it's not electric heat!
I DO understand your being upset about his nasty review (without him even TALKING to you first) -- I don't think you deserved that -- but honestly, I was pretty horrified when I saw that you put the thermostat on 76!
The owner said he bumped it back down to 70, and I got the impression the OP was grateful b/c she had forgotten.
Never mind. I just saw it was the next-to-last day it got turned down to 70.
Thermostat temperature does not always equal room temperature. I had a job a while back where 'my' senior citizens were sharing space with other programs and had to win the thermostat war when my minion did a week of charting how when the thermostat was set to 72F, it was barely 65F in much of the space my frail old people had, and that was not good for their health.
And there are times when we set and forget our well insulated house to 76F. (It's Florida; when you acclimate to summer temperatures here, you often lose tolerance for the cold) Which puts it somewhere around 73F in the high ceiling living room. Since we're on a heat pump for heat, letting the temperature float much is at beast a wash and at worst is a huge energy increase if the floating of temperatures causes the emergency heating strips to kick in.
Good grief. If the set temperature is THAT IMPORTANT, the owner absolutely needs to have written instructions posted by the thermostat, and also communicated before there's an agreement to rent.
Some people like it warm, and others like it cool. Also, comfort is not as simple as just setting the thermostat. A room that is drafty and has poor windows will feel colder than a room without those problems, even if those two rooms have the same set temperature.
I would provide a rebuttal to his bad review. Don't let him get the entire upper hand in this. The guy sounds like a jerk. I've never done Air B&B before but will be more leery of it now.
I seriously don't understand why people choose air bnb over hotels unless you have a big group or want a place with a private pool.
I never even use uber, either. I use NYC cabs.
I don't want to be judged. I just want to pay and be done.
Hotels don't care about the temp you choose or how many hot showers you take.
Oh God, yes. Same here. I don't want to be judged and don't care for any "feedback" on me as a customer. Their opinion of me is irrelevant. If I've paid for the service, then we're done.
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