Hostelling is fantastic. I’ve been hostelling for over 10 years. The previous blog tells how I started and got into it. I’ve never looked back and apart from camping, I would not use any other type of accommodation unless absolutely necessary.
I have used hotels-motels in America on my last trip March-July 2007 because many of the places and the States I wanted to visit  do not possess hostels. I also discovered that many hostels in Malawi are not  called hostels but guest houses. some of these are also hotels, or boarding on  hotels. In the developing world I take what I can find anywhere  possible.
There are hostels in every populated continent. It  was established in Europe at the beginning of the twentieth century, primarily  for independent explorers and alike. Back then they were simple places of  shelter. A bed and maybe something to cook a meal on and that was it. Later they  developed but had rules, you could not drive to hostels and it was expected that  chores would be undertaken – making your bed, sweeping the floor  etc. Most hostels were away from cities and in places of  remoteness and often historical or geographical interests. Many of the UK  hostels are still situated in such remote areas.
However, today’s hostels have changed some what.  Families can arrive, people may turn up in any vehicle they choose. The newest  hostels are often found in major cities. Many of them possess rules as mentioned  in the previous blog.
Although the hostel international and Youth Hostel  Association hostels are sometimes stuffy and contain a sterile atmosphere, even  the majority of their accommodations are individual and different.   That is the beauty of hostels and hostelling; on  the whole, most accommodations are different. Many of them strive to create an  atmosphere, to be accommodating even friendly. The best parts about hostels is that you nearly  always find a mix crowd of people and nationalities. This only adds to the  flavour and hospitality. You meet people from all backgrounds, countries,  races, and with a story to tell and something to contribute. for people staying  long-term it is an opportunity to get another view of the world, a different  option and an alternative epistemology.  I enjoy this aspect of hostelling  immensely. I have made many of my friends this way. Hostels are cheap and are great for budget  travellers. I have never had to travel on a budget but I still appreciate the  fact that hostels are usually inexpensive. Making my accommodation cheap usually  means I will stay longer and can spend more money on activities and  attractions. for others it means they can have a roof over their  head for a night, maybe get a job to sustain their travel and use many  facilities that might not be accessible anywhere else on the road. They are a vital component of the travellers  information. I try to pick up a hostel guide each time I visit America. I use  the internet and the travel guide books plus world of mouth and good experiences  of previous hostels to obtain the best hostels. I always book my first hostel in any country I am  visiting. I do not always mention my disabilities. The other item I like about hostels is that the  majority of them offer tours and know about attractions. It is always good to  know what is happening in a city, town, area. Hostels can give information,  organise tours or know where events can be organised and this has often been  their most useful asset for me when travelling in a foreign  country.
I go travelling to explore, learn, make friends and  have an adventure and I try to do it for as little money as possible. Hostels  help facilitate the majority of this. I would not use any other accommodation until my  disabilities and /or body says It is no longer possible. Being totally blind and travelling and using  hostels has its own challenges. Many hostels have challenges for any traveller.  Often they are difficult to find or in locations that have many steps, in old  buildings, are narrow, have unusual opening and closing hours and many other  anomalies. Obviously for me the most difficult event is finding any hostel  building once I am in the near location. It is just a case of asking anybody I  pass and hoping they know it or showing my map or address if I have one. Many  locals often have no clue to what a hostel is, I have had this problem many  times in America. You ask an American citizen directions to the nearest hostel  and they think you mean the hospital! Young people with backpacks are  usually more helpful. However, I must admit even several Americans have tried to  give directions or once they know the address taken me there in their car.
I have experienced many types of hostels from square buildings with lots of  similar uninteresting rectangular rooms with the customary six to eight bunk  beds, white walls and no carpets. Everything is clean, there are few guests and  the staff are at best perfunctory and worst uncaring. Ones I like best are somewhere in between really  clean and really friendly. The more unusual and possessing character the better.  You want atmosphere and liveliness, with activities and people of interesting  backgrounds, with a story to tell, plus a warm friendly person to show you  around and make you feel human again. Not everyone wants a hostel that rocks  every night with young drunks, shouting and making lots of noise. similarly a  place with no atmosphere and guests is also unfriendly. The hostel with  something for everyone young and older, lively and relaxed is just  right.
A hostel will not please everyone, often the best  types are the ones that state what they are about and leave you to make the choice. Often all I am after is simply a bed for the night and the noise or what  it looks like is of no interest. However other times I want a crowd with  interesting people, events and information on tours and events. After many  years of hostel international accommodation I gradually got into the independent  hostels and the ones run individually were fantastic. I found hostels with  relaxed ambiances, no rules, friendly staff and owners and people amazed to find  one of their guests blind, but not put out or afraid of me. Hostelling is for anyone who wants it. Some of the  European and UK hostels now cater for disabled guests.  I have always taken  things how I have found them and once I have had a hostel staff member show me  to my dorm and shown me my bunk and where the nearest toilet is, I get on with  it. I try to make friends with the people in my room and other hostels alike,  joining backpackers in the hostel bar or lounge, garden or wherever the nearest  gathering area is.
Once there I get my bearings using my cane, remember my  directions and make friends with the hostel staff. I ask for help with  directions to places, booking tours, help with the internet and purchasing food.  I tell people I am independent and only need guiding once or telling  information. This technique has tended to work all over the  world. You get the occasional person who does not want to help or cannot handle  my blindness. This occurred once in a hostel in San Francisco, America. I was  travelling with a female friend; she went to her room but when I entered my  dorm, I was met by a rather rude guy from Portugal. He was very put out about  sharing with a blind person. I just shrugged and asked the hostel staff to move  into another dorm. they obliged and all was well there after. I have been refused a stay in a hostel in Savannah  Georgia, America because the hostel manager was not prepared to have me. He said  there were lots of stairs and it was dangerous. When I said I had travelled  around the world and it was not a problem. he replied ‘There are other  accommodation for people like you’ and closed the door in my faced. I decided  that he just did not want to help me. I felt it was his loss and spent the night  sleeping on the bus station floor. I stayed in a hostel in Key West, Florida America  with very rude staff who told me I could not check in until after 2.00 pm and  then shouted at me when I asked to use the toilet. These things happen all over the world. However,  this is by far outweighed by the helpfulness and generosity in other  hostels. I have had hostel managers collect me from  transportation stops, given me lifts to bus and train stations, given bottom  bunks when none were available, helped with cooking and also had much assistance  arranging tours and excursions. Not to mention several hostel managers and staff  allowing me to stay for free on account of my amazing adventure and  challenge.
I have been immensely lucky.   There are to many hostels to mention in any blog or  book. Some of the most interesting places are mentioned in each of the three  travel books. However, probably the best hostels I stayed in were  in Canada. Although many of the hostels in this country are not disabled  friendly, being in old buildings. I found the ones I did attend homely and  welcoming. The best hostel was Canadianna Backpackers,  Toronto. It has an international flavour from its staff to its guests. People  from all five continents, from India, Israel, America, Germany, Belgium,  Australia and many other nationalities. You can get free tea or coffee any time  day or night, and there is plenty of breakfast food for  a small price. The  hostel has all the requirements, internet, laundry machines to organised  tours. There is a wooden back porch to sit and have a drink and/or a smoke and  enjoy the hostel banter that exists among young travellers. There is always an activity occurring; whether it  be a drinking night or some silly game on the back deck – anything from darts to  ping pong!!! There is a continual buzz that hints that something  is about to happen even when it is not. I have been there three times and each stay  was memorable for the way the staff accommodated me. I was made to feel part of  the furniture an had all kinds of people running round for me; making me cups of  tea, fetching me food, taking me to events, organising tours etc. An absolutely  fantastic and well worth visit to this hostel.
My other favourite hostel is Jolly Boys  Backpackers, Livingstone, Zambia. Livingstone is a lively town on the bank of  the Zambezi river with Victoria Falls as its main attraction falling nearby. The  hostel Jolly Boys is a main part of the scene. A wild enclosed complex run by  two lovely ladies, it is just the place to relax or party after arriving into  Zambia. It has its own bar and swimming pool, internet and games tables. there  are numerous tours and attractions on offer from rafting the river to  bungee jumping the bridge, animal parks and African trible village and  cultural displays. It is a hostel for all. though it caters mainly for the young  and the wild. The boos cruise is one of its main events. I loved the place and  stayed three times. One of the hostels main attractions for me was that if you  stayed three nights on your arrival you got your Zambian visa for free. If you  did not organise your accommodation this way or with one of the other hostels  you could end up paying $50 US for the visa. Some of the people I met there have become great  friends while others were friends for a moment. They made the stay memorable. A  fantastic croud, we lay about in the sweltering heat round the pool, buying each  other drinks from the nearby cheap bar and telling stories and enjoying each  others banter and company. Life was blissful and easy at Jolly boys. The natives  that worked there were funny, friendly and helpful. I often got taken to the  bank or to go for a tour anywhere I wished to go it was no problem. When I ran  out of money and my credit card stopped working. The owner just told me to pay  for my accommodation when the money came and not worry. She was really cool and  relaxed about it all. There are several other places in Africa similar  but different to Jolly boys, but none of them quite live up to the mark. I would  recommend this place to anyone who wants a bit of fun, nature, relaxation,  adventure and mystery. You are guaranteed to make life long friends and have a  blast doing what ever you desire. Rock on Jolly Boys.
The most unusual hostel I’ve ever visited was  Venice Beach, Monkey Bay, Malawi. It was a hell of a place in many ways; malaria  carrying mosquitoes in their thousands, ripped mosquito curtains, water  everywhere in the bathroom, toilet doors that would open outwards as you were  going to the toilet, wet and unusable toilet paper, and useless showers to name  but a few. It was hot and humid, a hostel in a sand beach. Wooden chairs and  benches on a concrete island with locals who played the same music of  reggae constantly. When you were able to escape to the silence of the beach and  Lake Malawi, it was beautiful. I spent twelve days there in between xmas and New  year, 2004-05. It was unique. There was a bar and a small kitchen where you  could get cold beverages and good food. This consisted mainly of chips and eggs  if I recall. The hostel staff consisted mainly of young African boys with an  owner in his mid thirties – he was drunk for the most part. He was a dangerous  combination, especially when he drove us into the main town, over a bumpy and  dusty trail with large pot holes all the way.  It certainly was an  experience. The worst hostel? A hostel-hotel in Montevideo,  Uruguay. It cost $10 US per night, had no staff who spoke any English and no  guests that I could find. You had your own room with a television and nobody to  talk with. I stayed because every other hostel in Montevideo’s capital city  seemed to be full. It was poorly placed with few food outlets and far from any  city attractions. I spent my time walking the streets. The manager even tried to  charge me for an extra night because I failed to leave before the allotted time  of 10.00 am. It was terrible but an experience.
The countries with the best hostels are  Australia and New Zealand. There are plenty of good hostels and plenty of  choices in all major and small cities and towns. The best way to get to the  hostels in New Zealand is by way of the Kiwi Experiences buses, which give you a  discount. The hostel staff in Australia often book each  hostel for you as you travel and even help with booking activities and events.  Their staff are often very friendly and relaxed. North and South America varies. I found South  America to be very cheap with hostels scattered about in most of the large  cities and near the tourist destinations. The US can be good for hostelling  depending on what State you choose and region for that matter. The mid west does  not have that many. If staying in New York city, avoid the hostel  international. I suggest the Jazz Hostels, there is a selection of  them. Use the website www.hostelz.com for your search. The Green Tortoise are also good if you want  lively, fun and drinking-party travelling. Avoid the Santa Monica hostel in Los Angeles, it is  very good but expensive. The best hostel in the US is San Diego’s Ocean Beach  Hostel. They pick up from all transport destinations, are moments walk from a  beach and are near to all San Diego’s main attractions. The crowd is lively and  the hostel is relaxed with no major rules.
In Europe I have stayed in the cities  of Vienna, Austria, ok hostel, staff slightly  unfriendly, cold atmosphere Bruish, Belgium, out of the city, not very good, no  food outlets near by. Prague, Czech Republic, very cheap hostel, large  dorms with eight beds. Paris, France, good hostel out from city, near  plenty of food outlets, on a good transport line with the metro, friendly  helpful staff, reasonable price Germany, stayed in several cities, all hostels  ok. Ireland, Dublin, fantastic, for drinking and making  friends, friendly staff in most hostels lots to do. Cork, hostel out of main town, on a bus line,  friendly staff does breakfast Netherlands, several cities, Amsterdam, very  lively, Hi has to many rules and big, has its own bar. Other cities more  interesting. Arnhem, cool large hostel in the country, worth a visit if you like  history of World War II.
Hostels in African continent. South Africa most brilliant, Cape Town has the  most, hostels in Johannesburg, I would recommend Backpacker Ritz, they pick up  from airport for a small fee. Friendly staff organise many tours as do most of  the hostels in South Africa. Garden Route has plenty of good hostels. Once in SA  a guide book can help you with this. Most staff are friendly  and  engaging. Bloemfontein has a hostel but not very good,  difficult to get a bed, closes early. Hostels in Mozambique up the coast on the beaches  are all good. The country does not contain that many. Zimbabwe, still has some  hostels, 2004, don’t know if many still open. The ones I visited were mainly in  the central and south. Vic Falls was the main tourist spot with good  hostels. Zambia has good hostels, many variety for all kinds  of travellers in Livingstone, one or two in the capital. Malawi, has some hostels, mostly called guest  houses, they vary alarmingly so have to be careful.
Hostelling is not easy as every place is different  and you don’t always know what you are going to get. It is an experience, like a  box of un-opened chocolates. I love it as expressed. for a young person  travelling the world it is ideal for a rest for a night or a base to explore a  city/town for several days. They can cater for all. I have listed some of the  best and unusual. Each night in a hostel is an experience, something  different happens each day, someone arrives, people go the circle of friends  changes the party takes another twist.  Hostelling is fun, it is what you want it to  be. for anyone reading this website in a hostel, hello,  I hope you are having a grand time and making the most of it. For anyone reading this and thinking about using a  hostel, go on have a go. I did and I was blind!!! Tony Giles, backpacking  nutter.