DougF19
This property is located in the main street, on the fringe of the CBD and practically across the road from the city park/footy ground. It's easy to find and there is parking at the back, accessed from the next street. The room itself was a private one at the back of a residence with its own access. It's quite large, solidly built, quiet and comfortable - especially the bed - with a couple of nice armchairs and a small kitchen with microwave but no stove. The decor is a bit eccentric but certainly not offensive. The landlord let me in when I arrived and didn't bother me thereafter, and I didn't bother him.||||So nothing really to complain about, and I'd have given it four points but for one matter. The Booking.com blurb promised "a memorable breakfast", or words to that effect, which I took in the absence of any information to the contrary to mean, at the very least, a cooked one (which is what I'm old-fashioned enough to expect anyhow of any place that calls itself a B&B). For that reason I was happy to pay a few dollars more than I would have for other comparable accommodation in Maryborough. But it turned out to be just the ordinary Wettex-and-Weeties kind that you'd expect of a basic motel - the packaged spreads were admittedly a tad more upmarket than you'd find in an average motel and came in jars rather than blisters, but the cereals were the basic Kelloggs standards and inedible to adults, and there was no facility to make coffee. It didn't actually bother me all that much, but you need to bear it in mind - especially as there appears to be nowhere in central Maryborough that offers food of any quality, even for breakfast. And it did rather jaundice my opinion of the value I got for my money.||||Speaking more generally, I wouldn't recommend Maryborough as a destination. Practically every other town in the Goldfields has gone through a spectacular gourmet revival, but Maryborough appears to have been totally bypassed and remains just an ordinary blokey rural service town, a bit like a shrunken version of Bundaberg. As already mentioned, nowhere in the main street offered anything worthwhile in the way of dinner. The one attraction that makes it worth a stop is the wonderful heritage railway station, even if hardly any trains pass through any more; the lady who runs the concession for the old refreshment rooms is making an effort, and is probably your best bet for a meal (about 15 minutes' walk from the main street), but I noticed the business is now up for sale.