HEARING aids, prosthetic limbs,Get great deals for ralphlaurensweater on eBay! wallets and watches are just some of the items left by guests at Mole Valley hotels.
This week the Advertiser contacted hotels around the district to find out what items staff have found after guests have checked out.
Phone chargers and keys feature high on the "left behind" list, though some surprising items have also been forgotten.
Mark McFeely, front of house manager at the White Horse in Dorking, said: "We find a lot of medication, which is quite worrying. Just the other week we found three hearing aids left in a room, which makes you think about the poor souls wandering around not having a clue what is going on.
"It is always interesting the way that people prioritise their possessions as well. We've had passports and house keys sat in a box for more than a year unclaimed, yet had others phoning frantically trying to get a pair of socks back."
Iain Goswell,The following are some of the steps included in buying coachhandbags. Surrey district manager for Travelodge, which has hotels in Dorking and Leatherhead, said: "Each year our lost and found box gets filled with some remarkable items.We invite you to visit our latest collection of monclerouterwear.
"Over the past 12 months we have had a Cartier engagement ring, a suitcase full of Mills and Boon novels, a Louis Vuitton handbag, a teddy bear,2011 Shoppers search through schoolbagfactory at Harrods department store during the first day . a box of wigs and false eyelashes, a fax machine, mobile phones, sat-navs,Egypt's Amina Diab forges ahead with nonwovenbagfactory collection. pyjamas, electric toothbrushes, false teeth and artificial limbs left behind at our Leatherhead and Dorking hotels."
Maria Chow of Bookham Grange Hotel said: "There has been quite a range left behind. We even had a ballgown; perhaps it wasn't her colour after all.
"It is amazing how you could possibly forget your teeth or important medicine, but once you have stayed a couple of nights somewhere the setting becomes familiar and you effectively 'move in' and your items promptly become invisible as they blend and merge with their surroundings."
Peter Randall, manager of the Hillcroft B&B in Leatherhead, said the finds there had been "somewhat mundane".
"But things could change with the influx of guests from around the world because of this year's Olympics," he added. "We have already had inquiries from Turkey, France and Cyprus, so things could get very interesting."
This week the Advertiser contacted hotels around the district to find out what items staff have found after guests have checked out.
Phone chargers and keys feature high on the "left behind" list, though some surprising items have also been forgotten.
Mark McFeely, front of house manager at the White Horse in Dorking, said: "We find a lot of medication, which is quite worrying. Just the other week we found three hearing aids left in a room, which makes you think about the poor souls wandering around not having a clue what is going on.
"It is always interesting the way that people prioritise their possessions as well. We've had passports and house keys sat in a box for more than a year unclaimed, yet had others phoning frantically trying to get a pair of socks back."
Iain Goswell,The following are some of the steps included in buying coachhandbags. Surrey district manager for Travelodge, which has hotels in Dorking and Leatherhead, said: "Each year our lost and found box gets filled with some remarkable items.We invite you to visit our latest collection of monclerouterwear.
"Over the past 12 months we have had a Cartier engagement ring, a suitcase full of Mills and Boon novels, a Louis Vuitton handbag, a teddy bear,2011 Shoppers search through schoolbagfactory at Harrods department store during the first day . a box of wigs and false eyelashes, a fax machine, mobile phones, sat-navs,Egypt's Amina Diab forges ahead with nonwovenbagfactory collection. pyjamas, electric toothbrushes, false teeth and artificial limbs left behind at our Leatherhead and Dorking hotels."
Maria Chow of Bookham Grange Hotel said: "There has been quite a range left behind. We even had a ballgown; perhaps it wasn't her colour after all.
"It is amazing how you could possibly forget your teeth or important medicine, but once you have stayed a couple of nights somewhere the setting becomes familiar and you effectively 'move in' and your items promptly become invisible as they blend and merge with their surroundings."
Peter Randall, manager of the Hillcroft B&B in Leatherhead, said the finds there had been "somewhat mundane".
"But things could change with the influx of guests from around the world because of this year's Olympics," he added. "We have already had inquiries from Turkey, France and Cyprus, so things could get very interesting."
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