When is a suite not a suite? When it’s the Alaskan suite. It’s actually three separate rooms: one smallish bedroom with a double bed, another bedroom with twin beds and a bathroom at the end of a short corridor accessed through a pair of swing saloon doors - which any of the other guests could walk through if they chose to ignore the printed sign stating the bathroom was for use by Alaskan suite guests only.
The bedroom doors had keypad entry, which, if you kept the doors closed you had to unlock each time. Plus you wouldn’t want to leave the doors open at night as anyone could walk in. Also if using the bathroom you could be seen entering it by anyone who happened to be in the breakfast room at the end of the short corridor - so no privacy (especially not if you’re in nightwear or less!)
To call it a suite there should be a lockable door leading to the three rooms and not a pair of swing saloon doors.
The so called ‘self serve’ breakfast was not buffet style to help yourself to (rather than table service) but help yourself to whatever you can find in the fridge and cook it yourself. All we could find was one hard boiled egg, some fresh eggs, two yoghurts, some milk, some small cartons and tins of juice and some bread and bagels. On the side there were some cereals and sachets and a little fruit. Not my idea of a breakfast at a B&B. The rooms were on the dingy side one had a tear in the carpet. We were booked in for 2 nights but left after one. Can not recommend