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#1
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snoring in youth hostels
i'm just back home in san francisco bay area after a marvelous trip to
scotland and england where i stayed in four youth hostels over the course of two weeks. i just love youth hosteling international...but i have one question. is there nothing that can be done about hostelers who have major...and i mean major...snoring problems. i went to bed early one night at the st. pancras hostel in london and was woken up by the bunk literally shaking due to the snoring of the man in the bunk below. i tried to sleep through it but it was impossible! after an hour or so of this i went to the reception desk and asked to be moved but the attendant said there were no open beds and nothing that could be done about the snorer! another roommate told me the next morning (after i slept on the couch in the lounge!) that the snorer told him of his problem when they first met. so? at that point you've already paid for your bed. seems to me hostel reception could post a polite sign at the desk asking snorers to identify themselves as such so they could be bunked in the same room. i had this same problem at the youth hostel in santa cruz, california, earlier this year. the snoring was so loud from another roommate that i actually left the hostel at 12:30am and went and got a very expensive motel room. any other suggestions? sleepy in california |
#2
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bowerm wrote:
any other suggestions? Ear plugs. Pete. -- Peter Clinch Medical Physics IT Officer Tel 44 1382 660111 ext. 33637 Univ. of Dundee, Ninewells Hospital Fax 44 1382 640177 Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK net http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/ |
#3
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bowerm wrote:
SNIP seems to me hostel reception could post a polite sign at the desk asking snorers to identify themselves as such so they could be bunked in the same room. SNIP Almost everybody snores. I'll bet you do too, only you don't hear it.... you're asleep. -- Geoff |
#4
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That brings back memories. Twenty years ago I toured Southern Ireland. I
stayed in a hostel where an enormous German - and I mean bloody enormous, kept the whole of the men's dorm awake. I picked up my mattress and slept in the common room. It makes me chuckle now but sure as hell didn't then. |
#5
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any
other suggestions? Ear plugs again. Maybe listen to music on headphones to lull you to sleep (never works for me, just end up awake for hours listening to the music). A pillow. Place over their head. Wait for snoring to stop. Leave really early in the morning before anyone else wakes up. Best to sign in under a fake name with that one. Hit them until they wake up. Hope you get to sleep before them. Lace their coffee with a bit of extra caffeine. If they can't sleep they can't snore. Grow your hair. Shave before you go to the hostel. Try to get a bunk in the girls dorm. Comb your hair, shave and wash. Try to get invited to a bunk in the girls dorm. Carry the snorer's bed into the corridoor/street/rooftop/nearby canal. You'll need help with this (shouldn't be a problem tho - even his mates'll help you get the bugger out). |
#6
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On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 13:49:05 +0000, Mark Thompson wrote:
A pillow. Place over their head. Wait for snoring to stop. Leave really early in the morning before anyone else wakes up. Best to sign in under a fake name with that one. Wish I'd thought of this one in Trondheim in '95... -- If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament. |
#7
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I remember once I was occupying a bottom bunk. I must have had a funny dream or something because I was convinced I was trapped inside some kind of box. When I woke up I was actually pushing the bed above me off it's frame by at least a couple of inches. The German guy in the top bunk never said a word about it but he must have thought I was some kind of maniac or something. I think you got off lucky. "bowerm" wrote in message om... i'm just back home in san francisco bay area after a marvelous trip to scotland and england where i stayed in four youth hostels over the course of two weeks. i just love youth hosteling international...but i have one question. is there nothing that can be done about hostelers who have major...and i mean major...snoring problems. i went to bed early one night at the st. pancras hostel in london and was woken up by the bunk literally shaking due to the snoring of the man in the bunk below. i tried to sleep through it but it was impossible! after an hour or so of this i went to the reception desk and asked to be moved but the attendant said there were no open beds and nothing that could be done about the snorer! another roommate told me the next morning (after i slept on the couch in the lounge!) that the snorer told him of his problem when they first met. so? at that point you've already paid for your bed. seems to me hostel reception could post a polite sign at the desk asking snorers to identify themselves as such so they could be bunked in the same room. i had this same problem at the youth hostel in santa cruz, california, earlier this year. the snoring was so loud from another roommate that i actually left the hostel at 12:30am and went and got a very expensive motel room. any other suggestions? sleepy in california |
#8
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I remember once I was occupying a bottom bunk. I must have had a funny dream or something because I was convinced I was trapped inside some kind of box. When I woke up I was actually pushing the bed above me off it's frame by at least a couple of inches. The German guy in the top bunk never said a word about it but he must have thought I was some kind of maniac or something. I think you got off lucky. "bowerm" wrote in message om... i'm just back home in san francisco bay area after a marvelous trip to scotland and england where i stayed in four youth hostels over the course of two weeks. i just love youth hosteling international...but i have one question. is there nothing that can be done about hostelers who have major...and i mean major...snoring problems. i went to bed early one night at the st. pancras hostel in london and was woken up by the bunk literally shaking due to the snoring of the man in the bunk below. i tried to sleep through it but it was impossible! after an hour or so of this i went to the reception desk and asked to be moved but the attendant said there were no open beds and nothing that could be done about the snorer! another roommate told me the next morning (after i slept on the couch in the lounge!) that the snorer told him of his problem when they first met. so? at that point you've already paid for your bed. seems to me hostel reception could post a polite sign at the desk asking snorers to identify themselves as such so they could be bunked in the same room. i had this same problem at the youth hostel in santa cruz, california, earlier this year. the snoring was so loud from another roommate that i actually left the hostel at 12:30am and went and got a very expensive motel room. any other suggestions? sleepy in california |
#9
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Just 2 words : ear plugs
bowerm wrote: i'm just back home in san francisco bay area after a marvelous trip to scotland and england where i stayed in four youth hostels over the course of two weeks. i just love youth hosteling international...but i have one question. is there nothing that can be done about hostelers who have major...and i mean major...snoring problems. i went to bed early one night at the st. pancras hostel in london and was woken up by the bunk literally shaking due to the snoring of the man in the bunk below. i tried to sleep through it but it was impossible! after an hour or so of this i went to the reception desk and asked to be moved but the attendant said there were no open beds and nothing that could be done about the snorer! another roommate told me the next morning (after i slept on the couch in the lounge!) that the snorer told him of his problem when they first met. so? at that point you've already paid for your bed. seems to me hostel reception could post a polite sign at the desk asking snorers to identify themselves as such so they could be bunked in the same room. i had this same problem at the youth hostel in santa cruz, california, earlier this year. the snoring was so loud from another roommate that i actually left the hostel at 12:30am and went and got a very expensive motel room. any other suggestions? sleepy in california |
#10
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Peter Clinch wrote:
bowerm wrote: any other suggestions? Ear plugs. I couldn't imagine sleeping in a dorm without earplugs. miguel -- Hit The Road! Photos from 32 countries on 5 continents: http://travel.u.nu |
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