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#51
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but tolerance is all
snippity don't spend your free time moaning about ****e on here. ;-) |
#52
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I'm an awful snorer in hostel beds. I had to sleep in the hallway of a
hostel once due to it. I now travel with earplugs for the rest of the room or a anti-snore mouthpiece (those things are damn expsneive). Its a curse I tell you, so don't hate us too much. At the same time, most snorers don't mind a pillow to the head every once and awhile to remind us. Drew www.gonzotravel.net jobe wrote: Having spent many nights in climbing huts in the uk and Europe and cheap dolllar hotels in Africa and Asia I have to say if you have a problem with snoring then it is perhaps better you take a hotel room. By nature cheap dorm space has its problems snoring is one, theft another but tolerance is all when staying in cheap digs. Learn it or leave don't spend your free time moaning about ****e on here. I don't snore but have slept with people who do, no problem just learn to relax. I live in the country no noise but used to live near a motorway I know which I would rather have and its not the constant roar of traffic. Kind regards safe travels to all Mike "Gonzalez" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 22:32:27 +0100, "taywood" wrote: "Gonzalez" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 10:34:07 +0100, JohnB wrote: My last ever, ever, visit to a YH was in Derbyshire for a weekend cross country skiing seminar. After a visit to the local pub we retired quietly to our dorm. I couldnt sleep. I was in the top bunk and the other side of the plywood partition was a moron with a sleep problem. All was quiet until we became aware of this guys breathing getting faster and faster and faster - then it stopped. He didnt breathe for what seemed a hell of a long time and then his body noisily convulsed as his lungs desperately sought air. The bunk and the partition rattled This pattern was repeated over and over and over. People shook him, woke him, spoke to him, shouted at him nothing made any difference. http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/simplepa...D=2588&cook=no |
#53
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I'm an awful snorer in hostel beds. I had to sleep in the hallway of a
hostel once due to it. I now travel with earplugs for the rest of the room or a anti-snore mouthpiece (those things are damn expsneive). Its a curse I tell you, so don't hate us too much. At the same time, most snorers don't mind a pillow to the head every once and awhile to remind us. Drew www.gonzotravel.net jobe wrote: Having spent many nights in climbing huts in the uk and Europe and cheap dolllar hotels in Africa and Asia I have to say if you have a problem with snoring then it is perhaps better you take a hotel room. By nature cheap dorm space has its problems snoring is one, theft another but tolerance is all when staying in cheap digs. Learn it or leave don't spend your free time moaning about ****e on here. I don't snore but have slept with people who do, no problem just learn to relax. I live in the country no noise but used to live near a motorway I know which I would rather have and its not the constant roar of traffic. Kind regards safe travels to all Mike "Gonzalez" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 22:32:27 +0100, "taywood" wrote: "Gonzalez" wrote in message ... On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 10:34:07 +0100, JohnB wrote: My last ever, ever, visit to a YH was in Derbyshire for a weekend cross country skiing seminar. After a visit to the local pub we retired quietly to our dorm. I couldnt sleep. I was in the top bunk and the other side of the plywood partition was a moron with a sleep problem. All was quiet until we became aware of this guys breathing getting faster and faster and faster - then it stopped. He didnt breathe for what seemed a hell of a long time and then his body noisily convulsed as his lungs desperately sought air. The bunk and the partition rattled This pattern was repeated over and over and over. People shook him, woke him, spoke to him, shouted at him nothing made any difference. http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/simplepa...D=2588&cook=no |
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