PDA

View Full Version : Human "bed-warmers" at Holiday Inn


Lupe
01-24-2010, 08:31 PM
LONDON (Reuters) - International hotel chain Holiday Inn is offering a trial human bed-warming service at three hotels in Britain this month.

If requested, a willing staff-member at two of the chain's London hotels and one in the northern English city of Manchester will dress in an all-in-one fleece sleeper suit before slipping between the sheets.

"The new Holiday Inn bed warmers service is a bit like having a giant hot water bottle in your bed," Holiday Inn spokeswoman Jane Bednall said in an emailed statement to Reuters.

The bed-warmer is equipped with a thermometer to measure the bed's required temperature of 20 degrees Celsius (68 Fahrenheit).

Holiday Inn said the warmer would be fully dressed and leave the bed before the guest occupied it. They could not confirm if the warmer would shower first, but said hair would be covered.

Florence Eavis, Holiday Inn spokeswoman told Reuters that the "innovative" bed-warming method was a response to Britain's recent cold weather and marked the launch of 3,200 new Holiday Inns worldwide.

She could not explain why the beds were not being warmed by hot water bottles or electric-blankets, but admitted the human method was quirky.

Holiday Inn are promoting the service with the help of sleep-expert Chris Idzikowski, director of the Edinburgh Sleep Center, who said the idea could help people sleep.

"There's plenty of scientific evidence to show that sleep starts at the beginning of the night when body temperature starts to drop," he said. "A warm bed - approximately 20 to 24 Celsius - is a good way to start this process whereas a cold bed would inhibit sleep."

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60K50020100122

Kayvin
01-24-2010, 09:52 PM
That's really creepy, and probably very expensive.

Lupe
01-24-2010, 09:58 PM
oh, come on, you know you are checking on flight schedules to the UK as you posted that...

ROFL

Long Hall
01-25-2010, 04:33 AM
That seems like a very odd and, as previously mentioned, expensive way of warming a bed. Since this is a PG board, I will refrain from commenting on my own preference for a bedwarmer. ;)

Dorella Allerod
01-25-2010, 09:53 PM
eeeuuuwwww! I wouldn't want a strange person warming a bed I was gonna get in. That is...I have no words. :paranoid:

AlPrunty
04-20-2010, 08:18 AM
It's bad enough when my mind makes up images of things that go on in hotel beds then to think of this... Ewwwwwwwwwww

J'Yan
04-20-2010, 12:08 PM
eeeuuuwwww! I wouldn't want a strange person warming a bed I was gonna get in. That is...I have no words. :paranoid:

It would depend on what she looked like. Operative word being SHE!

AlPrunty
04-21-2010, 12:58 AM
You know my mother is so germaphobic she brings her own sheets to a hotel. And she has to "clean" the bathroom after they clean the bathroom before she can use the bathroom.

Dorella Allerod
04-21-2010, 05:41 PM
Yup. I am one of those that cleans the bathroom first as well. I also look closely at the sheets and have asked for clean ones if they don't look clean enough to me.

J'Yan
04-23-2010, 01:10 PM
You know my mother is so germaphobic she brings her own sheets to a hotel. And she has to "clean" the bathroom after they clean the bathroom before she can use the bathroom.

Man, and here I am just happy to be using a toilet instead of an e-tool.

I dated a girl who was OCD, it can be a pain.

Dorella Allerod
04-23-2010, 04:43 PM
My problem is I have been in the cleaning business so long my eye spots things that make me squirm. Even in restaraunts my eye catches things. :(

I do bring my own towel when going to hotel, motels as well.

John Gifford
01-05-2012, 05:51 PM
With the recent media on the LICE situation I'm very surprised with this... But, bed warmers in Hotels has been around for a while. But I don't think they were called Bed warmers!