The Hamilton Spectator

Tools for sleeping well while travelling

- STEPHANIE ROSENBLOOM

Some of us have enough trouble sleeping in our beds at home, let alone while travelling or changing time zones.

There are those who drift off by instructin­g their Amazon Echo or Google Home to play recordings of babbling brooks and cicadas. Others listen to podcasts like “Sleep With Me,” which tells dull bedtime stories. Some watch YouTube videos of people whispering or performing mundane tasks, or listen to electronic and ambient music, like the British group Marconi Union’s “Weightless (Ambient Transmissi­ons Vol. 2),” which has been reported to induce deep relaxation.

What might do the trick for you?

More and more smartphone apps are promising solutions. They join the ranks of traditiona­l white noise and sleep machines with settings said to aid relaxation or alleviate jet lag. Yet such gadgets, even so-called portable models that come with their own cases, are clunkier and more costly than apps. The Tranquil Moments Bedside Speaker & Sleep Sounds from Brookstone, for instance, has a dozen sounds like ocean surf and rain. It is portable and more intuitive to use than most sleep machines, has a nice clear sound (the speaker can also pair with your smartphone for when you want to play your own music), and can be made loud enough to drown out noisy neighbours, which not all devices, and especially not all apps, can do. Yet it costs about C$170, is about the size of a large softball and weighs roughly half a pound. (If you’re in the market for a bedside white noise machine, Wirecutter, the gear-andgadget recommenda­tion site that is part of The New York Times Co., recommends the LectroFan by ASTI and the Marpac Dohm DS, each about C$60.)

For frequent travelers, such devices aren’t practical solutions to take hither and yon. And so instead they turn to free white noise and meditation apps like myNoise, Relax Melodies (among my favourites as it’s lovely to look at and allows for easy mixing of sounds like wind and rain), Rain Rain Sleep Sounds, White Noise Deep Sleep Sounds and Calm. An app called Seasons from Logicworks is delightful as you can choose sounds — like spring peepers, a barbecue, leaf raking, and icicles dripping — based on the four seasons.

For no money or a few dollars on iTunes, you can download soothing music and nature sounds, and you need not pack any extra gear. A colleague recommends White Noise Plus, and White Noise Ambience, from the makers of the Seasons app.

I’ve found a good method to involve a combinatio­n of a gadget called SleepPhone­s, along with audio or videos of soft background talking (which for me seems to best mask other voices in hotel hallways and on airplanes). SleepPhone­s are flat speakers in a soft, lightly padded headband that allow side sleepers to avoid the dreaded in-ear pain from earbuds. It’s designed to fit around your forehead, although I like to position the band so the speakers are over my ears and the fabric lightly covers my eyes. The options include a wireless version (about C$210) and a wired version (about C$110), and both play any music, talk radio or white noise you have on your smartphone or computer.

There are, as with most products, downsides. Because the speakers aren’t in your ear, the sound has never been loud enough for me to drown out noisy passengers on an airplane the way sound through earbuds can. (This could also be a problem for those who want to use SleepPhone­s to tune out a vigorously snoring partner.) And charging the wireless Bluetooth version through its USB port is inelegant: you have to open the fabric headband to get at the wiring.

But this little device causes no ear pain and is as light and as small as a sock, so there’s barely any added weight or space in your luggage. Also, while SleepPhone­s come with an app that includes soothing sounds, you don’t need it for the headphones to work. That’s a relief: some sleep products have apps that are awkward to use and instructio­n booklets that put you to sleep faster than the devices do.

 ?? KASTO80 GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? More and more smartphone apps and devices are promising jet-setters more and more solutions to the problem of getting some shuteye when travelling.
KASTO80 GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O More and more smartphone apps and devices are promising jet-setters more and more solutions to the problem of getting some shuteye when travelling.
 ?? ASTI PRODUCT PHOTOGRAPH­Y TNS ?? Adaptive Sound Technologi­es Inc.’s LectroFan Kinder Bedtime Buddy is designed to help create perfect sleeping habits at an early age.
ASTI PRODUCT PHOTOGRAPH­Y TNS Adaptive Sound Technologi­es Inc.’s LectroFan Kinder Bedtime Buddy is designed to help create perfect sleeping habits at an early age.

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