My only beef with it is that it is essentially 2 separate beds. That's nice if you are traveling around with your SIL or something because you can kind of separate things so that you can keep the spooning down to a minimum. But if you actually want to sleep next to the person you are with then there's a rather uncomfortable wooden separator that makes that a bit of a pain, quite literally.
Oct 11, 2007
Time to sleep
Look at the way they set up the beds here in Germany (they do it the same way in Austria and Switzerland):
Genius, don't you think? I mean, there's a bottom sheet but no top sheet. You might be thinking that is gross, no top sheet, but I am just pretending to be certain that they wash/change the comforter thing regularly as well. (fingers crossed) If they do that then this really is a great setup. I know that when I lovingly and carefully put the top sheet on my bed at home Mr X usually destroys it in one night - that is to say that by the morning it is a twisted, jumbled and uncomfortable mess that may very well end up strangling one of us in the night someday by accident. Plus, look at this? So much easier to fold up and make your bed every morning...
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3 comments:
I am such a fan of this bedding arrangement. I was raised with no top sheets and therefore I am top sheet inept when it comes to making beds. Sometimes (to me, a lot of the time) simplicity is bliss.
Simplicity is bliss...so is ignorance.
They do that in Poland, too. I think it's cozy. Except when I'm trying to snuggle with my husband. In our Salzburg hotel the beds were separate, and we'd push them together before going to sleep, then they'd come apart during the night. In some hotels they were one large mattress instead of two, which was much easier.
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