[and then properly test your sleep to see if you sleep way better on them?]
remote cabins in Norway [eg Hjerrkin] also are worth sleeping over in! [bc it’s cold and the air is so clean and the buildings are made 100% of wood rather than synthetics] and you might be able to try forest bathing
[sometimes from mailing lists I see people post advertisements for “housesitting in Maine”]. Lol this might be the value of cold wilderness => people get HIGH aounts of glymphatic waste clearance [and maybe even just 7 straight days of it would do most of the work in clearing out the amyloid b/c there might be some level of diminishing returns/sigmoids]
or u could try Mt. Tremblant in Quebec! or Montana or Idaho
Or BC [cuz BC has the cleanest air in north america!] and loads of forest and quiet!
or northern MINNAYSOTA!
or Stanley, ID or Fraser, ID [apartment cold by default and you control how much to warm it up!!]
I did get to sleep on an eightsleep for like 6 days but I didn’t notice a significant improvement.
I get poor sleep much of the time so I need to do more experimentation.
[tsk tsk sometimes people hold psychedelic retreats in harvard forest…]
but really, staying in cabins IN THE MIDDLE OF THE FOREST actually is… really… calming… and good for sleep… and with low-VOC air! [tho trees release their own VOCs, not all VOCs are bad]
(sometimes ppl get their best sleep in ski resort hotels/cabins]
Equinox + Walker also pitch this as “sleep tourism” — set to be one of 2025’s biggest travel trends, which mostly tells you this is a brand category, not a unique offering