Sleeping onboard?

alant

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In the forepeak vee berth, do you sleep head first, or feet first.
Also, how about cave like stern cabin berths?
Headfirst, easier to get in, but pain getting out & reverse if feet first, but thats just me.
 
Feet first (except for one crew member who seems to prefer head first in aft cabin).

Serving tea in the morning - he should be so lucky - tends to be a bit of a surprise first time you find you're talking to his feet.
 
In the forepeak vee berth, do you sleep head first, or feet first.
Also, how about cave like stern cabin berths?

Surely having the widest bit of the berth closest to the widest bit of the occupants' bodies (normally their shoulders) makes sense. For forepeaks you've normally got more headroom away from the bow (handy for not clonking your head on the ceiling when under way) and I find it comforting to have my head closest to the direction in which I'll be looking when saying "What was that noise?" in the middle of the night.

As for these "cave like stern cabin berths" what on earth....oh wait you must mean for those unfortunate enough to have aft cockpit boats?
 
Feet to bow in double fwd cabin. Otherwise I dream. I woke up halfway through a dream thinking a seagull had sh*t in my eye only to find it was condensation dripping from the hatch. Always been the other way round since.

Aft cabin storage unless kids visiting.
 
A mate of mine once made the eccentric decision to sleep "wrong way round" on a saloon berth with a trotter-box. Woke up the first morning not sure where he was, tried to sit up, and smacked his whole face hard against the top of the box.

He slept the right way round for the rest of the week :)

Pete
 
A good friend would always sleep in the quarter berth head in to muffle his extremely loud snoring, a considerable sacrifice as he invariably complained of headache due to oxygen lack in the morning and when alone would reverse the position.

In my HR94 I sleep in the forecabin where there is standing headroom at the aft section but the foredeck then reduces the height to only accommodate legs and feet comfortably - no choice there really.
 
It has ever occurred to me to sleep the "wrong" way in either cabin, mainly because the ventilation is better and the reading lights are there.
 
Feet first on the vee berth in the forward cabin. I've tried both ways in the aft cabin and didn't find that either was noticeably better. However feet aft means having your head just over the domestic water pump, which is rather noisy if someone else runs any water while you're asleep.
 
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