
For months now I haven’t been sleeping very well. The underlying reason, ignoring any other factors, is our mattress.
When Louise and I moved in to our house, she already had a double bed which she brought with her. Great, you’d think! Sadly not so, the mattress was described as being ’soft’ and this was very much an understatement. Lying in bed near the edge of the bed caused the ends to curl up, reading at night was nigh on impossible as my bum sank almost to the slats and the springs inside the mattress let out a ‘ping’ with the slightest of movement.
Being a few stones heavier than Louise I suffered most at the hands (or should that be the springs?) of the nonsupporting mattress to the point where I was having to put a pillow underneath my back when I went to bed to offer some kind of support for my aching vertebrae.
This Saturday, we decided to head out to buy a replacement and bid farewall once and for all to for the torture device currently residing in our bedroom.
The first post of call was Sleepmasters – adjoined to Harvey’s Furniture. One look at the prices though (and the lack of choice – surprising for a shop that specialises in selling beds/mattresses) saw us walk out the door and round the corner to MFI. Now I’ve always thought MFI was meant to be pretty cheap. A walk round the kitchen section (this is the next ‘big thing’ on our list of to-do’s around the house) seemed to confirm this, but, as with Sleepmasters, MFI decided to charge an extortionate amount for their mattresses (we’re talking £300+). After another perusal of the kitchens we headed home empty-handed.
A scan on the Internet yielded some local ‘one-man-band’ bed places in Macclesfield so we decided to head out and give them a try (I was skeptical how such a small place could compete with the prices that the big chains could offer but decided to give it a go nonetheless).
We called in at a shop that, thinking back now, I could honestly not tell you what it was called. They seemed to have a good selection of mattresses from what we could see from the window and the lady at the back of the store (which resembled a warehouse) looked friendly enough.
i have a tendency when asked by shop assistants if “I’d like any help” to respond in the negative, even if I actually do want some help. This lady, however, proved to be my exception to the rule, possibly due to the fact that she looked shocked to see a customer in her store. She kindly showed us a number of spring and foam mattresses roughly within our budget (£100-£150). She pointed out that whilst spring mattresses are generally cheaper, they also have around a fifth of the lifespan and will wear out quicker. Nevertheless, cost was king and by the end of a couple of ‘test drives’ we had all but settled on a £140 spring mattress.
The lady asked us if, ignoring cost, would we prefer the £200 foam mattress that we had had a brief lie-down on earlier but jumped out of when the double-ton figure was banded about. We tried it again and, given that it was much more supportive than the spring, said yes, we would go for the foam at the right price.
The lady disappeared to tend to another customer (her lucky day) and Lou and I discussed the price and settled on paying no more than £170 for the mattress… a £30 premium on the spring that we had almost settled for.
Upon timid shop assistant’s return, she said she could let us have it for £170. Timid was evidently a mind-reader.
We went ahead and bought the mattress and took it home in the back of the car (one the benefits of the foam mattress is that it is stored like a stubby roll of carpet – even transportable in the back of a Ford Ka). It took a couple of hours for the mattress to fully fill out (it had been vacuum-packed after all) but sadly our first night’s sleep wasn’t great.
Whether it is because we’ve changed from a soft, probably broken mattress to what is described as an ‘Orthopedic firm feel’ bed or whether it is because foam mattresses seem to retain heat more than spring ones, we haven’t slept very well over the past couple of nights.
Lou says she finds the bed too hard (we didn’t ask what ‘firmness’ the bed was when we bought it, it turns out it’s an ‘orthopedic firm’ bed) and I haven’t slept great for some reason (although my back feels a lot better than it did previously).
We’re going to give it a couple of weeks to see if we can settle with it and start sleeping better. If not, I think we’ll be on the look-out for a ‘mattress topper’. These things tend to be about three inches thick and attach via elstic straps to your mattress to make it a bit softer. The question is, should we go for Canadian goose feather or made-made synthetic. Decisions, decisions.
I suppose if we’re in doubt we could always go and speak to Miss. Timid, she’ll probably be expecting us.