Tip of the Day - Use a Bed Warmer

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When I was younger I was obsessed with books about “olden times.”  I loved reading all of the Little House books, Little Women, and Anne of Green Gables, and I was fascinated with all of the historical details.  One of those details was that back in “olden times” people used bed warmers or wrapped a brick that had been warming by the fire in a piece of flannel and took it to bed with them to keep their feet warm.  When I climb between cold sheets, I always wonder why that’s a tradition that didn’t last. 

Lately, I’ve been freezing when I go to bed, but wake up in the morning having kicked off most of the blankets because I’m way too hot.  Last week, I started using my own version of a hot brick to warm the bed at night: a microwavable hot pack (like the kind you’d use on an injury).  I’m not saying that hot packs are especially eco-friendly — they’re plastic and goodness knows what that blue stuff actually is — but we already had one around the house, and the energy savings potential is great.

I can turn the heat down lower at night (and possible turn it off completely earlier in the season), so I don’t shiver for half the night and sweat bullets for the other half.  Two minutes in the microwave uses a lot less energy than keeping the heat up higher all night, or using an electric blanket.  And as I get warmer, the hot pack cools off.

The added bonus is that I’ve been falling asleep faster, because I’m not spending the first twenty minutes or so after I get in bed trying to warm up.

18 Responses to “Tip of the Day - Use a Bed Warmer”

  1. ana Says:

    It didn’t survive because a lot of the old time bed warmers had a distressing tendency to set fire to the bed clothes, especially those that looked like a pan and that actually had lighted coals inside.

    One thing I do to keep the bed warmer is to put an old blanket between the mattress and the bottom sheet. It works a lot better than just piling up blankets on top of yourself.

  2. Noelle Says:

    I always loved the bed warmers too! Although it did seem like a huge pain in the ass.

  3. Allie Says:

    Yeah, I can see how the old coal warmers were probably a bad idea, and a pain. I just wonder why no one came along with an electric version. I guess electric blankets took that spot.

    That tip about the blanket between the sheet and mattress is great!

  4. nancypearlwannabe Says:

    I totally use my heating pad as a bed warmer and Chris laughs at me! But my feet get freezing, and we don’t have a fireplace where we can heat coals in a pan to slide in to the end of the bed. Plus, that seems kind of dangerous, even if we did have a fireplace.

  5. maria Says:

    those who are freaked out by the blue stuff could buy (or try making!) a buckwheat heating pad like these ones. i have a flannel one and it was great for cold nights when i was living alone in a drafty apartment. also good for menstrual cramps and muscle aches.

  6. Aaron Says:

    Damn, that’s a good idea. I often fall asleep with my feet tucked up in a lotus-type position because they’re perpetually freezing. Sleeping like this all the time sometimes gives me knee aches. Or maybe I’m just getting old.

  7. Amanda Says:

    I picked up an old-fashioned rubber hot water bottle a couple of weeks ago, and now I’m not sure how I lived without it for so long. It hadn’t occurred to me to use it as a bed warmer, but it’s actually perfect for the job!

  8. Reluctant Blogger Says:

    I remember once leaving a hot water bottle on the inside windowledge of a bedroom in a flat I lived in as a student and it froze!

    But I did always use them because there was no heating in any of the rooms. But they did sometimes leak!

  9. mickey Says:

    When it’s really cold, we put boiling water in our Nalgene bottles (that’s one thing polycarbonate is good for!) and hold them in our laps while we’re sitting around the house rather than turn the heat up. When getting ready for bed, I throw it under the covers to warm my spot on the mattress. Those things stay warm for hours.

  10. Allie Says:

    Finally! A good use for those bottles! That’s brilliant!

    The buckwheat heating pad is a great idea too.

  11. erikka Says:

    I have a cloth bag full of rice that would save you from using plastic and help you feel Green still! It only needs 2 minutes in the microwave to be SMOKIN’ hot. Works like a charm.

    Lucky for my man, I’m his warm brick. For some reason, no matter what, I radiate enough btus to heat a small town…so he gets to warm his cold toes on me. I’m nice like that. :)

  12. Allie Says:

    Wow. The rice is a great idea!

    I’m impressed that you generate heat so well. I am the exact opposite. My hands are so cold that I’m just short of having X-men powers. I swear, a few degrees colder and I could freeze anything I touched.

  13. Rachel Says:

    I am a HUGE fan of hot water bottles. I have a great one and I use it EVERY night. I can’t believe I used to sleep curled up smaller than my cat! The one thing that bugs me is the water usage. So I usually reheat the water on the stove after boiling my late night hot water. It doesn’t take too long so I don’t think it’s using too much energy. My cat likes to lay over my hot water bottle on my stomach!

  14. Marian Clinton Says:

    I am old enough to remember when I was a child, we use to have soapstone slabs that were about the size of a book. You heated them on your old stove or other heat source, and when it was warm enough you wraped it in a heavy cloth or slipped it into a fitted sack. Placed it in bed by your feet. I took a hours to slowly lose it’s heat. You still can buy soapstone slabs today. You can also buy soapstone griddles which never need greasing to cook on. and they last forever.

  15. julie Says:

    another thing that’ll keep you warm is to take one of those emergency blankets - the ones that look like aluminum foil - and put it face up under your fitted sheet. that will keep you toasty.

  16. Melody Munro Says:

    Thank you for great bed warmer ideas I hate a cold bed. I had a foot warmer from Mastex company that started a fire when it was “not turned on” destroyed my bedroom. I will never use a electric bed warmer.

  17. Allie’s Answers » Blog Archive » Tip of the Day - Repurpose Your Old Nalgene Bottle Says:

    […] in March, Mickey mentioned in comments that he fills his old polycarbonate bottle with hot water and uses it as a bedwarmer.  You could fill it with ice and cold water in the summer to do the […]

  18. Ann Says:

    The foot warmer you had problems with may have been recalled.
    http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml07/07540.html

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