Learn best practices for starting and running a float center:
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Something in the world of floating have you stumped?

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Show Highlights

In this episode of the Daily Solutions Podcast, Graham and Ashkahn discuss what to do if you experience salt in your ear after your float. The Ol’ Salty Ear is common, uncomfortable, but ultimately avoidable by using things like vinegar and hydrogen peroxide mixed with water.

To learn more, take a listen (or read text from their conversation below).

Show Resources

Listen to Just the Audio

Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)

Graham: Alright, and today’s question is actually more of a question from the floater side of things, and if you’re a float center owner, then this is something you get all the time, which is, “I feel like I have salt water stuck in my ears.” “It’s a day after the float, how do I get it out?”

Ashkahn: So, first of all, one thing we have in our float rooms is just little bottles of distilled white vinegar. Usually do like a half-half mixture, half water, half distilled white vinegar. I’ve also seen places use alcohol.

Graham: Yeah, rubbing alcohol?

Ashkahn: Rubbing alcohol.

Graham: Not like green alcohol.

Ashkahn: Just pure vodka. But basically that is just a solution that you can put into your ears, kind of like those swimmer’s ears solutions that they make, that helps evaporate that salt water out, break it up, dissolve the salt, and flush the water out. So, that’s kind of a nice precautionary step. Having that in your rooms, available to people so that they can flush their ears out after their floats is going to reduce the number of times this happens to people in the first place.

Graham: I will say, I think they work better than just trying to rinse your ears out with water from the shower, for example, which I have tried doing just that and not using ear drops. Sometimes it’s fine, and then other times I do get that weird kind of crinkly, salty, the old salt ear.

Ashkahn: The old salty ear, yeah. It’s not very pleasant.

Graham: No it’s not. I guess for those of you who haven’t experienced it, first of all, you probably should just go into a float tank and don’t wash your ears out afterwards, and wait a day later.

Ashkahn: No don’t, you don’t want to have to live through that.

Graham: Okay, don’t do that, but if you did do it, what you would experience is kind of crunchiness, and I even find a squeakiness. Like, I’ll turn my neck and my ears squeak, which is a weird phenomenon, and it can actually be kind of painful as well.

Ashkahn: Yeah, it’s uncomfortable for sure.

Graham: Fortunately the exact same thing works as a precautionary measure, works for eliminating it too, so actually just putting some white vinegar, or alcohol into your ear afterwards will alleviate it, in my experience, in a matter of seconds. You get maybe 10 drops of white vinegar into your ear, and almost immediately that salty ear is kind of disappeared, and the crinkliness is gone, and you kind of drain it into a paper towel or whatever it is, and you’re set.

Ashkahn: I’ve also heard of, I’ve never tried this, using hydrogen peroxide. Like the 3% peroxide from the store. Have you tried that?

Graham: I haven’t, and this is where an actual scientist and myself probably diverge down different paths. But, I have heard that hydrogen peroxide is very good at eating away at organic material, and that in general, even for wounds and things like that, it’s probably better to use alcohol than hydrogen peroxide, just for it kind of going after your body a little bit more.

I personally would be a little nervous, and that is my completely uneducated non-medical opinion on that. But no, I haven’t tried it personally either.

Ashkahn: So, sometimes none of that stuff works for people, right? I’ve definitely gotten reports of that, like they tried all that stuff and it didn’t happen. Another of our co-founders just had crazy water in his ear for about a week.

Graham: For a week?

Ashkahn: After floating.

Graham: Yeah.

Ashkahn: I’m not sure what to do, other than wait it out, like it will go away, I mean I’ve had points where I’ve had it for a few days, and it will naturally end eventually, which is nice. But other than vigorously shaking your head, kind of like punching that side of your head with your ear, to kind of hammer it out of your ear, you know?

Graham: [inaudible 00:03:32] … is a medical professional, so that’s very apt medical advice right there.

Ashkahn: Yeah, the punching side of your head part is definitely what I would recommend to everybody.

Graham: Thank you Dr. Kahn.

Ashkahn: Why is there other techniques for this?

Graham: No, and I mean I think to be honest, that, that’s much more like actual swimmer’s ear, right?  At that point, it’s not the problem. The problem isn’t that there’s salt water, and salt crystallizing in the front of your ear, it’s that there’s actually water trapped somewhere a little bit deeper. So that’s much more common, and you’ll find it in regular swimming pools, not just float tanks as well.

Then, that will of course happen sometimes here. In Quinn’s case, it happened to be a lot of ear wax. I don’t know if I should say that on the air, I’m like, “Quinn has a lot of ear wax.” But it was, and eventually that ear wax just came loose and came out, and it was totally fine, and he was good again. So that’s how you deal with it.

Anything else to add?

Ashkahn: I don’t know, it just kind of sucks.

Graham: Get yourself some ice cream afterwards, you know?  Give yourself a treat.

Ashkahn: Every once in awhile, unfortunately it does kind of ruin people’s experience, I’ve had people tell me, they had a great float, but then this happened to them, and for like three or four days afterwards they were dealing with it, and they’re just not going to come back and float because of it. That part of it is unfortunate.

Graham: Yeah, putting things like that in your walkthrough speech are really good, just to prime people, “Hey, if you do have water in your ears afterwards, first of all, use these vinegar ear drops immediately after, and also if it happens, if it persists for days, that’s a cure for it.

Similarly, if you do have auto emails to go out right after someone’s float, putting in their, that this is a way to take care of salty ear, if they happen to experience it is great, and Ashkahn, we actually have some posts of literature. We call it our ongoing guide to floating, and that has a little mention of, if you have this kind of salt gathering in your ear, what to do about it afterwards.  That can again totally stop someone from having a completely miserable experience, just by letting them know how to deal with this problem swiftly rather than thinking it’s something they need to suffer through.

Ashkahn: Okay, well that’s been some Ear Tech, coming straight at you from the old Daily Solutions Podcast.

Graham: In your ears from our mouths.

Recent Podcast Episodes

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

Today brings a curious question about a float center owner who’s trying to deal with salt dust everywhere, including in their tool room. While salt does get everywhere, it can’t evaporate like water can and doesn’t travel through the air very well. 

Graham and Ashkahn try their best to answer it and try to figure out what might be causing it, having not experienced something like that themselves at Float On. If any float centers out there have experienced this phenomenon and have any insights, send it our way!

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

Personal background, training, education for float center owners – DSP 104

Every new float center owner brings something different to the table. A former accountant is going to have a different skill set than someone who spent the last 15 years in construction. Now, it’s likely that they’ll both find ways to succeed in very different ways, but it’s possibly that one could be better suited to running a float center than they other. 

Graham and Ashkahn get asked about their personal backgrounds that led to them starting Float On and, by extension, what the ideal background might be for running a float center.

While they have very non-traditional backgrounds themselves, they both have worked diligently through Float On’s lifetime to make sure that they learn the skills necessary to get the job done.

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

Causes of feeling nauseated in a float tank – DSP 103

Sometimes, very rarely, customers will get out of a float saying they felt really nauseous. Some even feel so bad that they vomit afterwards. What causes this and what can float center owners do about it? Well, sometimes it’s motion sickness, sometimes it’s the temperature in the tank, and sometimes it’s just random happenstance.

Regardless of why it occurs, how you handle it is important. Graham and Ashkahn have some good advice for post-bad float aftercare that’s worth listening to. 

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

Disinfecting inside float tank walls – DSP 102

How do you clean the inside of the float tank? Obviously, you wanna be careful given that you’re working so closely with your float solution. What precautions do you need to take? What sort of products do you use? 

Graham and Ashkahn share their stories of cleaning tanks, finding proper cleaners, and how to use them without affecting your water. 

How to reduce salt dust from ending up everywhere – DSP 105

Talking About Dr. Justin Feinstein’s Anxiety Study – DSP 101

Recently, Justin Feinstein and his team at LIBR have published their first landmark study on the effects of floatation-REST on patients with extreme anxiety. After years of hearing about Justin’s research, it’s exciting for the whole industry to finally get to see some tangible results.

But what can we say about these effects? What can’t we say? Graham and Ashkahn bring in Justin Feinstein himself to answer these deceptively unsimple questions and talk in depth about this research and what it means for the industry

Latest Blog Posts

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.