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

Should you let those with long dreadlocks and super long hair float? Yeah, we definitely think so!

Our sound designer, Jordan Lamp joins Graham and Ashkahn on this episode of the Daily Solutions Podcast to talk about what it’s like floating with dreads.

If any clients have body hair or shower less thoroughly beforehand, it will bring slightly more material into the tank. In the end, however, our filtration systems and procedures are designed to create a pristine float environment for every floater.

Show Resources

Listen to Just the Audio

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

Graham: Okay, we have a new question for you, and we have a special guest as well.

I would say a new guest in the studio, but in fact he’s always in the studio, he’s just appropriately silent in the background. We have our recording technician, Jordan Lamp, joining us.

Jordan Lamp: Hey guys.

Graham: The question today is should I let someone with long, capital long, dreads float? Will it damage their hair or the water?

Ashkahn: Jordan’s here with us because he has long, capital long dreads on his head, and has floated many a time. We thought he’d be a good person to offer some insight here. Yeah, what do you think? Let’s start with, does it damage your hair?

Jordan Lamp: I’m going to go no. It does make it very heavy. If you have longer dreads than I did, it’s possible that it’s really going to pull on your head, because the weight of the salt and the water combined makes them just incredibly, like heavier than just taking a shower or something. When I go to sit up out of the tank, there’s this incredible yanking sensation on my neck. If you had properly, properly, like down to the floor dreds, that may pose, you’d have to get out a different way, but once you get out to the shower, and you rinsed your hair really well, once the salt’s out, then you would just have wet dreads, which everyone’s used to.

Ashkahn: What’s that process like? Getting the salt water out of your dreads I bet is what they’re curious about.

Graham: Actually, how long are your dreads, out of curiosity?

Jordan Lamp: Well, I’m 6′ 3″, and they go down just like to almost my butt, I guess. The bottom of my back.

Ashkahn: Wow, okay.

Jordan Lamp: A few feet.

Ashkahn: Yeah, that’s pretty serious.

Jordan Lamp: Getting out, like first of all, I try not to waste too much of the tank water, because so much does get sort of sucked up in there. I’ll sit for a moment and just let the waterfall go before just jumping out of the tank, because there’s a lot of water that comes out. Then usually it’s just like a big like pool noodle sponge, essentially, so you just do a couple of wrings, and then you’re a pound or two lighter at that point. Then you just shower as usual. It’s really no big deal.

Graham: Does the shower take longer than usual to get all of the salts out of your dreads?

Jordan Lamp: No, no. In fact, I almost would not be hyper diligent, because the salt is drying. Then the way that the hair works, it scales. Hair follicles have a scale system, and so when oils and waxes or anything else coats that, it makes it slippery, and it detangles, which is the opposite of a dred. Something like going to the beach and swimming in the ocean is actually really good for dreads, because it dries them out, and it locks them up tighter.

Ashkahn: Oh.

Jordan Lamp: I almost don’t try too hard to rinse it out. You don’t want it flaky and you don’t want that thick texture about it, but I don’t try too hard at the same time.

Graham: Interesting. You’d almost say that floating is good for your dreads.

Jordan Lamp: Yeah, totally. Absolutely.

Ashkahn: Interesting. Like if I wanted dreads, I should just go dump my head in a float tank a few times. Then I’d just have dreds.

Graham: Is that how it works, Jordan?

Ashkahn: That sounds like what you’re saying.

Jordan Lamp: Kind of. Sure. I don’t see why not, it’s my medical advice.

Ashkahn: Okay, great. This is Dr. Jordan Lamp.

Graham: Okay, and then what about the float tank water as well?

Ashkahn: I guess that’s a question for us.

Graham: Right, yeah. Which is, we let people with dreads float at Float On all the time.We’re in Portland, Oregon, it happens almost every day, and it’s not an issue. We haven’t really had any problems with it.

More often, like a woman who has long hair, or a man who has long hair, just long hair in general I should say. It hasn’t been a problem for us either. You do get long hairs in the float tank, and the same thing will happen with dreads.

Ashkahn: Yeah, it’s just part of it, right? People are bringing stuff into the float tank, and your float tanks have equipment, and you have operations to deal with that sort of stuff. If someone has I guess like long, dirty dreds that’s going to be a little bit more stuff than a normal person would bring into a float tank, but at the end of the day, your system should still be able to handle that. That’s just part of the operation, so I wouldn’t really be too concerned about it.

Graham: Yep, no more so than with just regular long hair. Again, seems to be the same kind of thing, and we definitely don’t prohibit people with long hair from hopping in the float tank or anything like that. Yeah, I think that’s about it for this question. Anything else to add, Jordan?

Jordan Lamp: No. It’s very simple. It feels really cool. It does feel really interesting when you’re actually in the float tank, because other people’s hair floats so freely, it’s maybe more silky, whereas these feel like tentacles sort of like rubbing up against you. If you have an open tank with a reflection on the top, you can see your silhouette, and it just looks like these crazy tentacles everywhere.

Graham: Oh yeah, I bet that looks awesome.

Jordan Lamp: Which is a very original experience that you can’t really get anywhere else, I think.

Ashkahn: Yeah, all right. Well, I’m going to start getting some dreads.

Graham: We’ll see you tomorrow when Ashkahn’s all dreaded up.

Recent Podcast Episodes

Slip Proofing Your Float Tanks and Float Rooms – DSP 220

Slip Proofing Your Float Tanks and Float Rooms – DSP 220

The solution inside float tanks is slippery. Really really slippery. What is the best way to make sure that float customers aren’t slipping and falling before or after their floats.

Ashkahn and Graham break down the various steps needed for slip proofing for inside the float tank, the first step out of the tank, the rest of the float room, your hallways, or inside your workrooms.

Slip Proofing Your Float Tanks and Float Rooms – DSP 220

Should You Install Shower Screens in your Float Rooms? – DSP 219

Float centers, it has been said, are nearly in the shower business as much as they are in the float business. In fact, float centers run twice as many showers as floats. No doubt about it, they are an important part of the float experience, as is designing them. 

So do you include shower screens or doors? Graham and Ashkahn weigh in and share why the think it’s better to skip the door altogether, and dispel any sort of benefit that it may appear to have for a float center.

Slip Proofing Your Float Tanks and Float Rooms – DSP 220

5½ of the Most Common Construction Mistakes Float Centers Make – DSP 217

Graham and Ashkahn have been around the proverbial float block. They’ve visited centers all over the world, consulted with them, and trained them on how to make their centers as good as possible. It’s tempting to ask them, specifically, what are some of the most common mistakes they’ve seen in this time. 

Fortunately, someone did. The duo hash out exactly what they think of when it comes to both “common” and “expensive” construction mistakes for float centers, especially where those two points intersect on the float center Venn diagram of unhappiness. 

Slip Proofing Your Float Tanks and Float Rooms – DSP 220

What Post-Float Music do you Wake Up Floaters With? – DSP 216

There’s a lot of options for floaty music out there. Some are free with a creative commons license, some are built into tanks by manufacturers, some float centers will use meditation tracks to pull people out of it, or self compose music on occasion.

How does Float On pick their post-float music? Ashkahn and Graham explain their thoughts on post-float music, why they maintain a minimalist approach, and explain the formation of Theta State Records.

Latest Blog Posts

What Happens When the Media Doesn’t Give a Shit

What Happens When the Media Doesn’t Give a Shit

Float tanks have been getting a lot of media love recently, which is unsurprising given how beneficial people seem to find them, and how crazy they sound when you’re explaining them for the first time. Most of the press has been very positive, and coverage like the Nightline piece still bring a giant smile to my face whenever I watch them.

Media Reporters and EditorsUnfortunately, not everyone has taken the time to do the appropriate level of research into floating before writing about it.

Permits: Planning for your Planning Department

Permits: Planning for your Planning Department

Construction permits differ from state to state, and even from county to county. Keep in mind that everywhere has its own quirks, and, more than likely, it’s own unexpected fees that can cost several thousand additional dollars…