Deep Sea Slumber

Deep Sea Slumber

The deep ocean is the least-known place on Earth. Deep Sea Slumber is a sleep podcast and documentary series about ocean creatures: their biology, their sensory worlds, and the quiet strangeness of their lives. Every episode moves through layers of creature facts, behavioral science, and deep ecology, with a final sequence where you become the animal. Fall asleep somewhere in the dark water. No fear framing. Just calm narration and creatures the ocean mostly keeps to itself. For curious minds who fall asleep best when they're actually learning something. 🔔 New episodes weekly on YouTube → @DeepSeaSlumber Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episodes

  1. Sea Turtle Facts for Sleep | The Reptile That Has Outlasted Every Mass Extinction

    2D AGO

    Sea Turtle Facts for Sleep | The Reptile That Has Outlasted Every Mass Extinction

    A sea turtle crosses open ocean using a sense we cannot feel, guided by the Earth's magnetic field from inside her own body. She will return to the beach where she hatched, decades later, arriving within a few hundred meters of where she began. Seven species carry this ancient form through the modern sea, and not one of them is in any particular hurry. 🌊 In this episode: • How a sea turtle's body is built for life in the open ocean, from its shell to a heartbeat that slows to almost nothing on a long dive • The magnetic navigation system that guides turtles across thousands of miles of open water to a single beach • Why female sea turtles return to the exact beach where they were born, sometimes after 30 years at sea • The lost years: how hatchlings vanish into open ocean gyres for up to a decade and what that drifting life looks like • Day in the Life: nesting on a moonlit beach, returning to warm water, and the long patient rhythm of a creature older than almost everything in the sea Somewhere tonight, in dark warm water, a sea turtle is resting between breaths, heart nearly still, carried by a current older than the shore. Let it carry you too. Perfect for falling asleep, unwinding, or anyone curious about ocean life. 🔔 Subscribe for more: @DeepSeaSlumber #SeaTurtle #SleepDocumentary #OceanLife #WildlifeDocumentary Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h 27m
  2. The Sea Otter Explained | The Animal That Replaced Blubber With a Billion Hairs

    APR 30

    The Sea Otter Explained | The Animal That Replaced Blubber With a Billion Hairs

    Off the coast of California, a small mammal is floating on its back in water cold enough to numb a human hand in minutes. It is not struggling. It is resting, warm inside a coat so dense that one square inch holds roughly a million individual hairs. The sea otter is the only marine mammal without blubber, and the way it survives anyway is one of the quieter marvels of the ocean. 🌊 In this episode: • The densest fur on Earth and how it traps air to replace blubber • A metabolism that burns three times faster than expected to stay warm • Tool use, sensitive paws, and why the otter's hands carry a kind of intelligence • The kelp forest trophic cascade and why one floating mammal shapes an entire ecosystem • A Day in the Life: floating, diving, eating, and drifting through the cold Pacific Sea otters nearly vanished from the world. That they are still here, tending their fur in cold coastal bays, is worth two hours of your night. Perfect for falling asleep, unwinding, or anyone curious about ocean life. 🔔 Subscribe for more: @DeepSeaSlumber #DeepSeaSlumber #SeaOtter #DocumentaryForSleep #DeepSea #OceanDocumentary #MarineLife #OceanLife #DeepSeaDocumentary #ScienceForSleep #OceanFacts #DeepOcean #FallAsleepFast #DeepSleep #SleepDocumentary #BedtimeDocumentary #CalmNarration #SeaOtters #KelpForest #OceanWildlife #MarineBiology Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h 23m
  3. Coral Reef Facts for Sleep | Built by Animals Smaller Than Your Fingernail

    APR 28

    Coral Reef Facts for Sleep | Built by Animals Smaller Than Your Fingernail

    The Great Barrier Reef is visible from space. It was built by animals smaller than your fingernail. That gap between those two facts is the whole story, and this is where we go tonight. 🌊 In this episode: • How coral polyps extract calcium from seawater and build limestone, one microscopic layer at a time • The symbiotic algae that live inside coral tissue and supply up to 90% of the reef's energy • Why reefs can only exist inside a narrow band of temperature, depth, and water clarity • The anatomy of a reef across time, from fringing reef to barrier reef to atoll, and what Darwin figured out from a boat in 1842 • The cleaning stations, ancient partnerships, and quiet agreements that hold a reef community together • Two entirely different communities sharing the same coral on opposite schedules: the day shift and the night shift • What a coral reef suggests about belonging, community, and complexity without a center • A Day in the Life drift through the reef at the edge of evening, in warm amber water, as the night shift begins Over two hours of unhurried reef, from the smallest polyp to the largest living structure on Earth. Perfect for falling asleep, unwinding, or anyone curious about ocean life. 🔔 Subscribe for more: @DeepSeaSlumber #DeepSeaSlumber #CoralReef #DocumentaryForSleep #DeepSea #OceanDocumentary #MarineLife #OceanLife #DeepSeaDocumentary #ScienceForSleep #OceanFacts #DeepOcean #FallAsleepFast #DeepSleep #SleepDocumentary #BedtimeDocumentary #CalmNarration #CoralReefLife #BarrierReef #MarineBiology #GreatBarrierReef Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h 9m
  4. Anglerfish Facts for Sleep | The Animal That Carries Its Own Light

    APR 26

    Anglerfish Facts for Sleep | The Animal That Carries Its Own Light

    Most people have seen the image. The wide mouth, the curved teeth, the single point of light rising from the head on a thin stalk, something that looks assembled from a nightmare rather than evolved over time. What the image doesn't tell you is how patient this animal is. Or how old. Or how precisely every part of it was shaped by a world most of us will never reach. 🌊 In this episode: • The illicium and esca: how the anglerfish grows its own bioluminescent lure from a modified spine • The expandable jaw, soft skeleton, and a body built entirely around the problem of scarcity • The parasitic male, one of the most extreme reproductive strategies in the vertebrate world • The deep sea economy: how this animal fits into the slow, pressurized dark of the ocean floor • A Day in the Life narrative: drift through the deep as an anglerfish, in second-person immersion The anglerfish has lived in absolute darkness for over one hundred million years. Every feature that seems strange is a feature that works. Perfect for falling asleep, unwinding, or anyone curious about ocean life. 🔔 Subscribe for more: @DeepSeaSlumber #DeepSeaSlumber #Anglerfish #DocumentaryForSleep #DeepSea #OceanDocumentary #MarineLife #OceanLife #DeepSeaDocumentary #ScienceForSleep #OceanFacts #DeepOcean #FallAsleepFast #DeepSleep #SleepDocumentary #BedtimeDocumentary #CalmNarration #Bioluminescence #DeepSeaCreatures #MarineBiology Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h 32m
  5. Jellyfish Facts for Sleep | Transparent, Bioluminescent, and 500 Million Years Old

    APR 26

    Jellyfish Facts for Sleep | Transparent, Bioluminescent, and 500 Million Years Old

    The jellyfish is older than forests. It has no brain, no blood, no bones, and it has been solving the problem of being alive, in roughly this same form, for more than five hundred million years. Tonight we slow down to understand what that actually means. 🌊 In this episode: • The nerve net: how a body without a brain senses, responds, and navigates the open ocean • The mechanics of the bell: elastic energy, jet propulsion, and one of the most efficient swimmers in the sea • The nematocyst: a single stinging cell that fires faster than almost any other biological process in the animal world, and what it gave to modern science • Five hundred million years of continuity, through every mass extinction, every rearranged ocean, every shift in the living world • Bioluminescence, transparency, and the quiet physics of a body made almost entirely of water • How jellyfish feed, bloom, and move energy through the ocean without ever chasing a single thing • Day in the Life: drift through a full ocean day as the jellyfish itself, rising, pulsing, and finally going still in the dark Staying with one creature for two hours turns out to be its own kind of rest. Perfect for falling asleep, unwinding, or anyone curious about ocean life. 🔔 Subscribe for more: @DeepSeaSlumber #DeepSeaSlumber #Jellyfish #DocumentaryForSleep #DeepSea #OceanDocumentary #MarineLife #OceanLife #DeepSeaDocumentary #ScienceForSleep #OceanFacts #DeepOcean #FallAsleepFast #DeepSleep #SleepDocumentary #BedtimeDocumentary #CalmNarration #MoonJellyfish #Bioluminescence #JellyfishFacts #MarineBiology Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    2h 26m

About

The deep ocean is the least-known place on Earth. Deep Sea Slumber is a sleep podcast and documentary series about ocean creatures: their biology, their sensory worlds, and the quiet strangeness of their lives. Every episode moves through layers of creature facts, behavioral science, and deep ecology, with a final sequence where you become the animal. Fall asleep somewhere in the dark water. No fear framing. Just calm narration and creatures the ocean mostly keeps to itself. For curious minds who fall asleep best when they're actually learning something. 🔔 New episodes weekly on YouTube → @DeepSeaSlumber Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.