Poor sleep is Ireland's quiet epidemic. Surveys consistently show that one in three Irish adults regularly gets insufficient sleep, and the consequences โ on mood, cognition, immunity, metabolic health, cardiovascular risk, and even cancer susceptibility โ are profound. The Irish climate adds specific challenges: our latitude means extreme variation in day length (from 18 hours in June to under 8 in December), and our predominantly overcast skies mean that even when the days are longer, the light signal that regulates our circadian rhythm is often weak.
Pat Coffey at The Honey Pot, 14 Abbey Street, Clonmel, addresses sleep as a priority in almost every client consultation. Poor sleep is both a symptom of underlying imbalances and a driver of them โ fix the sleep and a great deal else often improves. This guide covers the complete protocol: sleep hygiene, light management, diet and nutrition, and the supplements and herbal medicines that genuinely support sleep quality.
Good sleep is not just about duration โ it is about quality and structure. A healthy night's sleep cycles through approximately four to five 90-minute cycles, each containing light sleep, deep slow-wave sleep (the most physically restorative stage), and REM sleep (where emotional processing and memory consolidation happen). Disruptions to this architecture โ from alcohol, stress, blue light exposure, or the wrong supplements โ can result in eight hours that feel unrefreshing.
Common Irish sleep problems include: difficulty falling asleep (sleep-onset insomnia, often driven by anxiety or cortisol dysregulation), early waking (often a hormonal or mood-related pattern), frequent night waking (often linked to blood sugar instability, alcohol, or sleep apnoea), and non-restorative sleep (waking feeling unrefreshed despite adequate hours, often linked to sleep architecture disruption).
Melatonin โ the primary sleep hormone โ is exquisitely sensitive to light. Its production begins in the evening as light dims, and it is suppressed immediately by bright light, particularly the blue-spectrum light emitted by screens (phones, tablets, computers, televisions). In Ireland, where natural light levels are low for much of the year, this creates a particular challenge: we are often not getting enough bright light in the daytime (which anchors our circadian clock) and too much artificial light in the evenings (which delays melatonin onset).
Morning light: Try to get outdoors within the first hour of waking for at least 10โ15 minutes. Even the relatively dim natural light of an Irish winter morning (typically 500โ2000 lux outdoors versus 50โ200 lux indoors) is significantly brighter than indoor lighting and provides an important circadian signal. A light therapy lamp (10,000 lux) used for 20โ30 minutes in the morning is a valuable tool for Irish winters.
Evening light: Begin dimming lights at home at least 1โ2 hours before bed. Use warm-toned lamps rather than overhead fluorescent or cool white LED lighting. Enable night mode on all screens, and consider blue-light blocking glasses for evening screen use. The goal is to mimic the gradual dimming of a natural sunset, which is the circadian cue that initiates melatonin release.
The optimal bedroom temperature for sleep is 16โ19ยฐC โ cooler than most Irish people keep their homes. Core body temperature drops as part of the sleep initiation process, and a cool room supports this. If you share a bed with someone who runs warm, consider separate duvets. Keep the bedroom as dark as possible โ blackout curtains are genuinely worthwhile investments for people with sleep difficulties.
Blood sugar stability is critical for uninterrupted sleep. Eating a large meal within two to three hours of bed, or having a high-sugar evening snack, can cause blood sugar swings that trigger cortisol release in the small hours, causing night waking. A small protein-containing snack in the evening (natural yogurt, a small amount of oats, a few nuts) is often helpful for people who wake at 2โ4am โ this pattern is frequently blood-sugar related.
Tryptophan-rich foods support serotonin and melatonin production. Good Irish food sources include eggs, dairy, turkey, oats, seeds, and bananas. Including these in the evening meal supports the neurotransmitter chain from tryptophan to serotonin to melatonin.
Caffeine has a half-life of approximately five to seven hours โ meaning that a coffee at 3pm still has 50% of its stimulant effect at 8โ10pm. For people with sleep difficulties, Pat typically recommends cutting all caffeine after 12pm. Note that tea (including green tea) contains caffeine; even decaffeinated coffee contains small amounts.
Magnesium is involved in the regulation of GABA, the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter โ the brain's natural calming system. Low magnesium (extremely common in Ireland) is associated with poor sleep quality, restless legs, nighttime cramps, and anxiety. Magnesium glycinate โ the most bioavailable and gentle form โ taken at 200โ400mg approximately one hour before bed is one of the most consistently effective natural sleep aids. Pat recommends this as the first supplement to try for most sleep difficulties.
Valerian (Valeriana officinalis) is one of the best-researched herbal sleep aids. It acts on GABA receptors similarly to benzodiazepines but without the dependency risk or cognitive impairment. Multiple RCTs have demonstrated improvements in sleep onset time and sleep quality. It takes 2โ4 weeks of regular use to achieve full effect. Available as a capsule or tincture at The Honey Pot.
For people whose sleep difficulties are primarily anxiety-driven โ racing thoughts, cortisol-driven wakefulness โ ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is a valuable addition. It is an adaptogen that reduces cortisol levels and has specific evidence for improving sleep onset and quality in people with stress-related insomnia. It pairs well with magnesium.
Both of these gentle nervines help calm an overactive nervous system. Lemon balm (Melissa officinalis) and passionflower (Passiflora incarnata) are available as teas, tinctures, or capsules and are particularly useful for sleep-onset difficulties related to anxiety and mental chatter. Pat keeps several herbal sleep tea blends in stock that combine these with other calming herbs.
Melatonin is available in Ireland on prescription only (unlike in the UK and US where it is available over the counter). For jet lag, shift work, or short-term circadian disruption, low-dose melatonin (0.5โ1mg) taken 30โ60 minutes before the desired sleep time can be genuinely helpful. Discuss with your GP.
Bach's Rescue Remedy Sleep formula โ Rescue Remedy plus White Chestnut (for the repetitive, circular thoughts that prevent sleep) โ is a gentle and popular option available at The Honey Pot. It is particularly useful for the kind of night-time mind-chatter that keeps people lying awake reviewing the day, planning tomorrow, or rehashing old worries. For more on flower essences and anxiety, see our guide on flower essences for burnout and overwhelm.
Persistent insomnia lasting more than three months, sleep apnoea (characterised by snoring, breathing pauses, and daytime exhaustion), or sleep difficulties accompanied by mood disorder should be discussed with a GP. Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is the gold standard evidence-based treatment for chronic insomnia and is now available in online formats. Natural supplements work best for mild to moderate sleep difficulties; severe or chronic insomnia may require a more comprehensive medical approach.
Transform your sleep naturally โ Pat Coffey at The Honey Pot can recommend the right combination of supplements and herbs for your sleep type.
Shop at The Honey Pot โ ๐ 052-612 1457