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Don White June 23rd 06 02:38 PM

Seasickness
 
Martin Baxter wrote:
Scotty wrote:

I have a non-boating friend who's going on a cruise next
week. He's concerned about seasickness. I told him ginger is
a good cure. I bought him a box of Ginger Snaps ( more for a
joke ). Should he start munching on these before he steps
onboard or wait till / if he feels bad?

SBV



Aren't you related to a Canuck now? Get some Gravol, best stuff on the
planet, but you can't get in 'merica.

Cheers
Marty


Good old over the counter Gravol, or the 'no-name- versions of it.
This stuff makes me drowsy also.

Martin Baxter June 23rd 06 02:53 PM

Seasickness
 
Don White wrote:



Aren't you related to a Canuck now? Get some Gravol, best stuff on the
planet, but you can't get in 'merica.

Cheers
Marty


Good old over the counter Gravol, or the 'no-name- versions of it.
This stuff makes me drowsy also.


The packaging does carry that warning, I can't speak from personal
experience, so far I've not had a problem, (he says with fingers
crossed).

Cheers
Marty

Gogarty June 23rd 06 05:20 PM

Seasickness
 
Mythbusters did a piece recently on non-prescription (over the counter)
antidotes to seasickness. It included those wrist bands, various
concoctions and ginger. Only ginger worked. We always carry ginger root on
board as well as ginger beer (not ginger ale). The prescription drugs also
worked but left people drowsy or even spaced out.


Dennis Pogson June 23rd 06 05:22 PM

Seasickness
 
Joe wrote:
Steve Thrasher wrote:
Scotty wrote:

The only time I felt queasy was anchored in a storm, closed
up cabin, with an alcohol stove cooking spaghetti. Not a
good combination.


In 1957 my dad was assigned to Hickam AFB. We drove to San Francisco
and boarded a WWII US Navy troop transport, refurbished slightly.
For our first meal out, just after passing under the Golden Gate and
catching some swells, was "Split Pea Soup". Wonderful stuff, green
and slopping about in the waves.


Wuss.. Green pea will settle the stomach.... to bland, Coonass fish
head and rice soup, now thats the ticket. The Greasy pork
chops....thats a standard. Bacon works good too! Top things off with a
nice Cigar...once you get the weak ones blowing chunks the rest are
easy.

It also helps if you make wall paper for the head by printing this 100
times:

http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/o/image...circeye_lg.jpg

Joe
;o)



Joe


Porridge. Tastes exactly the same when puked up as when eaten.

Dennis.



FishinJC June 23rd 06 05:57 PM

Seasickness
 

Gogarty wrote:
Mythbusters did a piece recently on non-prescription (over the counter)
antidotes to seasickness. It included those wrist bands, various
concoctions and ginger. Only ginger worked. We always carry ginger root on
board as well as ginger beer (not ginger ale). The prescription drugs also
worked but left people drowsy or even spaced out.


On that same show they tested 2 people and 1 said that the drug that
worked best was the placebo (sugar pill). Of course when they tested
him, they told him that it was a new drug and he didn't get sick at
all. That tells me for some it is a mind game. If you feel relaxed
and believe it what you are taking will cure you, you will be fine.

I have horrible memories as a child, first time out far and getting
really sick. It stuck with me for awhile, until one day, someone I was
fishing with started to get sick and I was laughing (which is customary
on a fishing boat) and for some reason I haven't gotten sick since. I
don't know if seeing someone else get sick and laughing took my mind
off it long enough for me to forget my fear or what, but I do fine now
(of course I'll go out tomorrow and barf my brains out now that I made
this public).


Bob June 23rd 06 06:54 PM

Seasickness
 

FishinJC wrote:
The prescription drugs also
worked but left people drowsy or even spaced out.


In all these post the one thing that i have not read is a quantitative
description of the sea state (that's using numbers for all the
sailing.asa readers).

So a drug left people drowsy or even spaced out. Personally after
heaving my guts out for two days then totally dehydrated and
incapacitated for days 3&4 I would most certainly take the drowsy and
even spaced out option. Granted the sea state that caused my marathon
puke fest was extreme. So take the drugs and get er dun.

On that same show they tested 2 people and 1 said that the drug that
worked best was the placebo (sugar pill). Of course when they tested
him, they told him that it was a new drug and he didn't get sick at
all. That tells me for some it is a mind game. If you feel relaxed
and believe it what you are taking will cure you, you will be fine.


This is an excellent point................ What is the expected placebo
effect for any given sample/study group? Cant remember but I think the
folks who submit to the NJM mentioned, maybe 6%-12% of people are head
cases.

Anybody know the typical expected placebo effect for humans?

Bob


Gogarty June 23rd 06 07:40 PM

Seasickness
 
Sea state matters, as does the size of the vessel in the sea state. Even
so, the first cruise I ever took with my wife to be was a large
passenger ship where the sea state was mill pond. She was very, very
sick. But that was it. Our honeymoon was eleven days at sea on an even
larger ship in some horrendous weather where the ship clnaged like a
gong and we have been sailing on our own boat for years. Never another
problem for either of us thugh we have had the occasional guest for whom
the day was no fun at all. Even busted up one romance. He got sick; she
did not.


Wayne.B June 23rd 06 08:04 PM

Seasickness
 
On Fri, 23 Jun 2006 14:40:36 -0400, Gogarty
wrote:

Sea state matters, as does the size of the vessel in the sea state.


And the type and amplitude of motion that the vessel generates.

There are 40 footers with a very solid motion and there are others
that generate a weird cork screw effect.

Guess which one is worse, I'm getting queasy just thinking about it.


Larry June 23rd 06 08:32 PM

Seasickness
 
Wayne.B wrote in
:

My trawler has stabilizers, send her to SWFL.




In your dreams.....(c;


Larry June 23rd 06 08:35 PM

Seasickness
 
"Bill Kearney" wrote in
t:

Yeah, bent over is one thing, bent over and hurling their guts up just
doesn't qualify as a turn-on.




I was driving the Amel under sail around the harbor, on another nice day
cruise. She laid on her belly on a towel up under the main in front of me
on the port side.

I wouldn't have even notice our collision course with a 950' containership,
especially after she released the clip on the back of that metallic green
top!

"Oh, look! Is that the emergency tiller?!"......(c;



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