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Rosalie B. wrote:
"Donal" wrote: My advice first of all for your friend would be - find a place to go out on a boat in rough weather and see how you feel. How do you feel on roller coasters and other amusement rides. If you can do those things, you probably won't get sick on a cruise ship. "Scotty" wrote in message ... 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? I'll add my opinion to all the rest. Seasickness is 50% physical and 50% in the mind. It is triggered by confusion between the signals from the eyes and ears(balance). The treatment for the physical 50% is easy. Get Stugeron. Take *half* a tablet one hour before setting sail. A whole tablet seems to cause uncomfortable drowsiness. The treatment for the "in the mind" side is also quite simple. Look at the horizon .... this will synchronise the signals from the eyes and ears. On a sailboat, this is easy. However, on a cruise ship this will be a bit more difficult. If it is at all rough, then you should stay on the upper decks where you can look at the horizon if your stomach begins to feel a bit funny. After the first 24 hours the problem is likely to dissappear. I have only gotten motion sick a couple of times - once I had an earache and was reading in the car. I've been on a ferry crossing the English channel where the waves were crashing over the bow and virtually everyone else was sick except me and my mom (my dad was sick). My mom got us a seat where it was warm but by a window and we drank hot tea. My grandson who is out in his dad's power boat a lot, fishing, was on our boat while we were bashing into the waves. There are fixed portholes in the bow, and all the little boys (3 grandsons) were up in the V birth watching the water splash over the portholes. They thought it was an exciting thrill ride. This grandson got bored of it though, and lay down on the floor to play with his Gameboy - and promptly got sick. Lost all his cred with his cousins. My son was getting queasy in the cockpit, but he couldn't take my husband's usual remedy (saltines) because he'd just had his tonsils out, and his throat was very sore. I can get seasick in a very short time. However, I have always managed to prevent the decent into hell by getting onto deck quickly, and concentrating on the horizon. If I get on deck quickly enough, I am fully recovered in under a minute. I once took 20 minutes .... and it was touch and go for most of it!! One of the first times we went out on our boat we were going south from the Patuxent to the Potomac and there was a south wind which had been blowing for some time. We left about 10 - it was a cold April day. The tide was going out (against the wind) and the boat was banging into the square waves and taking green water over the bow. I was at the wheel, and I did start to get a little queasy, but Bob kept saying that being at the helm was the best thing for me. At one point the anchor came loose and was banging up and down on the bow. Bob had to go out and secure it. We didn't have any jacklines, and I knew if he went overboard I couldn't get him back, but he hung on tight and did the job. He also had to go out a little later and take down the staysail. Finally about 3:30 in the afternoon, I said to him - you HAVE to take the wheel, I can't do this anymore. So he did. I dropped a pencil, and leaned over to pick it up, and had an moment of intense nausea (but did not throw up), and then when I sat up, it all went away and I was completely fine. I think the uneasy feeling I had been experiencing was nervous tension from having to hand steer for that length of time. Enjoy your (non-boating friend's) cruise. Regards Donal Only times I have ever gotten queasy on a boat was in extreme heat and humidity with lolling, glassy seas...rough weather usually provides enough activity that you don't have time to sit and think about being seasick...object is focus...if you focus on doing something, it will alleviate the situation.... |
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