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#1
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![]() wrote in message ... Vic suggested using salt tablets for extreme sweating and I have to admit I have never used salt tablets and dont use much salt on my food either. I cannot seem to convince my doc that the sweating is a serious problem; he simply says to drink a lot of water. However, it has come close to killing me twice while caving so I can no longer do any real caving. Caves are a near 100% humidity enviro and around here are roughly 74 degrees so I sweat enough to have my coveralls saturated very quickly. The last couple times I went, I got loopy and got lost and simply didnt care. When boating, I can carry a lot of water so I always have a liter in hand. I never drink sodas and am not into sports drinks either. This issue makes me not want to go boating by myself so I am looking for a solution. Sweating is your bodies way to get cool so isnt suppressing sweating a bad thing? One can normally cool off during boating too by jumping in the water but when working on the boat in the heat, I just dont want to take the time to do that until suddenly I realize, uh oh, am doing stupid things............... So, salt tabs or not? I too had a similar issue when I was younger, working in a paper mill. Hot and humid place as the rolls came off the rollers. I came down with a splitting headache one day and got dizzy. An old timer came by with 2 white pills and a huge soda. Told me not to come back to my station until I took the pills and washed it down with a quart or two. In 30 minutes, I was ace. I asked him why, the answer was the salt helps your body cool itself, you run low you sweet too much and get dizzy with low sugars. While not scientific, it sure worked. I repeated it a couple of times to be sure, and each time the same results, but just didn't let it go as far as the first time. I later learned the company even supplied them. I later read the Kon-Tiki expedition book, good read. The one thing they forgot to bring in their ocean trek was salt!!! In an ocean of it, and they didn't have palatable salt. Go figure. While too much is bad for you, not enough can also be devastating. Like anything else, you have to prepare for what you are going to do. Diet and liquids are part of it. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 1 Oct 2008 20:26:33 -0600, "Canuck57"
wrote: wrote in message ... Vic suggested using salt tablets for extreme sweating and I have to admit I have never used salt tablets and dont use much salt on my food either. I cannot seem to convince my doc that the sweating is a serious problem; he simply says to drink a lot of water. However, it has come close to killing me twice while caving so I can no longer do any real caving. Caves are a near 100% humidity enviro and around here are roughly 74 degrees so I sweat enough to have my coveralls saturated very quickly. High humidity does not have to increase sweating for clothes to be soaked, since whatever there is won't evaporate. If however you continue to be overheated, your body might turn up the sweat rate, even though it won't work. Hard to tell at the time. The last couple times I went, I got loopy and got lost and simply didnt care. When boating, I can carry a lot of water so I always have a liter in hand. I never drink sodas and am not into sports drinks either. This issue makes me not want to go boating by myself so I am looking for a solution. Sweating is your bodies way to get cool so isnt suppressing sweating a bad thing? One can normally cool off during boating too by jumping in the water but when working on the boat in the heat, I just dont want to take the time to do that until suddenly I realize, uh oh, am doing stupid things............... So, salt tabs or not? I too had a similar issue when I was younger, working in a paper mill. Hot and humid place as the rolls came off the rollers. I came down with a splitting headache one day and got dizzy. An old timer came by with 2 white pills and a huge soda. Told me not to come back to my station until I took the pills and washed it down with a quart or two. In 30 minutes, I was ace. I asked him why, the answer was the salt helps your body cool itself, you run low you sweet too much and get dizzy with low sugars. While not scientific, it sure worked. I repeated it a couple of times to be sure, and each time the same results, but just didn't let it go as far as the first time. I later learned the company even supplied them. I went through USAF basic training in texas in late May, June, and early July. I had an extra canteen on my pistol belt, half filled with salt tablets. Whenever there was a break, a line would form and I would hand them out. I later read the Kon-Tiki expedition book, good read. The one thing they forgot to bring in their ocean trek was salt!!! In an ocean of it, and they didn't have palatable salt. Go figure. While too much is bad for you, not enough can also be devastating. Other things in sea water. It's the standard source for magnesium and bromine, for example. The CRC has the complete ingredients list. Like anything else, you have to prepare for what you are going to do. Diet and liquids are part of it. The Boy Scout motto is " Be Prepared ". The official USCG motto is Semper Paratis, translates to' always ready.' The rescue boat crews have there own slogan: "You have to go out, but you don't have to come back." Their boats carry ballast to the point of being self righting like a lead keel sailboat. Casady |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Oct 2, 12:43 am, wrote:
On Wed, 1 Oct 2008 20:26:33 -0600, "Canuck57" wrote: I later read the Kon-Tiki expedition book, good read. The one thing they forgot to bring in their ocean trek was salt!!! In an ocean of it, and they didn't have palatable salt. Go figure. While too much is bad for you, not enough can also be devastating. What is unpalatable about sea water other than the salt? You ever hear of that desalination process that makes use of forward osmosis by mixing a sweetener with the salt water causing the sweet water to wick through the material much faster than the salt? Apparently, they sold it to DoD as an energy drink for emergency situations but it apparently tastes vile being so sweet. One of my many schemes is to build an inflatable solar still for use on boats for emergencies. Most such stills are very inefficient because the sunlight has to pass through the membrane on which water is condensing so I propose to separate the light concentration and condensation surfaces.. It would use a special shape called a "Compound Parabolic Concentrator" to concentrate sunlight on a small container of seawater. This shape requires fAr less tracking of the sun than a parabola does and can work in a cloudy sky too. Of course this will have to wait till I develop my device that allows any mainsail to be continously furled............ |
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Salt tablets? | General | |||
Salt tablets? | General |