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-   -   motion sickness. (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/819790-motion-sickness.html)

vash 07-08-2014 09:10 AM

motion sickness.
 
not our Motion..:D

sea sickness. does the patch prescribed by a doc work?

i get it on boats. i think it is getting worse as i get older. my brother gets it BAD. i am trying to work out a 10 day tuna fishing trip. being out on the water that long could be a problem. my friend went, and he is almost a pirate. even he got sick on the ride back home. he said the boat felt like it was corkscrewing.

churn...

ideas? visit colorado for a big supply?

Bugsinrugs 07-08-2014 09:21 AM

Saltines. Lots of them

GH85Carrera 07-08-2014 09:28 AM

Yes the patch from the pharmacy is best. My wife needs them for boat rides.

widgeon13 07-08-2014 09:31 AM

I've heard seasickness is bad if you are susceptible to it. Ten days is a long to be seasick. Most likely you would wish you were dead. How about Dramamine, ever tried that. I don't get seasick or airsickness but it is debilitating.

vash 07-08-2014 09:34 AM

Dramamine knocks me out. But I think that's the idea behind it.


Sent via Jedi mind trick.

Scott Douglas 07-08-2014 09:34 AM

I get seasick standing on a dock that's firmly anchored to the shore. Cracks my kids up. I haven't tried the patch but have used Dramamine which puts me to sleep.
Have fun!

allaircooled 07-08-2014 09:37 AM

I get seasick and I was in the Navy for almost 12 years! Everytime we were about to get underway I would go to the docs office the day before and get Dramamine. I would start taking it the day before we left and for only a couple of days and after that I was fine. If I forgot, I would wish I was dead for sure.

Geary 07-08-2014 09:44 AM

As a youngster, I got violently ill at sea. One fishing trip across the Molokai Channel, I dove overboard and swam to shore as soon as we were close to land.

I wouldn't chance it, Vash. Not without at least a prior 1-2 day test trip, with all the aids at your disposal .. ginger, patch, wrist buttons, etc.

vash 07-08-2014 09:57 AM

Yea. Maybe a one day salmon trip.


Sent via Jedi mind trick.

Seahawk 07-08-2014 10:10 AM

I, thankfully, never suffered from motion sickness even in really big seas. The below is actually fairly calm seas:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1404842559.jpg

The keys for me were:

- Eat. Saltines were mentioned.
- Patch. Get the prescription stuff. I never needed one but they do work.
- Stay on the bridge. If possible, stay above decks. The closet I ever came to getting sick was during the monsoon season in the Indian Ocean. Huge seas, Perfect Storm seas: For days. 75% of the crew of the Frigate I was on were sick. Some guys were on IV's. I got my lawn chair out when I felt bad, sat against the hangar doors on the flight deck and tied myself in. Watched the horizon and instantly felt better.
- Go on a one day something trip before the ten day. The tuna boat is going to move, a bunch.

This is a good link: Avoiding Seasickness - Cruises - Cruise Critic

Seabear 07-08-2014 10:12 AM

I use the scopolamine patch when I go out on the ocean, or up in the Straits where there are ocean swells. It works well, leaves me with a bit of cotton mouth, but doesn't knock the crap out of me like Dramamine. I usually put it on the night before heading out and take it off on the way back to the dock.
A one day trial would be a good thing, it will tell you whether it works or not.

Cajundaddy 07-08-2014 11:15 AM

My wife gets motion sickness easily but I almost never do. Down below at a nav station can test my resolve though. From her experiences on week long ocean live aboard adventures:

The patch works best.
Bonine tabs a close second.
Ginger snaps third but surprisingly effective.
Dramamine wiped her out and made her feel worse than seasick.

deanp 07-08-2014 11:23 AM

Try the acupressure bands for your wrists. My wife gets motion sickness and found those helped. We took a trip with my sister and her family earlier in the year and my sister was not, ahem, keen on some of my backroad carving. Dramamine knocks her out, makes her feel almost as bad. She tried the wife's wristbands and it was night and day difference.

Jim Richards 07-08-2014 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seahawk (Post 8153959)
I, thankfully, never suffered from motion sickness even in really big seas. The below is actually fairly calm seas:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1404842559.jpg

The keys for me were:

- Eat. Saltines were mentioned.
- Patch. Get the prescription stuff. I never needed one but they do work.
- Stay on the bridge. If possible, stay above decks. The closet I ever came to getting sick was during the monsoon season in the Indian Ocean. Huge seas, Perfect Storm seas: For days. 75% of the crew of the Frigate I was on were sick. Some guys were on IV's. I got my lawn chair out when I felt bad, sat against the hangar doors on the flight deck and tied myself in. Watched the horizon and instantly felt better.
- Go on a one day something trip before the ten day. The tuna boat is going to move, a bunch.

This is a good link: Avoiding Seasickness - Cruises - Cruise Critic

Ahh, the memories...

http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6072/6...0c425fab_b.jpg

The only time I prayed to Ralph, the Porcelain God, was after eating a curry dish during heavy seas out in the North Atlantic. To this day I won't eat curry.

atcjorg 07-08-2014 11:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cajundaddy (Post 8154056)
My wife gets motion sickness easily but I almost never do. Down below at a nav station can test my resolve though. From her experiences on week long ocean live aboard adventures:

The patch works best.
Bonine tabs a close second.
Ginger snaps third but surprisingly effective.
Dramamine wiped her out and made her feel worse than seasick.

11 yrs in the navy (3 WESPACS) plus I deep sea fish a couple times a year, a 10 day is a long trip those listed above work best in that order IMO, get the patch follow directions, it's a little bumpy out there right now, where is the boat going Cedros ?

allaircooled 07-08-2014 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seahawk (Post 8153959)
I, thankfully, never suffered from motion sickness even in really big seas. The below is actually fairly calm seas:

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1404842559.jpg

The keys for me were:

- Eat. Saltines were mentioned.
- Patch. Get the prescription stuff. I never needed one but they do work.
- Stay on the bridge. If possible, stay above decks. The closet I ever came to getting sick was during the monsoon season in the Indian Ocean. Huge seas, Perfect Storm seas: For days. 75% of the crew of the Frigate I was on were sick. Some guys were on IV's. I got my lawn chair out when I felt bad, sat against the hangar doors on the flight deck and tied myself in. Watched the horizon and instantly felt better.
- Go on a one day something trip before the ten day. The tuna boat is going to move, a bunch.

This is a good link: Avoiding Seasickness - Cruises - Cruise Critic

For some reason I can take it in Radar room 4, which is right above your hangar on a cruiser. Get me close to the pointy end of the ship and I was done. Instantly.

I never tried the patch but I will give that a try here when I finally go out and do some deep sea fishing. Haven't gone in awhile and am starting to get interested again.

vash 07-08-2014 12:13 PM

Seahawk. That picture should be in the army recruitment brochure. :).


Sent via Jedi mind trick.

Bill Douglas 07-08-2014 01:25 PM

Patches are great.

If for some reason you want to go the "organic" way try crysallized ginger. It really works on me.

TimT 07-08-2014 02:04 PM

Quote:

Watched the horizon and instantly felt better.
That works... below decks is a recipe for producing chum...

Keeping your eyes on the horizon keeps your head moving less.... the balance system in your inner ear is more stable....no motion sickness....

I've been a boater for almost 54 years now, Dad got me a 8 or 9' Boston Whaler when I was a kid and have been offshore fishing ever since... I was told eyes on the horizon by an old salt many years ago...

biosurfer1 07-08-2014 02:34 PM

My dad went deep sea fishing once (ONCE) and he was on and around boats most of his life, just not open sea boats. He said its a good thing he didn't have his checkbook with him because he would have paid the captain anything he wanted to take him back.

He always says the craziest thing was the very first step back on the dock and he was instantly fine, like nothing ever happened...except for the memories that bubble up when ever someone mentions anything about "deep sea"


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