by Skippy » Mon Feb 18, 2008 10:47 am
Hi Bo,
I have always been very prone to seasickness, carsickness, airsickness (and lately severe morning-all day-sickness...). While flying, I've found it different if I'm the one flying, rather than being a passenger; I guess being more in control of what's going on helps.
This said, I've been airsick a number of times while flying my own HG. I've taken a few steps to minimize the onset of nausea:
1) What worked for me was making sure I ate a good breakfast, and flew on a full stomach (not too full though). An empty stomach topped with the usual pre-flight nerves were often a good recipe for nauseousness. I also tried the candied ginger, and that seemed to help, although a good breakfast or half a sandwich just before launching seemed to work better for me. I guess keeping your protein level up helps avoiding those lows that get you in late morning/lunch time, which is usually when we end up in the air.
2) Driving to launch, I always make sure I look straight at the road, and if I can't sit on the front row, I still have a good field of vision of where we are headed, so that I can anticipate every turn, so that I don't get carsick going up. If I'm carsick going up, then you can bet I'll get sick while flying...
3) I also make sure I don't drink any alcohol the night before, not even one beer or glass or wine, as I can feel it the next day, and this wouldn't help the nausea while flying.
4) I also make sure that I remain hydrated while flying, as I have found this helps too. I force myself to drink occasionally even if I'm not thursty. A dry mouth doesn't help.
5) Another thing that might work is accupuncture. It has cured my pregnancy-induced sickness, where no medication worked fully, or only supressed some of the symptoms. I don't know if it would work for airsickness, but I would certainly give it a shot if other simple remedies don't work, and you want to stay away from drugs and their side-effects. It can however get expensive if you have to see one on a regular basis though, and your insurance doesn't cover it.
Short of seeing an accupuncturist, you can use accupressure wrist bands. I have used them sailing, and they have worked. I also have flown with them, with relative success, but it's worth trying.
I hope this helps,
Skippy