While reading Dem's post about fishing outside the bar and his mention of taking motion sickness pills the night before it occurred to me that in the gazillion posts I have read on this site I have never seen the issue of seasickness addressed.
Back in the early eighties, the USCG did some research on seasickness; it's causes, ways to minimize it and medication to either prevent its onset or stop it once you're afflicted.
As a result of that study, they came to recommend what some now call "The Coast Guard Cocktail" as a way to treat seasickness after it has begun.
The "cocktail" is a combination of 25mg of Phenergan (also called Promethazine) and 25mg of Ephedrine, both in tablet form and taken together.
I swear by this stuff. We had people, including my wife, get violently ill while sailing on Mary Flower and every time the stricken person took these meds, the seasickness disappeared within minutes! And I mean DISAPPEARED, not just reduced. In over ten years of carrying these medications on board the treatment never failed to work. And unlike most motion sickness meds such as Dramamine and the like, this doesn't have to be taken in advance. It can be taken after the person is already ill. And unlike Dramamine, it tends not to make the person drowsy.
If you'd like to learn more about this subject in depth, just Google the phrase "phenergan ephedrine seasickness". You'll find a ton of information as to how and why it works.
I suppose this isn't technically a C Dory subject but if it helps someone on a C Dory tolerate a rough weather outing, I guess it's ok to post it.
Jim
Here's a photo of my wife happily reading while crossing Lake Michigan in 4 - 6' waves with a 25 knot wind forward of the beam. Before we started using the "Coast Guard Cocktail", she would have been lying in her bunk experimenting with new colors of green on her face in these kinds of conditions.
Back in the early eighties, the USCG did some research on seasickness; it's causes, ways to minimize it and medication to either prevent its onset or stop it once you're afflicted.
As a result of that study, they came to recommend what some now call "The Coast Guard Cocktail" as a way to treat seasickness after it has begun.
The "cocktail" is a combination of 25mg of Phenergan (also called Promethazine) and 25mg of Ephedrine, both in tablet form and taken together.
I swear by this stuff. We had people, including my wife, get violently ill while sailing on Mary Flower and every time the stricken person took these meds, the seasickness disappeared within minutes! And I mean DISAPPEARED, not just reduced. In over ten years of carrying these medications on board the treatment never failed to work. And unlike most motion sickness meds such as Dramamine and the like, this doesn't have to be taken in advance. It can be taken after the person is already ill. And unlike Dramamine, it tends not to make the person drowsy.
If you'd like to learn more about this subject in depth, just Google the phrase "phenergan ephedrine seasickness". You'll find a ton of information as to how and why it works.
I suppose this isn't technically a C Dory subject but if it helps someone on a C Dory tolerate a rough weather outing, I guess it's ok to post it.
Jim
Here's a photo of my wife happily reading while crossing Lake Michigan in 4 - 6' waves with a 25 knot wind forward of the beam. Before we started using the "Coast Guard Cocktail", she would have been lying in her bunk experimenting with new colors of green on her face in these kinds of conditions.
