The topic of seasickness came up on another thread and I didn't want to hijack the thread...
Here is my question... Is there anyone here that feels they are more susceptible to motion sickness on a power boat than on a sailboat?
I'd love to understand the physiology of "seasickness" better. My crude understanding is that it is the result of your brain receiving conflicting data regarding your equilibrium from you inner ear and your eyes. If you brain is unable to resolve the conflicting data, then you get sick...
Funny thing about my personal relationship with seasickness.... When things get rough on a powerboat, I'll get queasy and I have to stare at the horizon to keep from spilling chum over the rail. But the one time I've ever gotten sick on a sailboat was a time when I went into the cabin to fix the crew lunch and we were sailing through some very rough chop. As soon as I got out of the cabin and back on deck, my stomach settled down.
So sailboat vs. power boat!?!?
I'm wondering if I don't get sick on a sailboat because the thing making the boat move and the thing making the waves (wind) create a subliminal pattern that my brain's equilibrium centers can lock onto but in a power boat, the wind is not what is moving the boat... so I don't have that pattern to lock onto. I don't know this to be true but it is a decent hypothesis.
So back to my original question... anyone else here that feel they are more susceptible to motion sickness on a power boat than on a sailboat?
Here is my question... Is there anyone here that feels they are more susceptible to motion sickness on a power boat than on a sailboat?
I'd love to understand the physiology of "seasickness" better. My crude understanding is that it is the result of your brain receiving conflicting data regarding your equilibrium from you inner ear and your eyes. If you brain is unable to resolve the conflicting data, then you get sick...
Funny thing about my personal relationship with seasickness.... When things get rough on a powerboat, I'll get queasy and I have to stare at the horizon to keep from spilling chum over the rail. But the one time I've ever gotten sick on a sailboat was a time when I went into the cabin to fix the crew lunch and we were sailing through some very rough chop. As soon as I got out of the cabin and back on deck, my stomach settled down.
So sailboat vs. power boat!?!?
I'm wondering if I don't get sick on a sailboat because the thing making the boat move and the thing making the waves (wind) create a subliminal pattern that my brain's equilibrium centers can lock onto but in a power boat, the wind is not what is moving the boat... so I don't have that pattern to lock onto. I don't know this to be true but it is a decent hypothesis.
So back to my original question... anyone else here that feel they are more susceptible to motion sickness on a power boat than on a sailboat?