![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When I Started flying Hang Gliders here in Telluride and Central Colorado
and the Owens Valley I made dozens and dozens of trips up into the low 20's without O2. I also look back and found my self in the landing zone not remembering much on how I got there!... This is the sort of thread that can shed a whole lotta insight into such things as: info/knowledge diffusion/comprehension rates throughout targeted special-interest populations (hang-glider/sailplane types); hypoxic realities; etc. All hypoxia-related stories are the same, but different! I musta had sufficient imagination & curiosity to both seek out info on the topic and believe what I read, even before availing myself of the opportunity of a chamber ride back in the '80s. (For the record, I - then, anyway - was one of those people who essentially lacked "any obvious symptoms" [arguably, the most at-risk kind?] other than "the usual mental degradations"...no blue fingernails, no giddiness, no "B&W vision symptoms"...just mental dullness/sloppy-handwriting/etc/) By then I owned a ship w. an O2 system...and after then, I *believed* (!!!). Ever-after, part of me was amazed/appalled whenever encountering someone ignorant-of/unbelieving of altitude-related hypoxia (think: any Himalayan mountain climbing tale). Flying from Boulder, CO (at the eastern base of the Rockies), it wasn't uncommon for "a hang glider type" to either stop by the field for a chit-chat, or occasionally land there from a cross-Divide flight. One in particular sticks with me. After relating my amazement to having encountered a hang glider near 18,000' on one bitterly cold March day above the Williams Fork Range and asking him how he dealt with such wind chill, he related a flight to that altitude that all he remembered anything about was the takeoff and subsequent post-landing landing somewhere he knew not where, miles from his launch site..."coming to" long after he'd landed. He put it down to "the cold"; I noted he might want to do some research about hypoxia! Cowabunga!!! Bob W. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Pilot with Hypoxia talking with ATC - this ends well | son_of_flubber | Soaring | 8 | September 10th 14 02:01 PM |
Hypoxia imminent - Disclosure still holding breath! | VOR-DME[_4_] | Piloting | 3 | October 13th 11 09:47 PM |
Hypoxia revisited | Martin Gregorie | Soaring | 0 | July 15th 04 08:14 PM |