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On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 06:20:01 -0500, Cub Driver
wrote: I have been skiing at Ajax (Aspen Mountain) on a regular basis for nearly forty years and have never noticed any effect on mental acuity at 11,000 feet. Of course it may be that skiers are mentally inacute to begin with. Relying on yourself to "notice" a change has been shown to be an exceedingly UNreliable assessment method. There have been numerous experiments in altitude chambers demonstrating that. The subjects were not aware of their errors in, for example, performing simple mathematical computations, until they were returned to sea level pressure and could view what they had written. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 06:54:42 -0500, Ron Rosenfeld
wrote: until they were returned to sea level pressure and could view what they had written. Of course, returning to standard pressure at Aspen means 8,000 feet. Perhaps we are off the wall the whole time? Still, I've never had a waiter complain that I was miscalculating the tip. Perhaps I've been overtipping? It seems unlikely: my wife has never complained. Seriously, 11,000 feet is not a problem unless you have medical problems. People get altitude *sickness* while skiing at high altitudes; they might be insomniac; they get dehydrated, especially if they booze it up; and sometimes they hyperventilate. (One of the ski patrol tricks with ailing turkeys is to have them breath into a paper bag, to *cut down* on their oxygen intake.) Loveland Pass, west of Denver, was higher than 10,000 feet, and carried all traffic before the I-70 tunnel was built. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com the blog www.danford.net |
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Cub Driver wrote:
they booze it up; and sometimes they hyperventilate. (One of the ski patrol tricks with ailing turkeys is to have them breath into a paper bag, to *cut down* on their oxygen intake.) Wrong again. The idea of this trick is to keep the CO2 level up. Stefan |
#5
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![]() Cub Driver wrote: (One of the ski patrol tricks with ailing turkeys is to have them breath into a paper bag, to *cut down* on their oxygen intake.) ABSOLUTELY WRONG.... hyperventilation is treated by increasing the CO2 content..The paper bag's therapeutic effect is acheived by allowing CO2 to be rebreathed, and hindering its passage from the body. Hypocapnia is not treated by inducing hypoxia. Dave |
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Cub Driver wrote:
On 6 Nov 2004 19:20:43 -0800, (PaulH) wrote: I took my Arrow up to 10,500 today I have been skiing at Ajax (Aspen Mountain) on a regular basis for nearly forty years and have never noticed any effect on mental acuity at 11,000 feet. Of course it may be that skiers are mentally inacute to begin with. But Dan, we *start* at 5K+ MSL! I ski Loveland (10-11K) all the time with no problems. But remember, we're up and down within 15-30 min (depending on the lift lines and being amazed at where we live). Flying is something else -- we stay up there for long periods of time. My body prefers O2 any time I've over 8K MSL for more than an hour. |
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Well, what's about all the "high-landers" who often live at ore above
8K? ;-) (I live above 7K year round for example) I would guess that goes with Mike's obervation. One adapts to high altitudes but it takes a day or two (or three). For short trips up one may end up hypoxic. What I still have to find out (in an pressure chamber) where my limits would be. Chris PP-ASEL, Glider New Mexico Blanche wrote: Cub Driver wrote: On 6 Nov 2004 19:20:43 -0800, (PaulH) wrote: I took my Arrow up to 10,500 today I have been skiing at Ajax (Aspen Mountain) on a regular basis for nearly forty years and have never noticed any effect on mental acuity at 11,000 feet. Of course it may be that skiers are mentally inacute to begin with. But Dan, we *start* at 5K+ MSL! I ski Loveland (10-11K) all the time with no problems. But remember, we're up and down within 15-30 min (depending on the lift lines and being amazed at where we live). Flying is something else -- we stay up there for long periods of time. My body prefers O2 any time I've over 8K MSL for more than an hour. |
#8
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Cub Driver wrote:
I have been skiing at Ajax (Aspen Mountain) on a regular basis for nearly forty years and have never noticed any effect on mental acuity at 11,000 feet. It is the very nature of hypoxia that you don't recognize it yourself. Actually, this is the point which makes it so dangerous. I'm somewhat shocked that a pilot wouldn't know this. Of course it may be that skiers are mentally inacute to begin with. One thing is to walk around (or ski around or climb around, for that matter). It's a very different thing to work mentally, as is piloting. Stefan |
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