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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    West Virginia
    Posts
    238

    Things I learned, a little griping (kinda long)

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    Hi All,
    Ok, I learned something very important today...it is, indeed, possible to get motion sickness while riding a bike. This has never happened to me before. I was riding along the trail admiring the fall colors as I have before only this time I had watch because there were a lot of things I had to watch out for (sticks, walnuts, etc) and I actually got queasy. Then...well I won't gross you out but it wasn't pretty. I kept going but I couldn't watch the trail directly in front of me. Then it almost happened again when I was on the road by the river and the shadows got to me. I have no idea why. But, ick, that wasn't fun.

    Griping:
    I almost got hit twice today! I do not understand why these people cannot slow down for like 2 seconds to pass me at a respectable speed. Grr.
    Okay, I'm done.
    Hope you all are haviing a good day.
    Gray
    Re-examine all that you have been told... dismiss that which insults your soul.
    Walt Whitman

    My blog: A Gamut of Interests

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Seminole, FL
    Posts
    268

    Smile

    Grayson: Motion sickness, or benign positional vertigo? I have the vertigo and if I look up a certain way with my head tilted, the spinning will start and that will cause nausea. I was diagnosed with it last year and luckily for me, due to my doctor visit I found out about a blocked artery when my EKG showed a problem. The vertigo can be managed with motion sickness tablets, but it has gotten considerably better for me just on its own. But I have the vertigo and my quick thinking doctor to thank for saving my life last year. You might want to check with your doctor.
    “No Bird Soars Too High If He Soars With His Own Wings” ~ William Blake

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    1,708
    I get motion sickness really easy. For a car ride, I must be driving or in the front, or forget it. I'm not totally sure what that is. There's a good point made already about check it out for any health reasons. Many things can cause that (blood pressure, vision issues, medicine side effects, etc.).

    I was thinking... ya don't have a bun in the oven, do ya?

    Holy cack balls... my first kid I was SO sure I was not prego. I had heard of people getting morning sickness, but I had my first bout of weird evening/night sickness. I thought there was no way... welp, sure enough along came DD.

    That's too bad about car incident. People in their 2ton killing machines can be freakin crazy. I have wanted to yell sometimes, "hey, I pay road tax too you know!", but the 2ton dis-advantage stops me.

    I do always try to give a wave or some type of gesture to those drivers that do give the fair way. My hope is that they might re-tell the story to a crazy who normally does not.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411
    Quote Originally Posted by GraysonKelly View Post
    I almost got hit twice today! I do not understand why these people cannot slow down for like 2 seconds to pass me at a respectable speed. Grr.
    Hi Gray,
    It is pretty unusual to almost get hit by cars twice in one day. If these near-misses keep happening, then it might indicate that you need to change something about how you are riding in certain situations. When I first started riding in traffic, I used to think I was doing all the right things to be super safe....later I realized that by doing some of those things I was actually putting myself into dangerous traffic situations. Now I ride a lot differently and it is rare that I find myself in a dangerous position these days.

    I agree with wildhawk that if you keep getting nauseous on your bike you should get a doctor's checkup- nausea upon exertion can indeed be a symptom of heart trouble, as can 'upset stomach' pain when exercising.
    I assume you don't ride on an empty stomach and are getting enough riding fuel and water?
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    West Virginia
    Posts
    238
    I just had an EKG done at work and everything is actually better than it was before. I deeply appreciate the advice and if it happens again I will visit the doc. I have issues with my tummy anyway and the doc knows and has ruled out heart trouble. It really was just kind of weird. I was looking at the ground with all those leaves different colors and trying hard to focus to see anything that might cause me to wreck and whammo. But I won't mess around with it. Thank you all for your concern.
    As far as almost getting hit, I think I'm doing things right. There are just not a lot of roads around here that have a decent shoulder to ride on. I explained the one situation in my other post "Did I do something wrong?" The other "near miss" was along the river road. There's no shoulder and I ride the white line as much as possible (WV roads tend to be really bad and sometimes the white line is non existent but I still ride as far to the right as I can get. This truck just didn't bother to move over. The opposite lane was straight and clear and I'm pretty sure he was going way over the speed limit. Scared me to death. Am I doing it right?
    Gray
    Re-examine all that you have been told... dismiss that which insults your soul.
    Walt Whitman

    My blog: A Gamut of Interests

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
    Posts
    359
    Kinda funny, I noticed this wknd that riding on trails with lots of leaves on them of a pinkish color makes me dizzy. It's like information overload. Kind of like when someone wears that black and white check crazy pattern on a shirt and then they move...whoa! Just the light pink ones do it, which I think are red ones laying underside up.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by GraysonKelly View Post
    I ride the white line as much as possible... as far to the right as I can get.
    That's been gone over pretty thoroughly in the other thread... but there's your problem. When there's no room for a car to pass you safely while sharing the lane with you, claim the lane so cars don't try to share.

    Also, you need to ride far enough to the left that you won't run over gratings, and that if you encounter a pothole or debris in your line of travel, you'll be able to swerve right to miss it, not left into traffic.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    West Virginia
    Posts
    238
    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    That's been gone over pretty thoroughly in the other thread... but there's your problem. When there's no room for a car to pass you safely while sharing the lane with you, claim the lane so cars don't try to share.

    Also, you need to ride far enough to the left that you won't run over gratings, and that if you encounter a pothole or debris in your line of travel, you'll be able to swerve right to miss it, not left into traffic.
    Wow! I didn't know I was allowed to do that. That will make my life so much easier. Thank you so much! All of you, thank you so much.
    Gray
    Re-examine all that you have been told... dismiss that which insults your soul.
    Walt Whitman

    My blog: A Gamut of Interests

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    3,151
    You're not just allowed to. It's much safer. Drivers generally don't even perceive that you're there when you're hugging the line and being a "gutter bunny."

    You don't have to get out into the middle - but easing out means taht a: you're not actually *weaving* to get around edge stuff, and more importantly, b: drivers perceive you as a slwo-moving vehicle in the road (not a pedestrian-like object on the side of the road, which they don't have to worry about) and are about 100 times as likely to bother to move around you.

    I was doing a long ride with a guy on a two lane road when I had only read about this. People had talked about it being important to "be assertive" and I figured I didn't *care* about assertiveness, I cared about being alive, but then I'd read also that it was safer. At that point I didn't have too many situations in daily riding where it came into play.
    When my friend noted that the drivers seemed to be a whole bunch of jerks, I said, "this is where the experts say we should be out further in the lane." We moved out.
    The drivers got better. Instantly.
    We stopped for a snack. We went back out. The drivers were jerks, buzzing by us.
    We remembered to move out. Now the good drivers were driving!

    Now, this road wasn't so busy that drivers had to wait for oncoming traffic except a handful of times, but we didn't get a *single* honk or rude gesture or anything, and we were on that road for about 30 miles.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    3,151
    OH, and I have a trick stomach: if I drink my morning tea and forget to eat enough, it bounces back half an hour later. When it happened on the bike, I thought, "oh, yea, it was strong tea but naw, that's not really nausea..." because it did feel a bit different 'cause I was using muscles down there...
    The reality happened so fast that I *hope* I was invisible to the poor driver who was going by about that time.

 

 

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