seasickness

mattall

Earning My Ears
Joined
Feb 11, 2002
Messages
24
What have people used to avoid this? I am concerned because we are at the front of the ship on deck 6. Thanks..:)
 
My daughter got sick the first night of our cruise. We aren't sure if it was just a combination of the excitement, being tired, slightly rough seas or if it was seasickness. Anyway, the head server at dinner gave her some type of seasickness tablet (can't remember the name) that they give out free. She just went on back to the room and went to bed. The next day she was fine and also for the rest of the trip. No one else in our group of 11 got sick even though a couple of them had gotten sick on fishing excursions before.
 
Bring the Dramamine. This dosage is for children and adults alike. They sell it at Treasure Ketch. We needed it the 2nd day and the 4th day for headaches only. No adverse affects - we went to bed early and adjusted just fine. I brought the Ginger tablets and also the Bonine but just used the Dramamine - I trusted it and they were orange chewables.

Don't forget the headache stuff (Motrin) for too much sun. Don't forget the Benadryl for alergies to detergents, day at Castaway Cay (sea lice vs. snorkel vest) and too much sun. It's really costly on the ship.

Kim ºOº
 
The drugs like dramamine make u very drowsy. I brought along the arm bands for myself and my daughter. Altho we didn't have to use them at all. We let our friends at our table use them for their daughter and apparently it worked pretty well for her!
debbie
 

Do kids feel the motion like adults do? I was always under the impression that kids don't get sea sick. If thats not so let me know so I can get the childrens Dramamine. My DD's are 10 and 6.
 
Bring BONINE, NOT dramamine. Bonine is a far more effective seasickness medication, ask your pharmacist.
I travelled on an NCL boat in the north atlantic several years ago, due to a late departure we ran at full speed with NO stabilizers out in 30ft seas(we were on deck three, I was looking UP at the waves). I kid you not, NCL staff was handing out Bonine like Pez. Fully 75% of the guests AND crew were sick, restaraunts/ bars and casino were EMPTY, people literally lying on the floor in common areas. At one point the ship was rocking 20degrees from vertical, side to side...plates sliding off tables etc.
made me laugh to hear people complaining about the MINOR swells on the wonder a few weeks back... but my wife had the bonine just in case!
 
Originally posted by tschorer
Bring BONINE, NOT dramamine. Bonine is a far more effective seasickness medication, ask your pharmacist.
I've been looking into this because my daughters suffer from motion sickness (and so do I).

According to the directions, Bonine is only for adults and children 12 years of age and over. My daughters are 10 and 12, so one is qualified to take Bonine (meclizine) and the other isn't. Regular Dramamine (dimenhydrinate) can be given to children, but our experience is that it makes our daughters sleepy.

For more about Bonine, see http://www.pfizer.com/chc/bonine/

So what will we do with our 10-year old who is too young for Bonine? We'll give her Bonine anyway. We talked to her pediatrician and my family practioner. Both said we could give her Bonine. If you have a child under 12 who suffers from motion sickness and gets knocked out by regular Dramamine, consider talking to your physician also. Please don't take the advice that I got for my child as necessarily being appropriate for your child.

Bonine is one of several brand names for meclizine. Others include Antivert and Dramamine II
 
The Transderm Scop patch worked well for me on a rough Western Caribbean cruise in 1993. You stick it behind your ear. Each patch last for three days. In the United States, you need a perscription from a doctor. The Trasderm Scop patch is not for children.
 
Have never cruised before, but am bringing (and taking!) Bonine as a precautionary measure. I asked my dd (6) pediatrician, and she told me to give her 1/2 a pill. This should be fine she said.
 
Her pediatrician told me it was okay to give my DGD, who was 9 at the time of our 1st cruise, a whole bonine based on her weight - she's big for her age. He said for smaller 9 y.o. he would have started out trying 1/2 pill. My DD (adult) and I tried the patch and slept away 2/3 of our 1st cruise. It also bothered my vision so much I had to wear sunglass even in the restaurants. I am very prone to seasickness and now I take a bonine about an hour before boarding and that it. Last cruise I took a 2nd bonine one day later in the week when we were traveling fast to make up for lost time dropping off a sick crew member. Felt just a tinge queesy so I tolk it as a preventative. I was fine after that.
 
I know this is off topic, but it was mentioned on an earlier reply

...SEA LICE!???
drop.gif
What the heck is that???
 
If I remember correctley Sea lice are teeny tiny jelly-fish larve.....GROSS. We heard about them before our cruise too. I heard that they cause a red, raised rash that really, really itchs. I was told that the rash tends to be where your bathing suit would cover (seems the little buggers get caught underneath and it tends to get irritated.) We purchased some Sea Lice protectant(I kid you not) at a scuba shop but I have been told you can buy it over the web. We used the lotion (it was also a sunscreen ) and had no trouble with the little critters. I didn't hear of anyone else on the cruise that had problems with them either though. Maybe it depends on the weather?? WE were there in July. Good Luck!
 
Yes, I have seen all three medicines (Dramamine, Bonine, Antivert) at our local Walgreens!
 
My suggestion to anybody is try the meds BEFORE getting on the ship. Make sure that they do not make you just as sick as the seasickness. I have that problem and found that the wristbands were the only way to go for me. Just watch out for the funny tan lines

88 days till we leave and I can not wait!

;)
 
In SOME children I think that experiencing seasickness is psychological. My kids DS8 and DD5 seemed fine the whole trip and we experienced some rough seas. We cruised in October and faced rough seas due to a hurricane and a tropical depression a little south of us. Because seasickness is not a common concept to many children I think that if you introduce this fear that they can start to feel sick. Before the trip and during the trip we never told the kids about getting seasick. Yes, I did bring all the medicines just in case but no one complained about not feeling well. They felt a little "funny" they'd say and we'd move to another part of the ship or go to the pool (which helps with the seasick feeling) and everything would pass.

Better safe than sorry, bring the meds but let the kids judge for themselves how they feel.

I do realize that some kids are very suseptible to motion sickness and I am not negating that situation.....
 
regular dramamine causes drowsiness....
dramimine 2 doesn't and lasts 24 hours....
my daughter used to live on the stuff for road trips....
i'll stock up on bonine and dramimine 2 before the cruise, however i suspect i'm not allowed to take either of them....

and yes, children can most definitely get seasick...
i remember spending the entire transatlantic voyage in my stateroom when i was 7 years old....like the earlier post, as a result of terrible storms on the atlantic.....boy.....i can still remember that horrible feeling decades later....and it was for days on end....(the other direction i'd been fine.....the weather was perfect....on the most beautiful ship ever, the Queen Mary.....i can't wait for them to finish building her successor....i'll definitely book a trip on her at least once...)
 
Here is a website for a sealice product. Hope it helps.

My DH and I got sea lice very badly on Castaway Cay in May 2000. Would have loved to have known of this product before. I am very susceptible to this (don't know why, not allergic to anything!).

It does have to do with the time of year, wave patterns, etc. Check out the website for more.


Sea Lice product
 

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