I never have been on a airplane with my pouchy yet, I was wondering!
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It doesn't feel any different.
It also feels the same 100 feet below the surface of the ocean.
Never a weird feeling on a plane or on a train ... with a fox or on a box ... sorry, feeling kind of like Seuss this evening.
@Scott F posted:It also feels the same 100 feet below the surface of the ocean.
I am curious about the depth to which any human can dive, J Pouch or not. I was reading about that amphibious assault vehicle accident that killed 8 marines in California and it said that AAV had sunk to a depth of several hundred feet, which was too deep for divers to access the wreckage. Is 100 feet about the max depth divers can go down?
Recreational diving has a maximum depth of 120-130 feet. This is often reduced to 100 feet for practical reasons. People can go much deeper without a submersible, but elaborate measures are required: extra tanks, complex mixes of gases, and lots of decompression time on the way back up. It’s expensive and dark.
@Michael posted:Never a weird feeling on a plane or on a train ... with a fox or on a box ... sorry, feeling kind of like Seuss this evening.
Your awesome Michael! I love that!!!
I always get extra gas and rumblings when flying. I think it has more to do with the excitement of travel and a slightly different diet than the cabin altitude.
Stay safe my friends.