UnderSeaBumbleBee
Contributor
Dave you know there are a lot of youtube clips of people rinsing. I am sure if you put one one we would all watch it. LOL We would say it was gross, but we would watch and send the link to others. 

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This has not been a stellar dive season for me. It seems I have had one sinus infection after another and it has kept me out of the water. Well one dive buddy told me to get on the bed with my head hanging back off the side and drip warm water mixed with sea salt in my nose until my sinus passages were full. Let that soak a minute and then flip over and let the crud come out on a towel.
Well the first time I did that, my buddy told me to make the stuff to strong and it burned the back of my eyes. And it took me a while to recover from the horror.
Then I was talking with someone else that does the same thing and they told me I had originally done it much too strong and that it is easier if you purchase a Nasaline giant nose syringe that holds the salt water to shoot it up your nose or to drip it in while you are on the bed with your head tipped back.
I have been doing this for a couple of weeks not and feel better than I have in months! I was scheduled to have sinus surgery and decided to put it off and give this a try. So far so good! I am only into this a couple of weeks.
It also seems that I can equalize a little easier.
So is anyone else doing this and has it improved your health? Your ability to equalize? Anything else? I was pretty skeptical, but it seems to be working.
Well said. It was because of this thread that I started rinsing. Have not anything more than an occasional sneeze in 2 years. I LOVE the sinus rinse and have recommend it to a lot of people. If someone is set off by two deaths, they might need to see the actual percentages of deaths vs. number of users and that would put in a better perspective. The fact that both deaths are in a generalized area says more about water quality than the action of rinsing. If you are unsure.. don't use tap water. Simple.A couple more things. If you are afraid of tap water, you probably should not dive. There is more stuff living in lakes, ponds, rivers the ocean etc than there is in tap water. That water will get up your nose and in your ears when you dive
Second, if two deaths is enough to stop you, diving isn't for you again. More than two people died last year diving.
Also more people died driving cars last year through no fault or error of their own.
I am in kind of a ranty mood today. I will get off the soap box, but be warned it is a slow day at work and I might be back.
and if the mucus is there, it means that bacteria and viruses are trying to attack our body. Sinus rinse gets rid of all that gunk! My nose is very clean now, and I rarely have any stuffyness. If I do.. I rinse.. Ta da! Problem solved!Not a good idea. The water could have a contaminant. 2 people in Louisiana just died from something like this using fresh water. The mucous is there for a reason- to prevent bacteria and viruses from infecting our bodies.
................As the next loads of saline are injected, I intermittently pinch the other nostril shut while saline is overflowing, thereby pressurizing my nasal passages and forcing saline into the semi-closed areas, such as sinuses and, possibly, eustachian tubes, which makes my ears pop. The air in those semi-closed areas is gradually replaced to some extent by saline. After injecting/irrigating 8-ounces of saline solution, I can actually hear it sloshing around when I shake my head. The saline continues to bathe those semi-closed passages while I finish my shower..........
Dave C
Excellent reply Dave, and not too much info, either. I'll give it a try.I hope it answers your question about the "mechanics of getting the tubes to open".
Dave C