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Ok, yeah from what little I have read, Sufer's Ear - a totally different problem entirely - is more common in cold water.Sorry I meant Surfer's Ear not swimmers:11:
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Ok, yeah from what little I have read, Sufer's Ear - a totally different problem entirely - is more common in cold water.Sorry I meant Surfer's Ear not swimmers:11:
b) One dive I equalize a little bit too less (objective was to go down as fast as possible and i had some equipment problems and equalized like in the past just when I feel a slight pressure in the ears). = on the next day I had that "water in the ear" feeling again.
h90, could you elaborate on this a little? I didn't think it was possible to equalize too often. However, from what others have written in this forum, it seems easy to equalize too hard, and several knowledgeable divers have posted here misgivings about the 'pinch the nose and blow' Valsalva-type equalization, because of the risk of self-injury. Do you think this might have happened to you?
It's not. He actually said "One dive I equalize a little bit too less," which I take to mean he didn't equalize as much as on the others - and the problem returned.h90, could you elaborate on this a little? I didn't think it was possible to equalize too often. However, from what others have written in this forum, it seems easy to equalize too hard, and several knowledgeable divers have posted here misgivings about the 'pinch the nose and blow' Valsalva-type equalization, because of the risk of self-injury. Do you think this might have happened to you?
h90, could you elaborate on this a little? I didn't think it was possible to equalize too often. However, from what others have written in this forum, it seems easy to equalize too hard, and several knowledgeable divers have posted here misgivings about the 'pinch the nose and blow' Valsalva-type equalization, because of the risk of self-injury. Do you think this might have happened to you?