bluebanded goby
Contributor
I'm wondering what would be a responsible level of caffeine use on diving days.
Obviously, no caffeine use at all is one healthy option. I gave up caffeine altogether for several years, but reintroduced a few sodas a day back into my habits in the last year.
On the one hand, significant caffeine use on a diving day may leave you dehydrated and pose a risk of DCS and other problems.
On the other hand, if you do normally use caffeine but abstain on a diving day, you could end up with a caffeine headache, which you might mistake for something else (subclinical DCS?).
I was thinking, therefore, that as a usual practice I might have a cup of tea or possibly a coffee immediately on waking up on a diving day (just to drive off possible caffeine headache), and then switch to copious bottled water for the rest of the day.
Does that sound like a prudent approach? If not, would anyone care to lay out a plan (besides total abtention) that would be better? Thanks for any comment.
Obviously, no caffeine use at all is one healthy option. I gave up caffeine altogether for several years, but reintroduced a few sodas a day back into my habits in the last year.
On the one hand, significant caffeine use on a diving day may leave you dehydrated and pose a risk of DCS and other problems.
On the other hand, if you do normally use caffeine but abstain on a diving day, you could end up with a caffeine headache, which you might mistake for something else (subclinical DCS?).
I was thinking, therefore, that as a usual practice I might have a cup of tea or possibly a coffee immediately on waking up on a diving day (just to drive off possible caffeine headache), and then switch to copious bottled water for the rest of the day.
Does that sound like a prudent approach? If not, would anyone care to lay out a plan (besides total abtention) that would be better? Thanks for any comment.