I live in Vail Colorado 8000ft above sea level. My doc says 52% is it no higher or I will pull you script if you don’t donate. I trust the doc I have be under his care for over 5 years and he has never let me down. No one on this forum is going to convince we otherwise. I have been dialed in for that last 3 years. I know my limits and only go outside them to experiment. I’m a retired engineer and love experimenting. You know that Nelson Vergil cat probably pays for his house with all the blood tests I have purchased. HaHa engineers we love our data. Give me Microsoft Excel and a shitload of numbers and I am happy for hours.
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Hahaha, engineers are some of my favorite peoples!
Hey, btw, a little off topic, but @hrdlvn, I’ve never been able to find an adequate answer for this, but since you’re an engineer AND live at 8000 feet…what is your best idea for what causes altitude sickness? From everything I’ve ever read, they just say it’s random or idiopathic…in other words they have no fucking idea why it affects one person and not another.
You could be an Olympic athlete in their prime traveling up to Vail for the weekend with your grandma, and you get altitude sickness and she doesn’t…or vise versa…apparently.
It happened to me once (pre-trt) up at Big Bear in California, and it affected no one else. Nowadays I’m paranoid to go on trips to high altitude.