You are lucky.  I worked with a guy who froze his fingers in the company 
parking lot trying to get his car started in subzero weather, and lost all 
feeling in them.  Never regained it.


From: Bill Prince 
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2016 9:08 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Movie Review - minor spoiler

I'd never heard of frostnip. They did turn color over the soles, so maybe it 
was just the beginning. I remember my feet being really sensitive for a while 
afterward, and skin did sluff off the bottoms. No toe damage other than the 
darker color (not black, and I didn't lose any toes). They look kind of normal 
now.

bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 1/17/2016 6:22 AM, Lewis Bergman wrote:

  Unless your skin turned black it wasn't frostbite, it was frostnip. I have 
had it twice and it still hurts like hell but the skin doesn't die off. It does 
permanently change though. My toes still have a shiney, slick appearance they 
didn't have before. 

  But I'll give you this, as long as you never thaw those extremeties you can 
operate at a decent level. Once thawed and you actually have had some nerve 
damage it is impossible to walk, for instance, without looking like you are 
barefoot on sharp glass.

  Having said all that I hadn't considered that maybe the real story had them 
frozen the entire time and then just had to get various parts cut off.


  On Sat, Jan 16, 2016, 9:44 PM Bill Prince <[email protected]> wrote:

    It's not impossible to be in freezing water for longer periods of time.

    When I was a teenager, I and a friend got a couple of snowmobiles stuck in 
18" of frozen slush when the temp was between -10 and -20 (about -10 when we 
got the snowmobiles stuck, and about -20 two hours later when we gave up trying 
to get them completely out).

    We both fell in several times, and when we got back to the nearby cabin we 
were both near hypothermia. My jeans were coated with about a 1" thick layer of 
ice, and my boots had frozen to my feet.

    When my Dad got me home, my parents had to cut off both the jeans and the 
boots. They put me in a tub of tepid water until I started looking more normal. 
I did suffer some frostbite, and my feet still get cold faster than about any 
other part of my body.

    None-the-less, I am living proof you can get wet in freezing water, and 
survive at least a couple of hours.


bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 1/16/2016 4:02 PM, Chuck McCown wrote:

      Yep, I was in 32 degree water with ice floating on it two times.  Once 
for about 90 seconds and once for about 2 minutes.  It is an emergency for 
certain.  

      From: Lewis Bergman 
      Sent: Saturday, January 16, 2016 4:38 PM
      To: [email protected] 
      Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT Movie Review - minor spoiler

      Yea. The most obvious flaw was the ability to jump out of freezing water 
and just traipse around. You have to at least strip down and get dry clothes on 
to survive.



      On Sat, Jan 16, 2016, 5:29 PM Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

        Revenant

        Things bugged me in Gravity.  
        Similar things bugged me in Revenant.  

        While a true story, they were oblivious to the effect of hypothermia 
and cold water exposure in the winter. 
        And that old story of climbing inside the carcass of a large mammal to 
get warm has been proven false many times.  The animal gets cold about as quick 
as a steak taken off the grill in cold weather.   Hunters know that they cool 
off pretty quick.  Certainly would not retain heat all night long.  Could 
provide shelter though.  

        OK, I guess.  It appeared to have been lots of work to make.  Leo did a 
good job.  

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