Why do some people get carsick and others don’t?

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Source: Radio New Zealand

Jan Parkes’ early travel blogging trips to Fiordland were seven hours on the road with a baby who wasn’t even walking yet.

But with a travel-writing, photography-toting mum who’s covered most of the South Island and 40 countries, her three children (now aged between 7 and 12) learned to take life on the road in their stride.

They rarely get sick while travelling, but Parkes knows the warning signs. The moment a small voice pipes up with “I don’t feel so good,” the mum radar switches on.

Windy roads can increase the chances of motion sickness. (file images)

Unsplash / Getty Images

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