Dag said: (among other things) -- > Of course the situation is more detailed. Among other things it > depends on when you lost the stereoscopic vision (I lost mine at the > worst time, around 2-3), if you have any cooperation between the eyes > at all (I don�t, some do) and a lot on practice. I did manage to play > table tennis after a lot of training, but only back hand. > > Fast downhill skiing is something else, I do that too. Usually you > know how far away the slope is, because you know where your feet are. > Jumping between boulders on trips into the mountains is dangerous, > because it is difficult to see the how big a rock is. The difference > between 50cm and 150cm height hurts, especially with 20 kilos on your > back...
I don't think I ever had binocular vision. Know exactly what you mean about jumping rocks ... and I'm not terribly confident going downhill in unfamiliar territory in flat light. What was also interesting was when I tried skeet shooting. From some stations I could hit the target beautifully; some stations were hit and miss; and from one station I never even *saw* the target. ERN

