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The tutorial in the Coastside link has charts included.
"Sal's Dad" wrote in message ... The only chart I found online is at http://historicals.ncd.noaa.gov/historicals/histmap.asp ; go to "Entrance to San Francisco Bay" 1974 # 5532 - download 5532_1-1974 and zoom in. Zooming in on the southern end of the bridge, you can see that between Fort Point and the South Tower it shoals - from 200-300' in the main channel, to 30' or so where the capsize occurred. The shipping channel under the main span stays 200-300'. Once past the bridge, the harbor widens immediately; presumably the first pier is the one seen in the later photos. Sal's Dad "Calif Bill" wrote in message nk.net... A tutorial on the gate and bars on local fishing site. Includes charts. http://coastsidefishingclub.com/drupal/?q=node/view/58 "Brian D" wrote in message ... And swells coming in through a narrow channel accelerate through the constriction. Some won't have been large enough to break, while others will be. I think that might be why there's a long period between rollers in the picture sequence (of an obviously dangerous place, else why was someone rushing to get the camera out BEFORE anything bad happened?). Also, ships moving through the channel disrupt the swells, or create their own too. Brian D "Sal's Dad" wrote in message ... After looking at many wave photos on this page, I think wave behavior in that location is different than I am used to. This place seems to have a very long period between waves with nearly flat water between them, weird. Was probably a 10-14' swell day with 13-15 second period. You have to remember the waves hitting here have a couple of thousand miles of open ocean to build in. Keep in mind these are not traditional breakers, rolling into a beach, but swells coming through a narrow channel - not very shallow water, but still a bar with suddenly shallower depths. For more info: http://www.surfline.com/travel/surfm...fort_point.cfm It appears the tide was coming in, so the boat was caught in one breaker - rolled and dismasted - continued drifting under the bridge where the wash of a second wave rolled it again, and then into the relatively calm water of the bay. |
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