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#12
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wrote in message . ..
On 14 Apr 2004 11:12:33 -0700, (basskisser) wrote: wrote in message . .. Hi, I have a boat on Lake Lanier in GA. The other morning I took it out, and the overall wave action appeared to be different than usual. It was a flat calm day, except when a passing boat produced some waves. Most of the time the waves seem to be sort of peaked and a bit sharp, but on this morning they were more rounded and flatter. The first boat I noticed it from, I thought it might be simply due to the shape of the boat itself. But after a while I noticed it was true of all of them...which was cool with me because it meant I could go faster without getting tossed in the air too much. It still made me wonder *why* though. Could it have something to do with what creates high and low tides, and/or why sometimes when you dig a hole you seem to have more dirt than you took out and sometimes you seem to have less? If so, is there a way to predict when waves will tend to be sharper and when they will tend to be flatter, like people can predict high and low tides? I fish Lanier, where on the lake are you? At Holiday Marina. I don't fish, but if you'd want to hook up and go for a boat ride--houseboat, runabout, and/or paddle around in a kayak --let me know. So far I haven't met anyone from a news group, and that would be cool for me. I'm at R17. Give me a call at 678-714-5764, or an email at sometime if you want. If you send an email be sure to mention something about Lanier or the like so I know it's not spam, 'cause I get about a hundred spams a day. Cool, I'll do it. I sometimes put my bass boat in at Aqualand, but mostly Shoal Creek. Holiday Marina is nice. Do you live on your houseboat? I'll email you, possibly going fishing next weekend. |
#13
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There's a treatment of this subject in 'The American Practical Navigator'
('Bowditch'). Wave height and period are a function of wind strength and the time and distance that the wind has had to build them up. If the fetch is across a large body of water, waves will be higher. If the wind has only recently risen, the waves will be flatter. Rain smooths small waves further. Icing smooths things, too. If there's been a large wind shift, waves will be irregular. Shallow water makes makes waves shorter and steeper. wrote: Hi, I have a boat on Lake Lanier in GA. The other morning I took it out, and the overall wave action appeared to be different than usual. It was a flat calm day, except when a passing boat produced some waves. Most of the time the waves seem to be sort of peaked and a bit sharp, but on this morning they were more rounded and flatter. The first boat I noticed it from, I thought it might be simply due to the shape of the boat itself. But after a while I noticed it was true of all of them...which was cool with me because it meant I could go faster without getting tossed in the air too much. It still made me wonder *why* though. Could it have something to do with what creates high and low tides, and/or why sometimes when you dig a hole you seem to have more dirt than you took out and sometimes you seem to have less? If so, is there a way to predict when waves will tend to be sharper and when they will tend to be flatter, like people can predict high and low tides? |
#14
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#15
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On 16 Apr 2004 10:51:22 -0700, (basskisser) wrote:
wrote in message . .. On 14 Apr 2004 11:12:33 -0700, (basskisser) wrote: wrote in message . .. Hi, I have a boat on Lake Lanier in GA. The other morning I took it out, and the overall wave action appeared to be different than usual. It was a flat calm day, except when a passing boat produced some waves. Most of the time the waves seem to be sort of peaked and a bit sharp, but on this morning they were more rounded and flatter. The first boat I noticed it from, I thought it might be simply due to the shape of the boat itself. But after a while I noticed it was true of all of them...which was cool with me because it meant I could go faster without getting tossed in the air too much. It still made me wonder *why* though. Could it have something to do with what creates high and low tides, and/or why sometimes when you dig a hole you seem to have more dirt than you took out and sometimes you seem to have less? If so, is there a way to predict when waves will tend to be sharper and when they will tend to be flatter, like people can predict high and low tides? I fish Lanier, where on the lake are you? At Holiday Marina. I don't fish, but if you'd want to hook up and go for a boat ride--houseboat, runabout, and/or paddle around in a kayak --let me know. So far I haven't met anyone from a news group, and that would be cool for me. I'm at R17. Give me a call at 678-714-5764, or an email at sometime if you want. If you send an email be sure to mention something about Lanier or the like so I know it's not spam, 'cause I get about a hundred spams a day. Cool, I'll do it. I sometimes put my bass boat in at Aqualand, but mostly Shoal Creek. Holiday Marina is nice. Do you live on your houseboat? I wish. I'll email you, Good deal. possibly going fishing next weekend. Good luck...to you, not the fish :-) |
#16
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David Harrison wrote:
At Holiday Marina. I don't fish, but if you'd want to hook up and go for a boat ride--houseboat, runabout, and/or paddle around in a kayak --let me know. So far I haven't met anyone from a news group, and that would be cool for me. I'm at R17. Give me a call at 678-714-5764, or an email at sometime if you want. If you send an email be sure to mention something about Lanier or the like so I know it's not spam, 'cause I get about a hundred spams a day. |
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