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#1
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I said, "a lot"; not "most". I would agree that anyone who sails regularly
or cruises any distance has probably seen 30 or higher. A lot of people who daysail occasionally and pick their weather may think they have seen 30 but probably haven't. I realized today that I've forgotten just how strong 22 gusting 32 feels and how easy it would be to thing it was much more, especially if you were banging around in a boat. I've spent most of the last decade flying and I mostly stay in when it gets over 20. I know I've seen more. I remember trying to head out in a catboat when I was really young and foolish. Two reefs weren't enough so I put in the third which put about 18 inches between the tack and throat, basically just the peak of the gaff as a storm sail. I couldn't make any progress to windward so I dropped the sail and started running back into Tenants Harbor under the bare pole. I started the engine and couldn't seem to get it to go into gear. It just kept racing like the prop wasn't engaged. I was in a panic because the end of the harbor was coming up fast and I had no power. I realized just in time that the boat was going so fast under the mast alone that the prop was being pulled through the water faster than the engine usually pushed the boat. The engine took hold when I rounded up fast to grab a mooring. It wouldn't push the boat to windward but it held it long enough for me to run forward and grab the buoy. Otherwise, I would have been on the beach. I have no idea what it was blowing that day but, just before I turned around, the splume blowing across the surface looked just like snow blowing across a road, not streaks on the water but streams of spray blowing at wind speed. BTW the airport says it's 22 gusting 45 now. It's a dark and stormy night for sure. -- Roger Long "Max Mustermann" wrote in message age.info... On Thu, 23 Dec 2004, "Roger Long" wrote: Snipped When I got back inside, I got out my cell phone and dialed the weather number in the control tower. "22 gusting to 32" and this is measured 50 to 60 feet up in the clear air above the wind gradient. I'll bet there are a lot of sailors, probably some in this newsgroup, who have never seen 30 knots of wind while out on the water. -- Roger Long Roger, you have to get out more. You're referring to a barely Fresh breeze. Have a look at the following link: http://www.world-of-islands.com/Info...eaufort_en.htm I would have to say most of us regular boaters have been on the water in a 30+ breeze. Might not have liked it, but dealt with it OK. |
#2
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****. It really is a bad night. The airport just called to tell me that
the big twin on the next tie down jumped its chocks and blew into our plane. I'm waiting for a damage report. -- Roger Long |
#3
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Roger Long wrote:
****. It really is a bad night. The airport just called to tell me that the big twin on the next tie down jumped its chocks and blew into our plane. I'm waiting for a damage report. This sounds similar to a sailing situation. For example, one of the reasons I vacated the boatyard and anchored off during H. Gloria (1985) was concern that other boats in the yard could have given me problems. I took a lot of "heat" from the Dock Committee for this choice, but then ... -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.home.comcast.net/ |
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