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imagineero wrote:
As far as hail storms go - ouch! We have about one of these a year in sydney and it seems every 2 or 3 years we get a pretty big one that makes insurance companies unhappy... Im hoping to not be more than about 10 miles offshore at any time, though if i go really far north i'll probably take the common route of sticking to islands to avoid crocodiles. My wetsuit wont help me much if i bump into one of these hungry lizards ;-) Shaun My usual winter sailing attire is a wetsuit over the usual sort of base layer and on top of that a thick jersey (guernsey actually) and depending on the weather either a spray top or full offshore foulies over the top. As to the hailstorm, it was late march on the south coast. I was out on a small cat. Saw the clouds gathering behind a fairly high point a couple of miles away and thought it looked a bit dodgy. Then it became apparent it was heading our way. Didn't look too bad, no thunder, then. As it came accross the point the thunder & lightning started. At that point I wanted off the water *fast* I started heading for the nearest shore but the wind had dropped to nearly nothing (inflow into the circulation cell?) and I could see a line of white accross the water sweeping down from the point. I figured it would be best to meet it on one bow rather than abeam or astern so I put the boat on a close reach and overhauled the mainsheet so it was fully slack and freed the traveller. Then it hit. Whiteout. Freezing horizontal rain and wild windshifts. We were coping reasonably well but were fairly disoriented (no compass). Then the hail started. In about a minute the trampoline collected at least an inch of ice. We were hunkered down trying to protect our faces. The wind had eased slightly but was still sliceing the hail at us. I decided to run off before it as we couldn't stand the speed the hail was hitting us at nor see anything to windward. I steered off onto a run and my crew hastily joined me on the aft windward corner of the tramp to keep the lee bow up. The rudders were singing and the vibration through the tiller was pretty fierce. I have no idea how fast we were going. I could see a lighter patch ahead and the hail was easing so I steered for it. When I finally got out from under the storm we still had a couple of inches of ice on the tramp inspite of the spray washing over it at high speed and we were over a mile from where it had hit us. We beached as soon as we could as we could still hear thunder and feared another cell was developing. Size estimates of the hail stones were from looking at the half melted remmnants on the tramp. There cant have been a lot of 1" ones or we'd not have made it, and even through wetsuits, heavy jerseys and foulies we had a fair number of bruises. Haven't done much cat sailing since :-) -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: 'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed, All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy. |