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On Fri, 02 Mar 2007 08:05:53 -0500, Roger Long wrote:
Shaun Van Poecke wrote: When sailing in shallow waters, what do you allow for swell/waves? Half the wave is down and half the wave is up so, if you are cutting it real close and just worried about bumping the keel, you subtract half the height. That's a little nuts though because bigger waves come along, soundings are scattered, old mooring blocks and other stuff gets left on the bottom, etc. Exactly. I never cut it that close. If the waves are big enough to worry about this, the real issue is breaking waves. Any time you are in water less than about twice the depth of the average size waves going by, there is the possibility of one of the few largest waves of the day breaking on that spot. If you think a wave twice the size of the average breaking hard on your boat would create more excitement than you care to deal with, you should keep at least twice the average wave height under your keel and a little more when passing over isolated ledges. Shallow water may cause steep waves, but prevents them from building beyond a certain point. So you don't have to worry about the occasional huge wave in shallow water like you do in the open ocean. Matt O. |