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JAXAshby
 
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Default Radar on a cell phone

jerry, what a yo-yo are.

while thunderstorms *move* from the sw to the ne, the ROUGHEST frickin' winds
come when the darkest (ya no, as in frickin' DARK) cloud are ta da north of ya.

jerry, you read waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too many books without actually
gittin' out out on da watah to see WTF es happin'

In article ,
(JAXAshby) wrote:

you're worrying about not knowing when thunderstorms are immenent on the
Chesepeake? Why? You can see the clouds. The thunderstorm is north of

you,
get your sails down and your engine running.


Chesapeake squalls can move! 20-25 knots isn't unusual and they pack
50-70 knot winds at least once a season. They're usually from the SW,
but can blow up east or west of an obvious cell in minutes. (If the
squall is to the north, you're usually safe.) Sometimes you can see the
squall or line, sometimes it's imbedded, and it often doesn't include
thunder or lightning.

If I had a radar and a crew member to study it constantly, I'd add it to
the arsenal, but I have neither.

Personally, I depend upon the weather warnings as THEY can keep their
heads buried in their far superior radars while I handle the boat and
watch the sky.

They've gotten pretty good about tracking squalls. Last Labor Day
weekend, they announced one was going to hit Dove Cove, within eyesight
of our marina and where a friend of ours was anchored at the time. It
hit just where and when they predicted. I couldn't see any obvious
warning signs just 5 nm away.

The next weekend, we heard a warning while under bright sunshine. As we
were in an open anchorage with poorish holding, we (6-7 boats) unrafted,
moved to a better spot about 2 miles up the river and got our anchors
down just as the squall hit. A couple of miles south, 26 or 28 boats
didn't hear or act and wound up on the shore. (One of them was a
dockmate that WAS properly anchored but got dragged down on twice by the
same boat.)

--
Jere Lull
Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD)
Xan's Pages:
http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html
Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/








  #2   Report Post  
Jere Lull
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar on a cell phone

In article ,
(JAXAshby) wrote:

jerry, what a yo-yo are.

while thunderstorms *move* from the sw to the ne, the ROUGHEST frickin' winds
come when the darkest (ya no, as in frickin' DARK) cloud are ta da north of
ya.

jerry, you read waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too many books without actually
gittin' out out on da watah to see WTF es happin'


It's Jere, not jerry....

What I wrote was not "book reading". It was 20 years' experience on the
Chesapeake, easily 1000 days away from the dock.

Your area may have different characteristics, probably does. What you
have learned may not serve you well if you wander onto the Bay.

Related story from a friend: He befriended a UK family just starting
onto the Bay for a season's cruising before they completed their
circumnavigation. He warned them of squalls. They pooh-poohed the
warnings. After all, they had 20-30k miles under that stout boat's keel,
had been brushed (once hard) by several hurricanes or cyclones, and had
experienced lots of "weather". Simple thunderstorms didn't bother them
much.

A week or so later, they left the Potomac north bound. North of the
Solomons, they found out what the warnings were all about. They were SO
shaken that they returned to the Potomac that they knew rather than the
Solomons that seemed tight under the conditions.

Our friend didn't pay for any drinks when next they met.

--
Jere Lull
Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD)
Xan's Pages:
http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html
Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/
  #3   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar on a cell phone

right, jerry, in the Chesey the REALLY strong winds in a thunderstorm are in
the NW quadrant, and the storms move in from the NE. The rest of the n.
hemisphere follows its own path.

In article ,
(JAXAshby) wrote:

jerry, what a yo-yo are.

while thunderstorms *move* from the sw to the ne, the ROUGHEST frickin'

winds
come when the darkest (ya no, as in frickin' DARK) cloud are ta da north of


ya.

jerry, you read waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too many books without actually
gittin' out out on da watah to see WTF es happin'


It's Jere, not jerry....

What I wrote was not "book reading". It was 20 years' experience on the
Chesapeake, easily 1000 days away from the dock.

Your area may have different characteristics, probably does. What you
have learned may not serve you well if you wander onto the Bay.

Related story from a friend: He befriended a UK family just starting
onto the Bay for a season's cruising before they completed their
circumnavigation. He warned them of squalls. They pooh-poohed the
warnings. After all, they had 20-30k miles under that stout boat's keel,
had been brushed (once hard) by several hurricanes or cyclones, and had
experienced lots of "weather". Simple thunderstorms didn't bother them
much.

A week or so later, they left the Potomac north bound. North of the
Solomons, they found out what the warnings were all about. They were SO
shaken that they returned to the Potomac that they knew rather than the
Solomons that seemed tight under the conditions.

Our friend didn't pay for any drinks when next they met.

--
Jere Lull
Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD)
Xan's Pages:
http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html
Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/








  #4   Report Post  
Sheldon Haynie
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

Hmm.. I have rarely seen T-storms at night, course my eyes are not that good
as some.

Foregoing Vitriol, raving and puffery deleted..

As part of keeping your log with regular observations at say even bells.
SOP in Lioness is to plot position and sweep the radar to look for vessels
and thunderclouds.

With 48 mile range you do get a good warning. A cell phone that gave you a
message on weather would be nice, yet does not work offshore.


Course if all you do is sail in category 4 water it is no biggie.

Sheldon

  #5   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night, either, but have seen them
on land (way inland) on more than a couple occassions.

Hmm.. I have rarely seen T-storms at night, course my eyes are not that good
as some.

Foregoing Vitriol, raving and puffery deleted..

As part of keeping your log with regular observations at say even bells.
SOP in Lioness is to plot position and sweep the radar to look for vessels
and thunderclouds.

With 48 mile range you do get a good warning. A cell phone that gave you a
message on weather would be nice, yet does not work offshore.


Course if all you do is sail in category 4 water it is no biggie.

Sheldon











  #6   Report Post  
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

JAXAshby wrote:
I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night,


And there's a very good reason, which we can all easily guess

DSK

  #7   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

''cuz they don't happen at night, or 'cuz if one happened at night I would be
off watch and thus asleep below?

JAXAshby wrote:
I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night,


And there's a very good reason, which we can all easily guess

DSK









  #8   Report Post  
JAXAshby
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

''cuz they don't happen at night, or 'cuz if one happened at night I would be
off watch and thus asleep below?

JAXAshby wrote:
I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night,


And there's a very good reason, which we can all easily guess

DSK









  #9   Report Post  
DSK
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

JAXAshby wrote:
I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night,


And there's a very good reason, which we can all easily guess

DSK

  #10   Report Post  
Ken Heaton
 
Posts: n/a
Default Radar for weather at NIGHT Was Radar on a cell phone

I live in small coastal city, and for 15 years I had an apartment 2 blocks
from the waterfront of the harbour. This would be about 3 miles up the
harbour from the Atlantic coast itself. I remember a night a thunderstorm
woke me up as it put on its light show overhead. Then it hit the radio
station across the street. That was spectacular. And deafening. It was a
couple of days before they were back on the air.
Are thunderstorms uncommon at night? Seems around here they are as common
during the night as during the day.
--
Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin
Cape Breton Island, Canada
kenheaton AT ess wye dee DOT eastlink DOT ca

"JAXAshby" wrote in message
...
I have never seen a thunderstorm offshore at night, either, but have seen

them
on land (way inland) on more than a couple occassions.

Hmm.. I have rarely seen T-storms at night, course my eyes are not that

good
as some.

Foregoing Vitriol, raving and puffery deleted..

As part of keeping your log with regular observations at say even bells.
SOP in Lioness is to plot position and sweep the radar to look for

vessels
and thunderclouds.

With 48 mile range you do get a good warning. A cell phone that gave you

a
message on weather would be nice, yet does not work offshore.


Course if all you do is sail in category 4 water it is no biggie.

Sheldon













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