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On Jul 28, 10:41*am, wrote:
... I've heard others say the same thing, but the truth is, it matters where you sail. In the Long Island Sound and surrounding area, NOAA marine forecasts are worthless. After years of checking 5 different forecasts including NOAA whenever I needed one, I finally determined that Accuweather is the most reliable forecaster in my area. I don't know the reason, but that's the situation here. Don't get me wrong. My first point was that weather forecasts are not very reliable and, even if they come in slick digital packages, need to be checked against the reality of conditions around you. The argument I was trying to make in the post you replied to was that if the forecast is bad near shore it will probably be worse offshore all else being equal. Here in the Pacific doing my own routing and helping others with theirs my experiences with NOAA's ocean forecasts and wx faxes has not been good. One nice feature of NOAA forecasts is that they are signed by the forecaster and I have found that some forecasters are better than others and some are more interested in marine weather than others. Reading the "discussion" can provide a feel for the local abilities and bents. Some of the NOAA guys do way worse on average than the models. If you are in one of those places and it matters to you I'd suggest making an effort to get meso scale model data, particularly NAM. FWIW, I get my NAM charts from buoyweather.com (I find the slp/rain chart very useful). I think it's worth the subscription fee. You can get the data in lots of wrappers for free from NOAA but it is based on an LC projection so it doesn't work well with my viewer or with the saildocs chopper. I get COAMPS free from saildocs. I find it a little less good on average than NAM and the Navy doesn't put COAMPS out when they are using their computers for other things so it isn't always available. Anyway, my motivation for all this typing is that every year I hear the new guys getting all excited about their GRIBs and so on at the start of the voyaging season only to hear them complain bitterly when it turns out that the GRIBs are actually less accurate than the local wx products they've been dising for years. Yes, every year the wx forecasting seems to get a bit better but it is a long way from reliable and it is important to be skeptical and keep a weather eye open. It sounded to me like Skip was pretty excited about all his new wx inputs, and I'm glad he's got them, but I wanted to point out that, regardless of how much they cost or how pretty the charts, they need to be looked as the very fallible things they are. -- Tom. |
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