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![]() "Brian Nystrom" wrote in message ... riverman wrote: No, you're right. NOAA uses the same standard as river runners: trough to peak. But surfers (specifically Hawaiin surfers) have their own formula, and since a lot of the surfer terminology follows the fad, surfers worldwide tend to follow the Hawaiian model. Which leads to a lot of non-surfers also following the model, which leads to the confusion. Check out http://surfing.about.com/library/weekly/aa042001.htm Ah, that explains it, but that sure is a screwy way of measuring waves. As for East Coasters doubling the wave height...it's BS. I can't generalize for ALL east coasters, but it was on the right coast where I first encountered this. Some fishermen were on a raft trip, and estimated what I called a 6 foot wave as being a '3 foot wave'. I figured they just had poor spatial sense, but they explained that other fishermen also rated the sea swells from midline to peak. I've watched this happen all over, but never knew where it originated. --riverman |
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