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#1
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On Mon, 15 Mar 2004 20:50:46 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote: http://tv-antenna.com/heavy-seas/ My Dad and his war buddies used to tell tales of things like this on North Atlantic convoy duty - he commanded a DE and often said that he sometimes spent more time under water than on top of it. Great pictures. Thanks for the link. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 |
#2
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 15 Mar 2004 20:50:46 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: http://tv-antenna.com/heavy-seas/ My Dad and his war buddies used to tell tales of things like this on North Atlantic convoy duty - he commanded a DE and often said that he sometimes spent more time under water than on top of it. Great pictures. Thanks for the link. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 Had a roommate in school that had been on the Bonne Homme Richard carrier during a typhoon. HE said they had green water tolling down the deck, and never figured out how the DE's and destroyers survived. Bill |
#3
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On Mon, 15 Mar 2004 22:48:04 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 15 Mar 2004 20:50:46 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: http://tv-antenna.com/heavy-seas/ My Dad and his war buddies used to tell tales of things like this on North Atlantic convoy duty - he commanded a DE and often said that he sometimes spent more time under water than on top of it. Great pictures. Thanks for the link. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 Had a roommate in school that had been on the Bonne Homme Richard carrier during a typhoon. HE said they had green water tolling down the deck, and never figured out how the DE's and destroyers survived. My Dad and three his friends (along with others) were co-opted from the USCG into the Navy expressly for the purpose of DE duty. They were classmates and all four eventually ended up in the South Pacific on DDs. Man, the tales they told - unbelievable. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 |
#4
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I always get a kick out of seeing that picture, having spent a good deal
of time on that ship in similar conditions, including one time having to go forward to close the door on the foc'sle, which led below to the "rope" locker. otn |
#5
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otnmbrd wrote:
I always get a kick out of seeing that picture, having spent a good deal of time on that ship in similar conditions, Spent a week in same conditions one Christmas near the dateline on the "Kenai" running from Valdez to Tsingtao. Winds over 100kn sustained, waves over 100 feet. On the crests it was impossible to tell the difference between the air and the water. The noise alone was enough to write sea stories about. The sound of the wind was only drowned out by the sound of books, TV sets, refrigerators, and the contents of closets and desks crashing from bulkhead to bulkhead in the room above as the ship rolled. We lost 5 liferafts, about 200 feet of railing, the ladders on the kingposts, stove in the overhead above the cross passage and wiped off most of the strain gauges on the main deck. There was no way in hell any human could have survived a trip to the foc'sle. Well, maybe Jax could, and he probably did near the rocks off Cape Hatteras where the Gulf Stream lurks. Rick |
#6
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I don't remember, was "Kenai" a flush deck or raised foc'sle ship? (If
flush deck, going to the foc'sle in even relatively calm conditions could be dangerous to ones health.) In the storm in question, seas were running @60'. The Captain slowed down to basically "hove too" and headed directly into the seas. On that ship, the raised foc'sle was @30'-40' above the water when loaded and in that condition was only taking spray (trust me, we watched for awhile). If you look at the picture, you'll see that along the center catwalk, there are a number of places you could go too (deepwell pump houses) for protection. I was able to get forward (damn spray and rain STINGS at those wind speeds) secure the door, check for other damage (there was a good deal of it), retrieve the ship's bell (it had been broken off and was lodged in between some piping) and then head back. About halfway back, the old man blew the whistle to warn me of a "big one" coming ..... he says that's the fastest he ever saw me move. Also, if you look at the picture of the foremast, in this storm the brackets for all the deck lights (near the top of the mast) were bent up from seas coming aboard. (Ship in question ... Delaware Trader). otn Rick wrote: otnmbrd wrote: I always get a kick out of seeing that picture, having spent a good deal of time on that ship in similar conditions, Spent a week in same conditions one Christmas near the dateline on the "Kenai" running from Valdez to Tsingtao. Winds over 100kn sustained, waves over 100 feet. On the crests it was impossible to tell the difference between the air and the water. The noise alone was enough to write sea stories about. The sound of the wind was only drowned out by the sound of books, TV sets, refrigerators, and the contents of closets and desks crashing from bulkhead to bulkhead in the room above as the ship rolled. We lost 5 liferafts, about 200 feet of railing, the ladders on the kingposts, stove in the overhead above the cross passage and wiped off most of the strain gauges on the main deck. There was no way in hell any human could have survived a trip to the foc'sle. Well, maybe Jax could, and he probably did near the rocks off Cape Hatteras where the Gulf Stream lurks. Rick |
#7
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otnmbrd wrote:
I don't remember, was "Kenai" a flush deck or raised foc'sle ship? (If flush deck, going to the foc'sle in even relatively calm conditions could be dangerous to ones health.) Kenai has raised foc'sle. We were hove to trying to maintain steerage to keep the bow about 45 degrees or so to the seas. Making about 40 turns or so, was really grim listening to the engine, hoping that we wouldn't lose the plant. Even hove to we were rolling so badly it tore the Sat-A off the mount and snapped the HF whips. We had a "hydrostatic" load on board but still had a good deal of freeboard but there was no way to avoid taking seas when the roll was out of phase. It was the most incredible storm I have ever experienced in quite a few years at sea. No one even spoke for days, too exhausted, too stressed to do anything other than minimal movement to go on watch, no hot food for the whole week. What amazed me was the pressure of the water was enough to bend a perfect curve in the ladders on the kingposts ... the idea that the water could bend that steel when the only area it found was about 3 inches wide on the side straps. The sight of the deck movement was awe inspiring, thank heavens it was not one of the high tensile hulls like the Keystone Canyon or Atigun Pass. We found a few cracks on our return though. The Kenai has shelters and breakwaters at a couple of spots along the deck but still there was no way to go on deck. Not even on the stern. One less interesting trip the C/M and bosun had to go forward in weather to secure something or other in the stores forward. The weather was bad enough that the deck was secured but it was one of those "had to do" things. I was watching from the wheelhouse as they made their way forward from shelter to shelter between seas breaking over the bow. The water would hit the bow and rise vertically for maybe a hundred feet or so and crash back on deck just behind the IG vent mast. It looked like it was just heavy spray from the wheelhouse. They got just behind the vent mast when a big one hit the bow and came crashing down on them. They were knocked down like bowing pins and washed back to the pipeline where they managed to hang on. It was amazing how much weight of water was in the harmless looking cloud of spray. Rick |
#8
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Yikes! Did you see the link to this pic?
http://www.naval.com/canadian-ice/ And folks in this newsgroup complain about the cold weather. :^) -Jim |
#9
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![]() Jim wrote in message ... Yikes! Did you see the link to this pic? http://www.naval.com/canadian-ice/ And folks in this newsgroup complain about the cold weather. :^) -Jim Darn dangerous. The crew usually have to go out armed with fire axes to chop the ice off. Too much and the ship might roll. |
#10
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Depends on the ship and it's "initial" GM
Don White wrote: Jim wrote in message ... Yikes! Did you see the link to this pic? http://www.naval.com/canadian-ice/ And folks in this newsgroup complain about the cold weather. :^) -Jim Darn dangerous. The crew usually have to go out armed with fire axes to chop the ice off. Too much and the ship might roll. |
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