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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Interesting. I went to my Chapman's to look up their definition of chop: "The confused water action found at places where tidal currents meet is called a chop, a term also applied to small, closely spaced waves resulting from wind action on small bodies of water." So it looks like a 5 foot chop can be the same as 5 foot seas. I don't boat on the ocean so I was not familiar with the first part of the definition. ;-) Most boats can easily handle a 5-foot, 10-foot, or even larger ocean *swell* if the waves are far enough apart (defined as a "period" between swells) that they aren't too steep. You just go uuuuuuuup, pause a second, and then go doooooooown. No big deal, unless you're subject to sea sickness. You certainly experience chop on the lake where you boat, as it is a much shorter and steeper wave form created primarily by wind. With enough fetch, even a lake of moderate size and certainly any of the Great Lakes can become pretty nasty in 30-knot conditions. Before you put Chapman's away, look up the Beaufort scale. My latest copy is a 1985 edition and the scale is on page 327, but if you have another edition it may be somewhere else in the book. Look down the chart to Force 7 winds: 28-33 knots (32-38 mph). "Near Gale". "White foam from breaking waves begins to be blown in streaks" BOATS REMAIN IN HARBOR; THOSE AT SEA HEAVE-TO. Effects observed on land: Whole trees in motion, resistance felt when walking against wind. I've been on a 900 foot cruise boat in 35 knot winds, and you get wet all the way up to deck #6. Even with stabilizers, the boat rocked so much that the housekeeping carts were rolling back and forth in the hallways. Seas were 15-18 feet. |
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