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I usually figure a bar is unsafe if there's a fight in progress, I
see bulletholes in the windows, or when there's a mixture of HD's and souped up rice-burners parked out front. The USCG, however, has different standards. I think the formula comparing the wave height to the LOA divided by 10 and then adding the freeboard is pretty useful. If I follow the logic correctly, the formula predicts that a 30-foot boat with a 4-foot freeboard should be OK in up to about 7-foot waves. From a USCG item on bar safety: ** Many boating accidents and fatalities are attributed, at least in part, to hazardous coastal bar conditions. A federal law was enacted in the early 1970s establishing the ocean entrances to northwest rivers and bays as Regulated Boating Areas under the National Boating Safety Act. This law gives the Coast Guard authority to suspend or terminate the voyage of recreational vessels and certain passenger vessels that attempt to operate in these areas when hazardous or unsafe conditions exist. Failure to comply can result in a $1000 civil penalty. When imposing restrictions, the Coast Guard first evaluates the conditions at the bar. Restrictions are then based on the type and size of vessel and the following criteria: Wave height four feet or greater, or, Wave height is greater than the length of the boat divided by 10 plus the freeboard, or, The surface current is four knots or greater. These conditions are the minimum criteria for what is considered unsafe. ** |
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