BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue) (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/85760-sinking-feeling-not-low-transom-issue.html)

Short Wave Sportfishing September 1st 07 09:55 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sat, 01 Sep 2007 14:20:33 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

sail boat racers are a little bit crazy.


Ahem...

Never mind. :)

[email protected] September 1st 07 10:10 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sep 1, 4:54 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:

we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.


Capn' took me boating and flying all in one day.


[email protected] September 2nd 07 02:52 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
Wayne.B wrote:
sail boat racers are a little bit crazy.


Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:

Ahem...


Took the word right out of my mouth.

Never mind. :)


'nuff said.

Rick

Chuck Gould September 2nd 07 07:06 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.


Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.





Short Wave Sportfishing September 2nd 07 09:30 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.


Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.


If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.

Calif Bill September 2nd 07 09:57 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.


Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.


If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.


But there are wind waves and swells. You can easily have 8' swells. We
fish in those a lot. Normally comfortable at 8' and under. But wind waves
are those 2-3' normally that are on top of the swells and only appear when
the wind is blowing. Causing those sheep in the meadow days.



Short Wave Sportfishing September 2nd 07 11:06 PM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sun, 2 Sep 2007 13:57:51 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
.. .
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.

Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.


If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.


But there are wind waves and swells. You can easily have 8' swells. We
fish in those a lot. Normally comfortable at 8' and under. But wind waves
are those 2-3' normally that are on top of the swells and only appear when
the wind is blowing. Causing those sheep in the meadow days.


If you take eight foot swells and cram them into a space 200 yards
wide, are those waves?

You West Coast types - think the Pacific is the only ocean in the
world. :)

Chuck Gould September 3rd 07 12:45 AM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
On Sep 2, 1:30?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould





wrote:
On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.


I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.


Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)


With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.


Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.


Most people overestimate the height of waves.


If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


We seem to be holding two different conversations simultaneously.

Unless I misread your intent, you observed that you encountered 3
footers on your recent fishing trip with the backyard renegade, and
attributed that to opposing winds and currents. Very probable
scenario.

To go from 3 foot chop to 7 foot chop requires a lot more energy.
Given that tidal ebb and flood will be within a couple of knots one
way or the other regardless of the extremity of the tide in almost any
location other than a narow pass, the energy to go from the 3 footers
you observed to the 7 footers reported by the folks with the swamped
or sinking boat needs to come from the wind.

I have no doubt that you have seen 7-footers and more. It's hard to
imagine 7 foot chop when the winds are 10-15knots, as reported by the
victims of the incident. Seven foot swells, heck yes- not as much a
product of local winds as is chop. Also not really a problem unless
spaced very tightly together at a short period.

The boat photographed in the link will be experiencing waves breaking
on the foredeck in 4-footers, and could be pooped over the transom in
less.


Calif Bill September 3rd 07 05:53 AM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 2 Sep 2007 13:57:51 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
. ..
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.

Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.

If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.


But there are wind waves and swells. You can easily have 8' swells. We
fish in those a lot. Normally comfortable at 8' and under. But wind
waves
are those 2-3' normally that are on top of the swells and only appear when
the wind is blowing. Causing those sheep in the meadow days.


If you take eight foot swells and cram them into a space 200 yards
wide, are those waves?

You West Coast types - think the Pacific is the only ocean in the
world. :)


It is the biggest with the longest stretch open to prevailing winds. At
least winds that blow towards the USA. And when it gets nasty in the
Atlantic, all you pansies have shrink wrapped yor boats for the season.



Mike September 3rd 07 07:07 AM

Sinking Feeling (Not a low transom issue)
 
It is the biggest with the longest stretch open to prevailing winds. At
least winds that blow towards the USA. And when it gets nasty in the
Atlantic, all you pansies have shrink wrapped yor boats for the season.


I think that calls for a *touche'* :-)

--Mike

"Calif Bill" wrote in message
...

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 2 Sep 2007 13:57:51 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 02 Sep 2007 11:06:16 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

On Sep 1, 1:54?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
Ask Scot what we were into at Westerly Reef last Thursday and it was
beautiful out - light winds, but tidal movement into Fisher's Island
Sound was building three footers right at the channel entrance. When
we ran outside Fisher's down to Westerly we caught some major air
twice on waves out of no where. Go ahead, ask him. Three footers
and
that was nearly calm conditions.

I've been in Narragansett Bay at Newport with 10/15 mph wind from the
North and East Passage building 4/5' just because of opposing wind
and
tides.

Maybe you guys out in the NW need to come East and learn how to boat
in real wind and wave action. :)

With respect to the situation, they did exactly what I would have
done, although I might not have abandoned the boat completely. I
wasn't there so I don't know.

Observations: the amount of energy required to increase wind/tide chop
from 3 feet to 7 feet is enormous. Given that ebb and flood currents
are usually no more than a few knots, most of that energy has to come
from the wind.

Most people overestimate the height of waves.

If they are taller peak-to-peak than me, they are seven feet.

I've seen it more than once.

However, you are the expert so I'll defer to you.

But there are wind waves and swells. You can easily have 8' swells. We
fish in those a lot. Normally comfortable at 8' and under. But wind
waves
are those 2-3' normally that are on top of the swells and only appear
when
the wind is blowing. Causing those sheep in the meadow days.


If you take eight foot swells and cram them into a space 200 yards
wide, are those waves?

You West Coast types - think the Pacific is the only ocean in the
world. :)


It is the biggest with the longest stretch open to prevailing winds. At
least winds that blow towards the USA. And when it gets nasty in the
Atlantic, all you pansies have shrink wrapped yor boats for the season.





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:02 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com