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On Sep 3, 5:56?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Mon, 3 Sep 2007 07:58:24 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote: I attempted to go out in the little Boston Whaler to help but quickly determined that I'd probably just add to the problem as another possible casualty due to the sea state we've had up here for the past few days. (3-5 footers in close chop). According to Chuck, those don't exist in the North Atlantic. And we wouldn't be able to properly judge sea state anyway because "most" of us are bozos with no experience in judging wave action. :) Only the Manly Men of the Great Pacific North West can properly judge sea states. :) After a moment's thought, I realized that your crap-stuffed comment was either an unprovoked mean and nasty crack or you hadn't read my comment in the other thread. You being a bright enough guy that you don't need to resort to the habitual loser's devices of misrepresenting the remarks of another party to the discussion and peppering your retort with personal remarks, I'm sure you missed my comment where I addressed similar insinuations in the other thread. You either didn't see it, or chose to ignore it while selectively assembling the evidence to support your accusation. So here it is again, Tom. ************************* 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. ******************************** I'll just assume that additional remarks from you on this issue will be based on the entirety of my remarks on the subject. Thanks. |
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FS: 2004, 37 foot Egg Harbor SportsYacht in Scituate, MA | Marketplace |