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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ps.com... That's a description of experience in 5-6 footers on the West Coast. 99% of pleasure boaters, including me, won't normally venture out when prevailing conditions create 5-6 foot windwaves. With this experience and similar frames of reference, it's hard to visualize 7 footers springing up unexpectedly with wind speeds of 10-15 knots. Maybe the laws of physics are different on the East Coast, or maybe the unfortunate crew with the new boat overestimated the height of the waves. I know nothing about west coast boating or the effects of wind or storms on the near shore line. I do know that the Northeast sea states are seriously affected by the near shore bottom topography, relatively shallow water extending many miles offshore in some areas and the irregular, rocky shoreline profiles. Sea state can vary dramatically, location to location under the same general conditions of wind or offshore storms. Ask any recreational boater who, for the first time, travels south on Cape Cod Bay on a calm, flat beautiful day, transits the Cape Cod Canal then become unglued as they hit Buzzard' Bay and their whole world changes. Eisboch |
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FS: 2004, 37 foot Egg Harbor SportsYacht in Scituate, MA | Marketplace |