Post photos of your boat in big seas here.

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Nocanvas

Senior Member
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May 2, 2018
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186
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Navigator
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Mariner/Helmsman 38
Fishing in the Bearing Sea for King Crab ect. I always enjoyed seeing the other boats bashing through the waves. Lets see what you have to share.

Here's mine to share

When I was done with my wheel watch on this Jog we all went out on deck with the Louisville sluggers (baseball bats) and broke the ice. Your looking at three hours of ice in this photo.
 

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Can't really tell what's going on in the photo.

Was this your boat?
 
LOL hell no ! not our pleasure craft. One of the vessels I worked back in the 80s in the Bearing Sea M/V Cascade. Your looking through a heated spinner window. All the other windows were iced over. That little spinner window is all we had to see out.
 
LOL hell no ! not our pleasure craft. One of the vessels I worked back in the 80s in the Bearing Sea M/V Cascade. Your looking through a heated spinner window. All the other windows were iced over. That little spinner window is all we had to see out.

OK, thanks.

I was wondering if you wanted pics of us in our boats or any boat.
 
If you click on and blow up the photos you can see the gist. There has to be 50 pounds of ice and rime on the single stanchion and adjacent lines in that narrow view alone.

On a related note, as an exercise in “literary archeology,” I very recently read Alistair Maclean’s “HMS Ulysses,” his first novel based on experience in a light cruiser on the Murmansk runs in the 2nd European Apocalypse*. Basesd soley on that, no thank you! (Terrible book, btw, don’t bother.)

* - which was strictly speaking not a “world war,” the Anglo-Japanese Pacific conflict being totally unrelated. Eventually historians will get it right after failing for so long.
 
That’s some serious icing up and can’t imagine what the vessel as a whole would have looked like. I suppose that’s the point where it starts to get dangerous to stability.

Anyway the problem with posting photos is the lack of scale or 3D appreciation in order to size waves. In my photo the seas look to be about 15ft to me, however we measured them that day in the 20-25 ft range. Perhaps video would be more telling.
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Oh, hell no! Fair weather sailor here.
 
My kind of rough. :thumb:
 

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We're pleasure boaters, in that order. The few times I screwed up and got us into too-big-for-comfort seas, the last thing we had any time for was taking pictures.
 
Spent plenty of time in rough seas on ships and fishing boats when I was younger. Getting rolled around for days on end is exhausting. I avoid rough conditions whenever possible since I got back in to boating 8 years ago. Fair seas and following winds everyone.
 
Did someone say video? I'm sure many of you have seen this series of videos I took 3 years ago but I hope you still get a kick out of watching them.




This is where it gets fun. The wave you see knocked me off my feet while I was standing at the helm. It also knocked my anchor light lens off and that's 20' above the water. Some kinda fun, eh?

I actually enjoy being out on a day like this. My wife, not so much, so we usually stay in the slip if the wind is blowing.
 
Crossing the stream last spring. Got caught by an early front.

 
We're pleasure boaters, in that order. The few times I screwed up and got us into too-big-for-comfort seas, the last thing we had any time for was taking pictures.


My thought exactly. Last spring I screwed up and ended up in really rough seas. I was taking green water over the bow and into my ER vents. Everything that could fall over, slid off, and crash down did. My wife was braced in the salon trying to not fly around the cabin. I was wondering just how strong the attachment was on my helm seat. The LAST thing I was thinking about was trying to get a camera out.
 
That’s some serious icing up and can’t imagine what the vessel as a whole would have looked like. I suppose that’s the point where it starts to get dangerous to stability.

Anyway the problem with posting photos is the lack of scale or 3D appreciation in order to size waves. In my photo the seas look to be about 15ft to me, however we measured them that day in the 20-25 ft range. Perhaps video would be more telling.
View attachment 82914

Thats some serious seas to pay attention to.... Are those following seas. Great photo. You get what I was asking to see. We all have a story but not all have the photo. GREAT SHOT !
 
Did someone say video? I'm sure many of you have seen this series of videos I took 3 years ago but I hope you still get a kick out of watching them.




This is where it gets fun. The wave you see knocked me off my feet while I was standing at the helm. It also knocked my anchor light lens off and that's 20' above the water. Some kinda fun, eh?

I actually enjoy being out on a day like this. My wife, not so much, so we usually stay in the slip if the wind is blowing.

That last video reminds me of Clarkston, WA two years ago.... Wow the winds on the river roar.... Terrific video thanks for the share.
 
Crossing the stream last spring. Got caught by an early front.


Got to love those beam seas. She was rolling good... Nice day out too.
 
My thought exactly. Last spring I screwed up and ended up in really rough seas. I was taking green water over the bow and into my ER vents. Everything that could fall over, slid off, and crash down did. My wife was braced in the salon trying to not fly around the cabin. I was wondering just how strong the attachment was on my helm seat. The LAST thing I was thinking about was trying to get a camera out.


That sounds like you really got bounced around. Taking water in on the ER vents would concern me.
 
My thought exactly. Last spring I screwed up and ended up in really rough seas. I was taking green water over the bow and into my ER vents. Everything that could fall over, slid off, and crash down did. My wife was braced in the salon trying to not fly around the cabin. I was wondering just how strong the attachment was on my helm seat. The LAST thing I was thinking about was trying to get a camera out.

Are your vents on the outside of the hull?
 
Been in rough weather twice. The first was n a 44ft ketch and I was at the wheel. NO TIME FOR PICTURES. I was in survival mode!!! The second time I was again at the wheel, same boat,but in this case I was in a 150 wide channel with depth outside the channel at 4' and the boat had a 6' keel. Again I was in survival mode and no time to take pictures. Both times were a night and navigating with RADAR. Pictures were never on my mind.
 
Been in rough weather twice. The first was n a 44ft ketch and I was at the wheel. NO TIME FOR PICTURES. I was in survival mode!!! The second time I was again at the wheel, same boat,but in this case I was in a 150 wide channel with depth outside the channel at 4' and the boat had a 6' keel. Again I was in survival mode and no time to take pictures. Both times were a night and navigating with RADAR. Pictures were never on my mind.

Sounds like the Movie was called The Pucker Factor
 
Sounds like the Movie was called The Pucker Factor


The first one could have been called "Painting the Town Brown". It was my fFIRST time at the wheel of my "new" boat, we left at 3am in mid Feb to try to beat a cold front. My thought was, "44 feet is not a 'small craft' so damn the torpedoes full speed ahead" Surfing down the back slope of 20 foot waves in the dark on RADAR sure makes you feel SMALL. Needless to say, we didnt beat the front.
 
The first one could have been called "Painting the Town Brown". It was my fFIRST time at the wheel of my "new" boat, we left at 3am in mid Feb to try to beat a cold front. My thought was, "44 feet is not a 'small craft' so damn the torpedoes full speed ahead" Surfing down the back slope of 20 foot waves in the dark on RADAR sure makes you feel SMALL. Needless to say, we didnt beat the front.

Following seas can make one nervous as hell.
 
Following seas can make one nervous as hell.

Or following winds. I recall the Maryland Governor’s Cup race c. 1993. (+/-1). I watched a 70’ racer broach and get dismasted 100 yards off our port beam, while we were scooting along at 10+ knots on bare poles.

I have seen severe weather, as much as -100 or more wind chill and -35F native, while outdoors and working. But not on a boat.

But that MD G.Cup race was a doozy, particularly for an inshore event. The race is late July/early August each year. It is a BIG race for sail boats. It’s PHRF rated so staggered. I was crewing on a J/44. As we were overtaking the slower starts, the even faster boats were catching us as a massive thunderstorm cell hit us from behind, tracking perfectly down the bay. It should not have been a real shock; even though it was ‘93 we had weather radio and Baltimore had just been slammed and the warnings were out. But egos trumped common sense and people left so much sail out to try to eak the last little boost out, they left no time for hauling it down. Insane.

I think our anemometer maxed out or broke at 65 knots.

The 70 that broached to port was a Santa Cruz ‘70, granted a ULDB design, but the real pride of the Chesapeake fleet at the time. These were pretty significantly influential yachts:

Santa Cruz 70

Its carbon fiber mast snapped like a twig and we heard it like a thunder clap. And it wasn’t the only one, I think we saw about a eight boats broach and three dismasted just in our little field of visions.

Granted, it’s not like the ‘79 Fastnet race, but it was the equivalent for the Chesapeake. But like that race, this is a long one (overnight minimum and up t two days for slower boats is allowed) - so sailing on for another day with wreckage behind left you a little thoughtful...
 
Or following winds. I recall the Maryland Governor’s Cup race c. 1993. (+/-1). I watched a 70’ racer broach and get dismasted 100 yards off our port beam, while we were scooting along at 10+ knots on bare poles.

I have seen severe weather, as much as -100 or more wind chill and -35F native, while outdoors and working. But not on a boat.

But that MD G.Cup race was a doozy, particularly for an inshore event. The race is late July/early August each year. It is a BIG race for sail boats. It’s PHRF rated so staggered. I was crewing on a J/44. As we were overtaking the slower starts, the even faster boats were catching us as a massive thunderstorm cell hit us from behind, tracking perfectly down the bay. It should not have been a real shock; even though it was ‘93 we had weather radio and Baltimore had just been slammed and the warnings were out. But egos trumped common sense and people left so much sail out to try to eak the last little boost out, they left no time for hauling it down. Insane.

I think our anemometer maxed out or broke at 65 knots.

The 70 that broached to port was a Santa Cruz ‘70, granted a ULDB design, but the real pride of the Chesapeake fleet at the time. These were pretty significantly influential yachts:

Santa Cruz 70

Its carbon fiber mast snapped like a twig and we heard it like a thunder clap. And it wasn’t the only one, I think we saw about a eight boats broach and three dismasted just in our little field of visions.

Granted, it’s not like the ‘79 Fastnet race, but it was the equivalent for the Chesapeake. But like that race, this is a long one (overnight minimum and up t two days for slower boats is allowed) - so sailing on for another day with wreckage behind left you a little thoughtful...

BBBRRRRRRR SNAP UGG ! Great story Thanks for sharing
 
Here's a video I took while helping a guy take a boat from Seattle to Stockton. This was about an hour north of the Columbia Bar on our second day out. The boat was a 58' Bayliner Motor Yacht. No small boat by any stretch but it sure looks like a cork in this video.


 
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Thats some serious seas to pay attention to.... Are those following seas. Great photo. You get what I was asking to see. We all have a story but not all have the photo. GREAT SHOT !

Yes we were running with the seas (so you're looking at the back of the wave after it passed us) and couldn't alter course more than about +/- 20 degrees otherwise we would have rolled. This was daytime so I was able to take a photo, but by nightfall the seas really grew large. I honestly don't know how big the biggest ones were (every 7th???), but an occassional 30 footer would not be an exaggeration. My boat was 65ft and I felt really small. We hand-steered through these close to survival conditions for days. Finally pulled into Bodega Bay to rest and were greeted by the total asshle local fishermen who loved to brag about shooting the sea lions because they ate all their fish.

Ahhh, memories!
 

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