fireball
Well-Known Member
There is a channel of sorts just south of beach - it's probably about 20-30m wide and likely to be usable at HW - I have no idea what the exit west is like as I've never tried that passage when not in a dinghy!
Is that a slightly garbled version of the Zoe-Anne incident in this report?
http://www.maib.gov.uk/cms_resources.cfm?file=/LCSD.pdf
If so, then it's recorded as F8-9 from the SW, which would be pretty hair-raising.
6 Metre waves crossing the Bar![]()
To clarify the incident mentioned; it was not the Zoe-Anne incident and I believe was earlier than 1999,more like 1990.
ianat182
This is sort of post that makes me stick with Scuttlebutt.From the RNLI journal of the time:
9th October 1988, 32ft yacht Dingaling broached & knocked down, propellor fouled, two crew washed overboard. SW 7-8, ebb tide, breaking seas 10-15ft high.
To correct an earlier post, the medal didn't go to the coxswain, but to a crewmember who went into the water to support the unconscious casualty.
That is tragic that a life was lost. To enter the harbour in a F5 is not so much of a challenge to threaten life, in normal conditions. However if that were a F5 southerly at 3/4 spring ebb, then there could well be conditions that could make the passage dangerous. But entering in a F5, I forget how many times I have done so.
Rather a sweeping statement - shame cos I was hoping to attempt something like that in a ZapCat ... but I guess it's not really suitable ...I'd suggest no boat should attempt Chichester entrance in such conditions, better to stay offshore or head back into the Solent.
Rather a sweeping statement - shame cos I was hoping to attempt something like that in a ZapCat ... but I guess it's not really suitable ...
Brilliant! Ben Ainsley junior?
Begs the question why do you need to spend 250K + on a big yacht?