capnsensible
Well-Known Member
As strait a line as the wind will let you.
As said, we coast-hopped and overnighted (or longer) in convenient marinas/harbours on the way so the route and stop-overs are obvious.It would be interesting if you could mention your stops and routes nortada.
Echoes my experiences and suggestions almost exactly. I’ve crossed Biscay a few times. Last time we departed Solent. And hopped via Channel Isles to NW Brittany. We anchored at Oussant overnight before a two day passage to A Coruna.Crossing Biscay
I have done this trip several times.
If you go direct you will likely sit around in Falmouth for a long time waiting for a 5 day weather window. Apart from forecasting doubts in indicating such a window, they are fairly rare especially in May when the weather is less stable with a high frequency of stronger winds. (Take a look at the historical data on routing charts etc). So my suggestion which has always worked for me is to look for a window of sufficient length to cross to NW Britanny in favourable conditions. These occur much more often. If the window closes you can then duck in to one of the many very pleasant NW France harbours to await another window which can then be shorter - in the meantime you can edge south as the opportunity arises in small step,s if necessary. If on the first phase the window remains open then you can continue south anyway.
In my experience I have always arrived in N Spain well before those waiting in Falmouth for the ideal weather window AND have had the pleasure of visiting various harbours en route!
The OP does not mention boat speed. A direct passage Falmouth to A Coruna could be between 4 and 5 days. Used with care, it should be possible to wait for a safe slot. However, to make that choice does require some experience and judgement. As there is always some uncertainty in a forecast and there will be some pressure to go, I suggest that it is only prudent to go through the Chenal du Four. That will let you monitor forecasts to check that it is still safe to proceed. Through the C de F you will have internet contact. If the forecasts turn a little dodgy, a good stopping point is Ste Evette/Audierne, the closest French port to A Coruna. From there to A Coruna is about 3 days and choice of a safe slot more certain than a 4-5 days from Falmouth.Despite being Falmouth area based, my favoured route is usually to depart from a NW Brittany port - e.g. Camaret or Morgat - as a direct track to NW Spain keeps you nicely displaced to the East of the heavy traffic stream from Finisterre Ushant. Weather forecast permitting of course.
Thank you for pointing me at that link. A former colleague, recently retired, referred to scatterometer data as the gold standard in surface wind information.An easy way to get a sense of historical wind strength and direction is with the COGOW data - Climatology of Global Ocean Winds.
It's based on 10 years of scatterometer winds and has much higher spatial and temporal resolution than traditional pilot charts. It's also much newer data.
This is for the 2nd half of May.
Climatology of Global Ocean Winds
The plot shows averages, but as you mouse over different spots, the actual data will appear in a wind rose on the right, giving you some sense of the variability.
You have a while, and if you really want to get into the data, you can download the ECMWF reanalysis. I do this often for longer passages.
I would caution against being too influenced by climatology.
Certainly interesting although beyond the capacity or, even, the interest of many ordinary sailors. Publication is a good idea, but where? My experience, some years ago, was that the yachtie mags did not really want anything too intellectual or specialized. If you are a CA member, the editor would probably be interested.I agree - it doesn't give and adequate sense of the variance, or what actually happens with weather systems - how they develop and so on.
That's why I use the EC reanalysis - an amazing data set..; it's hourly at 025 deg, and has everything you want: wind, gust, rain, wave height and direction...
I typically download 10 years of data, 30 days per year, centered on the departure date.
I do routing on that data set - typically one departure a day for 15 days, centered on the departure date, for 10 years.
but even if you don't get that into it.., just view the data in a grib viewer and click through it.., it gives a real sense of how the weather systems develop.
I am usually doing this for racing, working on sail choices and so on - so a fixed departure date
but when planning a delivery, it's a very good way to understand what a good weather window looks like at its start.
I have learned a lot from this data - studying for example, the classic trade wind atlantic crossing. It's really surprising how often, in say November-December, when most people do this trip, the trade winds are disrupted by cutoff lows, or fronts associated with normal lows., or an unusual position of the high. You will get no sense of this from the climatology. I have been thinking of writing an article for publication on this topic.
He's stilll waiting for a weather windowHoly thread resurrection Batman! The OP was in 2010; I would hope he's got there by now![]()
Brave man.he entered Audierne at night without a French chart. Luckily, it was HW!
I do not know what boat you sail but the OP described his as light displacement. That does not sound like a boat that should be going far out. Hence my recommendation about the Chenal du Four. It keeps options open longer and makes a diversion easy. We did that in 2000 and were extremely glad in the event. I am sure our HR34 would have coped ywith F10s but we would not been happy.As usual there has been some Fred drift mainly about following the inshore or coastal hopping route but the OP was saying he is crossing from Falmouth direct to La Coruna and which route was favourable.
My two penneth worth having done it a few times is to stay West of the continental shelf 200 M mark more like the 1000 to 4000M depth.
I do not know what boat you sail but the OP described his as light displacement. That does not sound like a boat that should be going far out. Hence my recommendation about the Chenal du Four. It keeps options open longer and makes a diversion easy. We did that in 2000 and were extremely glad in the event. I am sure our HR34 would have coped ywith F10s but we would not been happy.
We do not know. I am minded of the young man in his little Beneteau looking at an old gaff cutter and her elderly owner. “How does she go?”, “Just fine in a Gale , better in a storm.”Admittedly my two last boats were long Keel displacement traditional boats but what's a light displacement boat? A 40 AWB or a Leisure 17 I rather think he might have been describing the former which should baring Orcas be perfectly capable of an offshore deep water 4 or 5 day passage.
I crossed a few times in the summer, can be a calm passage under engine.Only slightly off topic: when would be the best time to cross (North to South)?
As in, when are you most likely to get consistent winds?
Looking at June or July.