Ru88ell
Well-Known Member
Is the gap between them a goer?
Please tellYes, but look out for Dodman Point. Go WELL out or right in so you can touch it.
Don't ask how I know why NOT to be a few cables off!
Is the gap between them a goer?
Please tell
Is the gap between them a goer?
Yes of course. You can anchor between them if you like. It's good fishing. Sometimes (not winter I imagine 'tho) there are dive boats there. I'm not sure I'd go between them them in a gale or with huge swell, but one probably could.
WRT Dodman, I've maybe been lucky, but have never had any issues. I've been past in E7 and W9 and all winds in between without a millisecond of danger or worry, usually right where the chart shows overfalls. I have had a katabatic down-draft off Dodman which blew us flat (or so it seemed, hence was probably only 50 degrees in reality), but it was strangely, even eerily, smooth, noiseless and undramatic.
Our first Falmouth - Fowey race in 60s on Benbecula we ignored the advice and took a green sea right over the boat (bowsprit to stern), seemed like about four feet high right along the deck. It was blowing an easterly about F4
We were later advised that right in or right out avoids a weird sea, which often throws up big standing-type waves. We hit one. No damage, but H*ll of a fright.
Some years later a pleasure boat (can't remember the name) foundered off the Dodman with much loss of life (20+ I think). IIRC their passage had been uneventful until they reached the Dodman Point.
When I took Nav evening classes at Darlington Tech we were set to plot a course from Falmouth to Plymouth. Those who plotted "through the middle" were politely told that they had chosen most unwisely. I had remembered my experience in Benbecula and went right in. Lecturer commented I had obviously been there!
Some years later a pleasure boat (can't remember the name) foundered off the Dodman with much loss of life (20+ I think). IIRC their passage had been uneventful until they reached the Dodman Point.
As I remember she wasn't licenced to carry passengers, no safety gear etc and privately owned, and the skipper wasn't qualified for anything. Bad business all round ... no survivors.
Where else is a nice 'out and back' day sail from Falmouth?
Yes as doug748 has said, but watch out for the whelps...
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The boat was called Darlwyn ... old admiralty pinnace with a rear cockpit ... left Fowey when the weather was far too rough for the return journey to Falmouth. As I remember she wasn't licenced to carry passengers, no safety gear etc and privately owned, and the skipper wasn't qualified for anything.
Bad business all round ... no survivors.
Well remembered. I just read the whole report: http://www.plimsoll.org/resources/SCCLibraries/WreckReports2002/20836.asp ...though it doesn't relate closely to Nare Head.
Grim business...a slender 44' ex-naval launch with her watertight bulkheads removed for convenience in the cabin, and almost two tonnes of passengers (31) presumed to have been sheltering inside from the rising head wind, when defects in the re-built cockpit allowed seawater to flood the accommodation...
...perhaps the worst thing is how completely unanswerable any questions about her fate were, and remain. No radio, few life-jackets, and the best estimate about her time of sinking is made from stopped wrist-watches on the bodies found. Evidently the vessel wasn't seaworthy and culpably overloaded, but the location sounds as if it justifies wariness.