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When you're doing 70 knots on tarmac, keeping an eye out behind you is still recommended
Pete
Fractionally more seriously, I have a good idea of the effect that the wake will have at different speeds and distances, so not much need to look back at every boat passed. In some areas, looking back frequently is a VERY good idea (Poole Harbour: Condor Ferry!)
But also, there's a wake hierarchy.
Being somewhere at the smaller end of the mobo scale, encountering a large Ferry / larger mobo wake means the following procedure: Slow down, "Wake! Hold on!", aim to cut at about 45', power up to keep the nose high, then cue various "yee-hah" sounds as we go up and down with a bit of side to side. Writing a stern letter to the Ferry Company doesn't really come in to it.
Similarly I have had jet skis, and a few smaller ribs that encounter our wake aim for it and go "yee-hah". Again, no stern words exchanged.
But for some reason, sailing yachts aren't part of the wake love-in, despite the water being mostly covered in, errm, waves. (Yes, I know that passing stupidly close so that sails end up flapping, boat rocking, etc. is not good, but that's not what I'm talking about).
I'm starting to think this might be a sheltered water thing.
- Half way across Lyme Bay, or Mid-Channel, complaining about "wake" hardly ever happens, because the place is full of waves anyway.
- On a more typical day in the Solent (F4?), there is this idyllic state where a sailing yacht will proceed well, the IOW is sheltering everyone from the really big stuff, but there will still be some wake tolerance as they're bouncing around in the chop anyway, and are better stabilised by a properly powered up sail.
- On a windless day in the Solent, all the sailing yachts will, by definition, be Grumpy, as they have had to turn the engine on. The smallest ripple from anything with a larger engine produces paroxysms of rage.
The last time I went past Hengistbury Head, I encountered waves much larger than any Ferry wake. I'm in the process of drafting a stern letter to Christchurch Borough Council, requesting that they remove it, and Christchurch Ledge, immediately...
dv.
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