Twister_Ken
Well-Known Member
Nuts, isn't it. Might as well try to reconcile the Jews and Arabs.
Better not appoint Mr T Blair, then!
It doesn't always end well for the jetskier…
http://www.yachtingmonthly.com/news/472355/jet-ski-smash-with-trimaran
Nuts, isn't it. Might as well try to reconcile the Jews and Arabs.
Haven't tried a jet ski yet then?![]()
Wash is just little waves, which are something I generally expect to encounter when sailing. Natural or mobo made, all they do is rock the boat. I'm not sure what the big deal is.
Wash is just little waves, which are something I generally expect to encounter when sailing. Natural or mobo made, all they do is rock the boat. I'm not sure what the big deal is.
when a sizeable mobo digging a big hole passes near, it's not just little waves. Wash amplitude and wavelength is unlike any other type of wave. We have to hold on for wash, in a way that we don't have to hold on for any other wave.
when a sizeable mobo digging a big hole passes near, it's not just little waves. Wash amplitude and wavelength is unlike any other type of wave. We have to hold on for wash, in a way that we don't have to hold on for any other wave.
OK, as a wake maker (part time), here are my rules.
So, in order of protection status.
No wake, ever. Slow to 4 if neccessary. (biggest culprits in my opinion are RIBs and yachties in the RAF launch on the hamble ignoring the carnage caused by their chauffeur)
People up masts. People boarding from dinghy. People hanging off to clean boat etc. People filling with fuel.
Give very wide berth or slow (right) down. Boats at anchor or yachts downwind, particularly with spinnakers up, yachts with people doing foredeck work. The smoother the sea the more this rule applies.
Give lots of space where possible (it sometimes isn't near the mouth of the hamble for example) Everyone else.
But never any wake, ever?
It is not possible to never effect any other boat with wake. That is unless I never go above 6 knots and I go above 6 knots about 1/3 - 1/2 of the time.
Raggie talaban will say that's how I should behave, but if I am constrained like that it is you that is effecting my hobby by being there. I won't accept that sorry. If you are of the mind to complain about waves on the sea, then it is you that is spoiling your day, not me!
I like to think though that I wouldn't behave like any of the boats in Dylan's vid.
last weekend had a sloop overtake us on our port side, then cut across our bow leaving a 15ft gap. Proving a point as they were sailing and we were motorsailing? Maybe. Given there was no-one around (and he could easily have taken our stern), it was quite a d*ck move.
Possibly he was a racer, among whom a 15' gap is more than generous, and he genuinely thought he was leaving you plenty of room?
Pete
It's all in the mind...it's a wave, a very small wave, a very very small wave.
Sadly not just mobos (altho they have a habit of doing it in Chichester Hbr) - last weekend had a sloop overtake us on our port side, then cut across our bow leaving a 15ft gap. Proving a point as they were sailing and we were motorsailing? Maybe. Given there was no-one around (and he could easily have taken our stern), it was quite a d*ck move. I really must invest in another slingshot....
That's an interesting situation.
I'm amazed by the lack of room given to sailing yachts by other yachtsmen when under power.
We were beating up the river Crouch in a solid F6 and several members of our yacht club motored across our bows (engine trouble or I'd have joined them...) forcing us to duck them. We missed them by inches deliberately to keep as much height as possible.
I'd expect a yacht under power to give a bit of room especially as he presumably has some idea how sailing boats work.