TimfromMersea
Well-Known Member
Interesting situation last Thursday, the 30th September. Put my boat on the scrubbing posts at West Mersea - the main WMYC ones, not the shallower Dabchicks ones to the north. She only draws 1.4 metres so I didn’t anticipate any problems, even though the prediction was quite low, 3.6m at 06.30.
No issues getting on to the posts at 07.10. I normally leave it until the ebb has started, especially as on Thursday there was a fairly stiff SSW wind - I was single- handed so wanted there to be some ebb running to balance the wind trying to push the stern out. Not much water, maybe half a metre below the keel, but quite OK.
Duly scrubbed off when she dried out, with by then help from one of my friendly crew, who was joining me on the WMYC Autumn Trophy race, which was the reason for the scrub so late in the season. He offered to help me take her off the posts so with a prediction of 3.6m again at 19.10 we agreed to meet at 18.30.
At 18.30 that night the boat was still at least 2 feet dry on the posts! We waited until 19.15 but she was still not even afloat. The tide came nowhere near - I have never seen a ‘high’ that was quite so ‘low’.
I was seriously worried as the prediction for the next day, Friday morning, was lower, 3.5m at 07.50, and they didn’t start getting big until Saturday 2nd, when it was 4.10m, but at 22.10 by which time it would be pitch dark, and also 40 knots of wind and heavy rain was forecast.
I came down again on Friday morning with another friend and fortunately 30 minutes before tide time she was floating high, we got on board and motored her off with almost a metre under the keel. Sigh of relief!
Looking at Harwich Harbour web site, that compares the ‘actual’ with the ‘prediction’, on Thursday evening the ‘actual’ was 0.65m below the prediction, and on Friday morning the ‘actual’ was 0.45m above the ‘prediction’.
Can anyone more learned than me possibly please share any thoughts on why this should have been? In almost 60 years at Mersea I’ve certainly never seen a ‘high’ that came so ‘low’.
No issues getting on to the posts at 07.10. I normally leave it until the ebb has started, especially as on Thursday there was a fairly stiff SSW wind - I was single- handed so wanted there to be some ebb running to balance the wind trying to push the stern out. Not much water, maybe half a metre below the keel, but quite OK.
Duly scrubbed off when she dried out, with by then help from one of my friendly crew, who was joining me on the WMYC Autumn Trophy race, which was the reason for the scrub so late in the season. He offered to help me take her off the posts so with a prediction of 3.6m again at 19.10 we agreed to meet at 18.30.
At 18.30 that night the boat was still at least 2 feet dry on the posts! We waited until 19.15 but she was still not even afloat. The tide came nowhere near - I have never seen a ‘high’ that was quite so ‘low’.
I was seriously worried as the prediction for the next day, Friday morning, was lower, 3.5m at 07.50, and they didn’t start getting big until Saturday 2nd, when it was 4.10m, but at 22.10 by which time it would be pitch dark, and also 40 knots of wind and heavy rain was forecast.
I came down again on Friday morning with another friend and fortunately 30 minutes before tide time she was floating high, we got on board and motored her off with almost a metre under the keel. Sigh of relief!
Looking at Harwich Harbour web site, that compares the ‘actual’ with the ‘prediction’, on Thursday evening the ‘actual’ was 0.65m below the prediction, and on Friday morning the ‘actual’ was 0.45m above the ‘prediction’.
Can anyone more learned than me possibly please share any thoughts on why this should have been? In almost 60 years at Mersea I’ve certainly never seen a ‘high’ that came so ‘low’.