dbsea
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2021
- Messages
- 1,063
- Fluid Motion Model
- R-23 (Outboard)
- Vessel Name
- HALCYON
- MMSI Number
- 368365270
I found myself in a very uncomfortable / harrowing situation this past Saturday. We were making our way down from the San Juans, and we were on the last leg of our trip (Anacortes to Portage Bay, via the Swinomish channel, Saratoga passage, Shilshole, locks, etc.). I had been diligently watching the incoming cold front and wind forecasts, hence taking the inside and protected route as far as we could, but the forecast never showed the conditions we were about to encounter. We went slow all the way down for the most part, due to all the logs from the king tides and my apprehension from hitting a log back in November (thankfully no damage). It was a calm, uneventful cruise all the way to the south end of Whidbey Island with the wind blowing from the north behind us, pushing us along at a comfortable 9.5kn. As we entered the main part of Puget sound between Mukilteo and Edmonds, the conditions really went to ****. Out of seemingly nowhere we had 5ft following seas and 30kn gusts out of the northwest. While an experienced boater, I generally choose to avoid those kinds of conditions especially as I'm still just a bit over a year into owning a single screw inboard, coming from a twin screw outdrive boat. Even with the trim tabs fully retracted and desperately trying to surf down the waves, I found the boat lacked enough power to keep the bow up and stay on the surf and had a couple of really close calls where I almost took a 5-foot wave across the beam or narrowly avoided burying the bow in a wave because either I didn't know how to properly control it or the boat is just not cut out for that. Just south of Edmonds the waves were pushing us too close to shore, so I had to tack back out to more open water to make it around the two points to get to Shilshole, which was also somewhat harrowing. All said, it was probably the scariest 45-60 minutes i've had on the water in my own boat, and I arrived at the locks drenched in sweat, but grateful I didn't have to practice my mayday or figure out how I was going to save my spouse and my 3 dogs in those conditions. I would be lying if I said the thought of ramming the boat into the beach at Edmonds did not cross my mind.
Other than avoiding boating in those kinds of conditions, what else could I have done here to keep better control of the boat? Are they just not meant for those kinds of conditions? :?
Other than avoiding boating in those kinds of conditions, what else could I have done here to keep better control of the boat? Are they just not meant for those kinds of conditions? :?