• Sailing is all about the Weather.

    Big into the exploration of Atlantic Hurricanes since Katrina came uninvited into his world, James (Jim) Gurley (JamesG161) has followed every Tropical Storm birthed in Atlantic, Gulf and Caribbean waters since. Being a boater, he knows that we often need more time to prepare than we get from the TV weather folk. Jim relies on the science of storm development to share early warning info with friends and fellow boaters.

    Early in 2018, Jim and John Shepard, (JSSailem) started to chat about the weather data available. John asked Jim to help forecast Pacific NW storms, and this morphed into discussions on weather forecasting.

    For John, sailing in the PNW is sometimes hit and miss. One day is ugly, then a string of beautiful days but no wind, followed by a series of blue-sky days and 12 knot breezes. Being ready for those great sailing days means you need to look to the Pacific Ocean and what is brewing. John has been into Pacific NW Weather since the 1970’s when his first PNW November storm hit bringing more than 40 days and 40 nights of continual rain.

    Together we want to share information, new APPs, safety, and thoughts about letting the weather help you. Identify some of the resources for sailors and help prepare you for your next sailboat outing.

    It is far better to go out on the water knowing what to expect in weather terms, than to be out on the water and see dark ominous clouds suddenly appear, unprepared.

All Storm Action is currently in the Pacific

jssailem

SBO Weather and Forecasting Forum Jim & John
Oct 22, 2014
23,188
CAL 35 Cruiser #21 moored EVERETT WA
Stay Alert @garymalmgren . It appears you have a couple of severe storms headed northward towards the Japanese coastline.

Krosa and CoMay are to the south of your island paradise.

1753714151099.png
 
May 29, 2018
595
Canel 25 foot Shiogama, japan
Thanks for the warning. John.
We get around 6 typhoons a year in Japan.
Only 2 or 3 reach up north where I am.
Here is a famous one from a few years back.
gary





735th Anniversary of the Divine Wind saving Japan
A contemporary depiction of the Mongol fleet in the throes of the typhoon
A contemporary depiction of the Mongol fleet in the throes of the typhoon
On August 15-16, 1281, a typhoon struck the Japanese home island of Kyushu, sinking and scattering a Mongolian fleet bent on invading Japan. A previous invasion effort by Kublai Khan seven years before had met a similar fate. This time the typhoon raged for two days, and many ships of the invasion fleet were flat-bottomed barges ill-suited to rough sea conditions. An estimated 4000 ships were destroyed with the loss of 100,000 soldiers.
The Japanese saw divine intervention in these two storms and called them “kami kaze” (神風) or “divine wind”. During World War II, the nickname “kamikaze” was applied to Japanese suicide pilots in the hopes that they would repel the American fleets as the typhoons had done with Kublai Khan’s.
 

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