First bridge!

Status
Not open for further replies.
R

Richard Bryer

We passed under our first lift bridge last week with our H34 ( not a lot of them around here) I never realized how difficult it is to judge height from below! After passing under and looking back at other masts comming through we must have had at least 15 feet of clearance,from below we all thought we were not going to make it( including one firefighter of 30 years experience) That is until the voice of GOD ( the bridge keeper) boomed out- TAKE'ER THROUGH- YOU HAVE LOTS OF ROOM! I have new found admiration for you guys who pass under bridges with 4 fet or so of clearance based on published data.
 
T

Tony

Around World no Bridges

Once heard a quote from an Annapolis Md sailor that he can leave his mooring and sail around the world and back never passing unde a bridge Pleasant thought t
 
Jun 21, 2004
88
Hunter H31 Niagara Falls
It certainly does provide a scary illusion

Sevaral years ago we had to pass under a few while sailing from to Port Clinton in OH (lake Erie) to Port Dalhousey in Ontario Canada (Lake Ontario). I think there was even one en route through the Welland Canal (the canal was an experience all its own). It prepared me for the fixed bridge I routenly have to go under just to get from my berth to the lake along Oak Orchard Creek. I clear it by 10 feet or so, but it always looks like it is going to hit. It's a great prank to pull on unknowing guests who come aboard. Just start talking about how the lake level is so high and how you don't have much clearance to begin with and that someday you are sure its going to hit and... You get the idea. Paul
 
Mar 21, 2004
2,175
Hunter 356 Cobb Island, MD
It's more fun when you hear

Thwang! Thwang! as the antenna hits the steel griders as you pass under. Jim S/V Java
 
Jun 3, 2004
145
Catalina 27 Stockton CA
Try it in a race!

We have a race here in NorCal that goes from SF Bay to Stockton, about 70 miles upriver, all downwind and mostly spinnaker. You pass under 6 bridges to make the course. There's the story that a few years ago, the tide was particularly high and one of the larger boats passed under one of the shorter bridges only by intentionally forcing a roundup as they passed under the bridge, which heeled them enough get thru without hitting! I'd be afraid a roundup under the bridge might cause me to collide with a bridge abutment!
 
Jun 4, 2004
834
Hunter 340 Forked River, NJ
Too close for comfort

The NOAA cahrts say that there is 60' of clearance but when you get there, the bridge markings says 56' at high water. We managed to get our 56' mast under with perhaps 6" to spare if you believe the water height ruler. There is no way to see if you are going to make it by looking up the mast.
 
Jul 17, 2005
586
Hunter 37.5 Bainbridge Island - West of Seattle
Install a crows nest

Like the old sailing ships, install a crows nest, and get someone to go up there with a 2 way radio. Of course, if you don't make it under the bridge, the person up there will have a wild ride. ;d;d
 
D

don

now that you can get little cameras the size

of a thumbnail, im sorely tempted to install one on top of my mast, looking forward. That would be handy to see ahead in the ICWs too!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.