The Dark Side of Gulf Stream Blues
Dear Skipper: Congratulations for surviving with all hands, and caring enough to summarize excellent and important lessons.1. Securing against a knock down and 360 degree is fundamental offshore preparation. As you duly insist, that means tying up simply and effectively everything inside and outside, and the hatchboards too. I am lucky to have no side portholes and my two masts are stepped on deck. Now to the Gulf Stream...2. On my Rye NY-Azores crossing in late June-early July '99, I sought the Gulf Stream to help my relatively slow Allied SeaWind II, 32ft ketch (25.7' WL), but that was an error. A friend went due east out off the LI Sound and beyond, and was safe and fast, as were outbound Canadians at the time, while I was hit 7 days out by an unannounced "developing gale" which piped up to 65kts and 12m (40ft)waves, including a few rogue ones that exploded on the side and filled the cockpit, instead of carrying me forward on my way as all their beautiful strong sisters did, none like the one shown on your site, thank God! The "fun" lasted 36 exhausting hours and only cost me a main sail mast track. Cruisers who came to Horta from Bermuda only had 20-30kt wind, with huge regular swells.3. Three years ago, I crossed the Gulf Stream from Norfolk-Hatteras to Tortola in December, but the huge eddies and the tail of Epsilon gave us 8 days of 35-52 kts with confused swells. I don't think I have met such bad combination of duration and intensity in 50 years of sailing including a circum cadet cruise.4. Anyone seeking to use the Gulf Stream's powerful push should be wary of its proneness to heavy blustery weather and to rogue Max Waves scattered amidst well established patterns. Sorry this cost you your beautiful boat!!!BE WELL you and yours and thank you for the powerful links. Bert dF, Pianissimo