Weather forecasting drives me nuts. Winds overnight hit as high as 41 knots at our nearby reporting station at Smith Island in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. That's not all that unusual for this time of year and there was a gale warning out.What's driving me crazy is the pattern of change in barometric pressure and wind velocity. The attached link is a NOAA combined plot of barometric pressure and wind speed for the Smith Island buoy for the last five days. Some of it makes sense to me.On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day for example the falling barometer was followed by an increase in wind speed. Then when the front moved through about 1800 GMT and the barometer started to rise, the wind dropped (albeit temporarily). Then on the 26th the wind dropped again when the front moved through and the barometer started to rise.But then there's last night (shown as about 00 GMT). The barometer was still rising from the passage of the front when the wind kicked up from almost dead calm to more than 35 knots in a couple of hours. Winds in advance of low pressure systems here are almost always southeasters. Had I been looking strictly at changes in barometric pressure, I would have been taken totally by surprise by these gale force southeasterly winds.This is of more than academic interest to me. We're planning a five-month cruise up to Glacier Bay in Alaska in 2007. VHF weather reports in northern BC and in Alaska can be hard to receive, particularly in fjords, and there will be many times we're dependent on our recording barometer for severe weather warnings. Last night's gales would have caught us by surprise and slammed us.Any insights will be appreciated.Gary WyngardenS/V Wanderlust h37.5