On Saturday, Aug. 25, wife and I sailed our H320 through a day-long storm on the Chesapeake Bay while proceeding south from Deltaville to New Point Comfort and the York River.
Steady 20 mph winds from the northeast set us on a deep broad reach with the main half-reefed and no genoa deployed.
We endured continuous rolling as waves of 4 and 5 feet (estimated from trough to crest) battered the boat from the aft quarter and rounded it up to roll into a beam reach despite my best efforts to maintain course. In only 18 feet of water, big waves kept coming.
I knew that the wind would not turn the boat over, but this was the water lifting and rolling it past 45 degrees. The waves tended to break slightly, but not as foamy as when coming ashore.
But for the 3200-lb keel, I wonder at what tipping point we would have rolled over: 6-foot waves? Foamier crests? 25 mph gusts? Should I have motor-sailed through it? Any other thoughts? It was challenging, that's for sure. Thanks.
Bill O’Donovan
Deadline
Steady 20 mph winds from the northeast set us on a deep broad reach with the main half-reefed and no genoa deployed.
We endured continuous rolling as waves of 4 and 5 feet (estimated from trough to crest) battered the boat from the aft quarter and rounded it up to roll into a beam reach despite my best efforts to maintain course. In only 18 feet of water, big waves kept coming.
I knew that the wind would not turn the boat over, but this was the water lifting and rolling it past 45 degrees. The waves tended to break slightly, but not as foamy as when coming ashore.
But for the 3200-lb keel, I wonder at what tipping point we would have rolled over: 6-foot waves? Foamier crests? 25 mph gusts? Should I have motor-sailed through it? Any other thoughts? It was challenging, that's for sure. Thanks.
Bill O’Donovan
Deadline
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