Ross and Franklin
Ross, I think that the waves from boats and their frequency are determined by their hull shape and size, which would not be the same as waves generated from the wind. Franklin, "The wind is blowing 20 knots from the Southeast. The book states that the waves are 5-8', steep and some are breaking."Could this be partly attributed to an error made by the author? Crew boat captains and supply boat capt'n's are notoriously wrong at stating wave height. I have to record all of the ambient conditions several times a day in the area Im in on the Gulf. The best way for me to judge is to watch how they ride up and down the legs of the platform or rig. Then guess at the height. In a small boat, your perspective will throw you off as the boat rides up and down, you tend to look up and down as opposed to a cross section view.The Gulf of Mexico is a relatively shallow body of water, and its this shallownesss that makes the waves steeper and closer together. Until you are way past the continental shelf and into really deep water, do the waves become longer and further apart. Closer to shore, say 50 to 100 miles or so, the waves tend to be steep and have a period of between 5 and 6 seconds. That is really fast for 10 to 12 footers to be comming at you. Also note, the author may have been observing waves from a localized quickie storm wherein the wind was blowing the tops off of them and they appeared to be breaking. The other thing that causes steep waves is when the offshore waves with all of their mass and momentum start to hit shallower water, the wave wants to keep its shape and size, so it will 'ride ' up the shallow areas and then gravity makes them fall down, thus the steep breaking waves. Also, I dont remember the exact amount of fetch at which the increased distance no longer make a difference in wave height (the waves max out) but i think its only about 20 miles or so, I might be way off. Also in the shallow GUlf Of Mex, the Beaufort scale does not tend to hold true. Strong cold front come quickly and the waves are taller than they should be. Until they finally pick up momentum, which could take all day or longer, the wind blows the tops off of them. Its the far offshore storms that bring what we call ground swells. Thats the big slow moving far apart from eachother waves.I'm being rushed to give up the puter here so I probably didnt get to say everything i had to or it didnt come out right. Hoped it helped some. Tony B