redneck joe
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2009
- Messages
- 14,008
Charters return to protect their clients....no sense getting sued for injuring your clients. My boat is only a 16' so I draw the line when waves exceed two feet. Can always go another day. When I had my 22', I drew the line at 3' waves, yes it could handle more, much more, but not in comfort. Tossing my passengers around and getting someone hurt in not my idea of fun. Experienced boaters can tell when a boat hull has beer pounded in the waves, then no one wants to buy it.If the wave is higher then your boat is long head to shore. lol.
4’ waves in a 14’ boat is about max for me. I stop Downrigger in 3’ers because it puts too much pressure on my gunnels.
In a Lund Barron 6’ers are no problem.
I heard a story that the charters head for port when waves are over 3’. Many times I have kept fishing and all the charters went in.
What’s your max? Let’s hear some stories.
Charters return because most clients do not puke over the side as they are told to do and charter boat captains hate cleaning up other people's puke .If the wave is higher then your boat is long head to shore. lol.
4’ waves in a 14’ boat is about max for me. I stop Downrigger in 3’ers because it puts too much pressure on my gunnels.
In a Lund Barron 6’ers are no problem.
I heard a story that the charters head for port when waves are over 3’. Many times I have kept fishing and all the charters went in.
What’s your max? Let’s hear some stories.
Block island reported significant wave heights of 30’ with largest at 47ft.I think there were 20' waves on LI Sound during Hurricane Sandy
We can have a 15 to 40 mile of river in a straight line on the Tennessee River and I've been caught in one of those days.Here ,even tho our lakes are small compared to yours but peeps dont seem to think lakes can rough up and we get ,at best , peeps trapped on the other side of the lake from their launch point