My safety tip of the day is...

Lou C

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 10, 2002
Messages
13,826
For those like me near LI Sound we used to have a weather station based at the Univ of Conn that listed wind speeds and wave heights across LI Sound they had like 3-4 weather buoys, IIRC. Haven't seen it on-line in a long time but it was actually very helpful because it was real-time reporting.

Looks like it's back up again, glad I checked:
 

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
28,563
Lou, NOAA has buoys all along the coasts of the oceans of the world. These measure and report wave heights, period, water temp, wind speed and other stuff. Here is link for NE coast of the US.

 

airshot

Admiral
Joined
Jul 22, 2008
Messages
6,166
At my end of Lake Erie, the water did not drop 7 feet......after it dropped 4 feet, there was no more water left to drop !! Water here has been low for the past month or more. Hoping we are not entering the low water cycle that the lake goes thru every seven or so years. Been thru these high and low water cycles many times in my 75 years here on western lake erie, and they can really mess things up thru the fishing season.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,910
Lou, NOAA has buoys all along the coasts of the oceans of the world. These measure and report wave heights, period, water temp, wind speed and other stuff. Here is link for NE coast of the US.

Found this site the other day looking for wave data for Va. Beach after that last frontal boundary went by.

A treasure trove of documents related to wave data collected during extreme events, ie hurricanes and N’easters

 

redneck joe

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 18, 2009
Messages
14,068
Waves are choppy, short-period disturbances from local wind, while swell consists of longer, smoother, more organized waves generated by distant storms, carrying energy across oceans and arriving with greater regularity and power, often in sets, long after the original wind dies down. Think of waves as the chaotic "chop" from nearby wind, and swell as the orderly, powerful "rollers" that have traveled far
 
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