luckydave215
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2005
- Messages
- 1,619
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 60' CONV -Series I (1978 - 1986)
Unlike Hawaii, the tsunami caused by the Chilean earthquake was a real event in San Diego.
San Diego bay is 26 miles long, with a narrow entrance pointed due south.
Currents above 20 knots were reported in several places in the bay, we saw 7-10 knots SIDEWAYS to our slip, with white water and many vortices filled with swirling mud and bottom trash (old waterlogged wood, bottom weeds, plastic trash, Jimmy Hoffa, etc). The (floating) docks were surging up and down while enduring tremendous side loads, the barnacles being scraped off the pilings by the docks were flying through the air like stray bullets bouncing off the sides of the boats.
1 mile away at the back of our basin, the current was nil, so it all depended on exactly where you were.
In the next basin over (America's Cup Harbor) several boats were sunk and docks shredded. Apparently a 90 footer got loose and smashed/sunk a few boats in the 30' size.
The slowly decaying currents ("sloshing") were still apparent last night.
It was wild!
San Diego bay is 26 miles long, with a narrow entrance pointed due south.
Currents above 20 knots were reported in several places in the bay, we saw 7-10 knots SIDEWAYS to our slip, with white water and many vortices filled with swirling mud and bottom trash (old waterlogged wood, bottom weeds, plastic trash, Jimmy Hoffa, etc). The (floating) docks were surging up and down while enduring tremendous side loads, the barnacles being scraped off the pilings by the docks were flying through the air like stray bullets bouncing off the sides of the boats.
1 mile away at the back of our basin, the current was nil, so it all depended on exactly where you were.
In the next basin over (America's Cup Harbor) several boats were sunk and docks shredded. Apparently a 90 footer got loose and smashed/sunk a few boats in the 30' size.
The slowly decaying currents ("sloshing") were still apparent last night.
It was wild!