Hurricanes aren’t the only storms that wreck boating
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MIKE WHITEHEAD
Ahoy.
Another hurricane might hit Florida this weekend, just weeks after
Hurricane Charley wreaked havoc upon homes and boats.
Hurricane Frances is predicted to be a Category 4 storm with
sustained winds of up to 140 mph with high-water-surge levels. Boat
owners are scrambling to find shelter for their vessels, and many
larger vessels are heading out to sea to try to dodge the hurricanes.
The strong winds and the high-water-surge levels are what
contribute to the boat damage. The rising water breaks the docks
free, or the docks float up and over the tops of the pilings, and
many dock lines just snap. Eventually, a tree, or a house, or an
asphalt road or other boats will impede the passage of these runaway
boats and docks.
This is exactly what happened in La Paz, Mexico, when Hurricane
Ignacio hit the Mexican resort town in late August 2003 and was
followed by Hurricane Marty in September.
We experience some of these effects in Newport Harbor during
winter storms that hit our area. Remember the storm of Dec. 6, 1997?
This storm actually caused the harbor water levels to rise due to
heavy winds and storm water runoff entering the bay from storm
drains.
The runoff current in the Back Bay caused a couple of docks in
Dover Shores to break free, and then the docks drifted under the
Coast Highway bridge. The current carried the Back Bay navigational
buoys under the bridge and rearranged the mooring area off of
Bayshores. Some of you may also remember that the Rhine Channel was
closed to boat traffic from the debris that washed up into the
channel from the current. This storm and other storms keep the Harbor
Patrol busy chasing the broken-free boats and picking up navigational
hazards floating in the harbor.
Our boating weather, however, looks good this weekend with patchy
fog and the associated wind gusts on the fog’s leading edges,
especially in the morning hours. Also, you should watch for the seas
to possibly build on Saturday from a 3- to 5-foot westerly swell. The
west swell is predicted to decrease to 2 to 3 feet, but watch for up
to 2-foot wind waves with up to 15-knot afternoon winds.
TIP OF THE WEEK
The BoatU.S. Foundation for Boating Safety & Clean Water is
accepting applications for safety grants. Local community
organizations may receive grants of up to $4,000 for projects that
focus on increasing the voluntary use of life jackets by recreational
boaters.
“While all applications to our 2005 Boating Safety Grant program
will be reviewed for a variety of boating-safety programs,
preferential treatment will be given to those that focus on
increasing life jacket usage,” said Chris Edmonston, director of the
foundation’s boating safety programs.
The program has nearly $40,000 in grant funding available, but the
deadline to apply is Nov. 1, 2004, and the grants are being awarded
in late January 2005.
Over the past 15 years, the foundation has awarded more than
$615,000 in safety grant funds to organizations that develop
innovative projects that promote safe boating on local waterways.
“We believe that the creativity that goes along with a grass-roots
approach to increasing lifejacket awareness and education may yield
some very out-of-the-box ideas,” Edmonston said.
Newport Harbor’s yacht clubs, flotillas, squadrons and the Newport
Sea Base can go to https://www.BoatUS.com/
foundation to download an application and learn more about boating
safety grants or call (410) 897-0943.
The BoatU.S. Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water is a
national 501(c)(3) nonprofit education and research organization,
funded by the voluntary contributions of 575,000 members of BoatU.S.,
the nation’s largest recreational boat owners association.
Recognized as the No. 1 boating talk radio show in the nation,
“Capt. Mike Whitehead’s Boathouse Radio Show” airs every Saturday
from noon to 1 p.m. on KCBQ-AM (1170). You can join me, Chandler Bell
and Eric Hovland on my radio show by calling the listener line at
(888) 344-1170, and you can listen worldwide at https://www.Boathouse
Radio.com. Let me know of your boating news or information.
* MIKE WHITEHEAD is the Pilot’s boating and harbor columnist. Send
him your harbor and marine-related thoughts and story suggestions by
e-mail to [email protected] or visit https://www.boathousetv.com.
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