<!--quoteo(post=170889:date=Nov 11 2006, 05:15 PM:name=Mad_Jack)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Mad_Jack @ Nov 11 2006, 05:15 PM) [snapback]170889[/snapback]</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->
...... That way, the incoming waves are cut by your bow and the energy is dispersed roughly equally on either side if the vessel.
The second, which works well for smaller ships, is to do as Doober suggests and "lie ahull"; that is, take in all sail and wait it out. Many merchant ships of the period could actually find their own "calm point" within a raging storm by lying ahull.
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he he well for the first point when i did head into the oncoming waves - i nearly lost my fillings, the +20 foot drop as you went down the other side of the wave - to be met by another wall of water taller than my mast, just wasn't going to do it for me that time, and there was certainly no soft parting of the water by my bow(which generaly went under the oncoming wave i do recall). But as i said different conditions call for different methods, you got to think on your feet.
The second could have been an option, but the captain and myself decided that as we were on the very edge of the storm, and well it was pretty darn big already(like i said waves over the height of our mast when in the trough of the wave), and we were only a few miles from our destination port it was worth running with her. we took in all sails and used just the engine, but not before loseing the top-sail sadly. Anyway it was an adventure and i enjoyed it very much <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sailr.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid="
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