What's the biggest wave you've ever seen and where?
How about sharing some of your big wave photos?
How do you know when NOT to fish an area due to high surf?
This photo is obviously retouched, but not the size of the wave. This monster was the largest one I saw in two days of filming off the coast of Beavertail. It was three times the size of most other big waves. You never know when that big one will turn up.
when i was in my early 20's i was a fill in mate on a f/v. we were stuck in 12 -15 footers for most of a day on georges bank. it was enough to make me get a real job on dry land. i didn't puke but it was close - not fun
Mike:
I have some pictures I took in the winter of 92 at the East Wall where the waves were 25 to 30'. They are 35mm slides so I don't know how to convert them.
Mike:
I have some pictures I took in the winter of 92 at the East Wall where the waves were 25 to 30'. They are 35mm slides so I don't know how to convert them.
Any photo shop can scan them into a high resolution image, and it won't cost that much...
Since you mentioned it you're pretty much obligated
biggest waves i ever fished surfcasting were in montauk. 8-10 foot sets at their peak, then the bigger rogues, during last years Classic. when is it too big to go out? that depends on where you fish. first off, i have found in big water that if you can get out rockhopping at all it's usually on the ebb, and it requires studying the water for abit before you go out! you gotta be able to hold your rock and beware of where you will get swept to once your knocked off. crosscurrents are the killers that pull you parallel to the shore out into the coves...
Since the rogue waves always seem to know where I am, I try to stay out of places that a triple size wave will get me. I got soaked this summer in NH on a night when the average wave was'nt even breaking and I moved to a spot on the drop that had'nt been hit for the 15 minutes that I was fishing on a rock 5 feet higher. I was on it for a minute with my jacket not buttoned up and sure enough soaked my smokes.
Stand on top of the bluff at Cuttyhunk on a clear and calm day and watch the sets come in. The difference is pretty interesting. You will push the envelope less afterwards.
Frasier: Niles, I’ve just had the most marvelous idea for a website! People will post their opinions, cheeky bon mots, and insights, and others will reply in kind!
I have seen 16 foot cresting waves many times on my sailboat. They occur under certain conditions from just south of beavertail to about a line between PJ and Brenton reef then past that they are just big rollers on the open water.
The worst I have experienced recently fishing (that is been washed over by them , not just looking at them) were some rogues coming into central beach one October. Smokey and I were on the big rocks maybe 3 feet above the wash fishing for about 20 minutes when out of nowwhere comes three big waves in a row clear over our heads. We clung to the rocks like cats and immediately beat a retreat to the beach. We watched for a while because that was it , 3 waves and it went back to normal. Luckily we did not go back out on the rocks because about 20 minutes later here comes 3 more just like the first ones that hit us. Something out there was setting up these big suckers about every 20 minute and in between they were normal waves.
Serious chop on lake eerie.My guess would be 10-15 ft chop.Not rollers.I thought it was over that day.Maybe a minute after we left the safety of the inlet.Like nothing I've seen in the ocean.
Serious chop on lake eerie.My guess would be 10-15 ft chop.Not rollers.I thought it was over that day.Maybe a minute after we left the safety of the inlet.Like nothing I've seen in the ocean.
Yup, fresh water is less buoyant, so when you stuff a boat into that shorter chop, it feels more like a car crash....
“Americans have the right and advantage of being armed, unlike the people of other countries, whose leaders are afraid to trust them with arms.” – James Madison.
Just yesterday I was about 2-3 miles off squibnocket I saw a solid 16-20 foot swell start to break, by far the largest wave Ive ever seen, thank god I have a fast boat.
I would guess most of you old salts rarely get seasick; I was surprised when Frank Mundus told me he would get sick every day for 23 years...it takes a special love for the sea to endure that every day.
Frank said he would wait until all the big guys were on the rail and then he would approach the sickest one in the bunch and say, "That's not how you do it! If you're going to puke, do it right." Then he would take out his teeth and commence projectile vomiting, wipe his mouth, get up and eat a sandwich.
While taking a 42' around the thumb of michigan in 10-15' chop was the most miserable i have ever been in a boat. Those waves were really close to eachother, doesnt help that we were in shallow water for the majority of the trip. never been that green for so long.
I watched three guys on two jet skis Sunday a.m. venture out to massive offshore waves off of Newport...one of the jet skis was towing the surfer up onto the crest of these enormous swells and the guy was surfing them and then quickly picked up before the subsequent wave could crush him and dragged around for another ride, it was an incredible sight, they were much bigger than the waves in the video and these guys were either supremely confident or completely nuts...
I watched three guys on two jet skis Sunday a.m. venture out to massive offshore waves off of Newport...one of the jet skis was towing the surfer up onto the crest of these enormous swells and the guy was surfing them and then quickly picked up before the subsequent wave could crush him and dragged around for another ride, it was an incredible sight, they were much bigger than the waves in the video and these guys were either supremely confident or completely nuts...
Yup - it's sort of Newport's answer to 'Jaws', the cloud-break that was in Riding Giants
They've been surfing it for over a year now from what I understand although I haven't seen it 1st hand yet
The spot in the video is Around the Corner at Ruggles Avenue off Cliff Walk - the outer reef at The Point was bigger
I've got some Kodachrome transparencies from Hurricane Bob at Ruggles I oughta dig out and scan
Last edited by Crafty Angler; 08-25-2009 at 07:48 AM..
"There is no royal road to this heavy surf-fishing. With all the appliances for comfort experience can suggest, there is a certain amount of hard work to be done and exposure to be bourne as a part of the price of success." From "Striped Bass," Scribner's Magazine, 1881.
Location: I live in a house, but my soul is at sea.
Posts: 8,615
Similar to Nebe in my youth I was part of a crew on a 52 foot racing sloop coming home from the southern circuit to NY, caught outside Haterous in what was the remnants of a downgraded hurricane in September. Rain so hard it hurt, waves that swallowed the boat between the troughs, 2 men on for 2 hours max....all you could physically take. Not that going below was much of a rest, never heaved, but it was impossible to sleep.
Middle of the night and while on watch, the small storm jib stay breaks. My mate and I called up a second set of crew, so we could go forward and haul it in, making sure our life lines were clipped in as we went. Remember sitting on the deck and watching this f***king huge wave cresting as we get to it (taller than our boat was long), then watching the ocean disappear as we are lifed high into the air. I remember falling somewhat slower than the boat saying Hail Mary's on the way down, followed by a wall of water burying us as we plowed through that wave. If we weren't clipped in with life lines, I'd not be typing this.
Flew back to Ft. Lauderdale after that trip, to join a crew delivering a 42 foot catch to San Fran. On that trip we had one hell of a ride in a storm off Costa Rica with 30 footers, but nothing to compare with the monsters we road of Hatterous the previous trip.
Middle of the night and while on watch, the small storm jib stay breaks. My mate and I called up a second set of crew, so we could go forward and haul it in, making sure our life lines were clipped in as we went.
Eh... We just call the off bow to come up and help the bowman with stupid crap like that.
Oh wait.
Thats usually me.
And sail changes.
And peels.
And going up the rig.
And kite gybes.
And anything else stupid that the back of the bus has no desire to do.
Love it.
Back in '86 when I was in the Navy...there was one that worked over in Payroll, Had to be 7 foot tall and 300 lbs, if she was an ounce. Could chop a man in half with her thighs. Rumor had it she ate a bowl of Testicles every morning for Breakfast.....she was big and she was mean....
Oh...Ocean Wave...Sorry.....I digress
"If you're arguing with an idiot, make sure he isn't doing the same thing."
40' on my very first trip on a cod long liner in the Bering sea, once the first mate had convinced me we weren't going to sink, the ride from up on the bridge became kinda fun.