haha had a dighy race in 40-45 and man it was crazy they decided to cancel the race when everyone kept capsizing and two boat crashed into eachoth with such velocity it put a whole in one of them.
PS: Every winter we get the hot dry 80 (MPH) and above Santa Ana winds. The Devil Winds.
Sailing in those is a great test of your boat and skill but only advised for the experienced heavy weather sailor with great survival gear on their person and on board their boat.
Sooner or later the long distant cruiser will be caught in heavy weather so breaking the weak link on your boat (if there is one) close to land in a test sail vs 500+ Knots out is a good way to check your boat.
If you like heavy weather sailing (great for instruction), the Santa Barbara / Channel Islands CA area has some of the most consistent heavy weather sailing in the world.
We can easily get 35 to 40 gusting 50 to 60 at our Islands & channels between them. When 2 7 ft seas constantly collide making a 14 ft wall it is great fun on a sunny day & warm too!
True, not that scary. Good experience though. I have sailed with 60+ knots of wind on the same yacht, close to land (the land is the scary bit). Planning ahead, knowing your actual coarse across the ground/course made good and monitoring for change is very important, especially on a yacht in sailing mode. Sailing in sixty knots requires many of the skills that square rigger sailors use on a daily basis, as 60 degrees off the wind, made good, is the best you can reasonably expect on a Chico 40.
It's a little tough to tell from the video... how high are you calling those seas? Looks like 10-12 but hard to say from youtube...
MrLabrant 2 months ago
What skills????????
Dan221075 2 months ago
that was a good video, thanks for posting. Just starting out sailing so is good to see stuff like this.
FilmpoetsTV 11 months ago
The yacht is a Chico 40 designed by Keith Eade and Gary Mull. 12m/40ft long.
ToSeeTheSea 1 year ago
what kind of boat did you sailed? how big was it?
pwny100 1 year ago
haha had a dighy race in 40-45 and man it was crazy they decided to cancel the race when everyone kept capsizing and two boat crashed into eachoth with such velocity it put a whole in one of them.
gnilrefues 1 year ago
as a pointer its good to drop your boom if you have your storms up.
bigmuso123 1 year ago
Fast downwind sailing.
You are absolutely flying there.
How long is that boat?
TroyaE117 2 years ago
PS: Every winter we get the hot dry 80 (MPH) and above Santa Ana winds. The Devil Winds.
Sailing in those is a great test of your boat and skill but only advised for the experienced heavy weather sailor with great survival gear on their person and on board their boat.
Sooner or later the long distant cruiser will be caught in heavy weather so breaking the weak link on your boat (if there is one) close to land in a test sail vs 500+ Knots out is a good way to check your boat.
MIBstudios 2 years ago
If you like heavy weather sailing (great for instruction), the Santa Barbara / Channel Islands CA area has some of the most consistent heavy weather sailing in the world.
We can easily get 35 to 40 gusting 50 to 60 at our Islands & channels between them. When 2 7 ft seas constantly collide making a 14 ft wall it is great fun on a sunny day & warm too!
MIBstudios 2 years ago
Comment removed
JonaTheHero 2 years ago
True, not that scary. Good experience though. I have sailed with 60+ knots of wind on the same yacht, close to land (the land is the scary bit). Planning ahead, knowing your actual coarse across the ground/course made good and monitoring for change is very important, especially on a yacht in sailing mode. Sailing in sixty knots requires many of the skills that square rigger sailors use on a daily basis, as 60 degrees off the wind, made good, is the best you can reasonably expect on a Chico 40.
YachtBlueHeron 2 years ago
Comment removed
JonaTheHero 2 years ago
what a badass
pg911a5 2 years ago
Is that man in the boat alive? Or is he just as cool as a cucumber?
ydesdev 2 years ago 2
looked pretty damn scairy to me, and you say that was smooth sailing?
dirtTdude 2 years ago
fantastico
niperaquestes 2 years ago
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LAME
god damn pussys get your sails up
OpaUdgulf 2 years ago
You the pussy, you not there pathetic
sailor164 2 years ago
gilipollas
niperaquestes 2 years ago
Being a newbie, that's about how we sail in 20 to 30kts hehe. Winter is coming so guess we'll be learning!
freshnelly 3 years ago
You'll be better prepared than those that have never sailed under storm sails.
ToSeeTheSea 3 years ago
Nice choice of sails, looks like it was about as comfortable a ride as you could get.
surfergee2 3 years ago 2
Great film! Good sailing. I was fighting a hurricane in Grand Banks with my 38 foot GibSea. I wish I had sails like you then...!!!
Engasjert 3 years ago 2
A Hurricane is something I hope not to encounter again. I've just purchased a "Series Drouge" to help should we be that unlucky.
ToSeeTheSea 3 years ago
Great sailing in rough conditions. Well done. That takes some cajones!
ShorelinePearson 4 years ago
out there in a boat that big lol no way !!
19panther87 4 years ago