I have twice experienced 30+ Knot winds.
The first was in Jan this year in Anderson Inlet on the south coast of Vic (opening into Bass Strait).
My wife and I were about 4nm down the eastern end of the inlet when the wind started to build. When it hit about 20kts we decided we would start for home knowing it would take some time as the wind was westerly and with the tide out the channel - even for a TI - was not very wide.
To get back to our camp we had to sail back to almost the ocean bar before turning East into the northerly channel.
Approaching the ocean the wind had picked up even more and the waves were breaking very short and steep ~1m.
I had reefed to about 50% and we peddled hard when tacking but the wind and waves made this a challenge. My wife got a real work out that day - one min out on the tramp, then into the boat to peddle and then back out on the other side.
As the wind increased further and with the channel so narrow we were making very little headway. We decided to land on the sandbar separating us from our "home" beach and wheel the TI back to the other channel. We put the cart with the beach wheels in and packed everything down - amas in, mast and drives laid flat and tied down on top and set off.
We'd only got about 10m when the real change hit - the weather bureau reported 50+ kts nearby in Bass Strait.
The wind flipped the entire TI (which was broadside to the wind) about 270 degrees - which probably saved the rudder.
I'm so lucky my wife stays calm in these sort of situations. We just held onto the boat with our backs to the wind to avoid the sandblasting and after about 10mins the gusts abated slightly so we pulled the boat's bow into the wind and put everything back together. When we set off, this time my wife was pushing down on the leeward side.
Back at the other channel there was minimal wave action and we were able to peddle the few meters across to the camp beach.
Motto of the Story - always take the cart.
The most recent was in Oct this year when a wind change with winds gusting to over 30knts came through when we were ~ 3nm from shore.
Here's my log that I pasted onto the Vic Hobie Facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/groups/240154692833236/...
Sea Log - 12-10-14
Went out again at Sorrento [VIC AUS] today. It looked like a great day for it with the forecast for ~10kts rising to strong winds in the early evening.
Started off with 13 degree air temp at 10:00am and fog which burnt off by about 10:30 to reveal a beautiful blue sky and warm sun. Very light wind ~ 5kts. Meandered West hugging the coast to Portsea for a coffee before setting off out to Chinaman's hat. Plenty of playful seals and this time no big tourist boat.
The wind picked up slightly, so decided to visit Mud Island.
After a short stop we were off again towards the Sth Channel Island. When we got to the Sth Eastern tip of Mud Island the wind picked up again and we flew across the flat water. About half way across, the wind had increased to around 20kts and the chop about 1m and quite steep. By the time we were close to the Fort, I decided it was better to head for home rather than extend our time out there. Tried to close reach towards Sorrento but the wind had picked up to around 25kts and we had to fall away heading more towards Portsea. As the wind reached around 30kts we were often covered by water so reefed about 50% reducing the speed but also the number of times the bow looked like a submarine (I was a bit worried about water getting in under the forward hatch but later found we had only shipped about 1 a litre). We closed the shore closer to Portsea than Sorrento and then had to tack a few times to get back to our starting point. We were starting to get quite cold by now - in spite of the dry pants etc so having Sorrento sailing club to starboard and being able to make a single reach into the beach was very welcome. Never the less, all in all a great day out.The map of our journey is shown on this google map:
https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=zFOj4dHGLT2Q.kKknJSA6r-yoThe wind shift can be easily seen on this graph.
