I've only had my WAVE since September, but managed to nail an embarassing moment the 2nd time I took her out.
I launched from the Newport Aquatic Center, in the back bay, upwind, tacking pleasantly past the Dunes and under Pacific Coast Highway (PCH). I eyeballed the clearance marker (clearance: 24 feet) and figured "made in the shade", cruised under the bridge with a couple of feet to spare and out into the open harbor. It was such a perfect day, warm, breezy, that I sailed past the Coast Guard Station, out into open sea and tooled down around Crystal Cove for a while with the Dolphins and sea lions. Great day.
A few hours later I was on my way back, jibing downwind now. I didn't even bother glancing at the clearance marker under PCH, as I already knew that I was good to go.
Hmmm, let's do the math, low tide + several hours = high tide.
Carlos Mencia would have said "dee dee dee"
Suddenly, my WAVE bucked like a bull trying to throw a rider. "What the...???"
I looked up, and the BOB at the top of the mast is scaping and bending across the bottom of the bridge. The boat tilts at a scary angle, bouncing and kicking, trying her darndest to pitch me into the 56 degree drink. I can barely hang on and I'm thinking "what a numb nuts. I have bent the daggone mast on my friggin' second day sailing my brand new boat!!" Wedged at a ridiculous angle, by wind and incoming tidal current, the boat scrawls to a complete stop.
Out of nowhere, a little, red Coast Guard boat appears, and one of the guys throws me a line. As I lean out to grab the rope, a major gust of wind pushes me further under the bridge and away from the line.
The guy pulls in the line and tosses it again.
As I lean out to catch it, the wind teases me, again, with another breezy shove away from the rope.
With one hull way way out of the water, the other completely submerged, the mast goaning and bending and threatening to snap, the wind finally raked me all the way under the bridge and pooped me out the other end.
The BOB got scraped up pretty good, but I bent it back into reasonable shape, and the mast stayed true.
Yes, tides are a good thing to keep an eye on don't you think?
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