My Nordic Tug throws a large wake when at full speed of 12-14 knots. Most of the time I travel at 8 knots or less and the wake is much smaller (as are the fuel bills!) but every once in awhile I need to get somewhere.
I am VERY careful about where I am when I open up the throttle. I make sure there no boats nearby, that I am far enough for shore for the wake to fully dissipate, etc. If I see another boat approaching, I drop my speed early until I leave little to no wake. It's not only the legal thing to do, it's just common courtesy as well.
We all know that many boaters ignore courtesy and constantly roll everyone else. I don't expect that to change much, unfortunately.
I have a different issue that I was wondering about the other day. I was making my way north through the lower reaches of Lake Champlain last week. I was cruising at relatively high speed and I appropriately slowed down when coming near anyone else.
There were a lot of bass boats blasting through the area at speeds over 50 mph. These boats plane so smoothly that their wake dissipates very quickly so they can run fast without causing damage (most of the time). Even if they zipped by me less than 20 feet away, their wakes did not bother me much.
However, any wake at all that I left affected them a great deal at those speeds. For the first ten or so boats that came through, I dutifully reduced my speed to no wake well before we passed but then I noticed the bass boats would hit my wake FAR behind me and go airborne. I seriously thought they were going to flip.
What seemed odd to me is that they made no attempt whatsoever to slow down, quarter the wave or just scoot around the wake entirely. Going airborne just din't seem to phase them.
The question then is what is our responsibility for other boaters who make no attempt at all to avoid potentially dangerous situations? I know that I am responsible for my wake but often I could not see the boats coming around a bend a long ways away. To entirely mitigate any effect of my wake, I would have had cruise at no wake speeds the entire day due to the POSSIBILITY that a bass boat might come screaming through. Their closely speed is such that they can hit a residual wake created by me far before it was possible for me to see them coming.
I reached the wide open section of the lake where wind driven waves overcame all wakes before I reached a conclusion on what to do other than cruise slowly all the time.
Interested in your thoughts.
(Jet skis were another issue - they clearly WANTED me to throw a large wake so they could play in it but I also wondered what my legal responsibility would be if they got hurt while intentionally playing in my wake)
Maybe I just need to boat midweek
I am VERY careful about where I am when I open up the throttle. I make sure there no boats nearby, that I am far enough for shore for the wake to fully dissipate, etc. If I see another boat approaching, I drop my speed early until I leave little to no wake. It's not only the legal thing to do, it's just common courtesy as well.
We all know that many boaters ignore courtesy and constantly roll everyone else. I don't expect that to change much, unfortunately.
I have a different issue that I was wondering about the other day. I was making my way north through the lower reaches of Lake Champlain last week. I was cruising at relatively high speed and I appropriately slowed down when coming near anyone else.
There were a lot of bass boats blasting through the area at speeds over 50 mph. These boats plane so smoothly that their wake dissipates very quickly so they can run fast without causing damage (most of the time). Even if they zipped by me less than 20 feet away, their wakes did not bother me much.
However, any wake at all that I left affected them a great deal at those speeds. For the first ten or so boats that came through, I dutifully reduced my speed to no wake well before we passed but then I noticed the bass boats would hit my wake FAR behind me and go airborne. I seriously thought they were going to flip.
What seemed odd to me is that they made no attempt whatsoever to slow down, quarter the wave or just scoot around the wake entirely. Going airborne just din't seem to phase them.
The question then is what is our responsibility for other boaters who make no attempt at all to avoid potentially dangerous situations? I know that I am responsible for my wake but often I could not see the boats coming around a bend a long ways away. To entirely mitigate any effect of my wake, I would have had cruise at no wake speeds the entire day due to the POSSIBILITY that a bass boat might come screaming through. Their closely speed is such that they can hit a residual wake created by me far before it was possible for me to see them coming.
I reached the wide open section of the lake where wind driven waves overcame all wakes before I reached a conclusion on what to do other than cruise slowly all the time.
Interested in your thoughts.
(Jet skis were another issue - they clearly WANTED me to throw a large wake so they could play in it but I also wondered what my legal responsibility would be if they got hurt while intentionally playing in my wake)
Maybe I just need to boat midweek