Yachting Monthly — November 2017

(C. Jardin) #1
November 2017 http://www.yachtingmonthly.com 21

EXPERT ON BOARD


Nestling under a
weather shore in
Mupe Bay looks
idyllic, but the wind
may not behave quite
as you’d expect

A low spit, such as a gravel bank, provides
the most basic kind of weather shore
protection, serving as a breakwater but
with hardly any wind break effect (Photo
1). Even so, when a strong wind blows
over the low obstruction it will stay fairly
constant in strength and direction, so
that an anchored boat should lie steady,
without excessive sheering around. The

anchorage won’t feel like a cosy haven but
the anchor, provided it is properly set, is
unlikely to be tripped-out by the boat’s
movements.
We might expect a higher land mass to
provide better shelter, but this is where
things get complicated. A vigorous wind
will generally be stronger at high altitude
than at low level, and a mountain peak is
quite likely to interfere with that upper
air flow, encouraging some of it to spill
down the leeward slope (Diagram 1). The
effect can be particularly marked where
that slope follows a smooth profile down
to sea level, so that the strong airstream
then blasts straight off the beach (Photo
2). Whether this is nasty or nice depends
on whether you want peaceful shelter or
swift sailing. The Isle of Man has a
flat plain at its northern end but most

Basic shelter – with strong winds


In the lee of Chesil
Bank, the water is flat
but the wind strength
undiminished Sea


Wind stronger
at high level

Lee slope downdraught from upper wind

Strong airflow
down lee slope

Diagram 1

ALL GRAPHICS: MAXINE HEATH
Free download pdf