In the middle of San Francisco bay, under the Golden Gate there is a bar so shallow at times that the water color is sandy with a strong ebb and strong wind in.
Its hundreds of feet deep under the Golden Gate bro...check a chart...lol...what are you even saying? The worlds largest Shipping Vessels come in and out of the gate all the time.
There is nothing even close to shallow anywhere all the way to Alcatraz and all the way out into the Ocean. I will never understand why people just write stupid stuff on the internet and act like they know something when the information is readily available. stop
@@mikegrindstaff You obviously have never checked a chart, much less actually been out in the SF Bay east of the Golden Gate in a storm. It's 85 ft down.
I've actually found my sailboat pretty great at bar crossings because of the displacement, it's 12 tonne. The only thing that stresses me out is the rigging.
To me it indicates how much the hull flexed. The back stays wouldn't stretch that much. For kicks I like to show the steering cables in the engine room of my 40 ft Roberts steel motor sailer to people in weather to show how much she flexes! Fun stuff!
@@chrischristen8904 And the sails. Sails cause a lot of stabilisation against rolling motion. Sea going motor yaghts sometimes have a small sail just for stabilisation.
Obviously the camera is mounted on his head, so you are seeing what he is looking at. He's at the helm so he needs to have both hand free just in case.
@@warwick1765 , ofcourse Thankyou. My exit in 2016 was similar on my 42foot yacht...just managed to get over a rather large wave before it broke...always expecting to hit the sand as it went by.
@@zedthehun - I like the way the whole crew is watching that NS38 fly. If we were stepping up to blue water, I think the NS38/NS380 would be on the very top of our short list of boats.