Тёмный

Why are the waves so BIG?! | The Southern Ocean 

The Ocean Race
Подписаться 178 тыс.
Просмотров 233 тыс.
50% 1

The Southern Ocean is a place like no other: isolated, cold, wet, hostile and rough conditions. But there's a reason why the wind is so strong and especially why the waves get so big...
Don’t forget to subscribe for more The Ocean Race: goo.gl/BzBCwU
Check out our full video catalogue: goo.gl/nrB9ay
Like The Ocean Race on Facebook: / theoceanrace
Follow on Twitter: / theoceanrace
Follow on Instagram: / theoceanrace
Read More: www.theoceanrac...

Опубликовано:

 

8 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 89   
@paulskopic5844
@paulskopic5844 Год назад
Keep in mind that over 100 years ago Ernest Shackleton and 2 crew members sailed over 900 miles of this ocean in Winter.............in a 20 ft. boat to seek rescue for his crew of the Endurance.
@firehouse6226
@firehouse6226 Год назад
Yeah, those guys were super tough.
@ElSantoLuchador
@ElSantoLuchador Год назад
Shackleton is the Chuck Norris of the Southern Oceans.
@elisabethandersen1102
@elisabethandersen1102 Год назад
That was my first thought. It's almost incomprehensible how they survived that.
@SailingVesselCaprice
@SailingVesselCaprice 6 месяцев назад
And found an island that's just in the middle of nowhere. Unbelievable odds.
@MilesBellas
@MilesBellas 6 месяцев назад
"Shackleton's way with dissenters was to first isolate them, then squash them. When McNish, the carpenter, tried to take a firm (and intelligently grounded) stand against Shackleton's decision to march across the pack ice, Sir Ernest threatened to shoot him for insubordination" "Ernest Shackleton was a deluded fortune hunter and nobody's idea of a leadership model"
@ceej786
@ceej786 Год назад
I lived in Abu Dhabi when Azzam under Ian Walker took part in The Volvo Ocean Race 2014/15 and was sucked into following this race. For a non-sailor, watching the crew standing out in the open, clinging to anything whilst flying horizontally, getting lashed by the waves, was heart stoppingly exciting. It's safer now but that element of excitement is also slightly dampened. Still a huge fan of the race though.
@tarquinbullocks1703
@tarquinbullocks1703 Год назад
Ken Read and crew on Puma's Mar Mostro in 2011-12 for me. Broken mast, Tristan de Cunha, tanker trip to South Africa. What a team! These boats will never create that excitement.
@michaelharris6662
@michaelharris6662 Год назад
As they circle at their particular latitude, there are no land masses slowing the wind down by friction. Therefore, the wind can create very large waves.
@Sam-vn2id
@Sam-vn2id Год назад
Jesus loves you
@montieluckett7036
@montieluckett7036 Год назад
"Oh Lord, Your Ocean is so big, and My Ship so small, ..."
@68404
@68404 10 месяцев назад
Australia understands the Southern Ocean. We also know it kisses our southern coastline, instead of some arbitrary marking on a map.
@katarinageller-herr575
@katarinageller-herr575 Год назад
I pray for you for the next days around cape horn! The big waves give me the feeling that I want to pray for You!!! I love your braveness, and your team and your amazing beautiful sailing boat Malizia!! I wish you all the best for the next days untill you finally reach the city in Brazil, where you can rest for a while! I will always accompany you on the Internet and plan to get a Malizia tattoo if you really win this ocean race 2023 !
@bobsmoot8454
@bobsmoot8454 Месяц назад
Great explanation of the weather pattern
@veronikajordan4918
@veronikajordan4918 Год назад
Bravo und weiter so! 👌🏻🙌🏼❤ Alles Gute für alle an diesem extremen Ort am anderen Ende der Welt....bleibt stark, passt auf eure Malizia auf und erfüllt euch euren Traum. ⛵🌊
@behrensf84
@behrensf84 Месяц назад
No video or photo can show you just how big a 20 meter swell is. You have to experience it…
@jimj2683
@jimj2683 15 дней назад
VR would help
@thomaspotschka5387
@thomaspotschka5387 Год назад
It must be painfully for Guyot, not beeing part of this leg! Best wishes to you!
@joeyjamison5772
@joeyjamison5772 Месяц назад
"We're gonna need a bigger boat!"
@robingilmore1444
@robingilmore1444 Год назад
Man if I was 30 years younger, I'd like to try that!
@Roscoe.P.Coldchain
@Roscoe.P.Coldchain Год назад
I think you have to be very posh and born into it..Well that’s how it is in my country England..
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
Sounds like you've come up against a lot of barriers in life
@miketybring4700
@miketybring4700 11 дней назад
@@MrSimonw58 Most people do.
@Abhishek100.
@Abhishek100. 5 месяцев назад
🇮🇳In India, there is a brave naval officer named Abhilash Tomy who completed a solo race and won a silver medal. His story is truly inspiring. Similarly, there is an Australian movie titled ‘True Spirit’ about Jessica Watson, the youngest sailor to complete this race. During her journey, she shares her challenges and offers a glimpse into the ocean’s vastness.”
@KenDavies-qv3fs
@KenDavies-qv3fs Год назад
Good fun !
@dnarowdy
@dnarowdy 4 месяца назад
1.52 I just realized that this wind pattern around Antarctica is the same as on the poles of Jupiter.
@ElvisPresley4Hire
@ElvisPresley4Hire 2 месяца назад
The spin of the earth - mentioned as a cause for the high winds at the Antarctic- is actually much less than at the equator. At the South Pole there is just spin on a dime. At the equator the speed of travel of the spinning earth is 1023 mph. That is according to what we are taught at school. Funny because on a really nice day; with the earth spinning much faster in England than in Antarctica sometimes a feather dropped out of the window; will fall mostly straight down.
@tomdarco2223
@tomdarco2223 Год назад
Right On
@someoneelse.2252
@someoneelse.2252 Месяц назад
Nothing and nobody can control Mother Nature.
@salvitoripopadillo4539
@salvitoripopadillo4539 Год назад
When you get to a place of understanding the world has been misdescribed to us all, you'll get a clear understanding of why the southern oceans produce such huge waves! It's because they're much bigger than we... have been told!
@nobodycares79
@nobodycares79 Год назад
The westerlies of Southern Ocean are the combined results of a strong zonal thermal gradient and conservation of planetary vorticity. The classical convective theory (Hadley cells, Ferrel cells, polar cells) is not the best way to explain the circumpolar westerly winds.
@herbi4538
@herbi4538 Год назад
That's verry impression to watch.😮
@tree4408
@tree4408 Год назад
Hang on, sailors...! God's Speed!
@tr7b410
@tr7b410 Год назад
The song "Sail" on sailor by the Beach Boys comes to mind.
@reverands571
@reverands571 Год назад
25 Knots?!?!?!? The initial rise of the water, to become a wave, is Bernoulli in action. After that initial rise, the wind can push directly on the water, piling up more and more water. Few, if any, realize that Bernoulli can be involved, between two fluids (water and air). Note the term "initial rise". Friction, to push on the water, is also involved. Complicated mess, mathematically, usually ignored (my uncle wrote the first basic text, for Weights & Measures, on the transition from laminar to turbulent flow---and the experimental data was collected in a wind tunnel---on a flat surface. Nobody noticed, but me.)
@boathemian7694
@boathemian7694 Год назад
My wife circumnavigated down there on a 39’ boat… She says nothing when buoy racers talk shit in the pubs…
@boathemian7694
@boathemian7694 Месяц назад
@@SailorGerry you’re a sailor and don’t know what a buoy is? Where you from bro?
@fredrichenning1367
@fredrichenning1367 Год назад
Bah! Those aren't BIG waves. You should try to ride out a typhoon aboard a destroyer like I had to do back NW of the Philippines in 1957, Typhoon Rose. Those waves tossed us around like corks. I saw one of our sister ships on top of a wave that must have been 90 feet tall. It's bow was out back to the sonar dome, and the propellers were out, too. Then it disappeared THROUGH the next wave. This kept up for three days... THOSE were waves!
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
Ai captain
@wilowest3509
@wilowest3509 Год назад
I know exactly what your talking about l seen waves that were the height and as steep as some islands and it looked more like 200 feet lol scared the shite out of me on a cruise ship never mind a sailing boat . Ps nearly got spat out the back on the second night of this storm but the back rail saved me going overboard lol .
@fredrichenning1367
@fredrichenning1367 Год назад
@@wilowest3509 - I nearly got "tossed" overboard twice by so-called freak waves. One during a storm in the middle of the night. As a radioman, I had to deliver/take messages, like, to the boiler room, which was aft. No way to get there but on deck. Coming back, I heard the tell-tale sounds of a wave smacking the stanchions coming at me. Nowhere to go except there was a dummy torpedo head lashed to the bulkhead. It had a big ring in its nose. I leapt like hell and grabbed that ring. Here to tell the story.
@Dingo4440
@Dingo4440 8 месяцев назад
Well, that was in a Hurricane, the waves down there are monsters on a weekly and daily basis more often than not.... And they come with NO way to forecast them unlike a hurricane. They're 'normal'. Not for a day or two IF your unlucky enough to be out in a Cyclone once. In a destroyer is one thing, in a 40 foot yacht, that's something else.
@wilowest3509
@wilowest3509 Год назад
Be careful crossing from Australia to the Fijian islands around March went on a cruise must have gone through a cyclone , back in the 80's and the waves looked as steep and as big as some of those islands that were much higher than only 100 feet more like at least 200 feet of sheer omg terror . On the second night was out the back watching in amazement how big these waves were thinking how would a sail boat cope here then the ship tilted up all of a sudden and was on my ass sliding at speed towards the back of the boat in pitch black about a good 80 feet away and l immediately looked for the back rail to stop me getting spat out , hit the rail with force then rolled over onto my knees climbing back up towards the spa pool area looking for something to grab on to while the ship was on a steep upward angle. Managed to get back under the roofed area pants all muddy and wet on the back.Went to my room and said nothing to no one but the two girls out the back area watching seemed to have a good laugh lol .
@LFX27
@LFX27 11 месяцев назад
If I ever go from aus to fiji in my life I will bear this comment in mind, thanks 😆
@hosoiarchives4858
@hosoiarchives4858 Год назад
How do you get into this?
@stephenolson532
@stephenolson532 7 дней назад
Its because water runs down hill right?
@FlatlandMando
@FlatlandMando 17 дней назад
I don't think these modern, fast, " tech boats" are the ones to go down there & take a beating.
@j.a.4592
@j.a.4592 3 месяца назад
Racing in this circumstances is cracy. Safty sailing ist enought risky
@nightnursetaiaotoi
@nightnursetaiaotoi Год назад
Imagine how our wakas navigated these seas, and they repeated thier journeys 💯
@alangrant5684
@alangrant5684 Месяц назад
I know people love sailing but I just don't get it. Seeing nothing but wall to wall water might be cool at first but I think it would be so boring after that.
@bradwoods7321
@bradwoods7321 Год назад
Can think of a few trawlers that got all the windows punched put down there.
@williambyast7791
@williambyast7791 Год назад
Think outside the Box!
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
Cruise ship 🚢
@jemainejohnigan1033
@jemainejohnigan1033 Год назад
Sea monsters underneath
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
Aargh captain
@foresegiulianocarmine2534
@foresegiulianocarmine2534 Год назад
In certi momenti sembrano sommergibili a vela.
@av94_officiel
@av94_officiel Год назад
I passed through North Sea in peak season.👀
@clivedytor2069
@clivedytor2069 5 месяцев назад
These guys have b….of steel!
@buddymac3993
@buddymac3993 Год назад
Room to run like releasing the big dog to hunt!!!🇨🇦😄
@BaNaNa-su1rf
@BaNaNa-su1rf Год назад
It is so weird that waves have to be so dab😢😢
@Trevor7727
@Trevor7727 Месяц назад
balls of steel……
@erchiqui803
@erchiqui803 Год назад
⛵️😍😍😍😍😍
@user-xm2kl1nu3h
@user-xm2kl1nu3h Год назад
Ужасно красиво!!!
@davevandervelde4799
@davevandervelde4799 Месяц назад
All by Gods design.
@clairerichter2863
@clairerichter2863 Год назад
Southern ocean episode and footage of Guyot, nowhere near the southern ocean 40's, more like 20's 🤣🤔
@chadrew6
@chadrew6 Год назад
Umm, hard to believe you don't know this? The southern ocean is the only ocean unbroken by a land mass for the entire circumference of the earth, hence the waves can build up unhindered as they circle the globe. Maybe next time, try a headline that doesn't contain a stupid question!
@TheOceanRace
@TheOceanRace Год назад
Not everyone knows this which is why we explain it in the first minute of the video.
@DavidOfWhitehills
@DavidOfWhitehills Год назад
Umm, hard to believe you were not viscerally affected by the video. Try a bigger screen.
@robertcaldwell7571
@robertcaldwell7571 12 дней назад
Why are waves so big? Because the ocean is big. I didn't even watch the video.
@JimwombatLand
@JimwombatLand 7 дней назад
The Southern Ocean is not a Nice place to play
@moose6144
@moose6144 Месяц назад
You’re absolutely wrong. The reason why the waves are bigger in the south is because gravity cannot hold the water molecules as closely as they do in the northern hemisphere because of the overwhelming weight of the water, trying to pull itself away from the Earth because it’s upside down
@FlatlandMando
@FlatlandMando 17 дней назад
@@moose6144 Yah!
@bradsillasen1972
@bradsillasen1972 5 месяцев назад
Annoying ADD edit.
@nickmail7604
@nickmail7604 Год назад
And idiots that sail in these conditions for pleasure get what they deserve.
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Год назад
You overhead in a helicopter with a loud speaker
@harikuz
@harikuz Год назад
❤💝💖💗💚💛💕💞💟❣💔
Далее
5 Monster Waves Caught On Camera
12:32
Просмотров 18 млн
Bike Challenge
00:20
Просмотров 21 млн
It was hard 😂
00:15
Просмотров 896 тыс.
Why No One's Allowed To Explore The Antarctic
5:23
Rounding Cape Horn on the Volvo Ocean Race 2008/09
5:53
How a 16th Century Explorer's Sailing Ship Works
41:08
Просмотров 671 тыс.
This Is Why You Can’t Go To Antarctica
29:30
Просмотров 6 млн
This Line Killed 2 Sailors
19:39
Просмотров 576 тыс.