Looking for some Macknowledge from the group: This time next year, if all goes well, we'll be in the FLA Keys near Angelfish Creek waiting for a weather window to cross the gulfstream. I'm trying to figure out what constitutes a legitmate weather window for the 26X.
Most redditors and boat forums say don't cross if there's any North component to the wind. Ok...makes sense, I'm very aware of what wind-over-current can do to the waves. We have about a 1 knot westerly current in our "lake" with only a few miles of fetch, and in an east wind the waves are steep, closely spaced, and remarkably hard on the boat.
Tons of questions for locals or experienced MacPilots:
*does that mean that an E wind is OK and an ENE wind is not? How much does the wind speed affect this?
*How long does it take for the gulf stream to "lay down" after a North-component wind?
*Is 10 to 15 knots direct from the East, for a long period of time, considered a weather window? Obv we'd prefer a west-component wind but that's unlikely.
I know it's best to start early so as to arrive in the daylight, but I'm not opposed to either waiting outside bimini (out of the gulfstream) or even trying the approach in the dark, as we have good charts and we can do rudders up, centerboard 1ft, and kicker motor drawing less than the hull depth. We'll be sharing skipper duties 3 ways so fatigue should be manageable.
Here's a big question: does anyone see a "weather window" for the crossing in the data below? The windier conditions on the Sunday & Monday morning will have a lasting effect, but how long does it really last? Friday-Saturday-Sunday-Monday at end of the foreacst are obv out, but would anyone consider attempting a passage in the last Tuesday conditions: ENE at about 18mph if it holds for a few days after? Suicide?
