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    waves, swell, swell2 & wind waves. Oh my good!

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    • J
      jose_fley
      last edited by

      Four waves?
      Sorry. But my head is going to explode.

      0_1539379179416_Opera Instantánea_2018-10-12_221859_www.windy.com.png

      idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • idefix37I
        idefix37 Sailor Moderator @jose_fley
        last edited by idefix37

        @jose_fley

        In August you have got an information about the different kinds of waves shown on Windy, you seemed happy with it.
        And now you got a headache ??

        https://community.windy.com/user/jose_fley

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • J
          jose_fley
          last edited by jose_fley

          Swell 1, 2 and 3 is ok. But the map shows waves 1, 2, 3, waves and wind waves.
          What is the difference? 5 references ...

          idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • idefix37I
            idefix37 Sailor Moderator @jose_fley
            last edited by idefix37

            @jose_fley
            As explained in my post you have read :

            The seastate that you can observe in a given place, is a mix of different type of waves:
            The windsea (also called wind waves) is produced by the local wind.
            The main swell is produced by a strong wind in a remote place. The swell travels great distances to where you observe it.

            Secondary swells are produced also by winds in other remote places.
            All of them have different heights, come from different directions and show different periods (i.e. the time between 2 wave crests)
            Swell 1 is the main swell,
            Swell 2 and 3 are secondary swells

            Waves is the sea state (also called total sea) that you can observe in a given place = Wind Waves + Swell1 + Swell2 + Swell3
            Wind waves is produced by the local wind
            Swell 1 is the main swell produced by remote wind
            Swell 2 is a smaller swell produced by an other remote wind
            Swell 3 mostly is very small and neglected.

            What is the interest of knowing these different types of waves?
            For Surfers the best conditions are a strong Swell 1 with low Wind Waves and low Swell 2/3. With strong Wind Waves and strong Swell, waves are very disorganised especially if their directions are different ... « like in a washing machine »
            For Sailors, Wind Waves at 90º of the Swell direction give a «cross sea » tougher than a sea with all kind of waves in the same direction
            ...etc...

            Hope it’s clear for you now.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 10
            • J
              jose_fley
              last edited by jose_fley

              Is exactly that. for sailor. I have now a little boat 3.30mts.

              I can not understand well which one I should observe, which one is more important or that affects me directly 200, 300 or 500 meters far from the coast

              Yesterday I was observing the sea on the coast. On the map of Windy it showed that there was waves 2mts, swell (swell 1) of 2.1 meters. the waves was about 2 meters when broke on solid ground about , but 200 meters inside the sea, only 0,6/0,8mts.

              The wind was exactly as showed in the Windy map. 6km / h.

              idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • idefix37I
                idefix37 Sailor Moderator @jose_fley
                last edited by idefix37

                @jose_fley
                I see.... Both Weather Models ECMWF and GFS, and their respective Waves Models, used by Windy are global models which cover the planet. Their resolution is good but quite coarse for local forecasts in some areas (mainly because of the coarse bathymetric model embedded). I don’t know where is your navigation zone but at 500m the swell is much weaker if you are in shallow waters.

                As example today in France ECMWF gives this waves forecast in south of Britanny. The swell is well established and the Total Sea (Waves in Windy) is 2.8m near the coastline.

                0_1539430056370_49597682-A5F2-4C5E-B644-D27BA5B75886.jpeg

                If we consider at same time the forecast of a French Waves Model with a higher resolution and probably a better mapping of the seabed, we have just more than 1m (1mt) at the same place.

                0_1539430681242_6A2383F4-E40A-4763-A50B-C2B901A95990.jpeg

                For you it’s probably better to consider « Wind Waves ».
                « Waves » and « Swell » are overestimated if you sail at short distance of the coast in shallow waters.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • J
                  jose_fley
                  last edited by

                  Thanks for the explanation.
                  just one question more:

                  how many is for you "short distance of the coast."10 meters? 20 meters?,50, 100??

                  idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • idefix37I
                    idefix37 Sailor Moderator @jose_fley
                    last edited by idefix37

                    @jose_fley
                    I can’t say at which distance you get smaller waves. It depends on the seabed profile.

                    0_1539507683414_5CA0E888-D09A-49B6-8B5F-973EB302E19B.jpeg

                    You see that high waves (green) become smaller (blue) from 20, 10m, and much more from 5m (light blue). On top of the map, the 20m sounding line are at 1.96NM (nautical miles) or 3.6km.
                    On the right part of the map you see that these sounding lines are very close to the seashore and high waves too (green).

                    Then, you must consider that the sea is tougher as the soundings decrease. Distance between wave crests is reduced, waves become sharper and start to break. So sailing close to the coastline may be dangerous.

                    http://weather.mailasail.com/Franks-Weather/How-Waves-And-Swell-Form

                    In which location do you navigate?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • J
                      jose_fley
                      last edited by jose_fley

                      In the north of Tenerife (Canary Island). Exactly in Garachico city.

                      That picture is from Navionics, right?.
                      Thanks

                      idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • idefix37I
                        idefix37 Sailor Moderator @jose_fley
                        last edited by

                        @jose_fley
                        Yes it’s a picture from Navionics map. Do you use them?

                        0_1539546751076_8DDFC902-9674-4D0C-A02F-044B3529FA78.jpeg

                        Along which part of the sea shore do you sail? We could have a look to the sea bottom.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • J
                          jose_fley
                          last edited by jose_fley

                          Navionics and Windy are my favorite apps.
                          This week the sea weather is very very bad here
                          My sail zone is around the green fish that you can see in the map,
                          the exact coordinates of the little port from where i get out are; 28.378502, -16.813212

                          0_1539555805826_G.jpg

                          Gkikas LGPZG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Gkikas LGPZG
                            Gkikas LGPZ Moderator @jose_fley
                            last edited by Gkikas LGPZ

                            @jose_fley
                            @idefix37
                            I want to point out:
                            a) the resolution of the wave model is 0.1 degree=6 NM = 11 km,
                            so we must not expect different wave height at 200, 300 or 500 m far from the coast.
                            Also https://community.windy.com/topic/4541/is-model-resolution-important
                            b) Jose's boat is only 3.3 m long.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • J
                              jose_fley
                              last edited by

                              Thanks for your reply

                              Best regards

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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                              • 矢澤旭泰矢
                                矢澤旭泰
                                last edited by

                                I would like to add a question: How is the direction of "waves" (as called "all wave types combined (swell and wind waves)" in the map forecast or waves_direction-surface in the point forecast API) technically calculated? I assume it somehow combines swell and wind waves, but how are the different directions of swell and wind waves averages to get the "total wave" direction? Thanks a lot for any explanation.

                                idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • idefix37I
                                  idefix37 Sailor Moderator @矢澤旭泰
                                  last edited by idefix37

                                  @矢澤旭泰
                                  Wave model is based on spectrum analysis of waves and direction of total sea is deducted from it. See page 10.

                                  https://confluence.ecmwf.int/download/attachments/59774192/wave_parameters.pdf

                                  M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • M
                                    moritz.huetten @idefix37
                                    last edited by

                                    @idefix37 Thanks a lot for the response. How is it done for GFSwave (point forecast API) and ICON?

                                    idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • idefix37I
                                      idefix37 Sailor Moderator @moritz.huetten
                                      last edited by idefix37

                                      @moritz-huetten
                                      These wave models are also based on spectral analysis.
                                      GFS wave.
                                      https://gfs.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/GfsWave
                                      ICON
                                      The WAM model developed by DWD was the original model used and improved by ECMWF.
                                      So it should be very similar:
                                      https://www.dwd.de/DE/leistungen/opendata/help/modelle/legend_ICON_wave_EN_pdf.pdf?__blob=publicationFile&v=3

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • M
                                        moritz.huetten @idefix37
                                        last edited by

                                        @idefix37 Thanks a lot for your response. By the way, how do you extrapolate the wave forecasts beyond the original forecast domain (e.g. GFS Wave), to obtain values close to the coast or even on land?

                                        idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • idefix37I
                                          idefix37 Sailor Moderator @moritz.huetten
                                          last edited by

                                          @moritz-huetten
                                          Do you refer to a precise location? A screenshot would be useful.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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