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Last updated : December 16, 2002
 

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What Cartier missed out on
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The Secrets of the St Lawrence
The wind in your sails
Hard a-port!
Fast or slow?
The wind's paths
Against the wall
Solar energy
Under the stars
The wind and the waves
The windway
Wave wars
Graveyards
Conflicting seas
The St Lawrence, from 1 to…
Calling all sailors
Hot spots
Québec -Pointe-des-Monts
Pointe-des-Monts - Cap Whittle
Cap Whittle - Blanc Sablon
Gaspésie - Baie des Chaleurs
Îles de la Madeleine
Sailors take warning
White-outs
The sky above us
Keeping a weather eye
Fair weather and foul
The unexpected
The watchers
Radiograms
The four seasons
Wind aplenty
Vessel icing
Ice cycle
Extra
Beaufort scale
Handy references
Old Salts and Sea-dogs
The crew
A to Z
Stations
Areas
Dialing
 
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Secrets of the Saint-Lawrence - Marine Weather Guide

The windway

Sept-Îles

-"We have to cross to Anticosti today, or we'll have trouble tomorrow. They're calling for 30 knot winds tomorrow and the sea will be too high for my liking. Sailing is a lot of fun, but you need strong nerves."

Fetch
If there were never any wind, the St Lawrence would be a gigantic
mirror, rising and falling with the tides. But that is not the case at all.

The St Lawrence is a vast surface that can be whipped up into violent seas depending on the direction, duration and speed of the wind.

Fetch is the distance over which the wind has been blowing from the same direction. The longer the fetch, the higher and longer the waves. After 12 hours at the same speed, though, the wind has almost no effect on the waves, except that it may cause them to lengthen, distance permitting.

Since the fetch is limited on the St Lawrence, the waves cannot lengthen as much as they do out in the open ocean, so they often become very steep.

In July and August, the waves are rarely higher than 3 metres.

Swell and wind waves
Waves that have been formed elsewhere or before the wind changed direction are called swell. The swell can be an indication of approaching winds.

If the waves are flowing in the same direction as the wind, how-ever, you are looking at wind waves. If the wind should shift, you
will encounter cross seas

Image: Fetch: 50 nautical miles. Duration: 6 hours
Fetch: 50 nautical miles. Duration: 6 hours

 
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Last updated: 2002-12-16