1500 Mile Great Lakes trip on a Ranger Tug. Day 15 The Forecast Was Wrong

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • Starting our day leaving St Ignacio MI. We travel under the Mac Bridge and back onto Lake Michigan. We soon find the weather forecast was quite a bit off and end up in 6ft seas as we turn near the abandoned lighthouse. On a Ranger Tug R-27 OB

Комментарии • 90

  • @NIN34
    @NIN34 2 месяца назад +12

    The Tug took it like a champion, you had nothing to worry about.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      It was defiantly able to handle the conditions well. At one point I was feeling seasickness coming on but thankfully it passed.

  • @hawkdsl
    @hawkdsl 2 месяца назад +7

    Big waves and weather is fun as heck.

    • @curtbrown9702
      @curtbrown9702 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes in deed. Good vid but to much drama. Stay at home and sit in your pool. This guy is a GLASS BOATER. still good vid, much enjoyed, but not the moaning about 2-3-4 ft waves.

    • @maxsparks5183
      @maxsparks5183 2 месяца назад

      Especially when you think you are able to handle whatever the seas throw your way…..😖 You’re an idiot. I just hope when your day comes you don’t take other people with you.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      Well it’s fun to reminisce about after

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      I defiantly do consider myself a fair weather boater. I mostly spent time talking about them because it was something I couldn’t find a lot of information about when I was first looking into buying a ranger tug.

  • @thebigguy8306
    @thebigguy8306 Месяц назад

    Thank you for taking us along. Looked like a rollercoaster ride for a little while. Ranger seems like a great boat, but a fiberglass hull vs an aluminum hull of a Northwest type of boat - think Duckworth, Kingfisher, Hewescraft, Wooldridge boats

  • @Mach11976
    @Mach11976 2 месяца назад +4

    Good old lake Michigan, some days just wonderful and others hold on to your butt. It will change in seconds. Great job Captain 💪

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      Very true! At least until that point I was lucky that forecasts were accurate. It was less than fun at the time but a good memory!

    • @Mach11976
      @Mach11976 2 месяца назад

      @@MillennialAfloat And your rig took it like a champ. As you said noisy when you're up on plane in those swells. Good job, be safe.

  • @Richard-od7yd
    @Richard-od7yd 2 месяца назад +8

    I'm an old Navy Boatswains Mate and 6' seas sound downright calm !!

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      I do think you can build up a tolerance to waves! I’m sure the navy put you through some rough stuff!

    • @Richard-od7yd
      @Richard-od7yd 2 месяца назад

      @@MillennialAfloat Noth Cape Norway in November !!
      And GITMO in Summer !!

    • @davidstrickler6570
      @davidstrickler6570 2 месяца назад +1

      Typhoon off Guam aboard the USS Proteus. Waves were over the O2 level. Oh what great fun we had cleaning up after that.
      Golden shellback out.

    • @pwedza
      @pwedza Месяц назад

      much more than 6’ on a lake or a bay isn’t going to be too fun. were you on small Navy boats?

    • @cleanwillie1307
      @cleanwillie1307 26 дней назад

      Wave periods on the lakes are much shorter than the ocean so 6 foot waves in a 27 foot boat means you're going to get tossed around pretty good.

  • @alaneee5273
    @alaneee5273 2 месяца назад +6

    Another rough water strategy to consider is getting inside the wake behind a larger boat and match speeds. Slower, but smoother if your friends (or anyone else) is nearby. Thanks for the video. Always interesting.

    • @JG-wr1sl
      @JG-wr1sl 2 месяца назад

      Great advice. We were crossing Lake Erie once and the forecast was wrong (shocker, I know) We ended up getting behind two other boats heading in the same direction. You could tell that the first boat was taking a beating compared to us.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      That’s a great tip thanks!

  • @rangertruth4776
    @rangertruth4776 Месяц назад

    Quite a trip ! Glad you enjoyed the Great Lakes .

  • @DonaldRak-ku6bi
    @DonaldRak-ku6bi 2 месяца назад +2

    Hi from Don your doing well in video at times I saw water smooth out that's when I would throttled up and ran faster, your right, key to good run on water is the eye on waves

  • @randykaminski6214
    @randykaminski6214 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for showing the R27 in rough conditions. We sail the Straits almost exclusively, and are currently hoping to purchase a Ranger Tug/Rosborough or something similar. There are many “walkthrough” videos of the boats, but few going into detail of the boats mannerisms in the water-thanks again!

  • @reneeleegreco1603
    @reneeleegreco1603 2 месяца назад +6

    My Uncle really drilled boat safety in my head when I was little… I used to roll my eyes but would listen. Turns out I’m obsessive about safety & checking the weather so you made me laugh. Although Gwen you said the forecast was for 2-3 ft waves I instantly thought 5-6. So I paused this video to type this and am sure you’ll make it alright

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      That’s great you had an uncle that drilled that into you. Plan for the worst and hope for the best. Usually before this when I saw a forecast if 2 foot waves worst case would be 3ft.

  • @jerryhunter5020
    @jerryhunter5020 2 месяца назад +1

    Back in the later '50's my dad & I motored from Sault Ste. Marie to NY & return in a 14' Chris Craft kit boat. Weather didn't favor us along the north side of Georgian Bay. On our return were canaled as far as Oswego from where we headed north to pick up the Trent-Severn canal again. Headwinds and 6-8' waves forced us to shelter on Main Duck Island. Bad decisions made for some miserable hours manning the manual bilge pump - but some great memories. Definitely would not repeat!

  • @charlesmckinnis2718
    @charlesmckinnis2718 29 дней назад

    This brought back fond memories for me, I boated out of St. Joe and Saugatuck for 7 years in the late 70's and early 80's first in a 30' chriscraft and then in a 36' trojen. Seen many days of 5' - 6' footers and never minded it while out on the lake...BUT the scarry part was coming back into port!!! With the wind coming up from the south it didn't have far for the wind and waves to build BIG waves for you; its when it comes down from the NORTH 100 more miles that things get really hairy/scary!!! I wish your camera would have lasted and shown your entrance "DANCE" coming into the jettys' at the port. Now THAT would have been interesting to see. I then moved to Charleston, SC and bought a 45' Chris and NEVER was scared of wind or waves, they are longer on the ocean. Down there I had a NEW skill to learn and that was strong TIDES that this inland boater had never experienced before!!!!! We all learn. Good video, though.

  • @happychildhood591
    @happychildhood591 2 месяца назад

    Great video captain! I agree with you that being out in these conditions gave you great confidence in the abilities of your vessel. I took delivery of my brand new Ranger Tug R-31 CB during Covid 19. The wife and I couldn't find a delivery captain to make the two day journey with us from the dealer, Winter Island Yacht Yard in Salem MA to our homeport of Stamford CT. Peter Haywood, the owner of the Ranger Tug dealership and a highly experienced captain, agreed to pilot our new tug down as far down as Newport RI where we would spend the night. As soon as we got out of Salem Harbor, we were greeted with 4-5 foot seas, rain, and gusty winds. I urged Peter to turn back. He told me not to worry as the tug could take it and he as a seasoned sailor claimed to have been out in a lot worse seas and weather. Within 45 minutes, I got seasick as the waves increased to 5 feet with occasional 6 footers. We had no respite until we reached the Cape Cod Canal. After 45 minutes transversing the canal in much flatter conditions we entered the notorious Buzzard's Bay where the frequency of the waves increased, short intervals and very choppy. When we finally docked up in Newport, Peter bid us goodbye. I was totally spent and exhausted. Of particular interest, my wife never complained nor did she get seasick. We ran the tug from the lower station all the way with the heat on as it was March. The tug never complained nor did she ever moan nor groan. She was solid, and certainly could take more than I could. The next day we found ourselves a delivery captain to come with us, departed early and again got beat up, although not quite as badly. We eventually made it to Long Island Sound NY where the land mass somewhat shielded us from the wind and the seas dropped down to about 2-3 feet. This trip gave me great confidence in my boat. Three seasons later, I have not forgotten that journey and am still very happy with my Ranger Tug..!

  • @knecting
    @knecting Месяц назад +1

    When I was younger, we left Tobemorey and our destination was Sarnia. The forecast was for 2 to 3 foot waves. One hour into the trip we saw 3 to 5 foot waves. Approximately two hours into the trip, the NWS called for a gale warning. My father sought to find another destination and by the time we reached Kincardin, we saw 8 to 10 foot waves on Lake Huron. We were in a 35 foot Chris Craft and I have never been so scared like I was on that day. My father contacted the Coast Guard and they said to him that they wanted us to check in every 15 minutes and provide our position. In those days we used a loran. The bottom line is that great lakes are some of the most scariest conditions any power boater can experience. I apologize if I spelled these wrong but it has been over 40 years since that day.

  • @Clayton-o5c
    @Clayton-o5c 2 месяца назад +1

    I always add a foot to the forecast. We fish 50-100 miles off shore and usually overnight. I've had it blow up to 12-14 ft where from the fly bridge in the trough you were still looking up at the peak. Nobody wants to be out in rough weather but it's part of boating. Usually once on plane you can find a speed the boat is comfortable with. Don't worry about squeaks worry about having your fillings knocked out. That was a little uncomfortable but not dangerous.

  • @burtvincent1278
    @burtvincent1278 2 месяца назад +1

    We were cought in Great Lakes gales twice on my 25 foot sailboat. Not able to out run the surprise change of weather and being out of sight from shore, I was very happy to be in a sailboat. My express cruiser would have gone over especially on Lake Erie where the waves were coming from several directions and ten feet high.

  • @topnotch01830
    @topnotch01830 2 месяца назад +4

    LMAO!! I'm from New England and that would be a CALM DAY on the ATLANTIC! TRY 10' to 12' Seas Sometime.....I've been out there in 18ft seas in a 28ft boat........................the ocean separates the men from the boy's.

  • @kevinbean4551
    @kevinbean4551 17 дней назад

    You can buy portable air conditioners that work quite well. They’re rechargeable, but they are a little pricey, but you can move them around and put them wherever you like.

  • @reneeleegreco1603
    @reneeleegreco1603 2 месяца назад

    As soon as you turned, the waves were hitting you so excellent job navigating … boy that had to be stressful. I always wear my life vest too

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      It was defiantly stressful at the time. I took a big nap when I got into port. But now that I have that experience it will help for the future! Thanks for watching!

  • @lutherprince9304
    @lutherprince9304 2 месяца назад +1

    Great job captain! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @Rev1Kev
    @Rev1Kev 2 месяца назад +2

    Great video, yea getting caught in those rough seas can be mentally exhausting. I’m planning a cross Lake Michigan trip next month, from Charlevoix, to Manistque, then down to the Door Peninsula to Sturgeon Bay and then back to Charlevoix, doing this trip solo in my 24 foot Sea Ray

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      OH wow that sounds like quite the adventure! Charlevoix to Manistique is a long crossing. Are you planning on stopping at Beaver Island or doing a straight shot? Door county is a great place to boat! My personal favorite town to stop at is Fish Creek

    • @Rev1Kev
      @Rev1Kev 2 месяца назад

      @@MillennialAfloat yes I’m going direct Charleroi to Manistque, crossing just below Beaver Island. Good to know about Fish Creek, that is one of my planned stops.

  • @johndavidson9719
    @johndavidson9719 2 месяца назад +1

    These seas are a basic chop on the New England coast. I agree with hawkdsl, big waves and weather is fun as heck.

  • @michaelgarrity6090
    @michaelgarrity6090 2 месяца назад +1

    Personally, I much enjoyed all the footage of your boat underway in those conditions wirhout comments or with something that​ really bugs me, some crappy electronically created music on a loop. Just the sound of the boat, wind and water. I'm interested in getting an R-27 OB. Its definitely a seaworthy boat. They are built to the standard of 200 miles of offshore operation and since they come from the Pacific Northwest and designed to operate in the conditions found there up into Alaska. I ever had heard that some big wigs from Fluid Motion had taken an R -26 up to the Arctic Circle. I don't know if its still on the market, but someone in Florida was selling their 2018 or 19 R-27 that had a Seakeeper. I bet with one of those, if you don't mind its high pitched whine, a day like this one would be a piece of cake.

  • @barrywilkinson3420
    @barrywilkinson3420 Месяц назад

    I took the Beaver Island boat and it was a terrible trip. The boat being shallow draft rolled almost 30 degrees, back and forth. Sick people, people falling, water over the bow! I rode a Navy destroyer for 27 months and i was never afraid of a rollover as I was on that day. The boat ride back was worse as the boat was the smaller of the two and it rolled further. More sick people and people falling. The wind was high and the sea state rolling and spray off of the tops of the waves.

  • @johnschieffelin3226
    @johnschieffelin3226 2 месяца назад

    Interesting video. Lumpy going indeed. I've found my heavy Boston Whaler 350 Realm sometimes rides best in rough stuff at a low planing speed, although it is not fuel-efficient at all. At least the water splashing over your bow was fresh -- I boat in salt water and in some conditions the salt crystallizes on the windshield, very annoying.

  • @joerectifier
    @joerectifier 29 дней назад

    I don’t care for waves between, say north of 2’ to even 3’ depending on the period….as you mentioned, it’s just not much fun. From time to time I think it is instructive to navigate the unpleasant water and can build some skill and tolerance. In our 170 Montauk, more than 3’ is just flat out disconcerting and we don’t do it. Yes, absolutely addicted to wind, wave and weather forecasts….

  • @billiondollardan
    @billiondollardan Месяц назад

    The forecast was wrong in northern Michigan? Never! lol I grew up northwest of Traverse City and the forecast was wrong about 60% of the time. Back then they only seemed to care about Traverse and they would conveniently forget Leland

  • @Philc231
    @Philc231 2 месяца назад

    My wife’s great grandfather was the first lighthouse keeper on north Manitou island . Chris Ankerson was his name .

  • @davidkern1336
    @davidkern1336 Месяц назад

    We are curious if you have found your RT-27 will actually override auto pilot manually by turning the wheel alone? We cannot manually turn off course without first going into standby mode, else the helm ignores the manual input. We are getting different answers about this. Thanks,
    David

  • @sandidavis45
    @sandidavis45 18 дней назад

    As a sailor, I thought this would be interesting. Why are you not taking waves at a 45 degree angle? I realize it isn't direct, but by "tacking" you are working with wind and waves. 12 volt fans are normal. AC only works at the dock. Why do 60 miles alone?

  • @wiscorj
    @wiscorj 2 месяца назад

    Lake Michigan weather
    Always interesting

  • @yelyab1
    @yelyab1 2 месяца назад +1

    You would think that with the name of the boat it would have incorporated a flared front that throw the waves side ways and helps keep passengers dry, or less wet. I’ve been in this crap in a go fast boat that does not keep you dry and going slow is not it’s forte. My son and I had to switch off drivers every 15 minutes it was so tedious. We had to navigate each wave until we could take shelter short of our destination. The small craft advisory that got posted as we left on our trip said the waves were 6 to 10 feet. They looked like mountains. Never again.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      That sounds rough! Being in that stuff is tiring its great you had your son to help you its probably a good story you share now

  • @caroleemoreno8086
    @caroleemoreno8086 2 месяца назад

    Try the Delaware Bay sometime. First time I piloted my brand new boat I took it from Wildwood NJ to Elton MD in pouring rain, lightening and 7 foot waves. Fun as hell! But tiring nonetheless.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      That’s gotta be a great story for your first time with your boat!

  • @michaelbyrne8860
    @michaelbyrne8860 Месяц назад

    You can see the front moving through and the squaw line! I wonder what the Barometer was showing?

  • @cliffcohen6517
    @cliffcohen6517 2 месяца назад

    Been there done that! All is well until that famous left Turn!😂

  • @TR-px9iq
    @TR-px9iq Месяц назад +3

    I saw nothing to be concerned with what so ever in these conditions. A little chop is nothing for anyone with any time on the water. Now of xourse if there was a storm and it got real...like 6+ foot waves that could have been interesting but i saw nothing even half way dangerous about the conditions in this video.

  • @SirAdamMeek
    @SirAdamMeek 2 месяца назад +1

    You aren't a very dedicated RUclipsr... ANYTHING for the fans, except change batteries in rough seas LOL
    Great video, Thank you!

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      Thank you for watching! I think I have a better camera setup this year so I wont have to risk my life to change the battery anymore lol. It should give better views as well

  • @karikarr6377
    @karikarr6377 2 месяца назад +1

    Was this on Tuesday the 16th by any chance? We departed Frankfort heading north that day with the same 1-2’ forecast, and discovered quickly that the forecast was VERY wrong. 😑

  • @SS-rb7do
    @SS-rb7do 2 месяца назад +8

    No 6ft seas visible in video. Is this clickbait or am I missing something?

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +1

      Waves are one of those things that done come across well in videos. It’s hard to show a sense of scale since there’s nothing around and the camera is mounted higher up. It’s kinda the same thing if you ever tried to record rain.

    • @stingray4540
      @stingray4540 Месяц назад +1

      A camera does not accurately represent the scale of some things like wave size or the steepness of a trail or hillside.

  • @cambo1200
    @cambo1200 2 месяца назад

    Now imagine 30 foot waves out there.

  • @johntursi
    @johntursi 2 месяца назад +13

    28 minutes of the bow pounding through the waves, Really??

    • @curtbrown9702
      @curtbrown9702 2 месяца назад +3

      Great shots. Thats your view if you yourself was piloting. First person view.

    • @briancasey4917
      @briancasey4917 2 месяца назад +2

      28 minutes boredom

    • @Djdj-kd8ue
      @Djdj-kd8ue 2 месяца назад +2

      Looks like you were moving out pretty good there

    • @Philc231
      @Philc231 2 месяца назад +2

      @@briancasey4917boredom for whom ? The danger is real .

    • @Philc231
      @Philc231 2 месяца назад

      I appreciate your grit for not heading to a port . There’s a hundred spots you could have stopped .

  • @Clayton-o5c
    @Clayton-o5c 2 месяца назад

    Cowboy up jeeze that's a 3-4 ft sea tops

  • @finn3408
    @finn3408 Месяц назад

    What is your speed

  • @reneeleegreco1603
    @reneeleegreco1603 2 месяца назад

    Oh wow

  • @slapshot1343
    @slapshot1343 2 месяца назад

    Can we see radar footage?

  • @tomb727
    @tomb727 27 дней назад

    None of the Great Lakes are very forgiving.

  • @robertlivingston1634
    @robertlivingston1634 2 месяца назад +2

    Funny thing about video or pictures of waves you really can't tell what you're looking at, when I was in the navy I took pictures of massive waves in the Pacific and when I got the film developed I had pictures of billions of gallons of water, looked like standing on the beach of lake Michigan, nothing to really give reference to size.

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад +2

      That’s very true. When I was looking at the footage of the day later on I thought it wasn’t looking as wild as it was that day! Waves don’t come across well in video. Being high up on a ship doesn’t really help the perspective.

  • @estatejay
    @estatejay 29 дней назад

    No 6 ft seas. More like 2-3.

  • @tomtrenter3208
    @tomtrenter3208 2 месяца назад +1

    Do you know how high the camera level is relative to the water line (at, above, below)?

    • @MillennialAfloat
      @MillennialAfloat  2 месяца назад

      I would estimate about 8-10 ft above the water its on the radar mast and its almost at the highest point on the boat.

  • @mnmike6884
    @mnmike6884 Месяц назад

    60 miles takes 2 hours? Wow! You really don’t believe in fuel economy do you? Nice to have such discretionary fuel funds. Reduce your speed and 2-3 footers don’t become a concern. Those are fishing waves on Lake Superior! At least on a 19ft boat. No brand names need to be mentioned!

  • @ericrenshaw1824
    @ericrenshaw1824 2 месяца назад

    I sport fish the straits, and weather forecasting is very inaccurate.

  • @anthonyholmes1753
    @anthonyholmes1753 2 месяца назад

    2 ft?

  • @sharonbraselton3135
    @sharonbraselton3135 2 месяца назад

    Wrong smal biat 18 fert 14 feey been 6 fot plaus wave snal biat grat 6 fiit wacer big yaght shoikd dell a thibg

  • @TheodoreScopeline
    @TheodoreScopeline 2 месяца назад

    Um yeah, if white guys with a passion for weather forecasting were not pushed out by DEI, you would have more accurate forecasting.