My late father was a USN Captain and sailed on every sea. He told me about the rogue waves in the North Sea and the rough seas near Japan. He saw his share of rogue waves. He said more than once he thought "this is the one that's going to kill me", but he survived many rogue waves, 2 World Wars, colon cancer and lived to 88. 🇺🇸⚓🚢
My Dad - 1905-1996 - worked aboard a trawler in the North Sea as a boy, then went "to sea" aboard ships, ended in America, met my Mom and came ashore to earn his living. Many of his stories involved his time spent in the North Sea - "the worst waves in the world," according to him. And he had sailed in a lot of oceans.
In February 2000, a British oceanographic research vessel, the RRS Discovery, sailing in the Rockall Trough west of Scotland, encountered the largest waves ever recorded by any scientific instruments in the open ocean, with a SWH of 18.5 metres (61 ft) and individual waves up to 29.1 metres (95 ft).
Yeah, scale matters I guess. Then if it was four miles long, it would be fine, except it would collapse under its own weight. Let's make one. @@Davidcallard
Dayumn I can’t imagine the horror of experiencing that in a relatively small wooden boat. No wonder why so few people survived rogue waves until steel and iron ships.
@@MeetCoconut yea a wooden boat builded by a white boomer to housed millions of creatures. Do you know how much tonne of fucking food they all need every day? Was Ebola and coronavirus on the boat too? How did the Boomer Noah cleaned up their waste? How Tf did animals from Americas, Australia,or the Arctic got to the Middle East? Get off them drugs bruh .
I went shrimping off Key West coast for 12 days and nights in an ol steel shrimp boat. I have never seen anything like this before! This makes me fearful to even go on a cruise 🛳 ship! All of the earthquakes happening in different places today are the cause of this and only seem to be getting worse and more abundant daily 🙃 😪!
The men and women who put out to sea are a whole nother breed! The courage and nerve to do what you guys do, risking your lives on the high seas, I have mad respect for you. Amazing. I couldn't do it, especially when the weather's bad. That's terrifying. Bless you all! 🌹
@@soulassassin0g the world is vast. looking at demographics, there are a decent number of women researchers who no doubt cross the Drake Passage (the roughest seas in the world) on the way to Antarctica. so yeah.
Pfft, women are not generally sailors, lmao. All of the sailors and fishers in my country and surrounding countries are men. I haven't seen a single female sailor in my life
I remember loving the ocean as a kid until one day we were caught in a bad storm. I remember the waves being way higher than our boat, as we sank into the troughs and the sea turned black. I've never felt so vulnerable as I suddenly realised how deep that ocean really was. Never been on a boat since.@@angusbeef524
@@mapavusspeak for yourself fool this is absolutely terrifying to lots of people and it definitely would give them chills or goosebumps at the least i get chills from watching this. So stop being an immature ass and go give someone else your unnecessary attitude
Cowgirl (1 word) no need to be the spelling police. I know my phone shows it as 1 word.. but it really wasn't necessary to put in a derogatory comment.. are you always a Karen and just can't help yourself (1 word)
A retired ships engineer was once on a large cargo ship that got side swiped by a huge wave in mid altlantic. They all thought they were in for it as the ship tilted sideways but righted just in time. The seas are very big and scary.
You can hear them talking . There voices are very steady and calm. Can you imagine being a captain on these ships or deck hand. I really admire them,, so brave.
@@misssmisssymaria let me guess cnn? i spent 30 years on the ocean. We have that here in alaska regularly. That is just a set in a storm.It doesn't even go over the bow. Thats a calm day here in Alaska
I worked on the QE2 cruise liner and my first crossing of Atlantic was a force 11 storm... it was incredible how powerful the ocean is and a great experience to see first hand...
And just imagine that if you were in anything other than a cruise liner, it would have felt 2 to 3 times as rough, as cruise liners are built with only comfort/stability in mind. I said basically the same thing to my fellow crewman 1st trip out, as a kind of humble brag...when they found out it was on a ferry the place erupted with laughter
I've stood at the helm of a US Destroyer watching blue water come over the Bullnose and spray salt water foam on the windows of the wheel house. It's a ride...lol
Have you seen Viking boats? Traveled from Norway to Iceland. Luckily, there was global warming for 3-400 years which caused the sea to be more calm than today.
Yes , I agree! I sailed on the Vancouver LPD 2 , Pacific . On several WestPac's , 73 - 76 !! On one , we were walking on the bulkheads !! Luv'd it !! Go , Navy !!!
It's not what the boat is built from, it's how it's powered. In a modern diesel boat you have constant reliable power. With a sailboat once down in the trough the waves block the wind and that's when your problems really start.
As I was intrigued, I just went down a research rabbit hole on rogue waves. The video doesn't *conclusively* show a 'rogue wave', as the *general* state of the sea in the clip is very rough anyway. The wave shown doesn't seem like it would be extreme in the conditions shown. A rogue wave is one that is unusually large and sudden compared to the *general* sea conditions at the time. This clip just seems to show rough seas.
I'm currently a captain. I don't brag about my profession. I'm nowhere close to these guys though. For what they do every day out there. Mad respect for those captains.
Those aren't "rogue waves", that's called a rip tide. There's no wave hitting the hull, its the bow slamming down directly after the wave and heading into the the next rip. The captain is piloting perfectly.
I love how any big wave now is a rogue wave... Even if it's a regular one coming from the regular direction and it's just a plain old big wave, It's a Buffalo, chipotle, habenero, ghost pepper, sriracha, rogue wave!!
On an aircraft carrier I've seen waves like that once. Most of the time we would steer around them. Aircraft carrier' s deck about 60ft above a calm sea.
I'm also a trawler and we call that a dead sea were the boat felled into ,its the gap between the 2 swells if the swell are big the hole are big and you fall hard and it's very dangerous I have been in storms were almost every second swell is a boat breaker and that is awful
That wasn’t a rogue wave. That was just rough seas and every wave is different. A rogue wave is a whole diff beast and you will know it’s a rogue wave. Come on!!!!!!!
It's rogue because it did the opposite of what it looked like it was going to do. Unpredictable is basically what rogue means. So if you want to get technical the whole ocean and sea is just rogue and unpredictable.
@@klondike69none85 "Rogue waves are unusually large, unpredictable, and suddenly appearing surface waves that can be extremely dangerous to ships, even to large ones. They are distinct from tsunamis, which are often almost unnoticeable in deep waters and are caused by the displacement of water due to other phenomena." From a easy Google search. Says a unpredictable or sudden wave. Rogue means multiple things but most gone astray or unpredictable action. I guess my understanding of the English language is different than yours.
@kristinen7611 Definition of a rogue wave is a wave at least 2 times the average height of the surrounding waves. Some rogues have been recorded on weather buoys at over 3X taller than surrounding waves.
As someone who was born and spent their whole lives in a land locked state all I can say is no thank you. No thank you to all of this. There are probably sharks under the boat too waiting for it to be smashed apart...
Imagine being on a navy ship dodging enemy submarines in this kind of weather... (ww2 Atlantic) Must have been terrifying either being torpedoed by a U-boat or being destroyed by the storm.
Brave men go to sea everyday and experience this in order to provide us with food and to defend their nation and its interests while challenging the primacy of nature. US Navy 1990-1996.
i worked on one of the trawlers from the same fleet that the willameana j that sank with all hands lost was from a trawler called the ziderzee spelt different i expect but i joined not long after they perished, and it gave my mum a heart attack. and i can tell you that although i loved it and unfortunately only done one trip with them. every time i eat fish i think of those boys and what they go through to bring us our fish. I've done it and well it's the most dangerous and demanding job on the planet. they deserve medals all of them.
I went through a bigger storm than that with my dad and uncles on board the family fishing vessel, 63 feet long and 170,000 pounds. It was night, so I couldn't see the white foam and spray, but the vessel would rise very high, then drop really far before burying the bow (front of the boat) into the next wave backside. That was the only time I ever got seasick, I was 10, going on trips to learn. I refer to the story as "the 2014 storm." I was the only one having fun because I wasn't aware of the danger of the situation. I didn't notice until I looked back now, that everyone was in the wheelhouse, and it was quiet. It must have been a power 11 or power 12 storm.
Not a rogue wave though, just heavy seas. Rogue waves appear suddenly and are much larger than the other waves preceding them. Look at the graph of the draupner wave, there's a bunch of waves of the same size and then one huge one.
superior and Erie has taken down the most ships, my god so many good men have died out there. NOBODY understands that those lakes behave like the Ocean in the Fall..... them boys still sailing in November have balls of STEEL. The water always wins no matter how many good seasons you have, and That's a terrible death I can't imagine
total respect to all the boys fishing out there now. stay safe lads and fruitful catches. rip to the crew of the Willy from Portsmouth. and all who have perished. always in our hearts
Ocean: hmmm yall fishing men would you think you can catch strimp I’m sorry not today have fun in waves Fisher men: how on earth is the water talking to me 🧐
Newbie with small weiner tries to Trendize the words "Rogue Wave" To get more hits. like the way the store calls breast tender chunks as "boneless wings," so that they can charge you eight and a half dollars a pound for something it isn't worth but $1.99. A bushel.
Now just imagine this, but through rain, storms and at night in pitch black darkness in a wooden boat, with no way to tell where you really are.. and nothing but a sail, map and compass to find your way. Our ancestors were the SHIT. Its amazing they survived.
That was downward wave right? I heard that the upward rouge waves could break a tanker in half if they would form under it (the front and the end wouldn't be supported, thus bending the ship)
No. The sjip just eent over the top of one wave, down its back, which is why the boat points downward, but then gets hit with the wave behind that had already formed
The larger rogue waves can reach 80-100 ft. high and they can sink a battleship. My father said that he saw one that was 100 ft high near Japan. He was on a destroyer and they all thought they were going to go down with the ship. It was like having a 10-story building of water looming in front of you. He love being out at sea but said that was one of the scariest moments he ever had in the navy.
??? We lived on base in a very nice home. As far as ship accommodations, he always told us how wonderful the food was. Back then, a lot of the cooks on the ships were Filipino and they would make fresh pastries and bread every morning with breakfast
Salmon? LOL... You don't catch salmon in the seas, other than accidentally (bi-catch)... The reason why your salmon is so expensive is because it is either farmed (in enclosures/pens) or caught in rivers.
Those 4 seconds of complete silence. Utter stillness. In a immeasurably heavy floating steel behemoth FLOATING IN THE AIR. Those are the moments that make an atheist pray to God.
My late father was a USN Captain and sailed on every sea. He told me about the rogue waves in the North Sea and the rough seas near Japan. He saw his share of rogue waves. He said more than once he thought "this is the one that's going to kill me", but he survived many rogue waves, 2 World Wars, colon cancer and lived to 88. 🇺🇸⚓🚢
Thats amazing
@@vangrigoriou6521 He loved the Navy and he loved the sea, but he always told me "Rule #1. Respect the sea. It's a lot bigger than you are!" 😄
@@tiamia7139 Mother Nature doesn't discriminate, she's just out for blood in general
Your dads a G
He sounds like a warrior! May he rest in peace.
My Dad - 1905-1996 - worked aboard a trawler in the North Sea as a boy, then went "to sea" aboard ships, ended in America, met my Mom and came ashore to earn his living. Many of his stories involved his time spent in the North Sea - "the worst waves in the world," according to him. And he had sailed in a lot of oceans.
Bro pacific middle point is the worst and south of chile is the WORST, both a little more than north sea
@@culifabrizio1479nah
J ai beaucoup navigué en mer du nord, mer d irlande mer de barents.
Ce sont des mers très dangereuses.
Video très réaliste, la mer rend humble.
I thought South China sea was insane
Southern ocean is much worse than the north sea. The winds are absolutely horrendous
No idiot music and no stupid emojis. Very good !
What have we come to?
It is great and makes me feel seasick looking at it.
Perfection
但是這影片沒音樂,也沒有特別的浪。
MANTAP 👍>v
In February 2000, a British oceanographic research vessel, the RRS Discovery, sailing in the Rockall Trough west of Scotland, encountered the largest waves ever recorded by any scientific instruments in the open ocean, with a SWH of 18.5 metres (61 ft) and individual waves up to 29.1 metres (95 ft).
Jesus. That’s terrifying.
What’s even more scary is there are probably rogue waves even taller… but the crew didn’t live to tell the tale.
61ft -90 odd ft in writing doesn’t do the reality justice 😂
Seeing a ten story high wave would make me wish I was in a submarine.
🤢🤢🤢
you better thank God for every welder that worked on that hull haha
Dont thank god thank the welders
@@cowflick1180 im a welder and I thank God for guiding the hand I weld with
@@natenate2280 lmao as a welder you should know its you then
@@cowflick1180 as a welder I can tell you dont know how to weld
@@natenate2280 then you shouldnt be a welder. Also god isnt real
You could hear the whole ship creak. Scary! Shiver me timbers!
Arrggggghhhh
On a wave like that, you feel the whole boat bending back and forth with reverberations from the hit, like its wiggling.
All that and more! I have a theory that a smaller vessel might suffer less from monster waves than does a supertanker, for example.
😂😂seriously though
Yeah, scale matters I guess. Then if it was four miles long, it would be fine, except it would collapse under its own weight. Let's make one.
@@Davidcallard
Dayumn I can’t imagine the horror of experiencing that in a relatively small wooden boat. No wonder why so few people survived rogue waves until steel and iron ships.
Noah
@@MeetCoconut yea a wooden boat builded by a white boomer to housed millions of creatures.
Do you know how much tonne of fucking food they all need every day?
Was Ebola and coronavirus on the boat too?
How did the Boomer Noah cleaned up their waste?
How Tf did animals from Americas, Australia,or the Arctic got to the Middle East?
Get off them drugs bruh .
I went shrimping off Key West coast for 12 days and nights in an ol steel shrimp boat. I have never seen anything like this before! This makes me fearful to even go on a cruise 🛳 ship! All of the earthquakes happening in different places today are the cause of this and only seem to be getting worse and more abundant daily 🙃 😪!
@@debilawless3264 I think it was in 2010 when rogue wave hit a cruise ship. Two people were killed after they were hit with large shards of glass.
@@MeetCoconut 🤣🤣🤣
Kudos to the boat builders, it handled it perfectly..
I don't think you could pay me enough to do this! Thankyou for taking us along! Stay safe! 😊
The men and women who put out to sea are a whole nother breed! The courage and nerve to do what you guys do, risking your lives on the high seas, I have mad respect for you. Amazing. I couldn't do it, especially when the weather's bad. That's terrifying. Bless you all! 🌹
Women??
@@soulassassin0gyes women, have you not heard of equality?
@@soulassassin0g the world is vast. looking at demographics, there are a decent number of women researchers who no doubt cross the Drake Passage (the roughest seas in the world) on the way to Antarctica. so yeah.
@@machinismusI 2nd that…this girl I know from college is an Oceanographer and has been to Antarctica by ship multiple times.
Pfft, women are not generally sailors, lmao. All of the sailors and fishers in my country and surrounding countries are men. I haven't seen a single female sailor in my life
The sea is such a scary place
..and this is tamer than a lot of youtubes on storm waves....and it's still freaking terrifying.
That’s the biggest understatement ever
@@GorgyPorgy65 that’s every day commercial fishing the bearing sea…. Every day.!!!
I remember loving the ocean as a kid until one day we were caught in a bad storm. I remember the waves being way higher than our boat, as we sank into the troughs and the sea turned black.
I've never felt so vulnerable as I suddenly realised how deep that ocean really was.
Never been on a boat since.@@angusbeef524
Yeah, bugger that. Brave souls to venture out into seas like that.@@angusbeef524
Everytime I watch this it still gives me goosebumps
its comforting to me
@@mapavusspeak for yourself fool this is absolutely terrifying to lots of people and it definitely would give them chills or goosebumps at the least i get chills from watching this. So stop being an immature ass and go give someone else your unnecessary attitude
That wasn’t a “rogue wave.” No stress. Business as usual.
"Every time" is two words. So is "every day" which I'm sure you can't spell either.
Cowgirl (1 word) no need to be the spelling police. I know my phone shows it as 1 word.. but it really wasn't necessary to put in a derogatory comment.. are you always a Karen and just can't help yourself (1 word)
No stupid comments, no fancy name to things and NO music! Nice video. Impresive reality.❤
A retired ships engineer was once on a large cargo ship that got side swiped by a huge wave in mid altlantic. They all thought they were in for it as the ship tilted sideways but righted just in time. The seas are very big and scary.
You can hear them talking . There voices are very steady and calm. Can you imagine being a captain on these ships or deck hand. I really admire them,, so brave.
@@danielatellez1250 I would be in a corner crying.
Theyre called men
This is not an especially dangerous situation for a skilled crew. Wave not rouge
I’m morbidly fascinated by the oceans! Every time I see footage of a ship being swamped with water, I’m amazed that they can come back up!
They were not all tiny....some wooden ships were massive.
@@Agreatdayneverends Ok thats cool but that as nothing to do with what he said
It is normal to be swamped in heavy seas
When you've experienced rough seas, you never forget the feeling
I've experienced a couple of rogue waves sailing across the North Sea on a 25000 tonne tanker. They are not very pleasant, your beer goes everywhere.
Been out there in this type of chop. Nothing in the world like it. Very invigorating. When it is over you appreciate life more.
And yes normal, not a rouge wave
@RogerMacDonald-Evoy
Rogue waves are common during storms at sea.
Hats off to the designers of the Ships.
That wasn't rogue, just a large one in a set.
It was a rogue wave, I believe it was 80 feet. It was on the news.
@@misssmisssymaria let me guess cnn? i spent 30 years on the ocean. We have that here in alaska regularly. That is just a set in a storm.It doesn't even go over the bow.
Thats a calm day here in Alaska
Wrong
@@artbmarshall he is not, a true rouge wave would be much bigger than that
@TheMisterMarilynso youre saying Climate change?
No boring music just original sounds 🫡
Clearly a well built vessel, and well commanded, and a great helmsman
Apparently dumping 5 gallons of fish oil would calm those waves in about 20 min. That fact blew my mind.
Yeah, been through these, not just in the North Sea. Once we weren't sure we'd see the morning. A very intense night.
I worked on the QE2 cruise liner and my first crossing of Atlantic was a force 11 storm... it was incredible how powerful the ocean is and a great experience to see first hand...
And just imagine that if you were in anything other than a cruise liner, it would have felt 2 to 3 times as rough, as cruise liners are built with only comfort/stability in mind. I said basically the same thing to my fellow crewman 1st trip out, as a kind of humble brag...when they found out it was on a ferry the place erupted with laughter
I've stood at the helm of a US Destroyer watching blue water come over the Bullnose and spray salt water foam on the windows of the wheel house. It's a ride...lol
Most phone cameras have an auto-stabilizer function. The waves in this video are a LOT bigger than they look
The sound of the ship crashing into the water would be terrifying.
"The Sea was angry that day my friends. Like an old man returning soup at a deli. "
I was wondering who was going to post that saying. I would assume that line is from Seinfeld AND HERMAN MELVILLE
@@jeffpelkey6077
No it's from Seinfeld. 100% did you see the episode?
@@chrismacdonald4570 Was that the Andrea Doria episode?
@@bobbiingram4258
The name of the episode was : The Marine Biologist
What are the chances I have that episode playing in the background as I read this comment. (I always watch Seinfeld- it’s my comfort show)
Not a true rogue wave but definitely a terrifying situation
I can’t imagine what it was like sailing the ocean in the tiny WOODEN ships they used to sail in!
it wasnt that bad and they never sailed in small boats
The ships in 1500's averaged 200ft in length....
Have you seen Viking boats? Traveled from Norway to Iceland. Luckily, there was global warming for 3-400 years which caused the sea to be more calm than today.
A smaller vessel would ride the wave differently. It would actually ride up the crest then down the back of the wave
Some galleon ships are big!
we had this for 2 or 3 days straight when we went across the north sea. even on a large LPD you could feel every hit.
Yes , I agree! I sailed on the Vancouver LPD 2 , Pacific . On several WestPac's , 73 - 76 !! On one , we were walking on the bulkheads !! Luv'd it !! Go , Navy !!!
I don’t know what’s more terrifying. The wave going over me or me going over the wave
That one dude cooking in the galley getting covered in boiling soup lol
It's not what the boat is built from, it's how it's powered. In a modern diesel boat you have constant reliable power. With a sailboat once down in the trough the waves block the wind and that's when your problems really start.
As I was intrigued, I just went down a research rabbit hole on rogue waves. The video doesn't *conclusively* show a 'rogue wave', as the *general* state of the sea in the clip is very rough anyway. The wave shown doesn't seem like it would be extreme in the conditions shown. A rogue wave is one that is unusually large and sudden compared to the *general* sea conditions at the time. This clip just seems to show rough seas.
Exactly
I'm currently a captain. I don't brag about my profession. I'm nowhere close to these guys though. For what they do every day out there. Mad respect for those captains.
A captain will always be a captain no matter what. 💪
Captain Birds Eye
Wow strong waves, stay safe and God bless sailors and there families❤😊
The sea is as beautiful as is fierce‼️💙
“The seas were really rough that day.”
Well that’s an understatement. I was holding my breath the whole clip lmao.
'Like an old man trying to return soup at a deli.'
Everybody who plans to sail round the world in a 38 foot yacht should watch this first😂
My dad served on the Saratoga. Really didn’t enjoy being thrashed around by waves but seeing the fresh bloods get flung around was funny to him
Davy Jones saying he’s lonely.
now imagine if u fell out of the ship 💀
😱😱😱
I can feel my stomach lifting up in the fall
I could feel the bump! Man that's rough!
Me too!!! 😁😁😁
Nope…and they call me crazy for jumping out of perfectly good airplanes. I’ll take my parachute any day. 😂
Unglaublich, diese Naturgewalt macht einen platt .Bewundernswert ! Eine große Portion Mut gehört wohl dazu , Respekt an alle Seefahrer
Yeah, that's one of the reasons I stay on land.
Those aren't "rogue waves", that's called a rip tide. There's no wave hitting the hull, its the bow slamming down directly after the wave and heading into the the next rip. The captain is piloting perfectly.
Bravery is not even the best way to say this! Courage and teamwork are definitely a part of their daily work. Impressive, too
Bravery..... Like you have choices at this point. ,🤣
Cooper: "Those aren't Mountains...... They're waves."
I love how any big wave now is a rogue wave... Even if it's a regular one coming from the regular direction and it's just a plain old big wave, It's a Buffalo, chipotle, habenero, ghost pepper, sriracha, rogue wave!!
Thanks, your right
@RogerMacDonald-Evoy And every Volcano in the world is about 2 seconds from erupting.... 🙄
On an aircraft carrier I've seen waves like that once. Most of the time we would steer around them. Aircraft carrier' s deck about 60ft above a calm sea.
Steer around them?! LOL!
The reason rogue waves are a rarity is because most don't live to tell about it
Just a reminder from the ocean that she allows you to be there
👏👏👏
I'm also a trawler and we call that a dead sea were the boat felled into ,its the gap between the 2 swells if the swell are big the hole are big and you fall hard and it's very dangerous I have been in storms were almost every second swell is a boat breaker and that is awful
In august 2023 we sailed over the north sea during storm Hans. It wasn’t much fun and we didn’t get to sleep much 😅
I’ve been watching my fair share of waves hitting boats but I gotta say… this boat hit the wave
The thing is it looks much smaller on video than in real life
That wasn’t a rogue wave. That was just rough seas and every wave is different. A rogue wave is a whole diff beast and you will know it’s a rogue wave. Come on!!!!!!!
It's rogue because it did the opposite of what it looked like it was going to do. Unpredictable is basically what rogue means. So if you want to get technical the whole ocean and sea is just rogue and unpredictable.
@@kode4420 A Rogue wave is a freak HUGE wave that happens when the ocean is somewhat calm...and out of now where you have this wall coming at you.
@@kode4420 thats not the definition of a rogue wave.
@@klondike69none85 "Rogue waves are unusually large, unpredictable, and suddenly appearing surface waves that can be extremely dangerous to ships, even to large ones. They are distinct from tsunamis, which are often almost unnoticeable in deep waters and are caused by the displacement of water due to other phenomena." From a easy Google search. Says a unpredictable or sudden wave. Rogue means multiple things but most gone astray or unpredictable action. I guess my understanding of the English language is different than yours.
@kristinen7611
Definition of a rogue wave is a wave at least 2 times the average height of the surrounding waves. Some rogues have been recorded on weather buoys at over 3X taller than surrounding waves.
As someone who was born and spent their whole lives in a land locked state all I can say is no thank you. No thank you to all of this. There are probably sharks under the boat too waiting for it to be smashed apart...
Imagine being on a navy ship dodging enemy submarines in this kind of weather... (ww2 Atlantic)
Must have been terrifying either being torpedoed by a U-boat or being destroyed by the storm.
Submarines at least are deep ...the don't feel the brunt like ships do.
@@kristinen7611 no shit.
I’m using the bathroom and as soon as I saw the ship got the huge wave I legit shit myself lmaooo
Ok
@@xxChicago420xx ???
Too much info, thanks 😆
@@debilawless3264 sorry 💀💀💀
Gross
FYI, that’s not a rogue wave, this is what high seas look like
n the boat almost fell apart when it fell and landed on the low seas
If The Dukes of Hazard had a fishing boat instead of a Dodge Charger:
Brave men go to sea everyday and experience this in order to provide us with food and to defend their nation and its interests while challenging the primacy of nature.
US Navy 1990-1996.
Thank you and God bless
@@merewebster4510 Thanks.
i worked on one of the trawlers from the same fleet that the willameana j that sank with all hands lost was from a trawler called the ziderzee spelt different i expect but i joined not long after they perished, and it gave my mum a heart attack. and i can tell you that although i loved it and unfortunately only done one trip with them. every time i eat fish i think of those boys and what they go through to bring us our fish. I've done it and well it's the most dangerous and demanding job on the planet. they deserve medals all of them.
I think of them every time someone complains about the price of fish.
Sorry, not a rogue wave. A rogue wave by definition is one that comes out of nowhere and is as much as 4 times the size of surrounding waves.
Not just the surrounding waves, but specifically the largest third of the surrounding waves
Wow, that's a big fall
I went through a bigger storm than that with my dad and uncles on board the family fishing vessel, 63 feet long and 170,000 pounds.
It was night, so I couldn't see the white foam and spray, but the vessel would rise very high, then drop really far before burying the bow (front of the boat) into the next wave backside.
That was the only time I ever got seasick, I was 10, going on trips to learn. I refer to the story as "the 2014 storm."
I was the only one having fun because I wasn't aware of the danger of the situation. I didn't notice until I looked back now, that everyone was in the wheelhouse, and it was quiet.
It must have been a power 11 or power 12 storm.
If not for the courage of the fearless crew the Minnow would be lost, the Minnow would be lost😂
Not a rogue wave though, just heavy seas. Rogue waves appear suddenly and are much larger than the other waves preceding them. Look at the graph of the draupner wave, there's a bunch of waves of the same size and then one huge one.
That’s a fact
The sea was angry that day my friends
On the Great Lakes, especially on Lake Superior, there are waves called “The Three Sisters” that always come in threes and can be a freighter killer.
The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down..
superior and Erie has taken down the most ships, my god so many good men have died out there.
NOBODY understands that those lakes behave like the Ocean in the Fall..... them boys still sailing in November have balls of STEEL.
The water always wins no matter how many good seasons you have, and That's a terrible death I can't imagine
total respect to all the boys fishing out there now. stay safe lads and fruitful catches. rip to the crew of the Willy from Portsmouth. and all who have perished. always in our hearts
I used to spend 28 days at a time sat beside oil and gas rigs in the north sea.
Standby safety vessels.
You're ok until an anchor works loose
Ocean: hmmm yall fishing men would you think you can catch strimp I’m sorry not today have fun in waves Fisher men: how on earth is the water talking to me 🧐
😂😂😂
I live in norway i experienced that…
But they have both in Norway. rogue waves, and big waves.
This was just a big wave.
New title…..”Rogue Fishing Trawler Hits Big Wave.”
Newbie with small weiner tries to Trendize the words "Rogue Wave"
To get more hits.
like the way the store calls breast tender chunks as "boneless wings," so that they can charge you eight and a half dollars a pound for something it isn't worth but $1.99. A bushel.
It doesn't get hit, it rides up it and the bow slams into the trough.
Now just imagine this, but through rain, storms and at night in pitch black darkness in a wooden boat, with no way to tell where you really are.. and nothing but a sail, map and compass to find your way.
Our ancestors were the SHIT. Its amazing they survived.
That was downward wave right?
I heard that the upward rouge waves could break a tanker in half if they would form under it (the front and the end wouldn't be supported, thus bending the ship)
No. The sjip just eent over the top of one wave, down its back, which is why the boat points downward, but then gets hit with the wave behind that had already formed
@@jd32k damn so it is even bigger than it looks!
So it's a good way to see how far down the ship had to fall from the top of the wave it just went over. Huge drop
Any fish there? 😊
That wave could have smashed that ship pretty sure
The larger rogue waves can reach 80-100 ft. high and they can sink a battleship. My father said that he saw one that was 100 ft high near Japan. He was on a destroyer and they all thought they were going to go down with the ship. It was like having a 10-story building of water looming in front of you. He love being out at sea but said that was one of the scariest moments he ever had in the navy.
??? We lived on base in a very nice home. As far as ship accommodations, he always told us how wonderful the food was. Back then, a lot of the cooks on the ships were Filipino and they would make fresh pastries and bread every morning with breakfast
"The sea was angry that day my friends! Like an old trying to return soup in a deli!"
Woa what they catching in these waters? Salt? 😂
That might not look like much to some of you. I promise if I was on the bridge I would have been terrified!
I have water phobia from now
Aquaphobia.
I’ll never complain about the cost of salmon again
Salmon? LOL... You don't catch salmon in the seas, other than accidentally (bi-catch)... The reason why your salmon is so expensive is because it is either farmed (in enclosures/pens) or caught in rivers.
How does that ship not sink? I would be terrified of drowning
Buoyancy I believe and alittle bit of this...🙏🙏
I’d be more worried of the freezing temps of the North Sea . Drowning would be a relief from all those knives stabbing into your body
The terror that 19-yr-old felt in the Titan--unfathomable...
@@janaleland9038yeah I can't imagine... Drowning is one of my worst fears. At least the submarine was was quick.
@@janaleland9038 No sympathy, he shouldn't have been there. Simples. One less billionaire to contend with.
Those 4 seconds of complete silence. Utter stillness. In a immeasurably heavy floating steel behemoth FLOATING IN THE AIR. Those are the moments that make an atheist pray to God.
Not this atheist.... And that sea state was pretty normal for the shallow North Sea, certainly nothing 'rogue' about those waves.
Freind was fishing in a smaller boat on a calmish when a wave out of no where flipped them. They were ok but I'd call that a rouge wave .
観てるだけで 酔いそうですね、凄い波🌊😮
Still baffled how they traversed the world in wooden boats
Looks like a cool water ride at Hurricane Harbor! 😂
How many of those does a ship have in it before the frame is ruined?
Waves are waves...Idk why they call them rogue waves when they are expected during a storm.
That was a moderate wave, not a rogue one. High waves in the north sea is very normal, and from my own experience, that wasn't even a big one.
Anyone else feeling sea sick just watching this ? Lol