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Haulover Inlet
Is anyone here familiar with this inlet near Miami? I can't believe the boats that some people try to take through there. Crazy!!!
https://youtu.be/OM0KvjyG8zM?si=SlmztgBOvBCI0Rqc Sent from my SM-S916U using Tapatalk |
Yes, I lived in Boynton Beach for about 10 years. The Boynton inlet didn’t look much better and I went through it almost every weekend fishing and diving.
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YT channel Boats vs Haulover is pretty entertaining.
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I've seen many videos of the boats going through there with varying levels of success and smoothness.
<iframe width="1280" height="720" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/OM0KvjyG8zM" title="THE WORST BOAT FAILS EVER FILMED AT HAULOVER INLET!! BOAT SINKING! | WAVY BOATS" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
I really miss the Original Blue Top Legend. I think one of the girls went off to college or something, and the new larger Boston Whaler without the top isn't quite as cool as the original. :D:D:D:D:D
...But it's still a cool channel to watch every once and a while!;) |
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The Midnight Express is perfect for Haulover.
https://youtu.be/tqVP_wfuC_A?si=sP6FogZcH9NJFdl5 Sent from my SM-S916U using Tapatalk |
Just curious, what makes the Haulover Inlet have such extreme waves?
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They go to a boat show and buy a Bayliner or something without ever having been on the water before.. Some of the boats shown had $200K in engines alone hanging off the stern.. The only time I experienced seas like that big with no rhyme or reason, was in Buzzards Bay, RI.. it was so nasty that my father a man who never showed emotion was visibly scared... I remember the anchor being dislodge from the bow and flying in an arc away from the boat..one lost anchor.. Quote:
I saw a bunch of people who had no business operating a boat |
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Haulover has a large body of water immediately inside the inlet (North Biscayne Bay), combined with a short, straight cut dumping into the ocean. It's essentially like a velocity stack, in that it accelerates the tidal flow beyond a normal rate. Add the not unusual significant onshore winds and you can get relatively large standing or slow moving waves with steep approaches in a hurry. An ugly situation for inexperienced boaters (or rental boaters..overloaded boats, pontoon boats, bow-riding bay cruisers, etc.) All typical for Haulover. It's also fairly narrow, leaving little room to navigate and often stacked with traffic weekends and holidays. Most of the south Fla. inlets are straight-cut channels, and suffer any any time the tide and wind decide to come from opposite directions. Lighthouse Point was my home inlet, but the only inlets that never presented any challenges down there (other than getting run over by a cruise ship or freighter) were Lauderdale and Govt. Cut/Miami due to their sizeable width. |
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https://hauloverinlet.com/navigate-haulover-inlet/ (below is just an excerpt from the link) Quote:
<iframe width="1280" height="720" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/FrbiycI36fY" title="Why Haulover Inlet is SO Treacherous... AND, How to Beat It and Any Inlet!" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
So tide going out with slight onshore wind makes the waves stick up?
Nothing new there, just people at the helm that should not be. |
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The worst in a rough inlet is going through with the current where you have little to no steering control. The only way to steer the boat is to grab a little throttle as needed. Sometimes more throttle than is safe given the waves you’re headed into. if you play that wrong, you can end up with a whole lot of hull not touching the water or scooping in a terrifying amount of green water. so what often happens is you line the boat up best you can and essentially are white water rafting until you get into slower current where you can get steering control back.
Narrow inlets typically have very large standing waves when the current is rushing in or out. if you combine that with the wakes from large sport fish boats coming and going, it gets very dangerous very fast. I remember going through our inlet one January day to chase the rockfish, and I read the wave wrong, next thing I knew I felt like I was pointing straight in the air and had to hold onto the wheel just to stay in the boat. And that brief moment, I was praying the boat didn’t come straight back down stern first and swamp, fortunately it did more of a bellyflop and I got through. You also will see a fair amount of people that don’t understand the need to trim the motor up and keep the bow high in standing waves. Freshwater boats with down sloping bows have no business being in saltwater for this reason. |
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