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@marhawkman3032 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't do that cruiseliner one from a few years back where the liner got side swiped. busted windows and flooded rooms all the way to the top of the ship. left some really spectacular footage giving you a terrifying idea of just what'd happen to a smaller vessel taking a wave like that.
@theamazingmarlbito62932 жыл бұрын
What if a rouge wave went over a submarine that was close to the surface? Would it pick up the submarine? Horrifying 😳
@yapandasoftware2 жыл бұрын
Just stayed on the QE2 in Dubai last week. It's a floating hotel now. I recognized the photos as I walked over the entire boat. Awesome ship!
@MikeFord-io2jb2 жыл бұрын
@@philobetto5106 '.... 'rouge' governments? do you mean rogue?
@giggiddy2 жыл бұрын
@@philobetto5106 Give it a rest pal. We come here to get away from that crap.
@okankyoto2 жыл бұрын
One of the terrifying possible reasons why only in the 20th century did rogue waves start to have evidence found for them is theroized to be that- in the time before ships were made of steel, anyone who encountered them simply vanished
@SofaKingShit2 жыл бұрын
Here be monsters.
@domobran72 жыл бұрын
It is in fact the only possible reason. Rogue waves may have become more frequent due to oil spills reducing surface tension, and possibly also warming climate (though ice caps seem to be recovering, so jury is still out on global warming). But they always existed, so the only reason why they wouldn't be reported is that there was nobody left alive to report them.
@johannlaufenberg97982 жыл бұрын
S. S. Pacific perhaps?
@beepbeeplettuce58902 жыл бұрын
@@johannlaufenberg9798 no
@Kaidhicksii2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, especially back in the 19th century and the centuries before it. Generally, in wooden ships less than 200-feet long powered by sail, those who encountered freak waves weren't coming back to tell about them.
@ArtakaWorksStudio2 жыл бұрын
The fact that the Lusitania managed to survive getting dipped like that, with no casualties no less, is honestly a testament to these Gilded age beasts.
@giggiddy2 жыл бұрын
Make no mistake. Modern cruise ships are not designed for that. A rogue wave will destroy one of those.
@ArtakaWorksStudio2 жыл бұрын
@@giggiddy absolutely. Those monstrosities are top heavy floating hotels lmao
@Kaidhicksii2 жыл бұрын
True. It also simultaneously scares me to think about what might have happened if the wave that struck her was any larger. It was _only_ ~75' tall. Imagine if it were 90-100' tall?
@The_DC_Kid2 жыл бұрын
Stop before you make me cry (with laughter).
@J.R.in_WV2 жыл бұрын
@@Kaidhicksiithe wave was approximately 75 feet above sea level but due to gravity and the natural trough behind a moving wave causing the bow of a ship to “slam” down to far deeper than normal draft depth after coming down the back side of the wave it crested the height of the wave if measured from Lusitania’s normal waterline was near to 90 feet….scary stuff. More in depth studies have said the heavy steel used in her superstructure, including the wheelhouse, breaking the remaining surface tension of the oncoming wall of water was all that saved the bridge crew from being killed instantly when the wave impacted the wheelhouse. Once surface tension is broken the water starts to become “aerated” and while still a deadly force it’s something the human body can at least stand a chance of fighting for survival. That old adage about hitting solid water at high speed being like hitting concrete is true, think of doing a belly-flop vs a dive at the pool. Using your outstretched hands or pointed feet to break the surface with as narrow and pointed an object as possible. The bridge crew were all lined up to basically do a 90mph standing belly flop but the large, flat front of the bridge took that impact and aside from the windows held together keeping the men from being blown apart on impact.
@sitara27832 жыл бұрын
My dad was a merchant mariner for 39 years and the stories he tells me have made me terrified and enamored of the ocean to this day. He's had a few near-capsizings which constantly leave me wondering how I managed to be born. (In that scenario, it doesn't matter that he can't swim.) Keep up the good work; cheers from the USA.
@marhawkman3032 жыл бұрын
I've come to suspect the reason the rogue wave thing was considered a legend for so long... is because of how few survivors there were in the old days. :/
@wotan109502 жыл бұрын
I worked for a short time at Bermuda Star Line. My late mother, who couldn’t swim, was somewhat reassured that I was a strong swimmer. I said, “What difference does it make? If you’re more than a mile from shore, swimming isn’t going to help you a bit!”
@Operngeist12 жыл бұрын
@@wotan10950 if you can keep yourself from drowning long enough for rescue to arrive then it does make a difference.
@doggonemess12 жыл бұрын
Thank you to your father for his service! My dad was in the US Navy for 30 years. He was the CO of the USS Reid in the early '90s. I remember on one family cruise, waves were breaking over the forecastle, sometimes with the bow submerging and I was freaking out. He thought it was funny. Basically, his attitude was "this is nothing". I've never doubted the sea's power!
@loganbaileysfunwithtrains6062 жыл бұрын
@@wotan10950 old navy vets tell the same story, a lot of them couldn’t swim but what would it matter you get sunk out in the ocean you aren’t going to swim anywhere
@trapset15392 жыл бұрын
I can't imagine the horror of the officer who saw the wave crash over the lusitainia with himself above the ship with his legs submerged. Incredible.
@exactlywhatisaid2 жыл бұрын
he was up there on his tippy toes
@skedaddledbraincell Жыл бұрын
@@exactlywhatisaid TIPPY TOES💀
@ZGryphon Жыл бұрын
To be fair, he probably _needed_ his trousers rinsed by that point.
@75blackviking Жыл бұрын
@@ZGryphon Perhaps even shoveled...
@t.o.69535 ай бұрын
reminds me of the guy who was at the top of a light tower at candlestick park when the bay area earthquake hit in 1989. He said he could see the wave of force from the earthquake move up the tower towards him like an ocean wave approaching him. Somehow he managed to hold on and survive.
@samhouston91622 жыл бұрын
I'm happy more people are actually making content on rogue waves, even with the still limited understanding we have of them. It's something that should be discussed a lot more when it comes to ships at sea.
@Kaidhicksii2 жыл бұрын
Even though we are still little closer to predicting rogue waves than we were even 2 decades ago, we have an understanding of some of the factors that cause them. - Wind and waves travelling one way meeting a current travelling another - Two waves coming from opposite directions meeting head-on - One wave running down another wave - Geographical conditions - Sea states becoming nonlinear causing waves to absorb each other's energy (how seas become nonlinear is still not understood, although it relates to quantum physics) In any case, we still have a lot to learn. To me, that's frankly part of the fun. For one, you'll never live long enough to know everything. Still, that only motivates me to try and learn as much as possible. Second, most people look at nature as something to be conquered. That is something which will never happen, which is why I look at nature more so as a challenge to be met, constantly striving to evolve with it.
@JoshuaTootell2 жыл бұрын
There is a Veritasium video where he visits the US Navy testing lab where they can create "rogue" waves.
@ehaurader26402 жыл бұрын
@@Kaidhicksii yeah something like that the ripples everything makes in the ocean Frequency shock or something like that
@edwardmeade2 жыл бұрын
@@Kaidhicksii It has nothing to do with quantum physics. It's trigonometry. It's constructive interference of two or more intersecting wave trains. Since it is almost impossible to get two wave trains of the same frequency AND the same bearing (or reciprocal bearing) they tend to be short duration events.
@jf69012 жыл бұрын
@@JoshuaTootell Nature is as strong as it is beautiful. I'm with you.
@ZeldaTheSwordsman Жыл бұрын
The Queen Mary's ability to _recover_ from the extreme rolls she was vulnerable to was absolutely insane.
@cynvision Жыл бұрын
Considering the documentary I watched about Roll on Roll off ships, it is possible that the equipment loaded on board the Queen Mary was very well tied down properly and hatches were closed. Which was probably just the care and attention given to wartime things and military orders and training; where the current shipping industry is about speed and thus, you get ships that are rolling and not recovering. The documetary was about the Sun Ray in Brunswick Georgia where software was trying to balance a lot of loading and unloading and officers didn't have a great safety culture of checking after each other and the computer doing the math of the ship balance. Then, they opened a door for the harbor pilot to leave faster...
@daleslover277111 ай бұрын
I would imagine that when she started to roll, with 16000 + men on board, they moved in the opposite direction to help her, self right.. doing a calculation that 16000 × 200 lbs per man average would be 1,600 tons or 8 locomotive engins weight. I know if I was on the ship, I would be on oppose wall like a spider😂
@magesalmanac642410 ай бұрын
200lbs per man is generous.
@holdenmoore330310 ай бұрын
@@magesalmanac6424hardly most men weigh more
@jimness590210 ай бұрын
@@daleslover2771 the men were acting as ballast I would think most of them were well below the water line deep in the ship
@jgrab1 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised the narrator doesn't mention that one of the soldiers on board the Queen Mary was Paul Gallico, a novelist who later wrote a book called The Poseidon Adventure. The book was based on the near-rollover incident, and when they made the movie a few years later, they used the Queen Mary, recently retired, as their ship.
@59Drauz Жыл бұрын
I have not read The Poseidon Adventure, but the movie is pure kitsch. Perhaps neither has historical merit.
@jayive34 Жыл бұрын
@@59DrauzWell, Paul Gallico sure used his ordeal aboard Queen Mary as an inspiration for his book.
@GeoEstes Жыл бұрын
Interesting. That was a fun movie.
@hattyburrow716 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating
@superboats2 Жыл бұрын
I have all 3 movie versions of "The Poseidon Adventure" and the book. It would have been perfect in the remakes that they would offer pineapple upside down cake for dessert at the dinner and have people dancing to Lionel Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling" in the disco.
@gowanhewlett745 Жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation. Voice: every word audible. Pace: slow enough to hear and the ember facts. Great illustrations. Thankyou
@You-can-fix-it-yourself2 жыл бұрын
I have a photo from my grandfather while on board the USS Wyoming, in the South China sea, during a typhoon. He was in the crow's nest and took a photo of a 130 ft wave coming at them from behind. I calculated the height using trigonometry, and the ship's dimensions. No one ever doubted his stories of life at sea after taking that photo.
@beefchops14002 жыл бұрын
Crikey that sounds utterly terrifying!
@You-can-fix-it-yourself2 жыл бұрын
@@beefchops1400 He said it was a regular thing during typhoons. He also spoke of White Squals.
@pauls32042 жыл бұрын
I witnessed 100 foot waves on a Scottish North Sea oil platform I have never seen anything remotely like it, you can feel the pressure of the weight of water consuming and compressing the atmosphere
@mattheweisley8570 Жыл бұрын
Post an image of it please.
@stab74 Жыл бұрын
Post this online somewhere and link us!
@VitZ92 жыл бұрын
"Don't worry, this ship is practically unsinkable!" "Oh no. No no no no no. I'm not getting on that death trap."
@anoia77832 жыл бұрын
For real thou any ship said to be unsinkable got sunk on maiden voyage
@larchman43272 жыл бұрын
@@anoia7783 the ocean ranger drilling rig was also unsinkable.
@nyotamwuaji6484 Жыл бұрын
This ship is unsinkable! The ocean: HOW MANY TIMES MUST I TEACH YOU THIS LESSON OLD MAN
@billyhomeyer741411 ай бұрын
@@larchman4327I was near the Ocean Ranger 2/14,15/82 on a Phillips Petroleum Oil tanker heading to or leaving Holyrood NF. Think we caught some of that wave - the tanker rolled 33deg one way then 35deg the other way. Scary shit.
@larchman432711 ай бұрын
@@billyhomeyer7414 I was on a vlcc 889x144 going back and forth from Valdez to long Beach. We were in 30 foot swells one but didn't effect ship too much couldn't imagine it listing 30 degrees that's unimaginable especially in engine room with all that heavy equipment......... and heavy spare parts. That's cool to hear.
@twrecks45982 жыл бұрын
The Lucy animation was amazing! I can easily imagine that the Edmund Fitzgerald encountered this very same thing, but unfortunately was unable to recover. So hard to imagine something that size just getting swallowed up whole like that... the scale involved is mind boggling. Love your channel, keep up the great work!
@wayneantoniazzi27062 жыл бұрын
There's a number of theories about the "Big Fitz's" loss, all plausible, but the thing to remember is it's a bit of an oversimplification to call them the Great Lakes, they're really inland seas and capable of doing anything seas can do to ships.
@wotan109502 жыл бұрын
On a business trip to Detroit, I visited the Maritime Sailors Cathedral, the one mentioned in Gordon Lightfoot’s famous song.
@wayneantoniazzi27062 жыл бұрын
@@wotan10950 Thank God for Gordon Lightfoot! If it wasn't for the song the Edmund Fitzgerald would be just another Great Lakes shipwreck, forgotten by all except the families of the lost. Now they'll always be remembered and by extension all those lost in Great Lakes shipwrecks.
@jamesgroccia6442 жыл бұрын
They might've split up, or they might've capsized, they may have broke deep and took water. But all that remains are the faces and the names of the wives, the sons and the daughters.
@wotan109502 жыл бұрын
I remember one critic said that Lightfoot was the only one who could make a rhyme out of “the big lake they called Gitche Gumee” and “the skies of November turn gloomy.” 😀
@ChefDeRavioli2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely love the transition into 3D! Can’t wait to see this form of media grow and new animations of new ships
@Kaidhicksii2 жыл бұрын
Almost forgot to mention that. Really makes these videos even more immersive than they already are. Good on you Mike! :D👍
@Unownshipper2 жыл бұрын
This is extremely impressive. You've done a marvelous job recreating these liners and the weather and lighting effects really set the atmosphere. I'd never heard of any of these incidents except for the Mary.
@CancelHappiness9 ай бұрын
Those aren't mountains...they're waves.
@thomastaylor66997 ай бұрын
Reminds me of a certain si-fi movie I saw.😊 " Interstellar "
@ChessieSystem1973Ай бұрын
*insert a wave the size of two Burj Khalifas moving at a tremendous speed*
@CancelHappinessАй бұрын
@ChessieSystem1973 I love that clip from interstellar
@eboyjim2 жыл бұрын
In 1985 a rogue/sneaker wave struck Fastnet Lighthouse off the coast of southern Ireland. It smashed the windows and broke the light 46 metres in the air. I don't know how the hell it took until 1995 for us to realize they were real.
@VitZ92 жыл бұрын
The answer is academics who have never been out in the field, denying the lived experience of people who work in that field, because they're "better educated", despite having no experience or practical knowledge. I remember even when the scientific community started accepting the possibility of rouge waves, there were still plenty of "experts" who firmly believed they didn't exist, or only existed as a direct result of hurricanes, etc. Hubris is not a new phenomenon unfortunately, and it continues to this day. People just don't like to be told they're wrong, or something similar would never happen to them.
@pavelslama55432 жыл бұрын
It was mostly due to the low number of witnesses, because the wave usually got immediately rid of them.
@pavelslama55432 жыл бұрын
It was mostly due to the low number of witnesses, because the wave usually got immediately rid of them.
@okankyoto2 жыл бұрын
It took until 1995 for there to be substantial direct measurement of the event. With all the data points to prove it conclusively, but one had to hit a platform that was specifically taking that kind of data.
@eboyjim2 жыл бұрын
@@okankyoto Yeah I know and I understand but I don’t know how you look at an event like fastnet (a gigantic lighthouse with seismic readings) and don’t think “there’s something going on here.” To this day large ships go down in rough seas and it never gets reported as rogue waves, even though a rogue wave is basically the only natural event that could sink an oil tanker or a battleship out at sea. What’s shocking is the commonness of them and how they stayed unknown for so long. Every storm season buoys off Western Europe and the Eastern United States report 30m+ rogues on a very frequent basis.
@dantheartisan2 жыл бұрын
Out of 60 years of sailing and motoring both salt and fresh waters, the most horrifying thin I've ever experienced was a roque wave on a perfectly calm lake. It wasn't the size, I've riden much, MUCH larger waves, it was the velocity of the continuous breaking of the wave. It was like a supernatural experience.
@dantheartisan Жыл бұрын
@Lemons Limes after year of thought, I think what was normally a “bank” of gravel on the side of the cliff must have slid down due to being submerged. Even with that scenario, (the most logical), the result was much more intense than would be expected.
@j.pershing219711 ай бұрын
This sounds crazy but i watched a 3 ft wave roll down the Sangamon River here in Illinois. Calm to. It stole my fishing gear and nearly dipped me. It was moving 20-30 knots. Never seen that before or since.
@alanmacification Жыл бұрын
As a kid, I like watching waves on Lake Ontario. They came in sets of three. Every once in a while, one of the three waves would seem to steal the energy of the others and rear up, then die down, and another would pop up nearby. It looked to me like the energy of the waves hitting the shore was being reflected back at an off angle and interacting with the incoming waves, creating peaks and troughs or canceling waves as it passed.
@danakess389 Жыл бұрын
On the Great Lakes, the waves do come in three’s, the “three sisters”.
@whoever6458 Жыл бұрын
That's the thought I had about it too: constructive or destructive wave interference.
@j.pershing219711 ай бұрын
Reverberation. Lake storms are bad because waves come from multiple directions.
@deanmcpherson25972 ай бұрын
@@danakess389You are reading too many Edmund Fitzgerald stories.
@jetsons1012 жыл бұрын
I have heard that the original 1972 "The Poseidon Adventure" movie was based on the rogue wave that hit the Queen Mary. Parts of the movie were even filmed on board the Mary after she was bought by the city of Long Beach CA. Great watch, thanks to Mike for his time and work.....
@theshenpartei2 жыл бұрын
Neat
@KiwiSentinel2 жыл бұрын
The Mary was a slow roller and hung on the roll. I 1936 Paul Gallico was onboard when, during lunch, the ship rolled and hung on the end of a long roll. He wondered what would happen if the ship had just kept going over all the way. Years later while looking for an idea for a book remembered the event and the Poseidon Adventure was born.
@Kaidhicksii2 жыл бұрын
True. The author, Paul Gallico, was aboard the Queen Mary during a crossing in 1936, when she ran into a rough storm. When an exceptionally large wave hit, it knocked the ship onto her side. Gallico was in the dining hall at the time, and besides the obvious tables flipping, cutlery crashing and people sliding, he reported looking out the window and seeing nothing but the water. The thought came into his mind on what would have happened if the Queen Mary rolled all the way over, and when the time came for him to write a book, this incident came floating back, and The Poseidon Adventure was born.
@fionnmaccumhaill32572 жыл бұрын
Check out the movie "White Squal"!
@jetsons1012 жыл бұрын
@@fionnmaccumhaill3257 Just watched the movie trailer, looks pretty good.
@jameswhite1910 Жыл бұрын
I was on one of the ships caught by superstorm Sandy. Most of the ships survived, not all. It was something that really brought stories like these to reality. At the time, this was the largest cruise liner built - but we were dwarfed by waves. The 6th floor windows were smashed and that deck abandoned. I was on the 8th and it felt from that height like we were ants in a mountain range. When we rose up a wave - it seemed like we were climbing for minutes, then, the ship would teeter and come crashing down at free-fall speed on the other side. Nobody believed that even steel could withstand the pounding. When disaster hits, and then, suddenly, the magic of engineering fails... the feeling of hopelessness must be overwhelming.
@christophermarquis8384 Жыл бұрын
I'm active USCG, and I flew in superstorm Sandy (C-130J) on the HMS Bounty case... by the time my sortie was out there, it was just a debris field, but I remember looking at the 270-foot cutter that was down there and seeing the props coming out of the water. The ocean will kill you dead and care not.
@jameswhite1910 Жыл бұрын
@@christophermarquis8384 The fate of the crew of the Bounty still haunts me. Glad we have you guys though, at least you give us some hope in case of the worst.
@InfiniteDroidArmies2 жыл бұрын
For me, the story about the Queen Mary is the most terrifying. What an absolute disaster that could’ve been. Any loss of life is terrible of course, but 16,000 soldiers and 1,000 crew?
@@Allmenshouldrespectallwomen so you don’t care about people dying?
@Allmenshouldrespectallwomen2 ай бұрын
@@auuuuuggggghhhhhh never said that lol
@jaycagey2 жыл бұрын
While doing a crossing on the Queen Mary 2, I bought a book by the ship's architect, Stephen Payne, detailing how the ship was designed and built. At one point, he had arguments with Carnival and Cunard executives about the need to design the ship as a true ocean liner and not as a typical cruise ship. He highlighted the Michelangelo and Queen Elizabeth 2 incidents in his presentation and, as he stated it, "Photographs of these episodes really focused the Carnival/Cunard audience and thereafter there was no question that if we were to maintain the tradition of transatlantic crossings, it was agreed that it had to be by liner and not cruise ship."
@baritonebynight2 жыл бұрын
Thankfully we still have the option of traveling across the ocean on a liner vs the vile act of flying!
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
@@baritonebynight What are you doing on the Internet? It uses electricity, which is the property of God, not to be touched by mortals!
@wlmontag2 жыл бұрын
WOW!! This video was absolutely mesmerizing and in my opinion your best one yet. Thanks for taking the time to create this masterpiece.
@Aliciapaige777 Жыл бұрын
Oh my Lord,, I am truly terrified of the ocean. The thought of being out to sea in the pitch darkness of night, is scary enough, but to actually see the rouge wave coming, would literally make me pass out or have a heart attack out of pure terror. Hell to the NO, will you ever see me onboard any kind of boat or ship.. 🖤🖤🖤
@iaincatto6241 Жыл бұрын
I was a Chief Officer in the Merchant Navy. The knowledge that these occur is terrifying. Going from Durban up through the Agulhas is an area where we had to keep a close eye out for rogue waves.
@williamcrawford80510 ай бұрын
There have been some tragic losses off the Wild Coast. Ships have foundered, falling into massive holes caused by the relatively shallow water, the strong current and opposing weather. One was the Waratah for which they are still looking, lost with all hands.
@FL0ra_favvn6 ай бұрын
I often struggle to find KZbin channels that talk about things I like while still being very audible and not triggering any of my sensory ailments. I'm very happy to report that you do a very good job at appeasing the autism gods and I quite love watching your videos.
@denisvincelette975811 ай бұрын
I was on a Navy Ship during Vietnam. We went through many typhoons. Going bow first into 70ft rough waves, going underwater then coming out the other side. One one day I could hear the ship screaming in paint also hearing welds breaking along the main center beam. We we’re 5,000 miles from the home of San Diego. God stepped in and rescued the ship.
@Scott110782 жыл бұрын
My first ship was the USS Kitty Hawk. I was an engineer and the Number one attack team leader for the ships Flying Squad. It was the year 2000 and we were securing from a fire drill. Myself and my team were sitting on the deck halfway out of our fire gear. Now carriers are HUGE and a modern engineering marvel, they're big enough it's hard to perceive any movement of the ship, like we cut right through hurricanes and you barely feel it. So when you suddenly find yourself and everyone else rapidly sliding along the deck trying to find something, anything to grab onto it's VERY unnerving. Add to that the sounds of various expensive things tumbling over and crashing into things and more alarms you ever remember hearing going off. You could see the look of utter terror on everyone's face as our unshakable damn near unsinkable home is now nearly sideways. And as suddenly as it happened it was over. I don't remember what the clinometer maxed out at, just that 3-4 more degrees and we wouldn't have recovered. In 2000 the US Navy came VERY close to losing a Super carrier to a fucking wave. That's Horrifying.
@exactlywhatisaid2 жыл бұрын
holy shit dude!
@tobiasandtheangel4834 Жыл бұрын
So interesting to hear accounts from first hand experience. Much appreciated Rachel
@Wearethewingmakers10 ай бұрын
Ive literally been hit with ome at see while mending fishing gear on the starboard side. By far one of the scariest experiences of my puff. It wiped the crew out and sent us all home with injured limbs and broken bones.
@krakenwoodfloorservicemcma59752 жыл бұрын
My grandfather rode to Europe on the Queen Mary in 42 or 43. He said it was absolutely packed with troops and was a gamblers paradise. My grandfather was a very good poker and craps player.
@TopImpressiveLine2 жыл бұрын
It's impressive that the Lusitania, QE2, Queen Mary, and Michelangelo survived the rogue waves they encountered. Except for the Munich.
@enpakeksi7652 жыл бұрын
Do you think the München will ever be discovered?
@TopImpressiveLine2 жыл бұрын
@@enpakeksi765 If Munich had a similar fate to the SS Naronic, then there's a high chance she won't be discovered.
@concept56315 ай бұрын
@@TopImpressiveLine Why?
@jamesrodgers31325 ай бұрын
I heard a statistic quoted in another long-form video, saying that a ship is lost somewhere in the world every WEEK. One wonders how many might be rogue wave victims that left no evidence?
@nursestoyland5 ай бұрын
@@concept5631theres no exact location of where munchen had sunk
@georgemallory7978 ай бұрын
I've been thru a storm on Lake Michigan between Mackinaw Island and Frankfurt, Michigan, where we finally ended the day, due to waves reaching 10-12 footers. We were in a 21' cuddy cabin. It was 1981 and I was 14. My dad was a Navy veteran and was a pretty good seaman but he NEVER should have had his wife and 3 kids out in seas that big. Those waves looked like buildings. We were with a 25 foot and a 26 foot boat and they were only a hundred feet away from each other and would totally lose sight of each other constantly. I'll never forget it. When we made it into the harbor people looked at us like we were crazy. Not even large yachts were out in that weather. All 3 boats had people barfing their guts out, including my dad. I got extra food for lunch as a result of not getting seasick. My uncle and my dad treated me differently afterwards. I guess it's some sort of guy thing. I cannot imagine what Cape Horn or the North Atlantic would be like. I'd love to experience it once in my life, though.
@jakestewart23232 жыл бұрын
Bravo, Mike! Rogue waves have always held a morbid fascination for me, and I really enjoyed this video!
@Aengus422 жыл бұрын
You reminded me of my nan! She lived in Torbay, Devon in a bungalow overlooking the bay. Her taps in the kitchen used to suffer from water hammer. This is a very loud droning noise emanating from the water pipes sounding just like a foghorn. Anyway, any time this happened, she'd point out to sea & say "Oh! The Queen Mary's in!" 🚢
@jamesrodgers31325 ай бұрын
No, water hammer is the single loud thump heard when you turn off a fully-on tap quickly.
@themightyangustma275311 ай бұрын
The story of the München has always fascinated me, and I’m glad you featured it in this video. I do really hope she’s found one day, along with her crew.
@ZekeGraal2 жыл бұрын
Rouge waves are fascinating to me. You described the events of the München with more detail than I have heard before. Looks like I need to do some reading! Thanks Mike!
@hamishneilson71402 жыл бұрын
Do you think a part of the reason why the Queen Mary 2 didn't roll over is because all the loose furniture that would typically go flying had been stripped out, and she was filled with thousands of troops who would've been holding on to all sorts of things rather than becoming a living free surface effect?
@briananthony40442 жыл бұрын
Yes, hundreds of tons of loose items moving to the lower side could have finished her off.
@matthewmosier84392 жыл бұрын
I would also imagine that she was sitting lower in the water due to the extra passengers. A lower center of gravity. I've seen 28 degrees of roll and it feels pretty extreme. Could not imagine 50
@ct17622 жыл бұрын
a 40,000 ton ship is hardly going to be effected by loose fittings. loose cargo sure. but not furniture.
@baritonebynight2 жыл бұрын
It wasn't the Queen Mary 2.
@judithlee8422 жыл бұрын
My Father served as a cabin steward on the Queen Mary. He often told me stories of rough crossings and prayed when the waves were like mountains. He always said never underestimate the power of the sea.
@ianb90282 жыл бұрын
One tale that gave me the shudders comes from the 1998 Sydney Hobart yacht race. This was the roughest race on record and 6 people unfortunately lost their lives. The tale came from a helicopter rescue pilot. A yacht crew member had been lost overboard and the rescue chopper was trying to recover the crew. The pilot states he was maintaining a 100 foot hover when he saw a wave coming at him. He put 40 ft of altitude on and stated the altimeter went to 10 ft when the wave passed under. He had a crew member in the water trying to save an unconscious crew member from the yacht. Fortunately he got all to safety.
@shirleynaylor9450 Жыл бұрын
The Human Teabag, a great read. So very brave.
@eveapple4928 Жыл бұрын
Quick thinking and reflexes from the pilot saved the day! Very courageous
@billbruff96132 жыл бұрын
Thank you Michael. Great animation to bring these stories to life. I ALWAYS learn something new from you. Your deprh of knowledge is awe inspiring.
@looneyflight2 жыл бұрын
I've watched some of the research into rogue waves. They're used wave pools to recreate the phenomenon. They created single double and triple rogue waves in a row. The scariest one is able to lift a ship so high that when coming out it leaves so much if the ship unsupported by water that it could break the ships back. Don't think they have ever found a ship that was broken like that before though.
@sblack482 жыл бұрын
A bunch of WWII liberty ships disappeared, possibly due to encountering large waves. It was discovered that the welds used tested fine at room temperature but at sea water temps on the North Atlantic they became brittle. So in a heavy sea they just broke up.
@jameschenard13862 жыл бұрын
@@sblack48 attention to detail is everything. Glad you mentioned it. Liberty ships were built with an expected service life of less than a decade; they were born of the necessity to get as much “over there” as quickly as possible. A lot of short cuts in their design in order to fill an immediate need. Those welds were ultimately a result of that
@sblack482 жыл бұрын
@@jameschenard1386 my understanding is that they simply didn’t understand the impact of temperature on the ductility of the welds. Apparently it was a lady Engineer who made the discovery. Very unusual for the time.
@graham26312 жыл бұрын
They found the Edmond Fitzgerald broken in half.
@sblack482 жыл бұрын
@@Klaus293 they were launching them every day and a half. England was starving and they needed to move tonnage at all costs. They had to build them faster than the uboats could sink them. I suspect they were pretty ragged vessels.
@kaiplue2 жыл бұрын
This whole video is so intense. Had me at the edge of my seat. The animations were great at conveying the tension with your narration!
@MyDogFulton2 жыл бұрын
My uncle died on the Ocean Ranger oil rig. Couldn’t even imagine how scary giant waves must be.
@jimward20411 ай бұрын
Rogue waves are no joke. While a member of the US Navy in 1978, my ship was struck at night on the starboard side by a rogue wave in the Atlantic ocean to the west of Portugal that had to have been over 70 feet tall. It rolled us over to the point that the tilt alarm began to go off, indicating that we had rolled 55 degrees to port. The ship righted itself, but not without a lot of shuddering, shaking, and the sounds of furniture breaking loose from welds. To give you an idea of the size of this wave, the ship was over 500 feet long, 84 feet wide, 65 feet high at the bridge decking, displacing 12,000 tons....not a small ship at all. I still get a small case of PTSD thinking about this event.
@sirridesalot66522 жыл бұрын
The captain of SS Edmund Fitzgerald wired that the ship was holding its own but it sank shortly afterwards. I believe that it too was hit by one or more rogue waves. Those rogue waves may not have been the sole cause of the ship sinking so fast but I do firmly believe that they were the final blow.
@lhaviland86022 жыл бұрын
They likely got hit from behind and "slid" to the bottom face-first too which just makes it even scarier. Like imagine being on the bridge and you plunge into what seems like an average trough but then you just. keep. going. Goddamn terrifying.
@2lipToo Жыл бұрын
@@lhaviland8602 Absolutely chilling!
@marckyle589511 ай бұрын
When Gordon Lightfoot died last year, they rang the bell at the Mariner's Church for for him along with the EF crew. 30 rings in all.
@jonessr28002 жыл бұрын
Great content as always Mike. Rogue waves are definitely the scariest monsters out there.
@concept56312 жыл бұрын
Not as scary as Rogue Holes imo
@jonessr28002 жыл бұрын
@@concept5631 never heard of it tbh
@concept56312 жыл бұрын
@@jonessr2800 Black Holes but water
@niedas34262 жыл бұрын
@@jonessr2800 'A 2012 study supported the existence of oceanic rogue holes, the inverse of rogue waves, where the depth of the hole can reach more than twice the significant wave height. Rogue holes have been replicated in experiments using water-wave tanks, but have not been confirmed in the real world.' New fear unlocked I guess. Add that to the list of reasons why I'll gladly be a filthy landrat and be happy about it /s Seriously though, that's fascinating. I wonder if they actually occur in real-world conditions and if they do, how rare and devastating they would be compared to rogue waves.
@TheOriginalCFA19792 жыл бұрын
@@niedas3426o not black holes in water but really a “Rogue Trough,” the opposite of a Rogue Wave. A black hole in water happens every time you unplug your bathtub, it’s a whirlpool not a deep wave. We’ve used literally that to do black hole simulations. However, to your question, I’d assume extremely, it would be hard to have the required momentum to power out of it I think and I’d assume there’s probably a chance of it closing with you inside. (Think in wave tanks when simulated rogue waves “collapse” as the “closure”, as everything would be inverse)
@waverleyjournalise57572 жыл бұрын
One of your best - and most haunting - videos yet. You have a way with words, and these new 3d animations are an excellent way of setting and telling the scene.
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much!
@themaverickline2 жыл бұрын
Love your channel, Mike! The Queen Mary story is incredible - I was at the wheel of a sail boat once (my first time at the wheel too!) when we came around an island and got hit with a massive wind gust which rolled the boat over about 50 degrees. The inclinometer tipped into the red and maxed out, and the port side deck and railing actually dipped underwater. Thankfully we were able to recover quickly, and amazingly no one was hurt. But in the moment I thought for sure we were going to have people go overboard - any further and that probably would have happened. I can't imagine what this must have been like in a ship the size of the Queen Mary! Crazy stuff.
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
Terrifying!
@ami2evil2 жыл бұрын
@@OceanlinerDesigns Trouser Slopping!
@Alex878262 жыл бұрын
Always been super fascinated by rogue waves, cheers Mike!
@baritonebynight2 жыл бұрын
On my last crossing on QM2, I was able to speak with one of the crew who was on board QE2 when the rogue wave hit. She told me the seas had been very rough that night and she was in her cabin in bed but unable to sleep. When the rogue wave hit, she was thrown out of her bed and added "it was one of the only times that I was afraid."
@RyanKlapperich2 жыл бұрын
Has anyone collected stories from troops aboard the Queen Mary? It'd be interesting to hear what a journey with 16000 other people was like.
@CorePathway2 жыл бұрын
One big vomitorium
@graham26312 жыл бұрын
Here's some from a guy who l used to go fishing with as a boy. On the way back from the war the poker games on deck were incredible. Anything you can imagine being bet. I raise your luger with this iron cross... and the boxing matches.... Then they got off the coast and were low priority, meaning they anchored for 2 weeks before they could go ashore. They were pissed anything that wasn't bolted down went over the side. Along with other ships, making the debris flow miles long.
@Wingnut_Stickman2 жыл бұрын
Read "Roots" -- there is a chapter that covers this type of crossing.
@johnoneill5661 Жыл бұрын
Smelly 🤢🤮
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
As other comments says, there was one, named Paul Gallico.
@finsfan902 жыл бұрын
The production quality of this video is amazing! Awesome content!
@dfuher9682 жыл бұрын
U can add the Derbyshire to the list. Tho initially it was claimed, she sank due to crew negligence, years of investigations including finding the wreck on the bottom of the Pacific finally proved, that she had been the victim of a rogue wave that fateful night in 1980.
@enpakeksi7652 жыл бұрын
it's kind of expected that wrecks are in one whole or two pieces, but the Derbyshire is literally a field of debree.
@superboats2 Жыл бұрын
While I was serving my 21 years in the US Navy, I encountered two rogue waves. The 1st was when I was onboard my 1st ship, a Spruance class destroyer. I was the helmsman. We were experiencing rough seas, pitching and rolling pretty much at regular intervals. As the helmsman, maintaining the ship's course while rolling 30 degrees became fairly routine. The helmsman is not to do anything except to maintain the ship's course and speed until ordered to do otherwise. One rough day, I was minding my helm when I felt a strange vibration on the ship's wheel, after noticing a wall of water heading right towards us from the port bow. I instinctively knew what was happening and what was going to happen next. I didn't wait for orders, none were forthcoming and yelled, "HANG ON!!" We were struck and the ship started to roll much faster than what was normal. I immediately flung the wheel a hard 20 degrees rudder, turning the ship to starboard, turning the ship into the direction of the roll. I used the centripetal force to help counter the roll, thus preventing capsize. We rolled up to 52 degrees before the ship stopped rolling. I knew that the counter roll would be just as deadly, so when the ship began to right herself, I flung the wheel back to rudder amidships. When the ship was fully upright but the roll's speed continued with the momentum, I flung the wheel a hard left, do the same thing I did when we were rolling in the other direction. When that roll stopped and the ship righted herself, slowly this time, I was able to bring the ship back on course, and we continued on like nothing ever happened. Nobody noticed that I took action, only that we rolled so far over, that we thought that we were going to go over completely. My Executive Officer said as much. A few years later, as the helmsman, while serving on my 2nd ship, a Knox class frigate, the whole scenario happened all over again, resulting in only a 48 degree roll. People have found it hard to believe my story, but that's alright. I know what has happened. I was there and there are some shipmates that remember the rolls also. They just never realized that I prevented the capsizing events. If I had not done anything or worse, the opposite, I would not be here telling you all about this. We would have been upside down. Now, I'm a retired 1st class Boatswain Mate.
@whoever6458 Жыл бұрын
Great job! Glad no one got on your ass for taking the appropriate actions of your own accord. You definitely shaved those ships and I think you get additional bragging rights because you also definitely drifted in a Navy vessel! lol Cheers to you for a fine maneuver!
@MarieJackson-sp3be8 ай бұрын
You are a real sailor because you read the sea and counteracted it as much as you could instinctively. Bravo! 👍By the way, my roommate in college was the daughter of A USN Commander associated with the Spruance Class Destroyer, so I was invited to the ceremony when the first one was launched.
@wayneantoniazzi27062 жыл бұрын
Great stories well told Mike! As usual! I'm reminded of something one of my favorite writers of sea stories, Tristan Jones, once said: "The power of the sea can make any of mans powers, like the atomic bomb, look as puny as the waving of a baby's fist!" I've crossed the North Atlantic myself in some dirty weather (not as bad as in the video) and I can say from experience it can be a VERY hostile environment out there!
@pieterveenders97932 жыл бұрын
Although I would say Tsar Bomba gave the power of the sea a run for it's money, when you think of the utter destruction of the 2004 Indian Ocean and 2011 Pacific Ocean tsunami which hit Japan, then yeah a megathrust tsunami would definitely be a lot more powerfull than our biggest nuke ever detonated.
@wayneantoniazzi27062 жыл бұрын
@@pieterveenders9793 Not even Tsar Bomba, although it's a sure bet that Russian bomber crew probably need a few shots of Stoly to calm their nerves after dropping it!
@Sassymouse882 жыл бұрын
Mike, you always seem to know when I'm having a bad day, coz you post a video to help me feel better. Thank you!
@IloveCruiseShips1912 Жыл бұрын
The MS Munchen's loss was so haunting and scary, can't imagine what the crew must have felt when the rogue waves hit. Must have been so scary for the troops on RMS Queen Mary when she was hit by that wave. They must have felt shocked when they found how close their ship came to capsizing especially when other ships like MS Munchen sank. Must have felt terrifying to the officer who stood on the RMS Lusitania's compass platform.
@nursestoyland11 ай бұрын
And the helmsman along with the bridge crew on the Lusitania
@Arkus-Duntov2 жыл бұрын
My grandparents were on the QE2 in 1995. They were knocked out of their bed in their cabin. They recounted that the bow was bent once they disembarked.
@MartinT032 Жыл бұрын
My father worked on the development of the first oil rigs in Norway that would measure the rogue waves they encountered. He told me that they used to call the wave "hundred year waves" as they thought that was how often those waves would occur, and that the oil rigs needed to withstand one or two of them. Turns out that not only would rogue waves occur more often, they could even occur multiple times per year in certain areas. Terrifyingly, one of the reasons these waves were so mysical and believed to happen so rarely was because the people who saw them often just would not survive...
@prometheusunbound76282 жыл бұрын
I could listen to Mr. Brady talk all day long. It's not just his accent, which is charming, it's his pleasant tone and well-modulated cadence, plus his pronunciation is very clear. He's easy on the eyes, too.
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
Too kind :)
@paul552 жыл бұрын
Coincidentally, I was just reading about a rogue wave hitting a cruise ship only a couple of days ago. December 7th 2022. Viking Polaris was hit by a rogue wave and sadly an American woman died in the incident and some other people were injured
@walterkornack94845 ай бұрын
Wow. I’d never heard that story about the Queen Mary during WWII. Incredible.
@Lopezs7772 жыл бұрын
My man, your music selection in this video, alongside with the content, made my thalassophobia tip over 50 degrees. Very well done.
@ElSantoLuchador9 ай бұрын
"If there's a storm, they have to go right through it," reminds me of the Joseph Conrad story "Typhoon", where steamship Captain McWhirr drives right into the eye of a hurricane because it's the most direct route to the destination.
@todsturgeon29772 жыл бұрын
Great video. As someone who experienced a rogue wave from the helm, you managed to capture both the horror and fascination of the power of the sea.
@MarieJackson-sp3be8 ай бұрын
Great presentation. I can imagine how irritated the sailors were when no one believed them! I'll bet it made for many a fist fight! I know it wasn't until ocean buoys recorded the tremendous heights of the rogue wave that seemingly came out of nowhere that they were believed. I also want to thank you for including measurements in feet in this vlog. As an American, I cannot think in meters, so I appreciate that you knew we didn't change to metric when almost every one else did.
@NonsensicalNauticalRambings2 жыл бұрын
Can’t wait, looks fantastic! I’m going to assume that Lusitania, Queen Mary, and Michelangelo will be in this video. Edit: at 1:16, is that the Lusitania model you have been working on with Tom Lynksey? Edit 2: Alright, the 3D models are fantastic. Can’t wait to see how far you’ll go with them. Also, never heard of QE2’s rouge wave encounter, and just never heard of the Munich in general.
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
No this Lusitania is another model :) So glad you enjoyed the video!
@kerrinmarr92042 жыл бұрын
What an amazing ship the Queen Mary was when she was active. Significantly overloaded with cargo and troops and still managed to right herself and continue on.
@Flatty_VII2 жыл бұрын
Love what you're doing with the 3D stuff now, your overall production is getting better and better too. Keep it up mate
@dillpicklebucket8 ай бұрын
I think one of the most overlooked rogue wave situations that most videos miss, is the first ever video footage of a rogue wave actually hitting a boat and turning it over. On one of the first seasons of Deadliest Catch the F/V Aleutian Ballad was turned onto it’s side by a rogue wave and the cameras kept filming and you could hear the crew yelling. Other waves managed to right the ship and everyone survived. The video is crazy though. All of a sudden the right side of the screen is engulfed in water and then the camera breaks for a second or two.
@S.M.R2 жыл бұрын
Just recently, the expedition cruise ship, Viking Polaris, encountered one with one death in the Drake Passage. Cabin windows were smashed but the ship came back in Ushuaia safely.
@julieputney431710 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@mikemillward1805 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video; the MS Munchen has been found and the damage clearly points to a massive wave impact that stripped even the railings off the superstructure. The poor crew didn't stand a chance.
@MrNextMx Жыл бұрын
Got a link?
@1258-Eckhart Жыл бұрын
"Die genaue Untergangsposition und die Lage des Wracks sind bis heute unbekannt." de.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%BCnchen_(Schiff,_1972)
@GreggL-c8x10 ай бұрын
My mom was on the QE2 when that happened. She said the grand piano got ripped off the floor where it was bolted to the floor. RIP MUM.
@mattwilliams34562 жыл бұрын
Rogue waves are terrifying, but their theorized inverse, rogue holes, are a whole new level of horror.
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
"theorized"?
@mattwilliams34563 ай бұрын
@@ivan_pozdeev_u no scientific proof they have occurred, but physics says they should.
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
@@mattwilliams3456 They've been observed in the wild. Wikipedia article has a source.
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
In some video about rogue waves that I've also watched recently, there was also eyewitness testimony. I'll post the link here if I can find it.
@tysonhall7129 ай бұрын
Absolutely love your work I appreciate you keeping the story and history of the Titanic and all the other ships they were and are works of art beautiful collosal giants but out of them all Titanic is the most gripping something about it haunts me.ever since my grandfather told me the story.thank you for all your work keeping all of these ocean liners memorys alive
@stricknine61302 жыл бұрын
Great video! The last ship Munchen was interesting to me. It was headed to Savannah GA where I'm from and it went down in December of 1978 which is the month and year I was born. My grandfather was a docking pilot then on the Savannah River and would have likely docked it had it made it safely. I'll have to ask him if he remembers it sinking. Thanks for the video.
@stevieray62162 жыл бұрын
I remember the TV coverage about the mysterious disappearance of the München, the most devastating ship loss in Germany since the Pamir in 1957. Greetings from the city of Munich (no joke)!
@torgeirbrandsnes19162 жыл бұрын
Great vlog as always! My father was on S/S Stavangerfjord in mid 50s. He said that there was nothing worse than the north Atlantic during the winter. Once during a storm he was on the poop deck, and he saw the next wave was taller than the forward mast of the ship. You do the math… On a trip from the New York to Oslo she lost the rudder. The ship had two propellers and the captain used one propeller at the time to manuver the ship. She came into port almost a week late and the number of calls on the telegraph down to the engine room was about 5000! That was about 5yrs of normal telegraph ops! Keep up the good work!
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
Amazing! My dad came out on the Strathnaver to Australia in 1959. In the Indian ocean the ship hit a storm and was pitching ferociously. There was an engineer posted all night to essentially disengage thrust to the props every time it seemed like they’d come out of the water to reduce stress on the shafts and all the machinery. Dad still remembers the stern coming out and the propellers suddenly chopping the air sending a heavy ‘womp-womp-womp’ reverberation through the whole ship!
@m4terol2 жыл бұрын
Such a fascinating video once again! The animations in this one were impressive. Thank you for your effort and dedication, Mike! Can’t stay anything but happy with your videos. 😊
@OceanlinerDesigns2 жыл бұрын
Cheers Lari!
@straits92602 жыл бұрын
Love seeing the new 3d renditions of the ships
@johnsrabe2 жыл бұрын
Nicely done. The tiny James Caird, under Shackleton, faced a huge wave, but survived due to a “miracle of bouancy.” It’s startling to realize how devastating they can also be to giant ships. I almost wonder if they could be more dangerous to a big ship, than a little, sealed life boat?
@chawnadams96482 жыл бұрын
It depends on the size but a 100ft boat in 20ft sea's you bury the bow when coming out of the trough at the bottom before the start of the wave and slam back down after going over the crest. In a smaller boat rise and fall more but you don't get the slamming down after cresting the wave since you don't have the front 1/3 of the boat in air.
@rock-t3d2k2 ай бұрын
I remember reading Sir Ernest's South, and him describing that voyage. Truly an epic feat of seamanship. He learned later that a 500-ton steamer was lost in one of the same storms that the James Caird had to stand to in.
@christopherrosindale31752 жыл бұрын
The Queen Mary incident had ripple effects which nobody could have predicted at the time, especially for Hollywood.... One of the US servicemen who was onboard during that voyage was Paul Gallico, and the memory of that wave impact and the terrifying 50-degree list which followed it would, more than 20 years later, inspire him to write a novel. It's title? "The Poseidon Adventure." Soon afterwards, the manuscript of the book reached Hollywood movie producer Irwin Allen, and the classic disaster movie, which in a delicious irony, would be partly filmed aboard the Queen Mary; would use her blueprints to design the studio sets and would feature a 22-foot long model of the ship as the fictional SS "Poseidon" (this model still exists today in a museum in Southern California) to effectively recreate that freak wave strike, and then the scenes of the Poseidon capsizing and floating upside-down, followed. Cue in a superb cast of actors, great writing and direction, compelling special effects and an early music score by John Williams, and the result is a movie classic which founded the disaster movie genre....... All as a result of one freak wave in 1942!
@charliekezza2 жыл бұрын
Love this channel. Sad that sailors weren't believed until science could prove it
@AsFewFalseThingsAsPossible2 жыл бұрын
No, that's the best reaction to sea stories. Evidence is required.
@charliekezza2 жыл бұрын
@@AsFewFalseThingsAsPossible instead of a blanket "liar without a specimen, eye witness account doesn't count" and yes eye witnesses can lie but if you get more than one ship load of sailors saying they saw something similar (think giant squid, crazy long fish, fish with lights or giant octopus)
@janetmittleman79579 ай бұрын
I was on a small cruise ship ( 600 passengers) rounding cape horn and a rogue wave of 60 plus feet hit us on the bow around 3am. This destroyed the two most expensive state rooms. We were battling big waves for days and many passengers wore life vests and slept in the common areas because they wanted to be ready when the call was made to abandon the ship. I thought we hit an iceberg because many were spotted. Also we had 50ft waves from a cyclone in the sea of Japan. Our Captain mentioned after the storm that he was ready for bigger waves that were predicted .
@imagaybanana20042 жыл бұрын
The Munich story really freaked me out. Especially with that creepy music, and you’re chilling narration! Very very well done. Something about unsolved mysteries like that are so unsettling to me.
@lifeliver90002 жыл бұрын
I was doing a boat course on a 3 story coastguard boat on a average day when bizarrely just as the captain said there is no such thing as rouge waves and we looked forward and a giant wave just appeared and crashed over front of boat throwing people over the floor and ripping the windscreen wipers off the top story. Incredible size and force
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
"When on a cage with an elephant, you see a plaque saying "buffalo" -- do not believe your eyes." -- Kozma Prutkov
@MrBonners Жыл бұрын
I heard a term when I was in the navy in my 20s, A 'Grey Beard'. Was suppose to be common in the Antarctic ocean. The waves go around the world with nothing to break them, they build over several revolutions. In the distance on the horizon they look like a grey rolling fog bank coming at you. Searched the term on-line several times but have never found the term referring to giant waves. Pulled several 'greenies' in the Pacific regular like. Lost guardrails and such occasionally.
@R.M.S_Titanic1912Ай бұрын
Came back to this video, i got a fun fact!: The author "Paul Gallico", creator of the hit 1969 novel "The Poseidon Adventure" was on board the Queen Mary when a few waves hit the ship and it looked as if the ship would never recover, but she eased and sailed on, later there was a sinking that led to the capzizing of a liner, these two incidents led Paul Gallico to write the popular disaster novel "The Poseidon Adventure", later when the first film based on it (my favorite 1972 film) "The Poseidon Adventure" the S.S. Poseidon used the Queen Mary's ship design, and the model used for the wave and Capsized scenes are in a museum, i don't know where it is however, but after the release of the film in 1972, the actors of the movie actually went to visit the Queen Mary (at the time was at Long Beach) and my favorite thing about this was that a banner was placed covering the Queen Mary's nameplate, and it said "POSEIDON", so that day the ship was now the S.S. Poseidon, there is footage of the nameplate being replaced as "POSEIDON", and there is also photos of the actors in front of the Queen Mary, one has her normal nameplate, another with the nameplate being "POSEIDON".
@leopardone23862 жыл бұрын
You mentioned the München on my favorite maritime channel no less! I hope she's found soon. Great video yet terrifying. Three thumbs up!
@ivan_pozdeev_u3 ай бұрын
I doubt she'll be found anytime soon other than by accident. No point looking for a random wreck at the bottom of the Atlantic.
@SVR19682 жыл бұрын
Great video, all I can say is, the naval architects who design these big ships are absolute geniuses. You also have to admire the people who build these incredible vessels, and the crew that operate them.
@S3JUN32 жыл бұрын
Good video also wait ITS 3D!
@sabrinacarpenter54312 жыл бұрын
Was on the Uss Gunston Hall (LSD-44) 2003-2005. Experienced 2 or 3 really bad storms including an emergency deployment for hurricane Isabel in September 2003. These storms had 20ft to 30ft waves each time. I think the worst degree of listings I saw during that time was 35 to 40 degrees. Every time the ship came down off a 20+ft wave it felt like being slammed down onto a hard surface and the ship would shudder, creak and groan!! The North Atlantic Ocean is nasty during the fall and winter!!
@cassoIa Жыл бұрын
Your use of words in each script capture my attention and perfectly provide visuals when I’m not looking at the screen (I sometimes use these vids to help me sleep haha) or at least, I attempt to sleep! The info you relay is too good to miss! Absolutely brilliant stuff! 👏🏻
@lloydhayne248810 ай бұрын
My father was a soldier heading to Europe on the Queen Mary during one of those terrible storms. Don't know if it was this one, but he said he was on deck trying not to become sick when the wave hit. He said that he was thrown against the rail and that the ocean was just a couple feet below him. Then a container broke free and hit him. He wasn't killed because it contained toilet paper. I wish he were still here so I could ask him about the date of his sail. I know it was in the Winter and before D-Day.
@patanouketgersiflet94862 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Rogue waves are terrifying indeed, your heart probably skips a beat or a dozen when you're unlucky enough to see one.
@Thatmeepgamer2 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how you did this. This video is so good and the stories told so well. The Munich story is terrifying. The way the music and the images and the way you animated and told the story. Huh gives me the chills
@richardkohlhof2 жыл бұрын
I've heard of some of these rogue waves but this is the most comprehensive I've ever seen thank you so much
@St.Linguini_of_Pesto2 жыл бұрын
Wow, the animation of the rogue washing over the decks of the Lusitania are terrifying. I'm now a confirmed landlubber. Great video, I love sea stories.
@Sailor_alan Жыл бұрын
Never made the news or was news worthy because no passengers on. Sailing back to UK from Barbados is 2020 after covid happened. We sailed back to UK no passengers but 1.2k crew onboard. We hit a huge storm that was forecast to be 200 miles north of us. The captain had covid, the deputy captain was on the bridge. I saw this wave come at us much higher than the bow. Next thing we plummeted down into the trough all the ceiling fell onto us. I've never been so scared. Following morning there was a 6" wide crack 15m across deck 16
@ChrisJensen-se9rj9 ай бұрын
Is it possible that the loss of the "Waratah" could be the result of a broadside encounter with a rogue wave? Waratah was noticeably "top heavy" and had a tendency to roll over such that passenger testimony noted well. Waratah disappeared entirely. Not a bit of wreckage was ever found, and compared with the size of some of the vessels you have covered, she was a relatively small ship. Lost somewhere around the Cape of Good Hope, it's an area of the oceans that has been noted to have some seriously bad weather and monstrous waves.