
Post by
zezo | 2011-11-18 | 11:42:41
Predictions with different duration just see different things.
I'll use the current situation in the South Atlantic as example:
Thu current strategy suggests catching a low pressure system somewhere around 35S/15W. This is expected to happen in 4-5 days. But the prediction does not see that system coming if it's shorter than 5 days. It will keep more or less the direct route, because it does not know that it will lead to the wrong end of that system with strong headwinds in just few days.
The same thing goes for expected weather more than 7 days ahead. If you have checked the forecast at the gate few days ago with destination set at Capetown, it would suggest going the great circle route even if there was weather system forming around Cape Horn. Here is where human knowledge comes.
Real sailor would know that crossing the South Atlantic involves getting in the roaring 40's sooner or later, and would seek route South. That could go close the Brazilian coast, or as was our case - much further West. So you could set a destination around 45S/10W and see how to get there faster.
Shorter forecasts, on the other hand, have advantage in more unstable and unpredictable conditions. A 1-week forecast may suggest chasing a weather system 1 week ahead which is very unlikely to appear at exactly the predicted place and time, so it will lead in somehow wrong direction. What's worse is that it will lead in another slightly wrong direction the next day when the forecast changes. You end up making a zigzag track and losing time. So it's better to decide on a long term strategy and stick with it if possible.
Hope this helps
Cvetan