21 foot waves Lake Michigan near Indiana

Blueone

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You guys hearing this… suppose to be coming Wednesday Thursday


Katherine Rosenberg-Douglas, Chicago Tribune
Tue, September 21, 2021, 2:04 PM


A beach hazards statement was made Tuesday morning, warning of the potential for waves between 12 and 16 feet high in portions of northwest Indiana along Lake Michigan — with the potential for occasional waves as high as 21 feet.

A similar warning went into effect at 3 p.m. for waves as high as 18 feet in Cook County, according to the National Weather Service.

Warnings about the high waves, beach erosion and the possibility of lakeshore flooding came as the city had cooled off considerably. Wednesday is the autumnal equinox — which causes a uniquely local event known as Chicagohenge — meaning Mother Nature jumped the gun a bit with temperatures that weren’t expected to get out of the 60s Tuesday. The chilly temps prompted the weather service to use the headline “Autumn arrives tomorrow, autumnal temperatures today” on a weather recap on its website.






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“These types of waves, you know, happen a handful of times each year,” said meteorologist Lee Carlaw, with the National Weather Service in Chicago. “In fact, this is the time of year for it as we go into the autumn.”


Forecasters warned that the high lake levels, combined with potentially some of the highest waves in months, could result in minor to moderate flooding near the lakeshore.

The warning also said waves were expected to be highest Wednesday into Thursday, when strong, northerly winds will lead to higher and stronger waves. The warning for northwest Indiana covers Lake and Porter counties and extends to Cook County.

“The large waves and rising lake levels will result in inundation of low lying and flood-prone areas near the lake as well as beach erosion,” according to the weather service website.

National Weather Service records for Lake Michigan only go back to 1981, Carlaw said. Since then, the highest recorded waves were in 2011 — at 23 feet high about 40 miles east of Kenosha, Wisconsin.

With north-to-south winds, higher waves likely built as they reached Cook County and northwest Indiana, Carlaw said. But the weather service doesn’t have records going back to 2011 from buoys closer to the shorelines of Chicago and Indiana, he said.
 
Haulout is scheduled 10/4 for me. Usually westerly winds now up here, you can guess which direction I'll be going the last 120 miles of the season. I don't want to hear about any nasty Great Lakes weather 'til after that:)
 
upload_2021-9-22_1-17-25.png
 
Looks like a weather pipeline of rain coming up from the Gulf straight across Lake Huron for the next few days to go with the wind. Gotta love fall weather up here.
 
Not so calm on the west side right now.

upload_2021-9-22_7-16-37.png
 
I would love to watch 21' waves on the lake. I grew up on Huron and we never had anything like that.

I'm going to keep that link to the camera that Stee posted open throughout the day so I can watch from a distance.

Thanks, Stee
 
What wave height deters the big freighters (and I guess the ferry's) from going out onto the lake?
 
I would love to watch 21' waves on the lake. I grew up on Huron and we never had anything like that.

I'm going to keep that link to the camera that Stee posted open throughout the day so I can watch from a distance.

Thanks, Stee
I think the 21ft is mid-lake. Its hard to equate that to shoreline surf wave heights, but they should be pretty big. The buoy in the middle of Georgian Bay is showing this now. This is in the lake off our cottage and quite a bit north.

Wind Direction (WDIR):NNE ( 20 deg true )
Wind Speed (WSPD):23.3 kts
Wind Gust (GST):29.1 kts
Wave Height (WVHT):5.2 ft
Dominant Wave Period (DPD):6 sec
Atmospheric Pressure (PRES):30.02 in
Air Temperature (ATMP):55.6 °F
Water Temperature (WTMP):65.7 °F
 
Screenshot_20210922-110121_Chrome.jpg

Screenshot_20210922-110143_Chrome.jpg


Nothing to exciting at the south end... my boats just rocking in the breeze.
 
What wave height deters the big freighters (and I guess the ferry's) from going out onto the lake?

That's a really interesting question. If you click on the link below the freighter on screen has been in the same place since before the sun came up today. They never sit still and is this not a typical spot you'd expect a freighter to be parked (in Lake Michigan just north of Grand Have pier). I assume he's avoiding going further out into the lake due to the gale warning. Staying close to port in case he has to turn back around?

There's certainly a westerly component to the wind right now. Still only 3' on this side of the lake. I bet that's why this freighter is staying put. Though if it shoots around to a fully north wind he's going to be in a tight spot. I can't imagine how he'd thread the needle back into Grand Haven in 30+knot wind from the north. Yikes...

https://www.earthcam.com/usa/michigan/grandhaven/lakemichigan/?cam=lakemichigan
 

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