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The Beaufort Scale

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“And now here is the shipping forecast issued by the Met Office on behalf of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency at 0505 on Friday the 31st of July: Thames, Dover, Wight, northwesterly 4 or 5 becoming variable 3 or 4 later.”

Any sailor growing up in England will immediately remember the voice of the weather reader on BBC Radio 4 giving the latest shipping forecast and weather reports for sea areas around the United Kingdom. The numbers in the shipping forecast, which define the wind speed, are not given in knots, miles per hour, or kilometers per hour, but in ‘force’ values from the Beaufort Scale.

Francis Beaufort
Francis Beaufort

In addition to England, the Beaufort Scale is still widely used in Ireland, Germany, the Netherlands, Greece, Malta, China and Taiwan. This method of relating wind strength to observable phenomena, credited to Admiral Francis Beaufort (1774 – 1857), hydrographer to the British admiralty, is well known to professional and recreational mariners alike. But what are its origins?

Captain John Smith, the English explorer of Virginia, the Chesapeake and friend of Pocahontas, wrote a book in 1626 which noted: “A faire Loome Gale is the best to saile in, because the Sea goeth not high, and we beare out all our sailes. A stiffe Gale is so much wind as our top-sailes can endure to beare.” Anders Celsius, the Swedish astronomer of temperature scale fame, tried his hand at a wind force scale in the early 1700s using the large oak tree in the garden of his observatory. In a grade 4 wind “the trunk itself swayed vehemently.” Later in the 18th century, John Smeaton, the civil engineer best known for designing the Eddystone Light, developed a wind force scale which applied wind names to the strengths needed to turn the blades of windmills.

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Hurricane force winds – Force 12 and above. OceanMedia file photo
Hurricane force winds – Force 12 and above. OceanMedia file photo

Smith, Celsius and Smeaton all realized that the actual wind speed, as measured by an anemometer, was not as important as the affect it had on a ship under sail, the limbs of a tree or windmill grinding wheat. This is similar to our concept of time. For many centuries, European farmers and craftsmen paced their workday throughout the year from their observations of sunrise and sunset. It wasn’t until the widespread building of clock towers in the Middle Ages that work was regulated by bells striking the hour, as time was starting to be measured by “clock.”

It was Beaufort who synthesized the work of those early wind pioneers and developed the wind scale standard that was adopted for use by the British Navy for ship’s log entries starting in the late 1830s. What Beaufort did was develop a thirteen point scale, from 0 to 12, directly related to setting the sails of a frigate under different wind conditions. The frigates were three-masted, square-rigged, light warships and made up the bulk of the British fleet.

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Beaufort Examples were:

Force 0: Calm

Force 1: Light Air or just sufficient to give steerage way.

Force 4: Moderate Breeze or that in which a man-of-war with all sail set and clean full would go in smooth water from 5 to 6 knots.

Force 9: Strong Gale or that to which a well-conditioned man-of-war could just carry in chase, full and by. Close-reefed top-sails and courses.

Force 12: Hurricane or that which no canvas could withstand.

In the intervening years through the early 20th century, the Beaufort Scale was altered to reflect the shift from sail power to steam power. The empirical values used were changed to those of how the sea reacted to the wind, or sea state. Land-based observations of wind acting on smoke, leaves, umbrellas, telegraph wires and chimney pots were added as well. Force 6 (Strong Breeze) no longer meant ‘single reefed top-sails and top-gallant sail’; instead it was replaced with (sea): Long waves begin to form. White foam crests are very frequent. Some airborne spray is present; and (land): Large branches in motion. Whistling heard in overhead wires. Umbrella use becomes difficult. Empty plastic bins tip over.

Today, the modern Beaufort Scale correlates the Beaufort force number, wind description, wind speed, wave height, sea conditions, land conditions and a photo of the sea state in one table. When a new deckhand aboard a megayacht writes in ‘F5’ as the wind speed log entry during their nighttime watch, they are tracing our maritime heritage back to the days when Britannia ruled the waves.

Note: The painting of Francis Beaufort by Stephen Pearce is licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

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Capt. Jeff Werner is a 23 year veteran of the yachting industry. In addition to working as a captain on private and charter yachts, both sail and power, he is a certified instructor for the RYA, MCA, USCG and US Sailing.

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Capt. Jeff Werner
Capt. Jeff Wernerhttp://www.yachtmaster.com
Capt. Jeff Werner is a Senior Instructor with International Crew Training in Ft. Lauderdale, and is a 22 year veteran of the yachting industry. www.yachtmaster.com
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