[00:00.82] |
An interesting shot, but not what the team were after |
[00:05.79] |
So why were there no big waves? |
[00:08.55] |
There's no land between here and Kamchatka, 3,000 miles away 3000 |
[00:14.14] |
And it's funny that the waves that arrive here |
[00:16.44] |
start off around Japan, around the east coast of Russia |
[00:20.41] |
And when a storm hits these places |
[00:22.37] |
it whips up the sea, generating swell |
[00:26.18] |
It's rather like throwing a pebble into a pool |
[00:28.84] |
The ripples radiate outwards which |
[00:30.74] |
when they reach land, make waves |
[00:35.30] |
So if the size of these waves was anything to go by |
[00:37.97] |
Japan and Russia were having some unusually mild winter weather |
[00:46.34] |
And that was more than you could say for Pohnpei |
[00:51.57] |
And there were still no big waves |
[00:55.58] |
The only good news was that the housing was still working |
[00:58.02] |
and remained watertight |
[01:00.42] |
despite being soundly tested both below and above the water |
[01:08.05] |
And then, when the team thought things couldn't get any worse |
[01:11.28] |
If conditions got any calmer here |
[01:13.07] |
we'd probably have small boys out sailing their toy boats out on this millpond! |
[01:18.38] |
I mean, we came for 12-foot barrelling waves |
[01:20.83] |
and we've got what a sort of gentle riffle at the moment |
[01:25.37] |
Time to check the swell charts |
[01:28.97] |
There was better news on the Russian front - |
[01:31.12] |
a big storm sending swell Pohnpei's way |