Power boats in following seas, now theres an endless topic with no real answers only for gods sake use common sense. You now have a good idea of your boats handling for a given sea state with your experience. Either you need to hire a more experienced boat handler and gain experience (no insult intended we all have to learn to handle different sea states) or You have the accumilated experience and now know what sea state with your experience combined with your boats characteristics you can handle. Properly built sail boats are sometimes a handful in following seas even when they are built with narrow sterns, long full deep keels and rudders but a powerboat with that big wide stern sometimes can be a nightmare. As a past Newfoundland fisherman with more experience than i want in big following seas miles out, my best friends have always been reading the waves, picking your angular trail thru them and be fast on the wheel and faster on the trottle,Learn how to use the prop wash against the rudder to kick her *** around.(power steering, a boat steers by re positioning her stern) Anticipate ahead how you will attact two seas at a time, one your into and the one thats following. After 10 to 20 hrs. of this your muscels will cry in pain but the funny part you still function and you sort of get into a rhythm. Now there could come a point where you sense it's getting too dicy and thats when you have to make the big manover, be patient, read the seas, decide weather it's to port or starboard, wait for that longer than usual space between them, it will come and in that longer spaced trough,using the trottle for prop wash against the sweet spot on the angle of the rudder( not hard over, find this in calm weather) kick her around counter steer if necessary but get her fairly straightened out and into it, trottle up to get up and over the next sea, and it starts all over again but now you'll feel much more in control as now you only have to contend with one sea at a time,the one coming at you and you'll develop a new rhythm, read the sea, if it's breaking trottle up, put her nose into it, if not trottle up, attack it at an angle, straighten her up over the crest and get ready for the next one. Now head for that altermate port you pre planned for before heading out or let the sea carry you on your origional course while you maintain control one wave at a time. Above all don't panic, afterall you are in control and hoping for the best but prepared for the worst. Put on my survival suit on a few ocassions,Lets see, liferaft within easy reach and release, survival kit other than whats pre packed in the raft, close by, notified family and friends of my route and ETA,(important for quick rescue) Yup, i'm going to survive this.
Geo.