You are correct. Like I said this is a idea gathering stage. Part of my plan to sea if I want to make this run is to take it down to Charleston South Carolina and do a beach run in real ocean water. Go along the coast and out to see about a mile or 2 and see how well I handle a hour in the ocean.
I was on a cruise boat a month ago and we had 50mph winds and 20-30mph winds all day. We missed 2 ports because of it and caught one on the way back home. The waves were 4+ feet high. On a seadoo that would be a nightmare. It would take skill to just keep the seadoo upright.
glad you agree, didn't want to insult you but as soon as I heard "haven't been in ocean before" the red flags went up. What I want to hear is that your an experienced ocean rider, not the other way around, and also its a very expensive trip, customs, hotel, fuel, food, etc, so its not as simple as just heading over, then back, its quite pricey, and should be dragged out so you get your money's worth.
IMO 80% of the "cool" part of the trip is being able to cruise around the local waters, and check everything out, its not the actual trip over. There are a LOT of very cool ride spots out there but a 4 stroke is definitely the ride of choice since you will have to cover quite a bit of distance to get to certain destinations.
those video's (that I love, especially engineers video's, which are incredible) show the cool part, but if you dig into a couple of the threads you'll hear about cuts, contusions, sprained ankles, disabled ski's (left behind) and missing front teeth from hitting a rogue 7 footer that came out of nowhere, etc. this is not a trip for the meek, unprepared, or inexperienced rider, and IMO its not a ride for a 2 stroke, but it has been done, and will again, its just ill-advised.
I'm a swamp rider myself, although we do head out to the gulf and ride about once a month, a vast majority of my rides are rivers and lakes, hitting the twisties, dodging gators, and chasing down the occasional cruiser to jump wake. I did a LOT more surf riding when I had my Yamaha XL and I've spent some time on my buddy's FXHO, and even when only 2 miles off shore, some nasty sets can come in and make things very interesting in a short period of time. Always have a ride buddy, (or preferably 3) and make sure those riders have experience in the ocean and have a ski large enough for two up riding in the event that you need to drag a ski back. But when your 30 miles from shore in either direction, you better be over prepared, not under prepared, or we'll be sending flowers.
that's my 2cents.