Yes, take the waves at an angle. Tacking back and forth. That effectively increases the distance between the waves. But at times, this is impossible. Lay is where I fish most of the time, and it is reasonably crooked. But there are straight stretches and when the Summertime storms blow up, the waves can get intense, and I cant tack back and forth when the channel is narrow. The only solution is to slow down.What you did is commonly referred to as a “beanpole”. Where you stick the bow into the middle of a wave rather than hitting it on top. This can be (a) embarassing; (b) will get you wet; (c) can cause serious injury. I have seen windshields ripped off. Drivers ripped out of the boat. Etc.If the trough to peak distance is really 3-4-5 feet, the distance between the waves has to be longer than your boat. Taking them head on is dangerous. If you run 50, jumping from wave to wave, you are going to beat your boat to death. And if there is a rogue wave that is a little farther from the wave in front than usual, when you hit a wave head-on and beanpole the boat, it is going to hurt.The best you can do, running with the wind, is to tack back and forth, keeping the speed down to the point that you are not leaving the water when you go up and over a wave. It is slow, but it is safe and drier. If you are running into the wind, you are traveling opposite to the wave movement, which effectively compresses them. This is where beanpoles happen, because now you can almost run on top of the waves, but you have to “run”. And a rogue is bad.Better slow than sorry if the waves are really up that high. Ive seen em on the TN river, on Ross Barnett, on the Bend, and other places. Slow down. Your kidneys will thank you. 2008 Pantera Classic2014 Mercury Pro XS 200