Friday, August 16, 2013

THE Surf Report


We got surf!

SURF:
Actually it's flat but I needed to get your attention somehow to keep reading.
Lack of storms has equaled lack of surf in southern California and we're kind of in a drought right now. And it's not getting better anytime soon.
Charts show a little NW windswell trying to fill in on Sunday so maybe south SD will have waist high surf- but that's about it. The weather should be nice today and tomorrow with 70 degree water temps- so we have that going for us.
Tides the next few days are around 4' at sunrise, 2' at lunch, up to 6.5' at dinner, and down slightly to 5' at sunset. Make sure to keep up to date on the waves/weather at Twitter/North County Surf. 

FORECAST:

Charts yesterday showed a good storm forming off South America but unfortunately it's almost SSE of us so the swell really has to bend back around to get to us. The OC will pick up most of the swell- probably waist high+ towards Thursday. Other than that, there's no NW windswell on the models for next week and the tropics are pretty quiet.

WEATHER:

Weak low pressure off northern California finally moved inland yesterday and we have high pressure in Arizona controlling our weather today and tomorrow. Look for mostly sunny skies and temps in the low 70's. And as luck would have it, weak low pressure off northern California returns on Sunday and into next week. Look for a return of low clouds, fog, and cooler temps with daytime temperatures struggling to hit 70 and lows at night in the low 60's. Not really feeling like late summer around here.

BEST BET:
If you live in SD county- maybe Sunday with the tiny NW filling in. Or if you live in the OC- maybe Thursday with the tiny SW filling in.

NEWS OF THE WEEK:

We all know that man's best friend is a dog. But if you're a surfer, it's a dolphin. Considering they've been known to attack sharks, I love nothing more than seeing pods of dolphins in the line up. We also know that next to humans, dolphins are a close 2nd in the intelligence department (and rumor has it smarter than some humans like Mayor Filner). Dolphins even have names for each other and remember one another decades apart says a new study reported in Time magazine. Read on...

In his Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy books, the late, great British satirist Douglas Adams wrote that dolphins are the second most intelligent creatures on earth — before humans and after mice, which spend their time running complex lab experiments on scientists. The mice might not quite live up to their No. 1 billing, but the more we learn about the cognitive abilities of dolphins, the more they indeed seem to have the No. 2 spot locked up. Not only do dolphins have impressive memories for tasks, the ability to use tools and elaborate social structures, but they also have their own names, distinctive identifying whistles that they develop themselves. Now a study in Proceedings of the Royal Society B reports that dolphins can recognize the whistles of others they shared a tank with as long as 20 years ago, the most enduring social memories ever observed outside of humans.

The study, undertaken by Jason Bruck, then a graduate student at the University of Chicago, used 43 dolphins ranging from 4 months to 47 years old that are cycled among various institutions as part of a captive breeding program. Some of them had lived together for only three months; others had shared a tank for more than 18 years before being separated. Bruck first obtained recordings of each dolphin’s name whistle. Then he set up an underwater speaker in the dolphins’ tanks that played whistles from strangers and from former tankmates. The difference in the dolphins’ reactions was unmistakable.

“When they hear a dolphin they know, they often quickly approach the speaker playing the recording,” Bruck said in a prepared statement. “At times they will hover around, whistle at it, try to get it to whistle back.” They paid far less attention to a stranger’s whistle-name.

Moreover, it didn’t matter how long the animals had been separated — a dolphin could recognize the call of a companion it had last seen decades ago just as easily as one it last saw six months ago. Nor did it matter how short or long the animals had been housed together; they responded with the same recognition to a long-term friend or a more fleeting acquaintance. In the most impressive case, a dolphin named Bailey recognized the whistle of Allie, her tankmate 20 years and six months ago. “This shows us an animal operating cognitively at a level that’s very consistent with human social memory,” Bruck said.

Wild dolphins have a life expectancy that ranges from 20 to 50 years (though such superannuated adults are rare), and they live in ever shifting pods, with individuals constantly splitting off and reuniting with the group. Bruck suggests that animals with such a social structure may benefit from a long memory for one another, perhaps supporting a connection between complex social behavior and the evolution of memory. But it may also be that a prodigious memory for names is just part of the larger, fascinating package of dolphin intelligence, included for no particular evolutionary reason — another element of the hidden depths of a mammalian cousin that we continue to explore.

BEST OF THE BLOG:

Make sure to keep up to date on the waves mid-week with the Tuesday Surf Check. And with the Billabong Tahiti contest going on this week, take a step back in time and relive the Code Red swell at The North County Surf blog Clips of the Day. All of that  and more, plus an in depth THE Surf Report in the blog below.

PIC OF THE WEEK:

When someone tells you it was round out there today, this is what they meant. Oh- and if they said they road the foamball, this is what they meant too. 

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Illusionist
Flipper In A Previous Life
Wore a Fullsuit to My Prom