Thursday, August 27, 2015
THE Surf Report- Early Edition
The weekend can't come soon enough.
SURF:
Been pretty boring around here lately. I mean, getting a few tropical showers here and there was cool this week, but I need some surf! Looks like our prayers will be answered this weekend- and good weather to boot. AND warm water temps (Scripps Pier hit 78 today for what it's worth).
Look for a slow start tomorrow morning then a new SW swell starts to build all day and peak late Saturday for shoulder high sets. Models also show a little NW too by Sunday so the beach breaks should be fun.
Tides the next few days are 3' at sunrise, up to 5' at 9am, down to 1' around 3pm and up to 6' at sunset.
FORECAST:
Finally something to talk about! After the weekend of fun SW swell, it keeps rolling into next week with another boost on Tuesday for head high sets. That starts to taper off by Thursday.
Models last week showed a big storm forming off New Zealand but it soon fizzled and turned into an average storm. Average meaning head high+ SW swell for us over Labor Day weekend. And a touch of NW. God bless 3 day weekends.
We also have soon to be Hurricane Jimena tonight spinning half way between Cabo and Hawaii with winds of 70 mph. Good news is that it's forecasted to MAYBE hit a maximum Category 5 hurricane next week with winds near 150 mph. Solid. Bad news is that it's moving away from us. Good news is that the models show it stalling before it hits Hawaii- so maybe- just maybe- we'll get some surf from it over Labor Day Weekend too- if you can find it underneath that good SW swell. Speaking of hurricanes, Hawaii will be surrounded by 3 of them early next week. Yikes.
Back here in California, we also have more S swell on the charts from the southern hemisphere that may show up around September 9th for shoulder high waves. Lots of good stuff happening. I love that it's flat around here for 2 weeks and then the next two weeks is going to be fun. Feast or famine. Some may call it annoying. Make sure to keep up to date on the waves/weather at Twitter/North County Surf.
WEATHER:
Now THIS feels like August. Temps in the mid-80's, humidity, a lack of low clouds/fog, and thunderstorms in the desert. We have 2 more days like that around here before a weak low pressure system in northern California starts to influence our weather down here. Look for the clouds to return in the nights and mornings on Sunday and last into most of next week. Temps will return to normal too with mid-70's at the beaches.
BEST BET:
Like a kid in a candy shop: Maybe Saturday with peaking SW swell and good weather. Or Tuesday with a bump in size from the SW. OR... next weekend with bigger SW swell and potentially hurricane swell.
NEWS OF THE WEEK:
Noticed how we started our hurricane season with a BANG and now all the storms are over towards Hawaii and Japan? What gives?! I want answers!
A couple theories actually. We’ve had a stubborn sub-tropical high pressure system below us the past few months and the storms haven’t had a chance to form until they get out from under it- which happens to be near Hawaii. Another theory is the warm water in the Pacific is in a U-shape; so once the clouds move off Mainland Mexico and finally get their act together, they follow the path of the U-shape and eventually hit full steam near Hawaii. So what does this mean for Hawaii? Lots of surf, lots of rain, and the threat of hurricanes I guess.
So much rain in fact that the islands have already recorded rainfall well above normal for the month of August—Honolulu alone saw 3.6 inches of rain on Monday, more than six times the typical monthly tally. A series of storms that so far have not caused significant damage but have drenched Hawaii and they’ve had to dodge 11 storms so far this summer- with numbers 12 (Ignacio) and 13 (Jimena) on the horizon.
Although Honolulu’s recent downpours caused some flooding, road and beach closings, and overflowing sewers, it hasn’t been all bad news. Like the rest of us in California, almost a third of the Aloha State is in a drought. Water-wise that is, not wave-wise.
PIC OF THE WEEK:
Don't cringe and say "Not another left for the Pic of the Week"! In fact, I counted up how many rights and lefts I've had on the Pic of the Week, and there have been 3,489 rights and only 1,776 lefts. So for the next 1,713 Pics of the Week (32 years give or take a few months), I'll only be showing lefts as to not give it an inferiority complex to the rights.
Keep Surfing,
Michael W. Glenn
Unfazed
Patched Things Up Between Kobe and Shaq
Doin' Crossfit With Laird Tomorrow
Thursday, August 20, 2015
THE Surf Report- Early Edition
I'm ready whenever you are.
SURF:
Had a little NW/SW last weekend, nothing much mid-week, then a little boost from the S/NW on Wednesday that held up today for some chest high waves. For our upcoming weekend- not so much. Just leftover waist high waves from the S/NW. Stop me if you've heard this before, but a lack of storms means a lack of surf. So until then, we wait. The water though is fantastic- 73-75 degrees. And our weather has finally mellowed out.
Tides next few days are 2' at sunrise, up to 4.5' mid-afternoon, and back down to 2' at sunset. Even our tides are boring this weekend.
FORECAST:
Now that the bad news is out of the way, let's get to the good news. Well, actually some more bad news first. No real surf to start the work week but... a storm is organizing in the southern hemisphere tonight- just due S of us- and we should get some shoulder high surf starting late on Thursday the 27th and peaking on the 28th. Models also show a little NW windswell too. Finally some good surf if the models hold up.
After that we have all kinds of crazy stuff on the forecast charts. First up is that gnarly super Typhoon Astani off Japan. It's forecasted to go extra tropical this weekend (i.e. barrel through the cold Bering Sea) and may actually send us some long period inconsistent chest high W swell towards the 1st of September. There's also a couple tropical storms forecasted to develop around the same time too off Hawaii and Baja towards the end of the month. The odd thing about the Hawaiian storm is that models also show it going extra tropical like Astani and it may curve back our way towards the west coast. But that's not the real story. The real story is that the southern hemisphere may come roaring back to life next week- and in a big way. Models have a bomb of storm developing that may send us 8'+ SW swell around September 4th. It's still a long way off, but it's worth keeping an eye on. Make sure to keep up to date on the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf.
WEATHER:
Typical summer weather pattern is in store this weekend: Low clouds/fog in the nights/mornings and sunny skies at the beaches in the afternoon with temps in the mid-70's. High pressure builds slightly late this weekend and we get a little less clouds at the beach. Waaaaaay better than that annoying fog at the coast last Sunday that didn't burn off until 3pm. Regardless, enjoy it now before the heavens open up this winter and El Nino makes it dump rain around here for 5 months straight.
BEST BET:
In the near term- next Friday with a fun SW/NW combo. Or if you can wait that long- early September with a large SW swell I'm betting the house on.
NEWS OF THE WEEK:
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported this week that July 2015 was the warmest month EVER recorded for the globe. Not San Diego. Not California. Not North America. But THE GLOBE. Mother Earth. a.k.a EVERYWHERE (except for 6 random spots here and there but the other 7,453,290,112,339,854 spots around the world were the warmest ever). How warm? Here’s what NOAA is reporting:
• The July average temperature across global land and ocean surfaces was 1.46°F (0.81°C) above the 20th century average. As July is climatologically the warmest month for the year, this was also the all-time highest monthly temperature in the 1880–2015 record, at 61.86°F (16.61°C), surpassing the previous record set in 1998 by 0.14°F (0.08°C).
• Separately, the July globally-averaged land surface temperature was 1.73°F (0.96°C) above the 20th century average. This was the sixth highest for July in the 1880–2015 record.
• The July globally-averaged sea surface temperature was 1.35°F (0.75°C) above the 20th century average. This was the highest temperature for any month in the 1880–2015 record, surpassing the previous record set in July 2014 by 0.13°F (0.07°C). The global value was driven by record warmth across large expanses of the Pacific and Indian Oceans.
• The average Arctic sea ice extent for July was 350,000 square miles (9.5 percent) below the 1981–2010 average. This was the eighth smallest July extent since records began in 1979 and largest since 2009, according to analysis by the National Snow and Ice Data Center using data from NOAA and NASA.
• Antarctic sea ice during July was 240,000 square miles (3.8 percent) above the 1981–2010 average. This was the fourth largest July Antarctic sea ice extent on record and 140,000 square miles smaller than the record-large July extent of 2014. (This obviously is one of the 6 spots on earth that are still cooler than average…)
Global highlights: Year-to-date (January–July 2015)
• The year-to-date temperature combined across global land and ocean surfaces was 1.53°F (0.85°C) above the 20th century average. This was the highest for January–July in the 1880–2015 record, surpassing the previous record set in 2010 by 0.16°F (0.09°C).
• The year-to-date globally-averaged land surface temperature was 2.41°F (1.34°C) above the 20th century average. This was the highest for January–July in the 1880–2015 record, surpassing the previous record of 2007 by 0.27°F (0.15°C).
• The year-to-date globally-averaged sea surface temperature was 1.21°F (0.67°C) above the 20th century average. This was also the highest for January–July in the 1880–2015 record, surpassing the previous record of 2010 by 0.11°F (0.06°C). Every major ocean basin observed record warmth in some areas.
So in case this you’ve been paranoid lately about this whole drought thing AND the upcoming El Nino this winter, Global Warming just wanted to give you a little reminder he’s still here. Thanks.
PIC OF THE WEEK:
You know what annoys me? Surfing crowded Lowers and guys don't split the peak and waves go unridden. So I'm starting a new surfing group called 'Sharing is Caring' and everyone in the group must split the peak. In the case of the Pic of the Week; I go right, you go left. Don't look a gift horse in the mouth.
Keep Surfing,
Michael W. Glenn
Wise Man
People Think I'm In My Late 20's
Have 42 Unpaid Blackball Tickets
Thursday, August 13, 2015
THE Surf Report- Early Edition
Sorry for the lack of THE Surf Report last week- I was on vacation. Seems like I've been on vacation a lot lately...
SURF:
Not a lot to report on these past few weeks. The OC had some fun but walled S swell last weekend and it didn't really show down in SD. We're kind of in the same pattern this weekend too- fun S swell for the OC in the shoulder high range but SD only has waist to chest high waves. Luckily for us, we have a little NW windswell in the water too- so even though the surf isn't that big- it is peaky and fun. The S peaks overnight and Friday will be the call. By Sunday it's small again. At least the weather and water is warm (85 and 72 degrees respectively).
Tides the next few days are 1' at sunrise, up to 4.5' mid-morning, down to 1' again mid-afternoon, and back up to- you guessed it- 4.5' at sunset.
FORECAST:
If you weren't impressed by this weekend's report, you're going to loathe next week. Um, where do I start? No good storms in the southern hemisphere = no surf for us next week.
Models show a little action this weekend off Antarctica but it may only give us waist high SW swell next weekend with chest high waves for the OC. And that's all I have to say. Oh- wait- no hurricanes either. There, I'm done. Make sure to keep up to date on the waves and weather by visiting North County Surf on Twitter.
WEATHER:
The only real excitement the next few days is the weather. High pressure is expanding in the SW and we'll get some HOT temperatures over the weekend. Like close to 100 in Escondido and 80 for us at the beaches. And don't even get me started on Death Valley. Predicted temps over the weekend are 120 degrees plus. Now that's excitement. For us, looks for sunny skies, no clouds, and good weather through Monday. By Tuesday the low clouds/fog should return and temps back in the mid-70's for us.
BEST BET:
Friday with peaking small SW swell with a touch of NW, water temps in the low 70's, and beach weather in the 80's. Ahhhh, summer.
NEWS OF THE WEEK:
If you’ve been trolling the internet the past 24 hours, by now you've had to of heard the stories about the ‘Godzilla El Nino’. Catchy name, huh? Hopefully you’re not sick of my El Nino stories this past year (38 to be exact), but you may just want to take note of the Godzilla El Nino. Last year El Nino started to build but a couple factors may have contributed to its demise (you can read them here AND here if you've got a few hours to kill at work):
But this year looks to be different. Now I’m not predicting we’re going to get a ton of rain- if I could predict the weather I’d be a billionaire- but winter is just over the horizon and we will get rain of course. AND we haven’t had a good soaking in almost 20 years (the biggest El Nino on record to be precise- the winter of ’97-’98). Speaking of the ’97-’98 El Nino, let’s get back to Godzilla. The National Weather Service, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) all said the same thing today: Current conditions suggest this could the strongest El Nino ever. EVER. Strike up the band! All joking aside, this could be a season in which we get double the rainfall (20”+), piers fall into the ocean (better get those Ruby’s secured in Oceanside and Huntington), mudslides (any one want to sell a cliff-side home in Laguna Canyon?), and rivers overflowing (can you say Santa Clara?). But enough from my mouth, let’s have a look at what the various media outlets were saying today, in particular, the Los Angeles Times:
‘The strengthening El Niño in the Pacific Ocean has the potential to become one of the most powerful on record, as warming ocean waters surge towards the Americas, setting up a pattern that could bring once-in-a-generation storms this winter to drought-parched California.
The National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center said Thursday that all computer models are predicting a strong El Niño to peak in the late fall or early winter. A host of observations have led scientists to conclude that “collectively, these atmospheric and oceanic features reflect a significant and strengthening El Niño.”
“This definitely has the potential of being the Godzilla El Niño,” said Bill Patzert, a climatologist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge.
Patzert said El Niño’s signal in the ocean “right now is stronger than it was in 1997,” the summer in which the most powerful El Niño on record developed.
“Everything now is going to the right way for El Niño,” Patzert said. “If this lives up to its potential, this thing can bring a lot of floods, mudslides and mayhem.”
“This could be among the strongest El Niños in the historical record dating back to 1950,” said Mike Halpert, deputy director of the Climate Prediction Center.
After the summer 1997 El Niño muscled up, the following winter gave Southern California double its annual rainfall and dumped double the snowpack in the Sierra Nevada, an essential source of precipitation for the state’s water supply, Patzert said.
A strong El Niño can shift a subtropical jet stream that normally pours rain over the jungles of southern Mexico and Central America toward California and the southern United States.
But so much rain all at once has proved devastating to California in the past. In early 1998, storms brought widespread flooding and mudslides, causing 17 deaths and more than half a billion dollars in damage in California. Downtown L.A. got nearly a year's worth of rain in February 1998.
During the second largest El Niño on record, in the winter of 1982-83, damage was particularly severe along the coast, especially when powerful storms arrived as high tide surged onto the coast. "Particularly at the end of January 1983, we had some very strong storm wave effects along the coast, and a lot of the vulnerable structures were lost that winter," said Dan Cayan, climate researcher with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and the U.S. Geological Survey.
"Many locations along the California coast recorded their highest sea levels during that winter," he said.
The effects of this muscular El Niño – nicknamed “Bruce Lee” by one blogger for the National Weather Service – are already being felt worldwide. While a strong El Niño can bring heavy winter rains to California and the southern United States, it can also bring dry weather elsewhere in the world.
Already, El Niño is being blamed for drought conditions in parts of the Philippines, Indonesia and Australia, as occurred in 1997-98.
Drought is also persistent in Central America. Water levels are now so low in the waterways that make up the Panama Canal that officials recently announced limits on traffic through the passageway that links the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
El Niño also influenced the heavy rainstorms that effectively ended drought conditions in Colorado, Texas and Oklahoma, and has brought floods and mudslides to Chile.
There are a couple of reasons why scientists say El Niño is gaining strength.
First, ocean temperatures west of Peru are continuing to climb, reaching their highest level so far this year. The temperatures in a benchmark location in that area of the Pacific Ocean were 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit above the average as of Aug. 5. That’s slightly higher than it was on Aug. 6, 1997, when it was 3.2 degrees Fahrenheit above normal.
The mass of warm water in the Pacific Ocean is also bigger and deeper than it was at this point in 1997, Patzert said.
Second, the so-called trade winds that normally keep the ocean waters west of Peru cool -- by pushing warm water farther west toward Indonesia -- are weakening.
That’s allowing warm water to flow eastward toward the Americas, giving El Niño more strength.
For this year’s El Niño to truly rival its 1997 counterpart, there still needs to be “a major collapse in trade winds from August to November as we saw in 1997,” Patzert said.
“We’re waiting for the big trade wind collapse,” Patzert said. “If it does, it could be stronger than 1997.”
There is a small chance such a collapse may not happen.
“There’s always a possibility these trade winds could surprise us and come back,” Patzert said.
Overall, the Climate Prediction Center forecast a greater-than-90% chance that El Niño will continue through this winter in the Northern Hemisphere, and about an 85% chance it will last into the early spring.
In California, officials have cautioned the public against imagining that El Niño will suddenly end the state’s chronic water challenges.
In fact, it would take an astonishing 2.5 to three times the average annual precipitation to make up for the rain and snow lost in the central Sierra mountain range over the last four years of drought, said Kevin Werner, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's expert on climate in the western United States.
That amount far exceeds what happened in 1983, the wettest year on record for that region, when the area got 1.9 times the average annual precipitation, Werner said.
"A single El Niño year is very unlikely to erase four years of drought," Werner said.
"The drought is not ending any time soon," Halpert added.
California has been dry for much of the last 15 years. Even if California gets a wet winter this year, it could be followed by another severe multiyear drought.
Another problem is that the Pacific Ocean west of California is substantially warmer than it was in 1997. That could mean that though El Niño-enhanced precipitation fell as snow in early 1998, storms hitting the north could cause warm rain to fall this winter. Such a situation would not be good news “for long-term water storage in the snowpack,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at Stanford University.
Drought officials prefer snow in the mountains in the winter because it slowly melts during the spring and summer and can trickle at a gentle speed into the state’s largest reservoirs in Northern California. Too much rain all at once in the mountains in the winter can force officials to flush excess water to the ocean to keep dams from overflowing.
Swain said it’s important to keep in mind that all El Niño events are different, and just because the current El Niño has the potential to be the strongest on record “doesn’t necessarily mean that the effects in California will be the same.”
“A strong El Niño is very likely at this point, namely because we've essentially reached the threshold already, but a wet winter is never a guarantee in California,” Swain said in an email.
“I think a good way to think about it is this: There is essentially no other piece of information that is more useful in predicting California winter precipitation several months in advance than the existence of a strong El Niño event,” Swain said. “But it's still just one piece of the puzzle. So while the likelihood of a wet winter is increasing, we still can't rule out other outcomes.” ‘
So what does all this mean? Patch the holes in your roof, trim those branches hanging over your roof, clean out those rain gutters, and call up Snips and head to Cortes Bank!
BEST OF THE BLOG:
Seen the new hotel up the road from Ponto? Well, not really 'new'- it's been there a couple years- but new if you're talking about the development of the Ponto Master Plan. Seems like that land has been cleared, fenced, and vacant for decades. Well, the 1st part of the plan has been completed with the Cape Rey Hilton, and now phase 2 is about to happen. So what exactly is phase 2? I'm not going to tell you- that's what reading is for. Check the story in the blog below!
PIC OF THE WEEK:
In case you didn't know by now, I'm goofy. Foot that is- not crazy. Well, crazy too but doctors can't prove it. Anyway, where was I? Oh- goofy! I love lefts. Haven't surfed a true left pointbreak yet (I'm cursed in California with Swamis, Malibu, and Rincon), but if I ever find this place, I'm squatting there.
Keep Surfing,
Michael W. Glenn
Chic
She Blinded Me. With Science!
Rescued From The Pound Mickey 'Da Cat' Dora and Rory 'The Dog' Russell
North County New Business News: The Tourists Are Coming! The Tourists Are Coming!
If you’ve read my blog over the years (and I know you do),
then you know about the changes coming to Ponto beach in south Carlsbad (i.e.
the land surrounding the jetties separating Leucadia/Carlsbad). You can
reminisce here and here.
·
There are basically 3 ½ plans for development:
- Cape Rey Hilton- completed and next door to the Hanover Beach Colony homes
- The second phase which the San Diego Union Tribune reported on recently (more on that below)
- The ‘final’ phase which is thought to be a high end resort like the Montage in Laguna or Ritz Carlton Half Moon Bay. (Speaking of Laguna, it’s interesting they have 4 high end resorts; Ritz Carlton, Montage, St. Regis, and technically Pelican Hill- and we don’t even have 1 in Oceanside/Carlsbad/Encinitas/Solana Beach! Are we not good enough?! Whatever you socialites.)
- And the ½ in the ‘3 ½’ mentioned above: That random skinny piece of land in the far most NW track of land in Leucadia- up on the hill where Davina’s Cabo Grill used to sit and the ‘staircase to nowhere’ above the Ponto paved parking lot. Supposedly that’s owned by Omni La Costa Resort and they’ll make that an extension of their hotel up the road. Maybe food service on the beach, beach chairs, surfboard rentals, a couple bungalows on the bluff- think of what Hawaiian or Florida resorts do.
If you’re looking for something to do this weekend (besides
surf, watch the Teahupoo contest, hang at the beach with the ladies, or gasp!
do yardwork), you can read the full master plan here.
But I’m getting off track (as usual). Let’s talk about the
present and bullet point #2 in which the San Diego Union Tribune reported on
last week. You can read the full report
here, but I’ll put it in a nutshell:
“An application has been submitted to develop a key piece of
property covered by the Ponto Beachfront Village Vision Plan approved by the
city nearly 10 years ago. Irvine-based Shopoff Realty Investments turned in its
plans to the Carlsbad Planning Department in April for an 11.3-acre mixture of
residential and commercial development on vacant land that straddles Ponto
Drive just north of Avenida Encinas. Shopoff’s plan outlines a neighborhood of
76 luxury townhomes with three and four bedrooms, 73 rental condominiums of one
to three bedrooms, and a small “village” of three-story buildings with shops,
restaurants and specialty stores on the first floor and 42 ocean view
apartments on the second and third floors.
The overall Ponto Beachfront plan covers about 50 acres
between Carlsbad Boulevard (Highway 101) and the railroad tracks north of
Batiquitos Lagoon. The idea is to create a welcoming gateway for people
entering the southwest quadrant of the city. The Shopoff project would be the
second piece of the Ponto plan to be finished. The first was the 215-room
Hilton Carlsbad Oceanfront Resort & Spa, completed in 2012 and renamed this
year the Cape Rey.
Among the city’s popular beach neighborhoods, Ponto has long
been the black sheep. The area was zoned for manufacturing until 1975, when the
city changed the zoning to residential. A one-acre auto salvage yard remained a
notable eyesore on the prime coastal property until the city forced it out with
a Superior Court ruling in 1985. Another and more recent longtime Ponto
landmark was the two-story pile of firewood along the coastal highway, marked
by a sign that said “Wood not for sale.” Ponto remains Carlsbad’s last large
swath of undeveloped coastal property. But the few people who still live, work
and own businesses there seem resolved to the fact that change is coming.”
Don’t shoot the messenger! I’m not going to get all
political here- that’s not the purpose of the North County Surf Blog- I just
report what I see. But the fact is that all the trees, animals, etc. were
removed YEARS ago and we need to do something with the land since it’s
surrounded by chain link fence and collecting trash.
What I don’t want is
another Huntington Beach (even though I did spend a couple days there last
weekend and had a fabulous time; ‘It’s a nice place to visit but I wouldn’t
want to live there…’) so whatever plans are put in place, we need to make sure
it’s to our benefit:
- It looks appealing and fits in with the surrounding community
- We generate tax revenue so we can pay our men in uniform, fix potholes, etc.
- And if we draw in more tourists- they better support our local businesses damnit!
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