Friday, August 24, 2012

THE Surf Report 8/24/12



Wasn't that a 180?!

SURF:
A little bit of surf last week and great weather has been replaced with drizzle and a little bit of surf. Small surf looks way more appealing when the sun's out.
Today we have small SW again with waist high waves in SD and chest high sets in the OC. Of course it's overcast and the wind is blowing SW at 8. Nothing too exciting. For the weekend it doesn't look much better- the SW should back off and there's minimal NW showing on Saturday. Sorry for the bad news. Good news is that the water is still holding at 72 degrees.
And the tides are pretty mellow the next few days- about 3' in the morning and up to 5.5' at dinner. Make sure to keep up to date on the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf.

FORECAST:
After a dismal weekend of surf (I'm not angry), charts show a little NW windswell towards next Friday. Nothing really, maybe waist high in SD.
As far as the tropics go, there's a little group of clouds off mainland Mex but nothing to get excited about yet.
The real story though is charts showing a solid storm forming today off Antarctica and blowing up this weekend. If that's the case, we could finally have an overhead SW swell late next weekend (Labor Day anybody)? I'm keeping my fingers crossed on this one- we haven't had a big swell in months so we're due, right?...

WEATHER:

A complete 180 around here. Amazing tropical weather last week with temps in the 80's has now been replaced by drizzle, clouds, and temps in the low 70's. Luckily the models show a little better clearing this weekend but we'll still be on the cool side. That lasts until mid-week. Then high pressure is forecasted to return and we should have clear skies and temps in the high 70's next weekend (Labor Day anybody)?

BEST BET:
Nothing in the near term- looks like late next weekend if that forecasted solid SW swell shows up.

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


In the North County Surf blog recently, I reported about the sightings of orcas, great whites, makos, and jellyfish in our waters this summer. And I joked ‘What’s next?!” Well now we know- the Coast News reported two locals are back at Cardiff. Here’s the story:

Two years ago at least two sea creatures moved stealthily into local waters. Tom Stephan was out surfing Cardiff reef when he first encountered them.“ One was big, about three-feet long, and the other was two feet,” he recalled. “They were eating algae on the reef.” Not long after seeing them, Stephan was making a bottom turn on a wave when saw the little one. In a split second, he jumped off his surfboard to avoid injuring it. “It was swimming next to me 100 yards off shore at low tide,” he remembered. “I saw the head of what I thought was a sea otter near a string of kelp, then I noticed reptilian eyes. I thought ‘Cool, the turtles are back.’” Earlier this month, Stephan saw the turtles again. Stephan began spreading the word about the turtles/ He then polled surfers to see if there were other encounters. Vinnie Tessieri, who works at Hansen’s, also had a story. “The first time I saw them was last summer when I was spear fishing at Swami’s and they were about 40 or 45 feet below the surface,” Tessieri said. “I’ve seen them at Pipes at about 35 feet. They were just cruising, and were about two-feet long with a few spots on their shells” Dr. Jeffrey Seminoff is program leader, Marine Turtle Ecology and Assessment Program, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NOAA. He said that although he was aware of turtles in San Diego Bay, he was surprised to learn two years ago that there were additional sightings north in the San Gabriel River. He described these as a “new phenomenon.” “Just like San Gabriel, I think the Cardiff sightings are relatively new and an indication that the population is starting to recover and reoccupy previous habitats,” he said. “If we were to rewind 200 years, we probably would have seen them like they are now — probably more.” Seminoff said the Cardiff sightings, most likely, are the tip of the iceberg. “In the early 1970s, Michoacan, Mexico was their primary nesting place, and still is,” he explained. “About 15,000 females would come out and lay their eggs each nesting season from November to March. In the late 1980s, the nesting population was down to 200 to 300 turtles per year. The adults were killed for meat and the eggs were thought to be an aphrodisiac.” Today, the population on the nesting beaches of Michoacan, Mexico has increased to about 5,000 East Pacific Green Turtles thanks to their conservation efforts, now in its third decade. Today, he said, the population has increased to about 5,000 turtles thanks to Michoacan’s conservation efforts, now in its third decade. Known as East Pacific Green Turtles, they are genetically distinct from those observed between California and Chile, and the Yucatan where turtles swim with humans. “These are very skittish and do not like people,” Seminoff cautioned. “In the future, those behaviors might change and they might become more accustomed to surfers. They are very savvy, and very cryptic.” He added, “Juvenile turtles ‘pinball’ up the coast at about two to four years of age. Then they ‘set up shop’ and stay in the coastal area for 20 years. Upon sexual maturity, they start nesting. Seminoff says local residents can help protect sea turtles by: refraining from using plastic bags which, when confused with food, can clog a turtle’s intestines resulting in death; eat sustainable seafood that employs turtle-friendly fishing methods and by disposing motor oil and other poisons responsibly, so they don’t end up in the ocean. East Pacific Green Turtles enjoy a rich diet that includes sea grass, algae, sponges, jellyfish, anemones, snails and invertebrates. For this reason, Seminoff speculates they could possibly be living in the San Elijo Lagoon.

For more on Cardiff’s new ‘enforcers of the line-up’ check out the Coast News' article here.

BEST OF THE BLOG:

I've been complaining, err, commenting lately that surfing has been relegated to reverse airs (and I'm not bitter just because I can't do one). It just seems very repetitive and boring lately. Well fear no more- the North County Surf blog has some variety this week with clips of Wilko and Ho mixing things up. And an update on the recent building boom around town. And of course a mid-week Surf Check and an in depth THE Surf Report. All of that and morin the blog below!

PIC OF THE WEEK:

I love coming across random shots like this on the web. Just some no name empty spot that looks darn fun right now. Considering how bad it's been around here lately, this spot looks like J-bay. Without Derek Hynd's weird boards and all the sharks of course.

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
W. Stands For Wonderful
Put Up A Valiant Effort Against LL
Stripped Of My Smirnoff Titles