Friday, June 28, 2019

THE Surf Report


I'm activating the Emergency Boardriding System. God bless America! 

SURF:
Whoever said patience is a virtue obviously didn't surf. I'm not a big fan of small swells and overcast conditions (but who is), so it's been a pleasure to watch the forecast models this past week and finally see the potential for solid surf. But before I get too far ahead of myself, let's talk about the surf for the upcoming weekend. We've got a little background SW/NW for waist high+ surf today (and better towards the OC from the SW swell). For tomorrow the NW windswell will pick up a touch to the waist high+ range with chest high sets towards SD. 


And on Sunday, tropical storm Alvin may give the OC some chest high sets. The good news is that we'll have plenty of sun once the morning low clouds burn off and because of that, our water temps will warm up to the high 60's. Not the biggest surf this weekend but we'll finally have great weather and warm water. 


Speaking of warm water, we're at 67 degrees this morning and may warm up to 70 by Sunday (towards SD). AND... if the sun's out, it may be time for a jacket and boardies in the afternoons. And here's more info to plan your weekend:

Tides this weekend are:
  • 3' at sunrise
  • 2' after lunch
  • 6' at sunset
And speaking of sunset, daylight hours this weekend are already getting shorter since the longest day of the year was last week. But, there's still over 14 hours of daylight to get a session in:
  • 5:45 AM sunrise  
  • 8:00 PM sunset  
FORECAST:
After a small but sunny weekend, we start to see some REAL waves on the horizon- and that's when we activate the Emergency Boardriding System. 


New SW swell fills in on Monday for chest high surf and peaks on Tuesday for shoulder high sets. 


Wednesday backs off to the chest high range and the 4th of July has consistent chest high surf from soon to be Hurricane Barbara. If the models hold up, the OC should have head high+ surf by Friday the 5th. 


On Barbara's heels is a major storm taking shape off Antarctica this weekend which would give us well overhead SW swell starting on the 5th and lasting through the 7th. 


AND THEN... models show Hurricane Cosme forming off Mainland Mexico next week which would give us chest high+ surf again in north county SD and overhead surf in the OC around the 10th. So waiting patiently this past month may actually pay off for us. Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf. 

WEATHER:


Great weather this weekend (after the clouds burn off) will give us our 1st real taste of summer. Look for temps in the mid to high 70's at the beaches and a typical afternoon sea breeze. By the middle of next week, the clouds may linger at the coast a little longer (unfortunate for the 4th of July) but we still should see a little sun late in the day. All in all the usual weather around here for late June/early July. The only thing to watch out for is what the moisture from Alvin, Barbara, and Cosme do once they start breaking up...

BEST BET:
Where do I start? Seriously. Maybe Tuesday with new fun SW swell, July 5th compliments of Hurricane Barbara, next Saturday with solid SW swell, or the 10th of July if Hurricane Cosme comes together. And did I tell you we should be wearing trunks and a jacket by then?!

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


On this day in history, a heat wave on the order of a 20 year event enveloped the West and Southern California from this day to 6/30. Death Valley hit the highest U.S. June temperature ever recorded: 129°. Do you even know how hot that is?! Let's just say that 90 degrees is hot and is uncomfortable if you're doing any type of physical exertion outside. Now add 40 more degrees to that. You heard me right. 

And if you're wondering, Death Valley famously holds the record for hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth of 134 degrees on July 10, 1913. Is that even possible? Maybe I shouldn't complain then when it's cloudy and 65 degrees for months on end here in San Diego (which happens to be almost 70 degrees cooler than Death Valley's record. Yikes). And if you're wondering, the hottest temperature ever recorded in San Diego is 111 degrees, which occurred on September 26, 1963. 

Also on June 28th in weather history, Palm Springs and Thermal reached 122°, which tied or set new June records and came within one degree of the all-time highest temperature on record on this day. Also on 6/29 in Borrego Springs it was 120°, two degrees off the highest all-time.

And while we're on the subject of extremes, the coldest temperature ever recorded on earth was at the Soviet Vostok Station in Antarctica on 21 July, 1983 with a mind blowing -129 degrees. That's a 263 degree difference between Death Valley's 134 degree record high. (And the coldest it's ever been in California was at Boca with a numbing -45 degrees on January 20th, 1935). 

And the temperatures on Saturday in San Diego are supposed to be 62 degrees for the low and 77 for the high. Perfect. 

PIC OF THE WEEK:


Hoping to see some of this in the near future.

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Unstoppable
Have A Pet Bald Eagle Named Uncle Sam
Found Out The Raging Bull Was Really Born In Pamplona And Not Cronulla

Thursday, June 20, 2019

THE Surf Report- Early Edition


I'm back! 

SURF:
You didn't miss anything though. Surf has been the same for pretty much all of spring- consistent clouds at the beach and little SW swell. The first day of summer (tomorrrow, duh) starts off again with clouds in the AM and small surf. 


As luck would have it, a new S starts to show in the afternoon with chest high sets along with some small NW windswell. That holds into Saturday. We should also see a little sunshine at the beaches too Saturday afternoon. By Sunday, both swells are on their way down to the waist high+ range and nice beach weather again. 

Water temps are holding in the mid-60's and with a little sun this weekend, maybe high 60's by Sunday afternoon. And here's more info to plan your weekend:


Tides this weekend are:
  • 1' at sunrise
  • 0' at 8 AM
  • 3.5' at 3 PM
  • 1' at sunset
And speaking of sunset, daylight hours this weekend are:
  • 5:40 AM sunrise  
  • 8:00 PM sunset  
And since the longest day of the year is Friday, the days will start getting shorter on Saturday! Bummer. 


FORECAST:


Monday starts off slow with just background waist high sets from the S but then a new fun SW builds late in the day on Tuesday for inconsistent chest high surf. By Wednesday it's consistent chest high waves (bigger towards the OC) and then new NW fills in on Thursday for shoulder high combo waves. 


Further out, models show a good storm forming off Antarctica in a few days which could give us head high+ surf (finally) around July 1st. 


We may also see our 1st hurricane off Baja around that time too- but forecast charts have it moving due W away from us but we're still a ways out- so a lot could change between now and then. Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf.

WEATHER:


We may finally see a break in our June Gloom pattern this weekend but first... a chance of showers Friday morning... on our 1st day of summer?! Odd but not unheard of. In all honesty though, just expect some heavy drizzle and sunshine by late in the day on Friday. Saturday and Sunday should have sunny skies once the low clouds burn off mid-morning and next week may be more of the same. Hopefully the persistent clouds will go away finally and we'll have sun at the beaches in the afternoon. It's about time we saw some summer-like conditions around here.

BEST BET:
Saturday with fun but small NW/S or next Thursday with better NW/SW. And if you can wait that long (and believe the models), good SW around July 1st.

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


I mentioned a couple weeks ago that a weak to moderate El Niño  has been hanging around this spring and will most likely last into summer. Hard to believe though with all these persistent clouds at the beach, showers well into May (and on the 1st day of summer), water temps that feel downright average, and no hurricanes in sight, it's hard to believe any of this El Niño hype. Forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) say fear not, as our El Niño is still hanging around, and forecasters think it’s likely to stay through the summer. What happens after that is less clear, though, with about a 50% chance of El Niño continuing through the fall and winter (wouldn't that be awesome). Here's the official report:


Water temps in the eastern equatorial Pacific (i.e. between us and Hawaii- also called the Niño3.4 Index) has been cruising along between 1-2 degrees above average for several months in a row. This behavior is fairly unusual. Of the 23 El Niño winters in our historical record (dating back to 1950), nine persisted into March–May. Six of those were stronger El Niños, with the three-month-average Niño3.4 Index (the “Oceanic Niño Index” or ONI) peaking at 2.5 degrees or more above average.

Two winters, 1968–69 and 1986–87, featured a peak around 2 degrees above average and persisted into the spring. Only once before now has the ONI remained above 1 degree but less than 2 degrees above average throughout the winter and lasted into the spring: 2014–15. In that instance, March 2015 was technically the start of the great El Niño of 2015-16.  

These three cases were all followed by El Niño the next winter. The predictive value of this factoid is not large, but essentially, the ocean/atmosphere system is so complex that from year to year, even if some elements (like the ONI) look the same, there are many, many other differences. These differences mean that conditions will develop differently, leading to unique futures. Basically it would take approximately one trillion quintillion years for nature to repeat itself!

So what has more predictive power? To develop the most complete picture of how conditions in the tropical Pacific might develop over the next several months, ENSO forecasters study current conditions and dynamical and statistical computer models. Near-term, one of the conditions we look at is how the winds near the surface of the tropical Pacific—the trade winds—are behaving. The trade winds normally blow steadily east-to-west, keeping warm water piled up near Indonesia. When they slow down, that warm water can begin to slide eastward under the surface—a downwelling Kelvin wave—transferring warmer waters to the east. This warm wave eventually rises to the surface, reinforcing the El Niño. Throughout most of May, the trade winds were weaker than average.


The effect of these weaker winds can be seen in the recent increase of warmer-than-average water under the surface of the tropical Pacific, as a new downwelling Kelvin wave has formed. (But not a Kelvin wave of cinematic proportions.) The sea surface temperature across much of the tropical Pacific is still warmer than average, with the Niño3.4 Index coming in at 1 degree above average during May. 

Over the next few months, this Kelvin wave will likely (66% chance!) supply the surface with the warmer-than-average water required to continue El Niño through the summer. Since the end of May, the trade winds have strengthened, and for an idea of the longer term, we can look to computer models. Overall, the models in the current forecast predict that the Niño3.4 Index will stay near to slightly above the El Niño threshold 1 degree warmer than average. Some models are in the ENSO-neutral range, around average. It’s interesting that nearly all of the models remain between 0 and 1 degree above average through the fall and into the winter; this level of agreement between the models would usually contribute to more confidence in the forecast. However, the mix of predictions above and below the El Niño threshold means that, while El Niño is the favorite for next winter, forecasters are giving it only a 50% chance at this point.

Long story short, our water temps are still slightly above average which will mean more boardshort time this summer, a chance of slightly better hurricanes, and maybe a slightly more active winter storm season (again).

PIC OF THE WEEK:


Not the biggest but pretty darn close to being the best.

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Top Dog
Pretty Sure I Was Part Of That Anthony Davis Trade Somehow
1st One To Pull A 900 In Snowboarding, Skateboarding, And Surfing

Thursday, June 6, 2019

THE Surf Report- Early Edition


Let's get rid of these clouds and start summer already! 

SURF:
Had a little background SW swell this week for chest high+ surf and overcast conditions (but I've seen the month of June now 49 times so all the low clouds shouldn't come as a surprise). For tomorrow, the SW swell will drop to the waist high range with inconsistent chest high sets towards the OC and the NW windswell will start to pick up in the afternoon to keep us in waist to chest high surf. On Saturday, the NW windswell peaks with chest high sets and we'll have small remnant SW swell. 


On Sunday the NW backs off while new chest high sets appear from the S. All in all some small but rideable surf this weekend.

Water temps are starting to slowly creep up, now that we have SSW winds, and are hovering around 64. And if you're wondering when we'll hit the 'boardshort' threshold of 70 degrees, that usually happens around the 1st week of July- so we've got a month to go. And here's more numbers for you to chew on:


Tides this weekend are:

  • 1' at sunrise
  • -0.25' at 9 AM
  • 4.25' at 4 PM
  • 2.25' at sunset

Daylight hours this weekend are:

  • 5:40 AM sunrise  
  • 7:55 PM sunset  

FYI- longest day of the year is June 21st in which the sun in San Diego rises at 5:40 AM and sets at 8:00 PM (if there's no June Gloom of course). 

FORECAST:
The slow rise in S swell from Sunday continues into Monday with chest high surf. That peaks on Tuesday with more chest high+ waves and the OC seeing a rogue shoulder high set. 


The 2nd half of next week looks a little small and slow before the potential of shoulder high SW arrives next weekend. Nothing big on the horizon but still fun. Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf. 

WEATHER:


June Gloom is living up to it's name but I'll take that over showers and junky conditions. Looks like high pressure will build this weekend inland but it may trap the low clouds at the coast, so partial clearing may be our best hope on the sand. The sun could peak out here and there but it all depends what high pressure does the next few days. There could be sun at the immediate coast or there may not be. Let's just say there won't be and hopefully we're pleasantly surprised. The cat and mouse game will last into early next week before the clouds thicken up again late next week. If this truly is an El Nino year, it's need to kick into gear for summer! 

BEST BET:
Tuesday with peaking S swell or late next weekend with better SW if the models hold true. 

NEWS OF THE WEEK:



Speaking of El Niño, I'm pretty sure our rainy winter season is over. Pretty sure. But regardless, the El Nino fueled storms the past few months really put a dent in our decade long drought. Here's where we currently stand with our rain to date (FYI- season is October 1 to September 30th so we MAY get a couple showers here and there this summer from tropical systems but it won't change much of the numbers below):

  • Newport Beach: 18.01" so far (normal is 13.3"). That's roughly 135% of normal. For comparison's sake, we were only at 2.79" last season.
  • Oceanside: 14.96" so far (normal is 13.06"). That's roughly 110% of normal. For comparison's sake, we were only at 4.93" last season.
  • San Diego: 12.81" so far (normal is 10.39"). That's roughly 125% of normal. For comparison's sake, we were only at 3.32" last season.

Speaking of El Niño again, the Climate Prediction Center finally came out with their eastern Pacific hurricane outlook (i.e. the ones that form off Baja/Mainland Mexico) for the summer and it was worth the wait. The official prognosis is:

A 70% chance of an above-normal season. There is a 20% chance of a near-normal season and only a 10% chance of a below-normal season. (The eastern Pacific hurricane region covers the eastern North Pacific Ocean east of 140°W north of the equator).

The 2019 outlook calls for a 70% probability for each of the following ranges of activity:

  • 15-22 Named Storms
  • 8-13 Hurricanes
  • 4-8 Major Hurricanes


Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) range of 100%-180% of the median. ACE is a way to measure energy from the maximum sustained surface winds (measured every 6 hours) for all named storms while at least tropical storm strength. So if we're 100-180% above the median, look for some strong hurricanes this summer. 

The activity is expected to fall within these ranges in 70% of seasons with similar climate conditions and uncertainties to those expected this year. These ranges do not represent the total possible activity seen in past similar years. These predicted ranges are centered above the 1981-2010 averages of 15 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes.

The eastern Pacific hurricane season officially runs from May 15th through November 30th.

Two climate factors are expected to contribute to a stronger hurricane season across the eastern (and central, i.e. Hawaii) Pacific hurricane basin. These factors include El Niño and above average sea surface temperatures across the eastern and central tropical North Pacific. These conditions are already in place, and are expected to continue through the peak months of the hurricane season (July-September).

The most recent forecast indicates about a 60% chance of El Niño during the summer. The latest model forecasts predict a weak- or moderate-strength El Niño during this period, which means there is some uncertainty as to how much El Niño will enhance the hurricane season. Long story short, look for a hurricane season similar to last summer which was pretty fun around here. 

PIC OF THE WEEK:



This is what waves look like when there's no June Gloom. 

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Pretty Confident
Was Kawhi's Roommate At SDSU
Been Asked To Coach The US Olympic Surf Team

Thursday, May 30, 2019

THE Surf Report- Early Edition


Welcome home June Gloom! 

SURF:
Spring has finally arrived- 3 weeks before summer. But who's complaining?! The cold fronts with their wind and showers seem to have left the building and we had fun S swell this week and clean conditions. 


Look for the S to hold in the shoulder high range tomorrow, back off on Saturday to the chest high range before a new SW starts to slowly creep up on Sunday for chest high sets late in the day. All in all rideable surf this weekend and semi clean conditions. And here's some extra stuff you may be interested in:


Water temps have warmed back up to 63 in SD (and 60 in the OC and 65 at Scripps Pier).

Tides this weekend are:
  • 2' at sunrise
  • 4' at 9 AM
  • 1.5' at 2 PM
  • 6' at sunset
Daylight hours this weekend are:
  • 5:42 AM sunrise  
  • 7:50 PM sunset  

FORECAST:
As mentioned above, a new mid-sized SW swell arrives late Sunday and builds into Monday for chest high surf. That peaks Tuesday morning for shoulder high surf. Wednesday still looks fun and the 2nd half of next week looks to have waist high NW windswell and small SW. 


Further out, forecast charts show a fun S taking shape around the 9th with more shoulder high surf. Good to see waves again- without the wind! Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf. 

WEATHER:


Looks like winter is finally gone (jinx!). At least the showers are gone in the near future and we're officially into June Gloom. We've got weak low pressure hanging around Friday/Saturday for low clouds at the beach and sun inland. Temps will be near 70 at the coast with a little more sun towards Sunday. Next week we're right on track for the last few weeks of spring- low clouds/fog in the nights/mornings and sunny skies in the afternoons.

BEST BET:
Friday with fun SW swell or next Tuesday with more SW swell.

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


Been a wild winter. Spring has been almost non-existent as storms from the north kept dropping 1/4" to 1/2" of rain the past month. And the mountains in California- from Tahoe to Julian- continued to see snow. On Memorial Day. The 'unofficial' start to summer. Just how much snow occurred this past winter? The LA Times this week dove deep into the powder (sorry- bad pun). I'll let them explain:

California’s strange spring weather continues to stun the state, now setting a record for the snowiest May at Mammoth Mountain. The resort got a record 29 inches of snow this month, giving those in Southern California a chance to ditch the sandy beach for the powdery mountain this Memorial Day weekend. 

The snowfall has already topped May 2015’s record of 28 inches, further adding to the enormous dump of powder that Mammoth has received. A total of 489 inches have accumulated at the main lodge, and 715 inches have been recorded at the summit (that's almost 60' of snow. Wow). The ski resort’s current base depth is between 90 and 155 inches. In February, residents had to tunnel out from their homes after a record-breaking 24 feet of snow fell during the month.


If that's not odd enough, new research recently linked a series of earthquakes near California’s Long Valley Caldera in the Mammoth Mountain area to heavy snowmelt during a wet winter. Researchers planned to watch for seismic activity as it pertains to snowmelt, which typically begins in late May to early June. The expectation is that there will be a large number of seismic swarms, as there have been in the past, but there’s no guarantee.

Emily Montgomery-Brown, a researcher at the U.S. Geological Survey who published the findings, said there’s been an increase in runoff near Mammoth, but snow is still falling. “We’ll have to keep watching and see when the temperatures really start to warm up,” she said.

Overall, it’s been an exceptionally wet and snowy May in California. The placement of the jet stream — a high-altitude river of air running from the Pacific across the United States — is largely responsible. The jet stream has hit California with a series of storms out of the South Pacific. Mammoth Mountain Ski Area originally pushed its closing date to July 7, but on Friday the resort said it will now be open into August. That’s happened only twice before, making snow a new symbol of a California summer.

Incredible to think you could surf Huntington in trunks at the end of July then run up to Mammoth the next day and get a couple runs in. Awesome.

PIC OF THE WEEK:


With all the bickering between Democrats and Republicans lately, I thought this beautiful picture may bring some peace. May be Photoshopped though so it could be fake. Never mind. For more spots to put on your bucket list, check out Gareth Kolega's work on Instagram.

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Eminent
Kids Always Wanted A Pet So I Trapped A Sasquatch
Did A 360 Air On My SUP By Using My Paddle As A Propeller

Friday, May 24, 2019

THE Surf Report


What's that warm glowing yellow orb in the sky?

SURF:
Been a lot of windy/cloudy conditions lately. Winter won't go away and May Gray is nowhere to be seen. Fortunately for us, there's a break in the action today and we have sunny skies and clean conditions. Get on it! 


We also have new SSW swell in the water along with leftover NW windswell for fun shoulder high surf. For Saturday, nice conditions prevail again, the SSW hangs around, and the NW backs off. Still some fun chest high surf with bigger waves in the OC. For Sunday, this unbelievable pattern of on again/off again cold fronts continues with more clouds, a chance of showers - and yes- wind. The NW windswell will pick up again and make a mess of whatever SSW swell we have left in the water. Long story short, start your Memorial Day Weekend early and get in the water today.  


Tides this weekend are:
  • 2' at sunrise
  • 0.5' mid-morning
  • 3.5' at dinner
Daylight hours this weekend are:
  • 5:45 AM sunrise  
  • 7:50 PM sunset  
(And for those of you surfing in Vancouver, British Columbia, it's 5:18 AM and 9:01 PM. Holy cow.


And water temps have dipped to 60 degrees from all the NW winds- and 57 degrees in northern OC/LA county (which is the same as San Fran). Awesome! By the way, we won't hit our peak water temps until early to mid-August so don't expect to wear trunks anytime soon.

FORECAST:
After the cold front moves through on Sunday, we have a transition day on Monday with a little bit of wind and more sun. 


We start to see new SW swell arrive later on Monday and peak early Tuesday for more shoulder to head high swell. That holds on Wednesday and drops slightly late in the week. 


On it's heels is more similar sized SW arriving at the end of the month into the 1st of June. After that, things take a breather and the N & S Pacific look pretty small. Just in time for June Gloom! Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather Twitter/North County Surf.

WEATHER:


Winter just won't go away (if you haven't noticed I've been saying that the past 3 weeks). Late season (very late season) cold fronts/low pressure systems have been sweeping through our area and have given us breezy, cloudy, showery conditions. That should have ended back in March and at this point in time, true May Gray should be in control (low clouds/fog hugging our coast all day). Luckily for us, we'll have nice weather today and Saturday before ANOTHER weak front moves through on Sunday to kick up our winds again, make a mess of our surf, and drop unexpected showers on our Memorial Day plans. Early in the week we should clear up with cool sunny conditions before ANOTHER weak front shows up on our forecast models for late next week (no showers thankfully, just clouds). At this point in time, I'm guessing we'll continue to have showers on and off through July 4th (I said that last week too).

BEST BET:
Today with combo swell and nice conditions. Or more SW late Monday into Tuesday (with nice conditions on Tuesday).

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


1 more week until the North County Board Meeting's 5th annual golf tournament benefiting the Challenged Athletes Foundation happens on Friday, May 31st! If you haven't signed up yet, hurry as just a few spots are left and we're destined to sell out again. Cost is $90 and lunch from Frazier Farms is included. On that note, wanted to say thanks to Ian McDaniel at Venture, LLP for being the title sponsor this year again and to Goat Hill Park for hosting. And it couldn't happen without our great community of north county San Diego and everyone who donated their time and products. In particular, a big thanks to:
  • Hole sponsors:
    • Agency73
    • Surfhouse
    • C3Bank
    • Lohman & Dehner
    • Volte Wetsuits
    • Wave Soda
    • Ian McDaniel, Venture LLP
    • Challenged Athletes Foundation
    • EPK Collection
    • 19Ten & Elm Street Boardshop
    • VUGA
    • payrollHUB
    • TK Pacific Wealth, Inc.
    • Plan Design Consultants, Inc
    • Suga
    • JR Phillips Group, Inc.
    • Steve Rude at First Choice Loan Services
  • Raffle Prize sponsors:
    • Honma Golf
    • Straye
    • EPK Collection
    • Vuori
    • Gnarlywood
    • Nike
    • VUGA
    • New Wave
    • Vans
    • Volte Wetsuits
    • Vessel/BLVR
    • Priority Public House
    • Go Pro
    • Leus
    • Famous
    • Skrewball
    • Z Customization
    • Evnroll Putters
    • Falkner Winery
    • Mike Hess Brewing
    • Strickly Boarding Company
    • Fichter Silva
    • Adidas
    • Fuzion Payments
    • Bank of California
  • Swag bag sponsor Reverie Hawkins including:
    • D-Fi Packs
    • North County Board Meeting
    • EPK Collection
    • Brixton
    • S&A Publishing
    • Famous
If you'd like to join us or have any questions about the group, make sure to give me a shout at northcountyboardmeeting@gmail.com. Thanks again and I'll see you next week at Goat Hill Park supporting the Challenged Athletes Foundation! 

PIC OF THE WEEK:


Dare you $10 to duck dive that thing. 

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
Your Excellency
Been Known To Paint The Town Red
Last Known Winner of the Duke Kahanamoku Invitational Surfing Championship

Friday, May 17, 2019

THE Surf Report


I'm activating the Emergency Boardriding System again. BUT...

SURF:


So good to have real waves again. Lots of SSW swell this past week and semi-clean conditions led to overhead (and well overhead) surf at S facing beaches. As has been typical lately, winds were off and on from passing cold fronts. For the upcoming weekend, it's more of the same story- we'll have leftover background SW that will be met with a couple of cold fronts producing short interval NW swell. 


For today, winds are already blowing from the NW and the fading SW is blown to bits. Saturday morning things clean up to the shoulder high range from the combination of swells. On Sunday morning it's back to chest high sets from the combo swells but we have yet another cold front moving through for more wind and in increase in NW windswell. All in all a windy bookend to the weekend.    


Tides are all over this weekend:
  • 1' at sunrise
  • 4.5' mid-morning
  • 1' mid-afternoon
  • 6' at sunset
Daylight hours this weekend are:
  • 5:50 AM sunrise  
  • 7:40 PM sunset  
  • You pretty much can paddle out at 5:30 AM now and get out of the water around 8 PM. I like that. 
And water temps have dipped to 62 from the NW winds yesterday. Thanks a lot. 

FORECAST:
Lots of SW swells on the horizon, hence the activation of the Emergency Boardriding System again. 


First up is more NW wind/groundswell on Monday that will be met by head high SSW for overhead sets due to the combo swells. That holds into Wednesday before another weak cold front messes things up. 


The NW windswell will pick up more on Wednesday from the cold front but it will be a mess of course. 


Then next weekend we get more shoulder high sets from the SW. 


And if the forecast charts hold true, we've got an overhead SW arriving towards the 28th. Could be fun IF... the cold fronts stop rolling through. Make sure to keep track of the waves and weather at Twitter/North County Surf.

WEATHER:


Winter just won't go away (I said that last week too). We had a weak low pressure system off our coast yesterdy that kicked up our low clouds and squeezed out some showers. That moved through last night and today we're left with breezy NW winds. On Saturday things clear up and we've got sunny cool conditions. Then... another weak front comes through Sunday for more showers and breezy conditions. Monday/Tuesday look mild and calm then... another weak low pressure system arrives on Wednesday for more... showers and breezy conditions. At this point in time, I'm guessing we'll continue to have showers on and off through July 4th. 

BEST BET:
Tuesday with fun head high combo swell and clean conditions. Or next weekend with new shoulder high SW swell (and clean conditions)? Or the 28th with solid SW again (and clean conditions)?

NEWS OF THE WEEK:


As has been reported over the past 20 years or so, one of the downfalls of a warming earth is that storms are becoming more powerful and destructive. Which of course is a bad thing. Unless you're a surfer? Seems as though us amphibians are between a rock and a hard place- As we're amazed at the 80'+ surf at Nazare, Jaws, Cortes Bank, and other big wave breaks, the storms that make these waves pack a wallop when they hit land of course- and upwards of a billion dollars in damage. The Washington Post did a lengthy article recently about the pros and cons of ever increasing surf and wonder kid Kai Lenny's catch 22 dilemma. Here's what they had to say:

A handful of days every year, Jaws bares its teeth. It thunders toward the shoreline, growing to the size of a downtown building. Its power, energy and sheer size have made it one of the most famous big-wave surf breaks in the world, annually luring daredevils, risk-takers and thrill-seekers alike to Maui to tempt fate and tangle with a giant. Kai Lenny lives less than nine miles down the road on the island’s northern shore and spends much of the year just waiting for Jaws to stir to life. He’s part of a small tribe of surfers who eagerly chase the biggest waves on the planet. They monitor weather forecasts and buoys on both sides of the equator, tracking it all closely enough to understand that the ocean is changing around them. Climate change has warmed the ocean and is transforming wave conditions. The coming years and decades could provide big-wave surfers with some of the biggest rides of their lives.

“I feel like our eyes are starting to open up to all these new frontiers of what we can do,” Lenny says. Much of the research is ongoing, but here’s what most scientists agree on: Sea levels are rising, and surf breaks in some areas will change. Storms are projected to get bigger and more frequent, which can create waves that are more powerful and, in many places, bigger. The surfers are on the front lines of these changes, their lives intimately tied to the ocean, humbled by its power and in sync with its rhythms. Surfers such as Lenny live every day in a series of postcards — pristine beaches, sparkling oceans, towering palm trees, majestic rainbows — but can see ominous clouds on the horizon. They don’t pretend to know exactly how the future will unfold in the water, but they’re experiencing the shifts in real time and are plenty conflicted about what lies ahead.

Lenny finds the prospects both exciting and terrifying. The 26-year-old Maui native can tick off the dangers climate change poses to the ocean he loves: “Bleaching of reefs; the damage of the shoreline from stronger storms; the changing of wind patterns so that a particular wave might not be as good anymore; the shifting of currents, which could destroy a particular break along a coastline. … What was once paradise could just be a pool of polluted water.” Then he pauses. “But I got to tell you, if there’s a silver lining, as a big-wave surfer, bigger storms create bigger waves,” he says, “meaning I’ll have the opportunity to ride the biggest waves of my life.”

Lenny was all of 13 years old when he rode Jaws for the first time. Laird Hamilton, the big-wave surfing pioneer, towed him from a Jet Ski onto his first set of giants, and he has been chasing bigger and bigger waves ever since. In November, Lenny was entered in a big-wave contest at Peʻahi, home of the famous Jaws surf break, but the day’s competition was postponed because the waves were too big and too strong. Conditions were dangerous — like tossing a feather into a washing machine — but Lenny went out anyway. With all eyes — and cameras — focused on him, he tamed the menacing monsters, carving his way through walls of water, dropping at one point 20 feet on a wave that appeared to be eight stories high. From afar, he was a mouse tangling with a giant elephant. But up close, he treated the wave as his dance partner, churning through the water with ease, his movements as fluid as the ocean. The ensuing video clips went viral, further cementing Lenny’s standing as one of the sport’s premier daredevil artists. Just a few months later, his only lament is that the waves weren’t even bigger. “It’s not the biggest that I’ll do in my life,” he says of Jaws’s enormity. “I’ll probably do a way bigger one.”


One of the sport’s brightest young stars, Lenny is both laid-back and ambitious, a product of surf culture but also a business-minded entrepreneur — a full-on corporation with sponsors, revenue streams and a dedicated media arm. It’s as if he was born for this sport at this time. His name, Kai, after all, means “ocean” in Hawaiian. And his middle name is Waterman. “People don’t believe that’s his real name,” says his mother, Paula, “but it really is.” He was all of seven days old when his parents put him in the ocean for the first time, a baptism of sorts at Maui’s Lahaina Baby Beach. “Just a very normal thing to do in Hawaii,” explains his father, Martin.

Hawaii has long been a mecca for surfing. Because the islands are isolated in the Pacific Ocean, swells can travel for thousands of miles uninterrupted and descend on them from all sides, offering rideable waves year-round. But for those who grow up here, the water provides more than weekend recreation. “It’s a way for us to reconnect with nature, it’s a way for us to stay healthy, and it’s also a great equalizer,” said Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), a recreational surfer himself. “Nobody knows if you’re a doctor or a lawyer or unemployed or a student or even a U.S. senator in the water. There’s something really important about how the ocean humbles everybody.”

Since he got his feet wet as a week-old infant, it’s all Lenny has ever known. He caught his first wave at 4 years old. Surfed in Fiji at 8. Secured his first windsurfing sponsor at 9. Latched on with Red Bull at 13. His popularity now can be traced to the broad range of his skill set. He’s among the top big-wave riders in the world but also an elite wind surfer, kite surfer and foil-board rider. He wants to be at the forefront of anything that involves strong winds and big waves. When he’s in town, Lenny lives with his parents in Pāʻia, along the island’s northern shore. He has a garage there that stores about 80 surfboards, lined up against the walls like library books. He is constantly tweaking the designs and shapes, each wrinkle aimed at optimizing aerodynamics and moving his board one step closer to a high-performance Formula One car.

A wave that crashes on Maui’s northern shore typically originates more than 2,000 miles away in the north Pacific, near the Aleutian Islands. Storms there swirl, and the wind energy is transferred to the ocean surface. A swell ripples across the ocean, often traveling at 30 mph or more and arriving three to five days later at the Hawaiian Islands, where surfers bob in the water waiting for the perfect ride. As it nears the shore, the swell experiences friction along the sea floor, which John Marra, the Honolulu-based regional climate services director for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, likens to tripping. “They’re hitting the reef or a knob of rocks and just turning over,” he said. Scientists have been studying each of these delicate, interconnected parts to understand the impact climate change will have on waves. The warming ocean affects wind patterns. The wind drives swells. The reef trips the swell and creates the waves that make surfers pop up onto their boards.

The historical data is somewhat limited, and because the ocean is vast, complex and varying, there isn’t a consensus on the changes that are afoot. Nothing will be universal across the globe, and while some areas might see smaller waves, others — particularly those at high latitudes — could see more pronounced effects. A study published this year from University of California Santa Cruz researchers spelled it out simply, saying the warming ocean is “changing the global wave climate, making waves stronger.” The study noted that wave power — the transfer of energy from wind to sea — increased by an average of 0.47 percent per year from 1948 to 2008 and has risen by 2.3 percent annually since 1994. The researchers further estimated that global wave power could increase anywhere from 32 to 122 percent this century, which could produce wave heights that grow 16 to 48 percent. A 2014 study by Canadian scientists projected increases in wave heights for about 50 percent of the Earth’s oceans and found that the one-in-10-year extreme wave heights could double or triple in frequency this century.


“From a big-wave surfer’s perspective, we are entering sort of a golden age,” explained Mark Sponsler, the respected surf forecaster who founded the site stormsurf.com, “in the fact that the warmer the oceans are, the more evaporation there is. The more evaporation there is, the more energy gets sent into the atmosphere. The more energy in the atmosphere — specifically, in the jet stream — the stronger storms are, and storms are what govern the whole big-wave thing.” Australian researchers published a study last month that examined satellite and buoy data from 1985 through 2018 and found increases in wind speed and, to a lesser degree, wave heights across the globe. The changes were more pronounced in the Southern Hemisphere. In the Antarctic Ocean, for example, they found that extreme winds have increased by 8 percent over the past three decades and extreme waves by 5 percent — about a foot — though the study did not attempt to explore a causal relationship with climate change. "Climate modeling does point to some long-term changes in wave conditions, particularly in the [Antarctic] Ocean. However, more work is still required to be certain the changes we observe are caused by climate change,” said Ian Young, a researcher at the University of Melbourne who led the study.

At the same time, oceanographers warn that dying reefs will have an impact on how waves break, and rising sea levels could mean other swells roll right over reliable breaking points without ever “tripping,” leaving the swells flat and surfers without waves. Erosion also could spoil beaches, and shifting wind conditions not only could alter the way water moves toward shores but also could change sediment transport patterns, which could relocate or eliminate sandbars that trip waves. “The ocean feels a little sick right now” is how Hamilton, the surf legend, explains it. “We know there’s change. We know it’s affecting us,” he says. “We know it’ll create bigger surf than we’ve ever had, but it could also create longer periods of no surf, make waves come from weird directions that don’t hit reefs the same way. Overall, I don’t think it’s great — not great for mankind and not great for surfers either.”

By virtue of their chosen pursuit, the world’s best wave chasers are some of the most studied weather watchers. They use a variety of websites and smartphone apps that rely on algorithms, satellite readings and projection models. They’re peering into the future, studying the middle of the ocean to determine what waves will look like three or four days later when they reach the shore. Because they’re all reliant on the wind and the water, surfers notice the most subtle of changes. They know that El Nino years create better surf, that some popular breaks can feel dormant at times and other surf spots are just now coming to life.

The Portuguese city Nazare was just a fishing village a decade ago, but now big-wave surfers flock there in droves to ride the giants rising out of the Atlantic. Last year, Maya Gabeira rode a 68-foot wave there, the largest ever for a female surfer, and fellow Brazilian Rodrigo Koxa set the men’s record, surfing an 80-footer. That record stood for all of seven months before Tom Butler caught a wave at Nazare, estimated at 100 or so feet. It’s not yet verified by the sport’s powers that be, but every year, surfers are challenging the sport’s boundaries. When a storm’s brewing, most people go to great lengths to remain far from danger. The adrenaline-fueled big-wave enthusiasts race toward it. Big storms always have been both celebrated and feared. “There’s going to be parts of the world where people are getting absolutely destroyed — homes lost, people dying,” Lenny says, “and then on the other side, that same storm that just destroyed all of Japan is sending us perfect, big waves. And I love riding big waves.” The best big-wave riders are spontaneous and drop everything when conditions line up. Lenny recalls surfing on Maui’s southern shore in knee-high waves last May. The swell heading toward Fiji kept improving, and within three hours he had packed his bag, loaded up his boards and gotten on an airplane. He missed a connection in Los Angeles, but by the time he landed in Fiji the next day, 40-footers were still rolling in.


For decades, these fearless surfers chased water near the shoreline or were perhaps towed out a bit via Jet Ski. Lenny’s dream looks different. He wants to ride a wave in from the open ocean, getting dropped from a helicopter onto the edge of a storm. “There’s an undiscovered world out there in the middle of the ocean,” he says.

Lenny wants to meet a swell at its infancy, where wind first meets water, and ride it for hundreds of miles back to shore. He likely would use a foil board — a surfboard with a hydrofoil extending from the bottom. The hydrofoil acts similarly to an airplane wing, and the power from the swell creates movement and lift. The surfboard appears to float two or so feet above the water, and as long as the swell moves forward, the surfer flies along, using the wave as a mode of transportation across the sea. “Who knows, maybe you could ride in the eye of the storm,” Lenny says.

The future will be big and burly, and so Lenny spends every day on the water preparing. He often will go out three times a day, alternating between surf board, kite board, foil board, windsurf board and any other watercraft he can get his hands on. In April alone, he surfed in Australia, Hawaii and France, always looking for the taller wave and bigger thrill. Part of what makes Lenny extraordinary is that he aims to ride the giants like the much smaller waves that roll onto the beach not far from his front yard. “The goal of big waves traditionally was a very masculine thing. It was like David and Goliath — like man vs. nature,” he says. “It was to take off on a giant wave, ride it and make it and come in and be celebrated as a warrior. Now with modern advancements and technology, it’s more about performance vs. survival.”

One recent afternoon, Lenny slips between the railing at Ho’okipa Beach and past the sign that reads, “Warning, Strong Current,” walking down the steep rocks with his surfboard under one arm, coolly navigating his way toward Maui’s northern shore. “Hey, Kai-guy, did you see the sea turtles down there?” asks Doug Silva, his affable coach, trailing a few feet behind. Lenny waves a hand and keeps moving toward the water. “I see them every day,” he says.

The break is called Pavilions, and while the waves are only shoulder high, a solid training session awaits. And beyond that a business meeting, an afternoon back on the water, a trip abroad a few days later, then the World Surf League’s Big Wave Awards in California, where he would win the year’s Biggest Wave Award and be honored for the best men’s overall performance, and then another big-wave season starting in the fall. He briefly scans the horizon, getting ready to leap into the water and paddle out. “Dude, looks good out there,” he says.

PIC OF THE WEEK:


Voted 'Worst Wave Ever' by... pretty much everyone. Congrats! For more shots of Puerto you wish you never saw, check out Edwin Morales' work here. 

Keep Surfing,

Michael W. Glenn
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