Thursday, July 1, 2010

Southern California Long-range Surf Forecast – 7/01/2010

Forecast Overview
- Friday the playful mix of overlapping S-SW swells and background windswell will continue. Expect some eddy wind and texture throughout the day.
- Saturday will start off with the smaller mix of S-SW swell and NW windswell. A new S swell will start showing some long-period energy through midmorning and will continue to increase throughout the day.
- The new S swell peaks on Sunday and Monday setting up some overhead+ surf for the better S facing spots. Winds look decent for both days but the holiday beach crowds may make us crazy-insane.
- Look for solid waves to hold into early Tuesday…and look for rideable but fading swell as we move through the rest of next week.

Short Range (next 4 days)

Friday – (grinding along)
The surf continues to hold on Friday as we see a couple more S and SW pulses moving into the background. These will mix with our existing energy keeping the blend of S-SW swell (180-215) showing for most exposed areas. NW windswell continues to hold onto some ok size at the same time. Look for the average S-SW facing spots to see waist-chest high surf. Standout S-SW facing spots, mostly through Orange County again, will have some chest-shoulder high surf with some head high sets on the low tide, particularly at the well exposed combo breaks that can mix in some of the windswell. Winds/Weather: A weak eddy will continue to hold over the area on Friday…setting up some light/onshore texture for most areas (W winds for the SB/Ventura areas, variable winds for LA, and light S-SW winds for OC/SD). Look for W winds around 10-15 knots to build through midafternoon.



Saturday - (new S swell starts to arrive, building fast in the afternoon)
Saturday will start with similar sizes to Friday…still plenty of background S-SW energy along with some local WNW-NW windswell. Expect waist-chest high waves at the average spots with some shoulder high+ sets at the standouts. At the same time…a new S swell (175-190) will start to show long-period energy in the background. This new S swell will fill in fast by the afternoon and I expect there to be some overhead sets hitting the top S facing spots by the end of the day. Winds/Weather: The eddy will still show through the morning but it will start to lighten up…so overall cleaner conditions will be on tap for most areas. Onshore winds return through the afternoon.



Sunday the 4th of July (Large S swell peaks and chaos ensues)
A large S-swell (175-190) will start to peak on Sunday…showing strong throughout the day, but largest through the afternoon. Most S facing spots will see consistent chest-head high surf with some overhead sets mixing in. The standout S facing spots, again mostly in Orange County (but at a few other select breaks as well ), will see consistent shoulder-overhead surf with sets going 2-3’ overhead. We can expect even bigger sets at the best-of-the-best spots that can focus this swell. Of course this is the holiday so expect some crazy crowds at the beach, plenty of early blackball, and a general state of chaos. Really I am just hoping that no one gets hurt or drowned (not because the swell is out of control…mostly just because of the nature of having bigger waves on a holiday). Winds/Weather: Look for light and variable winds in the morning with some light offshore flow in a few spots. Winds come onshore around midday and build out of the WNW at 10-15+ knots for the afternoon.



Monday (Large S swell continues to peak and conditions stay clean)
The large S-swell (175-190) will hold strong into Monday, mixing with some background NW windswell. Most S facing spots will see steady chest-head high surf with some overhead sets mixing in. The standout S facing spots, again mostly in Orange County, will see shoulder-overhead surf with sets going 2-3’ overhead. We can expect even bigger sets at those focal breaks that can channel this swell. We will be past the worst part of the holiday, but I bet a lot of people are going to have Monday off too…so expect some still heavy crowds at the better shaped spots. Winds/Weather: Look for light and variable winds in the morning with some light offshore flow in a few spots. Winds come onshore around midday and build out of the WNW at 10-15+ knots for the afternoon.



North Pacific
High-pressure continues to make the North Pacific storm track its b*t@h...not that I would expect much else during the summer.



There is still the little gap of winds running down the California Coast that are the source of our windswell. These winds will be able to spit out a bit of NW windswell (even slightly WNW-NW at times) on and off throughout the weekend and into early next week. Sizewise look for a small increase of waist high+ windswell as we head into the weekend…and then another similar shot around Wednesday of next week.



South Pacific
On Friday and into early Saturday we are going to continue to see an overlapping mix of S and SW swells (180-220)…nothing particularly big…but still rideable at the top spots.



Our new S swell (175-190) will start to arrive, with 20-22 second long-period energy, in Socal on Saturday July 3rd filling in throughout the day. Eventually the swell peaks Sunday-Monday July 4-5th. This storm still has a bit of trailing fetch in place that continued to generate surf after the first, more intense, portion of the storm had moved on…so after the first part of the swell peaks we can expect decent sized waves to stick around for at least a few days.

You probably read this in the short-range…but I am expecting some pretty solid surf from this storm. Average exposed S-facing spots will be in the shoulder-head high range with some inconsistent head high+ sets mixing in as the swell peaks. The standout S facing breaks will be a solid head high/overhead+ on average with sets going 2-3’ overhead (and bigger at the best breaks) on the better parts of the tide swing. Look for this surf to start winding down on Tuesday (July 6) but holding rideable surf at least through Thursday (july 8).



Further out there isn’t a ton of organization at this point on the long-range charts but I am seeing more storm activity, both over and under New Zealand (which is about how this last storm spun up)…so it will be worth watching this area over the next few days.

Tropics
The tropics are pretty quiet again…nothing expected to brew up over the next couple of days. Long-range charts are showing some increasing thunderstorm activity next week, which will at least give us a chance that something may develop.



the Next Long-range forecast will be posted on Monday, July 5th, 2010.

Adam Wright
Surf Forecaster
http://www.socalsurf.com/

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