December Storm

This is the same storm that brought all the snow to the NE on the weekend of Dec 19/20.PC190004 After raining and blowing up to 55 out of the SE on Friday night you can see the weekend started out with pretty stormy surf on Saturday morning, unlike everywhere else on the east coast the weather was actually pretty nice for about an hour.

The surf was a mess but it was light wind and sunny skies. About mid morning it started blowing offshore and by 11 it was really starting to kick in out of the NW at about 25-35 with higher gusts. Sound tide got on the road in Avon again and they close the road at S-Curves also. A couple of people paddled out but it was too much wind and swell still.  We watched for a while and a few short shoulders were caught and that was about it.  The swell dropped a bit and it became more manageable but there were very few rides. Occasionally a good one was had. I watched someone try to paddle into one and their board got ripped out of their hands by the wind and was spinning in the air like a top.

A very peaky shifty swell from several directions.  Someone brought out some jet skis and they did some tow ins allowing people to get into the wave early enough to get behind the peak for a barrel which was pretty impressive to see.  Jeff and I paddled out between the jetties, the wind was slightly more manageable there and it wasn’t breaking out quite so far.  It wasn’t as big as behind the motels but we were able to get more rides.  We were amazed when getting in the water as it easily had to be close to 70 degrees. Unheard of for Dec. and with the Air temps around 40 with a 25-40 mph wind it made it bearable as the wind just cut right through you.  Swell came up pretty strong out of the north this am and the water temps plummeted overnight to the coldest of the season.

My guess would be about 52 degrees.  What a temperature change in about 12 hours. Jeff said as he was going out of Hatteras inlet this am the water temp was 45 degrees. If you got lucky today there was a good one to be had but there was a mega current out of the north and a lot of close outs.  There was a lot of denial paddle outs and most everyone lasted for just a few waves before getting tired of the battle. On Monday morning there was still a strong swell coming in out of the north and the water temps dropped even more hitting our first day in the upper 40′s.  It might have been 50 but it was a cold 50 with the air temps only reaching a high of 42 with a cold NW wind still blowing.  The tide was too high all morning making for strange conditions with the good wave if you got in the right place at the right time.

For about 45 minutes in the early afternoon at mid tide it was good , lining up nicely with a current you could almost keep up with. But then the tide dropped and the current increased rapidly and even though there was the occasional great wave it was really hard to find.  As I’m finishing this up on Tuesday the swell is all but gone.

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Ida follow up

155c63cAs the wind and waves subside from the remnants of Ida, a quick follow up on what’s happening.  All in all I think everyone around here has seen worse damage from other storms. It was more similar to a Nor’easter without the winds, and it definitely wasn’t tropical in nature either. As of today on Tuesday the 17th the road is open again to traffic but only if you have 4 wheel drive. You can see the track in the picture.  I’ve heard rumor that they may get one lane of pavement open today , if not today they will do it as soon as possible. They have put a ferry in place that runs from Stumpy Point to Rodanthe, crossing time 1 hr 45 min.  This will be used to bring down vehicles that cannot pass on the sand road.  For more info on this check out Island Free Press.  I love the aerial view of the point, It changes so much it is incredible. It almost looks like a little wave could wrap in but I know with that kind of shape it would be really hard to have a swell direction and wind that would combine to make any kind of a wave.  For more aerial view pics check out Don Bowers photo gallery on islandfreepress.org.   As far as the surf goes, yesterday finally provided a decent day of waves. As usual , there was a lot of current to paddle against and the vast majority of waves were to fast to make but if you got in the right place at the right time there was a good one to be had.  Here is the follow up the buried Porsche on Cottage Ave.

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Spring Break Update from Cape Hatteras

Alex Gray, Shorebreak, photos pullen

Alex Gray, Shorebreak. photo: pullen

We were supposed to be having springbreak the past few weeks but it’s been anything but, more like winter break.  I have always thought the first couple weeks of March are some of the coldest of the year. After the past snow days we had one real quick warm up but only for a couple of days.

March 6th and 7th were beautiful days, sunny, with a SW wind and a small easterly swell which having trouble finding a good sandbar to break on. The waves were pretty walled up and breaking all at once but the air was so nice everyone made it out in the 47 degree water for a surf anyway. A lot of the local boys that are away at college came home for the week, Alex Gray, Cash Barris and Morgan O’connell  were happy to find some surf.

The next few days were small but a north swell picked up quick on the afternoon of the 10th. The water temps dropped again and this week Jeff told me going out Hatteras inlet the water had dropped to 39.1 degrees. That is about as cold as you will ever see the south side. The cold water had pushed far south and there were dead turtles killed by the cold and out on the reefs Lionfish were floating on the surface all over.

Cash Barris, Over the Xmas Holiday (no gloves)

Cash Barris, over x-mas holiday (no gloves)

The Lionfish is not native to this area and couldn’t handle the cold. Everyone was up early on the 11th and found a nice head high swell out of the north that was getting crossed up with a southerly wind chop. A few folks went out but the wind was really killing the surf. Friday the 13th started the first northeaster I can remember in a while.  It never got strong enough to get much size but some windchop built up.

It’s been overcast and drizzly for 5 days now and the NE wind and swell is keeping the water temps in the mid 40′s . The wind died out last sunday and so did the swell but there were a few small glassy waist high waves to be had on the incoming tide.

- Scott