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Picture Of The Month



Swede P's first AOTY fish is a bruiser!

Topic: Ocean weather  (Read 59594 times)

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girlzluvfishin

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Here is a "newbie" question:


What am I looking for in the weather pattern or forecast that lets me know it may be a good day on the water?

Is it a low pressure system off the coast? swell predictions?

Living inland its hard to know these things and being fairly new to the PNW.... ???


Spot

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There are lots of good ocean forecasting tools available on the internet.

NOAA
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/data/Forecasts/FZUS56.KSEW.html

Magic Seaweed
http://magicseaweed.com/Washington-Surf-Forecast/14/

Wetsand
http://swellwatch.wetsand.com/#place=48.28319289548349_-124.343262_6_1418_height_none_Sat_-1

The trick is in understanding how different areas handle different swell and wind directions. 

In general though, you're looking for small waves, long periods, small seas and light winds.  And, always keep an eye on the forecast for 12hrs beyond when you plan on being out.  Sometimes swells or storms will arrive early.

If you can, find someone with experience to help you figure it out on the water.
 
Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  --Mark Twain

Sponsors and Supporters:
Team Daiwa        Next Adventure       Kokatat Immersion Gear

Tournament Results:
2008 AOTY 1st   2008 ORC 1st  2009 AOTY 1st  2009 NA Sturgeon Derby 1st  2012 Salmon Slayride 3rd  2013 ORC 3rd  2013 NA Sturgeon Derby 2nd  2016 NA Chinook Showdown 3rd  2020 BCS 2nd   2022 BCS 1st


HBH

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i use www.sailflow.com for wind forecasts


INSAYN

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Is it possible for someone with experience (like...Spot, yakintup, PolePole, Zee, BSteaves, Pelagic Paddler, etc...) to do a How-To on how and what to read using various scenarios? 

This is good info to learn and understand in real time, but with any How-To written for the interenet audience, it can be a starting point for newbies to start to get an understanding of what various data tells them (me). 
 

"If I was ever stranded on a beach with only hand lotion...You're the guy I'd want with me!"   Polyangler, 2/27/15


squidgirl

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i agree with Insayn on the How to .....or maybe spot or someone can give some on hand lessons somewhere one weekend.
"Life is short lets go fishing"


girlzluvfishin

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Yes because I read all the data but don't really know what it means!  So its like jiberish!  well better weather is coming and I really really want to get out and get some bottom fish for tacos!!!!  :P 


Pelagic

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  • Date Registered: Aug 2008
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Heres how I decide to “GO” or not..

 Keep in mind that these are just forecasts, they can be much better and they can be much worse.  With experience, and access to several sources, you will get better and better at finding those “doable” days. Keep in mind if you only fish when the forecast is  “absolutely perfect” you won’t fish much.  Sometimes you just need make an educated guess and “roll the dice”,  heading to the coast to decide if its “doable” when you get there.

 TONIGHT...W WIND 5 TO 10 KT...BACKING TO S AFTER MIDNIGHT.
 WIND WAVES 1 FOOT. W SWELL 8 FT AT 9 SECONDS.
 .WED...SE WIND 5 TO 15 KT...BECOMING S 20 TO 25 KT WITH GUSTS TO
 30 KT IN THE AFTERNOON. WIND WAVES 2 FT...BUILDING TO 5 FT IN THE
 AFTERNOON. NW SWELL 5 FT AT 9 SECONDS. CHANCE OF RAIN.
 .WED NIGHT...S WIND 25 TO 30 KT...BECOMING SW 20 KT AFTER
 MIDNIGHT. W SWELL 11 FT AT 8 SECONDS. RAIN.
 .THU...SW WIND 15 TO 20 KT...BECOMING W 10 TO 15 KT IN THE
 AFTERNOON. WIND WAVES 4 FT...SUBSIDING TO 2 FT IN THE
 AFTERNOON. W SWELL 10 FT. SHOWERS LIKELY.
 .THU NIGHT...NW WIND 5 TO 10 KT. WIND WAVES 1 FOOT. W SWELL
 7 FT. SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS IN THE EVENING.
 .FRI...N WIND 5 TO 10 KT. WIND WAVES 1 FOOT. W SWELL 6 FT.
 .FRI NIGHT...NW WIND 10 TO 15 KT...VEERING TO N AFTER MIDNIGHT.
 WIND WAVES 2 FT. W SWELL 5 FT.
 .SAT...N WIND 10 TO 15 KT WITH GUSTS TO 20 KT. WIND WAVES 2 FT.
 W SWELL 5 FT.
 .SUN...NW WIND 10 TO 15 KT. WIND WAVES 2 FT. W SWELL 5 FT. 

When you look at a NOAA forecast you have several things to use to make your decision.

 Wind/Windwaves: wind equals “wind waves” or “chop” which are day spoilers for us yakers. I look at the previous days wind and the next few days wind forecast to get a general trend of the wind.  For me any forecast that indicates winds in the 15-20 KT range or more is a no go for all but the nearest/shortest trips.  Forecasts like:

WED...SE WIND 5 TO 15 KT...BECOMING S 20 TO 25 KT WITH GUSTS TO
 30 KT IN THE AFTERNOON. WIND WAVES 2 FT...BUILDING TO 5 FT

should be a red flag.  The shorthand of this forecast is; slight breeze in the AM when you launch, turning to fairly windy by late morning, to damn windy by early afternoon.  In general, I have found that on most days (oregon coast summer) if NOAA says 5-10kt you are good till early afternoon with little to no wind and if it indicates 10-15kt you are usually good till about 11 or so am before it starts to blow.  If its blowing more than a light breeze when you launch it most likely won’t get any better.

Another factor to consider is wind direction. In the summer the swell pattern is predominately out of the North and most often the wind follows the direction of the swells, which is fine.  A situation to keep an eye on is when the swell and the wind are coming from opposite directions.  When a south wind hits north swells it tends to stand the waves up intensifying the sea state. In short be wary of the south wind..

This forecast screams ugly conditions...

AFTERNOON. NW SWELL 5 FT AT 9 SECONDS. CHANCE OF RAIN.
 .WED NIGHT...S WIND 25 TO 30 KT...BECOMING SW 20 KT AFTER
 MIDNIGHT. W SWELL 11 FT AT 8 SECONDS. RAIN.


Swell and Period:

Obviously we are all looking for small swells, however, just as important as swell size is the period length/wavelength. Swell size is the “wave height”  from trough to crest. The wavelength is the distance between the crests, whereas the waves period measures the size of the wave in time. A wave period can be measured by picking a stationary point and counting the seconds it takes for two consecutive crests or troughs to pass.

The following website is the best I have seen to see to show the correlation of how these factors (wave height/wavelength/period) affect the sea state.

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/volvooceanrace/interactives/waves/index.html

General Rules:
The smaller the swell the better (duh!)

The larger or longer (denoted in time in seconds) the period/wavelength the better. This stretches the waves crests father apart and flattens out the sea state.

A good rule of thumb is the period should be at least twice the swell height.  So if the forecast reads 4 ft swells at 10 seconds (wave crests far apart) with 1-2ft wind waves you would be looking at a relatively decent forecast (depending on your experience). But if the forecast was 4ft swell at 4 seconds (wave crests close together) you probably would want to stay on the beach no matter who you were.

Beware small (one day) windows of good conditions, sandwiched between bad conditions.  These generally occur between changes in weather patterns and are often misleading or very short lived, often conditions can change very quickly as a front moves in etc.

The best teacher is experience.  Go with others who have more than you, ask questions, “why is today a good surf day?”.  Study and create a library of “bookmarked” sources to draw info from, the more the better. Check out the forecasts for yourself in person, if you are far from the coast the Pacific City surf cam can be a great tool for this.  Look at the forecasts, then check the cam. Its not perfect, but it can give you an idea of what’s “good” and what’s “bad “.  Soon you will have an idea of what specific conditions look like in real time. In the future, when you see those conditions/pattern on the forecast, you know its time to take a day off and catch some fish.

« Last Edit: November 24, 2009, 06:45:58 PM by Zee »


rawkfish

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 :hello2: Great info!

Here's a good site for winds:
http://www.iwindsurf.com/windandwhere.iws?regionID=122

There's a great 7 day outlook on that site and is my main source for wind forecasts. Here's P.C. forecast as an example:
http://www.iwindsurf.com/windandwhere.iws?regionID=122&siteID=266&Isection=Forecast+Graphs
                
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summit_ridge

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I think PP's rough tutorial is one of the best I've seen yet.  Can it be posted in the 'how-to' section of this site for future reference?  Great read none-the-less!

-SR
"For the best adventure you gotta pay the currency of toil.."


Spot

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I think PP's rough tutorial is one of the best I've seen yet.  Can it be posted in the 'how-to' section of this site for future reference?  Great read none-the-less!

-SR

I'd agree!  This piece is the essential Ocean Kayak Fishing 101.

Well done Pelagic!

OK, who's going to submit Ocean Kayak Fishing 201?  ;D
Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  --Mark Twain

Sponsors and Supporters:
Team Daiwa        Next Adventure       Kokatat Immersion Gear

Tournament Results:
2008 AOTY 1st   2008 ORC 1st  2009 AOTY 1st  2009 NA Sturgeon Derby 1st  2012 Salmon Slayride 3rd  2013 ORC 3rd  2013 NA Sturgeon Derby 2nd  2016 NA Chinook Showdown 3rd  2020 BCS 2nd   2022 BCS 1st


Pelagic

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please consider this a "working document" feel free to suggest additions or clarifications that could help make this information more accessable and understandable to those new to the salt.  For me the more I understand about the ocean/waves/tides/etc. the more comfortable I feel when I am out there


jself

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I use all the above resources for figuring the "good" days...mostly for kayak surfing rather than fishing. also- there are web cams at PC etc., that give you a good idea of the reality of the forecast...it beats driving to the coast to see how it really looks!

You can usually find some protected area somewhere depending on which direction wind and swell are coming. I was at Indian beach last week with no surf while my friends were at Oceanside at the same moment with 3-6ft surf.


girlzluvfishin

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I totally feel like I should pay for that......I get it!!!


Spot

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You can usually find some protected area somewhere depending on which direction wind and swell are coming. I was at Indian beach last week with no surf while my friends were at Oceanside at the same moment with 3-6ft surf.

Ummm, Dude, you should have been able to predict that by looking at the predominant swell direction....  I'm just sayin....
Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.  --Mark Twain

Sponsors and Supporters:
Team Daiwa        Next Adventure       Kokatat Immersion Gear

Tournament Results:
2008 AOTY 1st   2008 ORC 1st  2009 AOTY 1st  2009 NA Sturgeon Derby 1st  2012 Salmon Slayride 3rd  2013 ORC 3rd  2013 NA Sturgeon Derby 2nd  2016 NA Chinook Showdown 3rd  2020 BCS 2nd   2022 BCS 1st


steelheadr

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Where is Indian Beach???
"Fast enough to get there...but slow enough to see. Not known for predictability"  Thanks to Jimmy Buffet for describing my life...again



 

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