Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
June 15, 2026, 09:15:39 PM

Login with username, password and session length

Recent Topics

[Today at 05:06:57 PM]

[June 10, 2026, 01:04:22 PM]

[June 02, 2026, 05:33:05 PM]

[June 02, 2026, 04:19:31 PM]

[June 02, 2026, 04:02:16 PM]

[June 02, 2026, 06:57:24 AM]

[May 31, 2026, 05:00:58 PM]

[May 31, 2026, 01:45:27 PM]

[May 31, 2026, 06:06:26 AM]

[May 30, 2026, 10:43:42 AM]

[May 30, 2026, 09:15:33 AM]

[May 27, 2026, 05:21:24 AM]

[May 23, 2026, 03:57:46 PM]

[May 13, 2026, 04:42:56 PM]

[April 29, 2026, 12:53:25 PM]

Picture Of The Month



Soaker with a spring sturgeon

Topic: explination of New Wave information from NOAA - FWIW  (Read 6415 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

BugBoy

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Date Registered: Dec 2009
  • Posts: 140
I stumbled across this handout from NOAA explaining the new wave forecast terminology and reasoning. Thought that it would be good info for those who get their kayaks salty.

https://www.weather.gov/media/marine/Wave-Detail-Handout-WR-PAC.pdf


Captain Redbeard

  • Lauren
  • Global Moderator
  • Sturgeon
  • *****
  • Location: Portland, OR
  • Date Registered: May 2013
  • Posts: 3344
Thank you, I found that interesting.


Larry_MayII_HR

  • Rockfish
  • ****
  • Location: Corvallis, OR
  • Date Registered: Jun 2017
  • Posts: 162
This looks like a good change. It will give detail on each primary swell component - direction and height for each prevailing spectra - rather than one lumped term.

The main change that will take some getting used to is reporting the wave height - it is double the amplitude which was what was reported previously.

Thanks for posting.