The Art of Reading Ocean Swells

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Understanding wave formation separates good surfers from great ones. A wave is not just water — it is energy that has traveled hundreds of miles across the open ocean, shaped by storms, underwater topography, and the angle of the seafloor as it approaches shore.

Groundswells, generated by powerful distant storms, produce the long-period waves that California surfers dream about. Wind swells, created locally, tend to be choppier and less consistent. Learning to distinguish between them — using buoy data, wind charts, and simple observation — is the foundation of session planning.

The key metrics to track are wave height, period (the time between waves), and direction. A 6-foot swell at 18 seconds of period will be dramatically more powerful and better-shaped than 6 feet at 8 seconds. Pair that with a favorable tide and an offshore wind, and you have the recipe for a session worth waking up early for.

Comments

3 responses to “The Art of Reading Ocean Swells”

  1. Kai Nakamura Avatar
    Kai Nakamura

    This guide is exactly what I needed before my trip to Trestles next month. Bookmarked.

  2. Dan Mercer Avatar
    Dan Mercer

    Reading swells is honestly an art form. This breakdown is the clearest explanation I have found.

  3. Brett Callahan Avatar
    Brett Callahan

    Seal Beach is so underrated for beginners. Friendly locals and forgiving waves.

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