Sunday

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by billyharry, Jul 11, 2011.

  1. billyharry

    billyharry Active Member

    44
    Mar 24, 2011
    Chop or not sunday sunday sunday
     
  2. daydaydawnpatrol

    daydaydawnpatrol Member

    24
    Jul 7, 2011
    so what the it cant be right
     

  3. Zippy

    Zippy Well-Known Member

    Nov 16, 2007
    I say watch the magic as it dissapears over the next 24 hours, lol.
     
  4. daydaydawnpatrol

    daydaydawnpatrol Member

    24
    Jul 7, 2011
  5. Mitchell

    Mitchell Well-Known Member

    Jan 5, 2009
    Ha! Its already gone. It took 6 hours for that swell to disappear...The noon NOAA WW3 model run had 8'@ 8 sec for sunday Delmarva, 6 p.m. run has 1.6 feet at 10 seconds.

    7 days out is voodoo.
     
    Last edited: Jul 11, 2011
  6. bobbyg

    bobbyg Well-Known Member

    72
    Jul 11, 2011
    headhigh chop sounds good to me right now
     
  7. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008

    Hah. 7 days out is called 'marketing your website.'
     
  8. Conner Stephens

    Conner Stephens New Member

    2
    Jul 12, 2011
    couple of qs....im trying my best to learn more about swells and such
    where is this swell coming from?
    how long will it last for
    and the forecast for nags head nc is 6-9 ft with 12 foot swell.. what is the difference in swell and wave height mean and also can someone tell me how this will look (ex.. surfable..rough)
     
  9. Swellinfo

    Swellinfo Administrator

    May 19, 2006
    - to get an idea of where the swell is coming from, look at the wave maps. zooming out is often helpful on the maps.
    - how long will it last for. Well, look at the forecast :)
    - 12 ft seas and 6-9 ft surf. Swellinfo predicts the wave face heights on the beach. The swell heights are open ocean swells that approach the coast. Wave face height is based on swell height, swell period, and swell direction (not to mention many other variables). But open ocean swell heights aren't the same as the breaking wave. So, 12ft @ 10 seconds, may be 6-9. But, 4ft @ 15 seconds may also be 6-9. In general, Swellinfo plays on the conservative side for bigger swells.

    Also, when you say the swell all of a sudden disapears, this isn't the case. Look at the wave maps, and you an see that the storm track just stays more south then the previous model cycles. So, where the Southeast is still big, but the Mid Atlantic isn't see the swell by Sunday. Since weather or surf forecasting relies heavily on the model guidance, you have to keep an eye on these updates, and that is why forecasts can changes so much. This is especially true for East Coast surf forecasts, because most of our swells come from storms right off the coast and any small change in the track forecast can make gigantic differences.
     
  10. GnarActually

    GnarActually Well-Known Member

    931
    Sep 30, 2007
  11. aka pumpmaster

    aka pumpmaster Well-Known Member

    Apr 30, 2008
    I'm guessing Magic Seaweed has it at 97 feet.
     
  12. delsurf4

    delsurf4 Well-Known Member

    96
    Aug 27, 2010
  13. *McLovin*

    *McLovin* Active Member

    39
    Nov 15, 2010
    Magic seaweed sucks, sunday disapeared just as fast as it came
     
  14. beachbreak

    beachbreak Well-Known Member

    Apr 7, 2008
    swellinfo has been correct the past three little swells in a row,here,including today,thank you
     
  15. ND081

    ND081 Well-Known Member

    900
    Aug 7, 2010
  16. gnurider7

    gnurider7 Well-Known Member

    85
    Sep 1, 2010
  17. cgrizzard

    cgrizzard Well-Known Member

    232
    Aug 13, 2010
    Whats the big deal, it was choppy smegma that showed up anyway. Probably would have been a tiny little window after it cleaned up that may have had rideable surf, but I doubt it would have been in the head high+ range like it was showing
     
  18. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    Arf ....arf.....the sound of the lap dog.....