Florida Vs. Jersey

Discussion in 'All Discussions' started by zach619, May 19, 2013.

  1. travy

    travy Well-Known Member

    268
    Jul 3, 2010
  2. Paddington Jetty Bear

    Paddington Jetty Bear Well-Known Member

    Apr 23, 2013
    All of this from a thread started by an ex-pat Southern Californian. Zachariah must be sitting back in South Carolina and having a laugh. That sadistic man..........
     

  3. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Pretty sure I already stated more than once that I wouldn't trade this place for the world (minus Hawaii), your reading comprehension is off the charts!
     
  4. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    He knew what he was doing when he started this thread LMAO, I’m just a willing participant, haven't gotten into a good interweb squabble in a while, it's quite invigorating if you ask me.
     
  5. brewengineer

    brewengineer Well-Known Member

    Jun 22, 2011
    He is one evil bastard. The kind of guy that feeds the seagulls near a large crowd of people, then walks away smiling.
     
  6. nynj

    nynj Well-Known Member

    Jul 27, 2012
    It's Obama's fault that Florida sucks. And Jersey sucks too.. Those barrel shots are a conspiracy and don't really exist.
     
  7. Peajay4060

    Peajay4060 Well-Known Member

    Nov 14, 2011
    Really? Tampa has it as good as NYC? What parts of NYC were you in? Where did you stay? Where did you eat? What kind of time did you put into NYC before you made that call?
     
  8. brewengineer

    brewengineer Well-Known Member

    Jun 22, 2011
    Worked in NY, lived in Chicago. Give me Chitown any day. You couldn't pay me enough to live in either place (again).
     
  9. nynj

    nynj Well-Known Member

    Jul 27, 2012
    I know you get heated and like to argue... But calling us who live in NY fools? Really?
    I've been to a lot of places and Long Island (in my opinion) is one of the best... I'm not in to the city so much, but LI is a great place to live.
    Except fpor the prices., They are crazy... And THATS why most move to Florida to retire. The money they made in NY is worth 5x in FL. That and the warm winters

     
  10. RobG

    RobG Well-Known Member

    868
    Jun 17, 2010
    I used to work in FL and damn do I miss that authentic Cuban food...
     
  11. gromsurfer123

    gromsurfer123 Well-Known Member

    100
    Sep 18, 2008
    California, jersey, florida all off it

    Funny you mention it. I am from Long Branch NJ and have surfed a lot of east coast breaks including Florida (both north and south) as well as the OBX (just cape hatteras, rodanthe and frisco pier), wrightsville and carolina beach NC, and south carolina (the washout and all over myrtle beach). Now, I live in California because I had a chance and just went for it.

    I have to start by saying the worst surf is in south carolina. Never anything worth mentioning or photographing (and definitely not worth living there)...
    Brings me to the next point, California beats the east coast overall just by having the most rideable days year round (rideable i define as head high or bigger) the longest you wait inbetween swells is no more than a week. but NJ on the december 21rst doomsday swell as it was nicknamed was the best barrels I have had all year, by a loooong shot. Mind you, after I surfed the doomsday swell (I was lucky to be home from college on winter break) I returned to california and road tripped all the way up north to santa cruz to do some bigger wave surfing.

    Florida is fun, but I enjoy cold water, so I vote NJ. I did have a slight laugh reading this forum, but not in a bad way, I just remember living in the east and debating who gets the best waves. It´s whoever receives the brunt of the storm. Every storm has a new track, giving new swell to waves in different regions all over the east. There is a wealth of great point breaks up in the northeast region between nova scotia (for the avid travelers with time and money) and plenty more down ending at Montauk.
     
  12. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Great Spanish food of all types, seafood is excellent too, what part of Florida was is?
     
  13. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    I say better, not into super congested big cities with overpriced everything
     
  14. brewengineer

    brewengineer Well-Known Member

    Jun 22, 2011
    I don't live in this area for the surf, and surfing would never be the only reason I live in any place. Charleston living is about as good as it gets for me. I will say that Myrtle Beach sucks compared to Charleston. There are much better and more consistent places in the charleston area, but even IOP and Folly popular spots aren't that bad. We don't have the NE or FL consistency, but when it is good we have nice clean barrels. I still wouldn't live anywhere else on the east coast.
     
  15. Peajay4060

    Peajay4060 Well-Known Member

    Nov 14, 2011
    You say better after spending time in both places right? Not like the jersey Florida thing where you say Florida is better but have never surfed in jersey and haven't surfed too many Florida spots either?
     
  16. waterbaby

    waterbaby Well-Known Member

    Oct 1, 2012
    gotta agree, charleston is fantastic - the weather, the architecture, the foliage, food, etc is all there. I lived there for a couple of years (right before moving to south FL) and thought the surf at folly was really good, too...granted, I was going to school, so I didn't have time to surf a lot, but did catch the major swells and it was always glassy, perfect peaking barrels.

    in comparison, california is a friggin desert with no culture (unless you consider the overwhelming mexican presence) and the water is full suit cold, year-round. The compromise is you can live way inland and be pretty sure, when you do make it to the beach, there will be surfable waves at some point in the day...it'll probably be slightly onshore/crumbly, but most likely waist high or better and fun
     
  17. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    I don't have to go some place to know that I want nothing to do with it. Big cities like that don't do much for me, i prefer smaller laid back towns, that's just my preference, so yes I can say that it is better here... FOR ME. You might prefer the big city, that's your thing. I've surfed plenty of spots in FL, but it's near impossible to get to them all, especially when you know where the best waves are and tend to go to those spots. Why would I go to a lesser wave just for the sake of saying i've been there? Florida has more coastline that California and is only 2nd to Alaska, so i'm sure you could understand why it may be hard to visit all the spots.
     
  18. Mr.Belmar

    Mr.Belmar Well-Known Member

    Aug 19, 2010
    Wow I cant believe i wasted time just reading through this post... again.... and once again not pictures or vid to prove whos spot is better- just a bunch of ppl crying... get over it, we are on the east coast- its the atlantic... its usually a lake anyways...
     
  19. Uncle Irish

    Uncle Irish Well-Known Member

    233
    Aug 16, 2011
    Lived in NJ my whole life, and have been visiting family in Fla, at least a couple of trips a year, for the last twenty. When in Florida, I usually surf in the Sebastian's area. Honestly, both have their positives and some negatives, and I don't care which is better. If I'm in Florida and catch a swell, I'm psyched. When I'm home in NJ and catch a swell I'm psyched. Have to agree about Charleston though, I have never surfed there, but that is a great place. Used to go there a lot in the early nineties, loved it.
     
  20. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    True that, I can understand being psyced about both for sure. Any day in / on the ocean is a good day IMO, regarless of geographical location.