Nj Reefbreaks

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by Haig Bakhtiarian, Dec 13, 2011.

  1. njsurfer42

    njsurfer42 Well-Known Member

    Nov 9, 2009
    i'm finding this thread fascinating. it started out w/ low potential (are there reefs in nj? where? i want to crowd your line ups even more...) & has turned into an interesting discussion of geology & geography...
     
  2. cresto4

    cresto4 Well-Known Member

    460
    Aug 19, 2010
    I agree. Seemed ridiculous at first glance but could be the most interesting and informative regional thread ever.
     

  3. Epic

    Epic Well-Known Member

    198
    Jan 25, 2011
    mm pineapple is good :)
     
  4. Etl1692

    Etl1692 Well-Known Member

    166
    Jun 12, 2011
    With regards to the Shrewsbury Rocks, I see it break from time to time when it's BIG! Never heard of "an ancient shoreline" or anything like that. But is it surf-able, has anyone tried? The only way I can see it is miles and miles from the shore and its so hard to tell what really goes on out there? Thanks guys some great info on reefs, great discussion!

    Cheers!
     
  5. Erock

    Erock Well-Known Member

    Aug 6, 2011
    Actually about 1/4 - 1/2 mile off Kure Beach (in between Carolina Beach and Ft. Fisher) there is a tall rock reef called Sheepshead Rock that is made of granite. It's really only good for fishing and spear fishing, but it is a very high relief structure that jumps from 25' in depth to 8' and is dome-shaped. The only problem is it's not really wide enough to cause a decent wave to break. On hurricane swells 8'+ it will create a short peak but not worth going out to.

    However on a high vis day in the summer you can skin dive it and spear Spanish Mackerel, Flounder, Black Seabass, Red Drum (illegal to spear in NC but cool to look at), Black Drum, etc. There are also copious sharks and barracuda that hang around it.
     
  6. Big Wet Monster

    Big Wet Monster Well-Known Member

    938
    Feb 4, 2010
    i like to take waves over the jetties and groins and watch the water suck up as I escape broken backs and boards. only in NJ. ive surfed OCNJ at times where it was only firing right on top of the rocks and you better not fall.
     
  7. Aguaholic

    Aguaholic Well-Known Member

    Oct 26, 2007
    I hate to agree with you....But, you couldn't be more on the money with this thread. Very interesting/informative.
     
  8. 34thStreetSurfing

    34thStreetSurfing Well-Known Member

    474
    Aug 13, 2009
    Thats where I was going
     
  9. Mitchell

    Mitchell Well-Known Member

    Jan 5, 2009
    I recently surfed one of these clam/oyster/mussel shoals on a mid-atlantic sandy barrier island that is eroding very rapidly. the bay behind the island is loaded with all sorts of shellfish beds, and the narrow barrier island is migrating so quickly that the beach has rolled right over these shellfish beds so the old shellfish beds of (idk 20-30 years ago - this entire island is only about 200 yards wide and is MOVING) are 50-100 yards or more out in the ocean. The ocean bottom well out into the surf zone and beyond is comprised of beat up shellfish beds with points, ravines and gullies that made for some pretty good breaks.
     
    Last edited: Dec 15, 2011
  10. LBCrew

    LBCrew Well-Known Member

    Aug 12, 2009
    One of the main reasons I am a strong advocate for manmade hard structure reefs along the New Jersey coastline, aside from beach protection. Imagine that... on days where there's a swell, the surfing potential. When it's flat, the spear fishing potential... just swim out with your sling, a flag, and a bag, and take home a fish or two dinner. That's something that "sand bag" structures won't give you.
     
  11. Erock

    Erock Well-Known Member

    Aug 6, 2011
    Ditto. It wouldn't be all that hard or too astronomically expensive since almost all of the East Coast states have large amounts of cheap granite (it's not the type that gets turned into counter tops) and limestone that can be cut into flat slabs that would make a great surfing reef with plenty of fishing and other recreational benefits. Problem is getting a municipality to pony up the dough to get it done.
     
  12. WorldwideStoke

    WorldwideStoke Member

    9
    Dec 11, 2011
    I did some research, apparently cold-water reefs grow deeper (50meters to 500meters) while warm reef grows from 0-100meters. This whole thread was interesting and I really thought that there was no such thing as cold water coral. Thanks 'yall...
    But I've still never seen it in Jersey
     
  13. WorldwideStoke

    WorldwideStoke Member

    9
    Dec 11, 2011
    Agreed - this thread has turned out to be a really interesting talk about our region. Props to all
     
  14. WorldwideStoke

    WorldwideStoke Member

    9
    Dec 11, 2011
    I've been surfing for years, and have never heard that joke. Thumbs up.
     
  15. soul_glide

    soul_glide Member

    5
    Oct 9, 2011
    If rocks on the bottom where the water sucks up from the ledge and the wave jacks up and peels down the line constitutes a reef, I surfed alone over one this morning somewhere in central NJ!