Dayum Barry Fumunda Cudda get your perv on Barry aren't you married..better head on over to Ashley Madison My homeboy tells me they have high class call girls on there..you know they specialize in the cure for your retirement boredom which you seek Good Luck Barry Fumunda Cudda from Puerto Hampshire
Your boy better come clean to his wife of come up with a good excuse... Ashley Madison was hacked and they are going to leak names and videos
http://www.weather.com/storms/hurri...opment-atlantic-southeast-gulf-coast-july2015 models still favor..slightly,,wait and see
Perspective on water temps is such a funny thing...and I ain't no mach burro...but fock, I'd be stocked for 50-55 year round. It'll be interesting to see those leaks.
wow congrats it gets cold as **** where you surf, you chose to live there lol. And yeah we get waves all fall, winter, and spring, and I'm in trunks most of that time laughing at you guys who can't even do a bottom turn cuz your rubbers so thick. Forget that.
Fluida, I got to give these guy's props, surfing in 35 deg. water aint no joke, down right dangerous, as for me, maybe in my younger days, not now, no way. Cepriano, water gets mid to low 60's if its a cold winter and the wind is mid 30's on up to 70's where I'm at, and honestly when your used to tropical water that's down right cold for me...well enough for a 3/2 anyway.
Water can dip below 60 on the coldest days in parts of N FL I believe, usually mid to low 60's though during peak of winter. Still nothing like up North but when air is in the 30's - 40's (sometimes in the teens and 20's) and throw in some wind and yeah, it's pretty cold, don't care who you are. But having the right gear makes it no big deal, these days there is gear for all conditions, makes it possible to surf in places like Alaska. I have respect for you dudes in the North but I would be right there with you if that's where I lived.
Looks like if it develops its another system like Christobal - good location but all of the fetch pointed out to sea.
I wish I worked at the Hurricane prediction center. It must be the best job. You come in, have a few coffees, get together with your other meteorologists, draw straws for who gets to throw first, grab a dart, and throw it at the "board of chance." "Ok, guys, most of the darts landed near 20%, so that's what we're going with. Jim, you are the rookie so you have to write up the mumbo-jumbo report with lots of technical jargon about wind sheer and dominant period and metric pressure. The rest of us, lets collect our checks and head out for 18 holes. Good job today, everyone."