any seasoned surfer would be able to tell you what happens. Fact is, if you have to ask, its probably outside your ability to handle it. ^barry knows his limits my cut off is 35.897654349. Ill open the polls shortly
For me, the bigger the swell, the more wind it can handle. If it's blowin' 20 and it's only 2', it's not much fun. If it's blowing 20 and it's overhead, it's all good. Here's my "offshore wind" scale for typical surf around here... 0-10: perfect; ideal 10-15: can be a little annoying at the upper end, with spray in the face and all, but def still good and hollow. 15-20: starting to have to fight it; becomes a factor on takoffs, but you just have to make the adjustments 20-25: pretty radical; surf has to be good to handle it 25-30: reaching my limit; more frustrating than fun for me. Doable only if it's near epic caliber surf. 30+: I don't surf in gale force winds.
The harder the offshores, the bigger your turns look! Anything above 30 has to be a truly epic swell to make it worth while. It's also hard to imagine the swell sticking around for long in those conditions.
6-8 feet 45 mph winds on saturday then 5-8 feet on sunday with winds around 20. safe to say I'm going sunday
This was a couple years ago in CR. Decent swell, maybe 3' @ 16,17 secs, translation: well OH on sets. All night the wind was wailing. Sending lawn furniture flying. At dawn the wind was probably a steady 30 knots & gusting to 45+ knot offshores. This is the type of velocity whereby the airborne sand stings the skin. We walked down to the beach with coffee in hand just to scope conditions out. Three 'surfers' walked by us, two guys & a gal. The fourth dude sat on the driftwood next to us. He was still drunk, and drinking screwdrivers from a Mason jar. Says they're from Alaska & have been up all night partying. His three buds paddle out. The gal looks shaky. Ask Mason jar how much she's surfed, he laughs & says it's her first time on a surfbort. They more get blown out than paddle out. In the process, they take a couple very big growlers on the head. Somehow they get out the back. And then ... they just keep on going & going, like in the direction of Australia. After a short while all we could see, way the heck out there, was little splishes & splashes where they were kicking up water with their ever-more-feeble attempts to paddle in. I say to Mason jar, hey, you might want to go get a boat. He says where would I get a boat & do you guys want to come with me? Uh, next town over, and no. He wanders off. By now there's 25-30 people on the beach, everyone watching the three people going further & further out. I'd say at least 1/2 mile out, maybe more. After about another 35 mins, here comes a panga bouncing around the point & towards the three drifting. Mason jar came through, they picked up the people & their borts & retreated back around the point. The downside to high winds & drinking all night from Mason jars, then going 'surfing.'
Lets see, if i get in the water saturday morning, hopefully ill be in Morocco mid day on Monday. See you there?
I learned from my foreman at work hes in his 60s and said hes been surfing since he was 5.he said that the more wind the better,the wind holds the face up and doesn't let it close out.like if its 6ft with 3mph west winds(offshore for me) its just going to keep closing out.but 20mph and itll hold wide open and be nice and hollow and drain down the bar. he did tell me of one story ,I think it was the blizzard of 69,idk I wasn't alive I'm not in my 50s lol,he said it took him like 1 1/2 hours to get in the wind was blowing so hard.id be scared shytless if I was in his booties
My buddy Smitty (RIP) told me accurately, if it's real big and kinda onshore but not howling, it helps you get in. It gives you a little push on the takeoff, and it's too big for the faces to get marred. And it adds power. Offshores in big surf you better paddle half way down. I went out yesterday it was just after a passing cold front. Early am tornadoes. SW wind blasting 40 plus. South swell maybe shoulder high on sets but barely breaking. I set my wife up at the greenmarket. It was a 4 concrete block day, to anchor the tent. Then went to my spot with a fish and a longboard, and like a dummy decided on the longboard. Winds subsided to 20 plus SW with some gusts, blowing it back on the sets, so I figured the longboard would get me in. Luckily my buddy was manning the tower, and gave me a ride on his buggy south to the jetty. I could not walk the LB against the wind. So I got one nice head high right and decided to drift back,and got a couple weird bouncy mushy drop and stops. Then I got greedy and drifted past the tower,and had to walk the plank back down the beach against the wind, getting sandblasted, and hugging the dune to avoid the worst of it. My buddy Doug, the only other moron out, was smart and took his hyptocrypto down, he could walk against the wind, but he got sandblasted too.