March 11, 2018 Surf Forecast
Swell Summary
Outlook through Saturday March 17: The current north-northeast swell will continue to subside this weekend. A large and rough north swell will build late Sunday and peak Monday, with surf likely reaching the high surf warning level along north facing shores and topping the advisory level along east facing shores. The short-lived north swell will drop quickly on Tuesday, then fade on Wednesday, but during this time, strengthening trade winds will lead to rough, advisory level surf along east facing shores. Very small north swells and decreasing trade wind swell are expected during the second half of the week Surf heights are forecast heights of the face, or front, of waves. The surf forecast is based on the significant wave height, the average height of the one third largest waves, at the locations of the largest breakers. Some waves may be more than twice as high as the significant wave height. Expect to encounter rip currents in or near any surf zone.
North East
am pm
Surf: Stomach to shoulder high NNE medium period swell.
Conditions: Bumpy/semi bumpy in the morning with ENE winds 5-10mph. Semi glassy/semi bumpy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting to the NE.
North West
am pm
Surf: Ankle to knee high NNE medium period swell.
Conditions: Light sideshore texture in the morning with SSW winds 5-10mph. Glassy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting WSW less than 5mph.
West
am pm
Surf: Ankle to knee high SSW ground swell.
Conditions: Fairly clean in the morning with ESE winds 5-10mph. Semi glassy/semi bumpy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting WSW less than 5mph.
South East
am pm
Surf: Knee high ENE short period wind swell in the morning builds a bit for the afternoon.
Conditions: Light sideshore texture in the morning with NNE winds 10-15mph. This becomes Sideshore texture/chop for the afternoon.
**Click directly on the images below to make them larger. Charts include: Hawaii County projected winds, tides, swell direction & period and expected wave heights.**
Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov and SwellInfo.com