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MOSTLY CLOUDY
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4:45 PM HST
East @
14
- 19
kts
78°F
79°-82°F
06:37 AM/05:52 PM
MKFWH1
(6 miles)
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| | 11/07 | 07:49 am | 2.30 ft | HIGH | | | 11/07 | 03:53 pm | 0.28 ft | LOW | | | 11/07 | 08:41 pm | 0.63 ft | HIGH | | | 11/08 | 12:50 am | 0.40 ft | LOW | | More Tide Info |
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| PROJECTED WIND in kts (11/7) | | (11/8) | 11AM | 2PM | 5PM | 8PM | 11PM | | 2AM | 5AM | 8AM | 11AM | 2PM | 5PM | 8PM | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Aloha, this is Kekoa with the report for Saturday morning at 6:00 AM.
3-4 ft. +
waist to shoulder high with occasional 5 ft. and fair conditions.
AM REGIONAL OVERVIEW:Small surf on the north shore this morning with only residual short period NNE swell hanging in to provide some rideable waves. Most spots have surf in the waist to chest high range with some shoulder high high sets at locations that magnify the NNE direction. Moderate tradewinds are blowing to provide normal side to offshore conditions for country shorelines.
PM REGIONAL OVERVIEW:Extreme NNE swell has filled in but showing more only at spots that favor that direction while other locations are missing this swell. Most spots are very small while places that magnify the NNE direction are showing solid waves in the chest to head high range with overhead high sets. Typical tradewind conditions with side/offshore winds and passing clouds with moments of sunshine!
Mostly sunny in the morning then becoming partly sunny. Isolated showers. Highs 81 to 86. East winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
New NNW has not arrived yet this morning and only residual short-period/broken NNE swell providing rideable surf. Most spots have waves in the waist to chest high range with a few shoulder high sets mainly at locations that favor the NNE direction. Buoy 1 is reading 6 feet @ 8 seconds...so no sign of the new NNW yet but should fill in later today. Moderate tradewinds continue to blow so expect normal side to offshore conditions. Are there more early season swells on the horizon? Check the extended forecast for the details.
SUNDAY: Mainly NNW swell with small ENE tradeswell wrap for mixed-up waist-chest occasional shoulder high waves at select reefs. Semi-clean with breezy Trades.
Wind: East Trades around 10-15kts+.
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MOKAPU POINT as of 3:12 PM HST on 11/07
7ft @ 8sec from NE 3ft @ 14sec from North 2ft @ 11sec from North
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WAIMEA BAY as of 3:24 PM HST on 11/07
5ft @ 8sec from NE 4ft @ 11sec from North
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NW. HAWAII as of 2:00 PM HST on 11/07
7ft @ 8sec from East 3ft @ 12sec from North 2ft @ 14sec from NE E@12kts A:77°F W:79°F
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CHANGE BUOY LOCATION
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CHANGE BUOY LOCATION
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CHANGE BUOY LOCATION
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For higher resolution buoy data, go to the LOLA Buoys tab in the forecast section.
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Letter of the Week: Each year thousands of ‘tourists’ come out to the North Shore in November and December, filling the house rentals and spending our money in the local shops. This will be my 6th year. Very simply, thanks for making us all feel so very welcome. You live in such a fabulous part of the world and, on behalf of all of us, I would like to thank you for letting us share your ‘back garden’ with us. David Longman, Huntingdon, England. For the first time ever, the 2009 Vans Triple Crown of Surfing events will be available live on television across Hawaii . In cooperation with the VTCS, Oceanic Time Warner Cable will broadcast all three events in their entirety, live on digital ch.250. All the features of the live webcast (narration, scores, interviews, replays, video clips, and more) will be available on the channel. If you don’t already have one, you’ll need a digital cable box to view the broadcasts, so hurry on down to your nearest Oceanic location and pick one up. First up is the Reef Hawaiian Pro on 11/12. It’s going to be sick! The floating lane markers at Ala Moana Beach Park will be going into the lagoon within a few weeks as DLNR officials try to keep stand up paddlers and recreational swimmers separated. There’s been much contention between the groups as several collisions and near misses have further frayed tempers. Swimmers were lobbying for a total ban on SUP’s in that area, but this seems to be the happy medium … at least for now. Is this an El Nino perk? Town regulars are commenting on the number of offseason fall and now winter SSW swells that have kept the south shore in motion. The 10/17 Southie had Big Bowl grinding and spitting for appreciative tube urchins, and another glassy overheader on 11/6 again had everyone scrambling for their boards! Island girl and Hollywood actress Tia Carrere is slated to portray Makaha legend Rell Sunn in an upcoming full length feature film about the late matriarch of Hawaiian surfing. The script for “Wave Dancer” was researched and written by Carrere and her husband, and will begin filming in spring 2010. Sunn passed away in 1998 after a 14 year battle with cancer. Some of the film's proceeds will go to the Rell Sunn Education Fund. Three great surf films will be included in the 2009 Hawaii International Film Festival at Dole Cannery Theatres in late October; Taylor Steele’s “The Drifter” focuses on the life and exploits of Rob Machado, “White Thunder” unveils the mad kamikaze antics of glacier bomb surfers Garrett McNamara and Kealii Mamala, and Dana Brown’s “Highwater” embeds audiences deep behind the scenes of a North Shore winter. White Thunder on the big screen should be a mind-blowing stoker! Go to www.hiff.org for tickets and show times. The annual buzz begins on the North Shore as rental cars with surfboards stacked to the sky begin coming down Kam Hwy in clumps, and everyone scrambles for a decent place to stay. The recent big WNW swell was bookended by sporadic 2’-6’ pulses and lineups from Haleiwa to V-Land have been cleared of sand and are packed to the gills with hot surfers. Airhorn blasts will begin to fill the air as the hectic 2009 North Shore comp itinerary kicks off with the Billabong Junior Pro on 10/6 and the Xcel Pro on 10/30, both at Sunset Beach. The Reef Hawaiian Pro at Haleiwa is next on 11/12, the O’Neill World Cup at Sunset right on its heels on 11/24, and then the Billabong Pipeline Masters on 12/8. Specialty events include bodysurfing, bodyboarding, and all-women’s events all at Pipe, along with the perennial Haleiwa International Open in December, and the North Shore Tow In Championships and The Eddie bringing an ominous and proper ending to it all. Whew! Just when you thought it was safe to read the news, the debate over the Haleiwa shark tours has been reheated by Honolulu city council, who’re proposing a flat out ban on shark tours in Hawaii. A bill to ban them on Maui has already been passed. More >here. If you have an opportunity, go check out the weekly North Shore Farmer’s Market. Held every Sunday from 9am to 1pm and located just off the shoulder of Kam Hwy. near Haleiwa Beach Park, the market features a huge selection of fresh produce, live music, handmade crafts, massage services, and tasty org...
MORE LOCAL NEWS: PAGE TWO
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