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BEST BEST
BEST BET FEBRUARY 2009: CARIBBEAN
Aquamarine water, warm tropical breezes, and endless set-ups from reefs to beachies - you might think we are headed to the South Pacific for this month's Best Bet.
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North Orange County

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North Orange County Introduction
Northern Orange County (which we define as Long Beach -- which doesn't really have any surf to speak of because of all the jetties and breakwaters associated with the Port of Los Angeles -- south to Corona Del Mar) is better known in the surf community for being the heart of the industry than for having amazing surf. In cities like Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, and Irvine is where many of the most prolific action-sport companies have their HQs, including: Quiksilver, Roxy, Billabong, Volcom, Hurley, RVCA, O'Neill, Lost, etc.

The OC lives up to its reputation as a wealthy, conservative, suburban grid ruled by the 9-seater SUV and the soccer mom, and every home within a mile of the beach appraises for over a million dollars. But if you can get past the stereotypes, you'll find some decent beachbreaks that pump all through summer and fall and sort of orderly calm that some find repulsive and others intoxicating.

Stand-out spots in the area include the Seal Beach Pier, the world-famous Huntington Beach Pier (annual host of the US Open of Surfing and former WCT stop), the Santa Ana Rivermouth, Upper West Newport (54th Street, 36th Street, Blackies, and the Newport Point), and the awe-inspiring Wedge, which can break at 20 feet just a few yards from shore on the right south swell.

--Joel Patterson
Crowds
Because the OC loves south swell, summertime can be chaotic and crowded. Armies of "tourists" from inland OC hit the beaches from late June to mid September, clogging the area's wide white-sand beaches. The lineups suffer, but big south swells seperate the men from the inland men, and when it's 8-feet-plus, you can get wave without to much of a fight.
Hazards
Only one OC shark attack has been recorded in the past half century, so don't worry too much about that. Oil spills from offshore platforms used to plague Huntington, but that hasn't happened in a while. Be very wary of surfing the Santa Ana Rivermouth after a rain. The primary sewage treatment plant nearby pumps out a steady stream of fecal materials and flagellated protozoans.
Pollution
Be careful for 48 hours after a big rain.
The Seasons
Summer
This is the only time you might be inspired to migrate south if you live somewhere north of Point Conception. Orange County flourishes during this period when southerly swells from New Zealand mean endless right walls at Trestles, boils at Brooks Street, barrel rolls at T Street, no parking at Salt Creek, wedgies at the Wedge and a Snake River-like current at Huntington Beach. And, since the water can be a balmy 70 degrees, you're enjoying all of this without the constriction of neoprene.
Fall
Orange County is chock-full of beachbreaks, and beachbreaks like crossed-up swells. Add a hot, dry offshore wind called a Santa Ana, and you get what California should be year-round: an endless supply of A-frames while all the kiddies are back in school.
Winter
What blesses Orange County in the summer curses it in the winter. Its southerly orientation tends to handcuff a number of breaks during the months between November and April, and it's not uncommon for the breaks in other counties, namely Ventura and San Diego, to be twice the size as spots like Salt Creek. But there are worse places to be during the winter, like Avalon on Catalina Island. Expect mild winters, nippy but manageable water temps (fullsuit, no booties).
Spring
Once again, Orange County likes crossed-up swells. As soon as the southern hemisphere starts stirring in April, you have a good chance of finding some more of those sand-bottom A-frames. Go early, though, since Santa Anas are almost nonexistent. Keep the fullsuit handy, too: stiff afternoon onshores will keep the water temps at dead-of-winter lows.
SURFLINE FORECAST for North Orange County
Extended forecast with surf heights, direction, period, tides, winds and more.
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SAND-BARRED
(09/09/04) 56th St. in Newport Beach opens wide with Hurricane Howard swell -- but closed due to sewage spill
NEW ZEALAND COMES TO ORANGE COUNTY
(05/02/04) CJ Hobgood gets pitted -- while many get swatted -- at the Wedge
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SONS OF SICKNESS: PUNKER PAT
(05/13/09) Socal local Punker Pat blows up out front his house in reeling Newport perfection
NEWPORT TUBE TIME
(04/10/09) Analog's team of Newport lurkers Josh Hoyer, Bones and Geoff Moysa catch some fun ones at 54th st
Go to All Related Content for North Orange County
Surf Spots: Show All Photos
Surfsidemap
Bolsa Chicamap
Goldenwestmap
17th Streetmap
HB Pier, Northsidemap
HB Pier, Southsidemap
Santa Ana River Jettiesmap
54th/56th Streetsmap
40 St. Newportmap