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Bakio seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (October - March)

The heart of the North Atlantic winter delivers the goods to Bakio from October through March. During these months, a climatological onslaught of strong extratropical cyclones churns the Bay of Biscay, generating consistent, powerful swell from the NW to NNW quadrants. Average wave heights range from 1.5m in October to a peak of 2.1m in January, with periods often exceeding 12 seconds — entering the 'powerful, long period' range. The key to quality lies in the wind: the ideal offshore component from the S to SSW blows around 27-32% of the time, sculpting clean, hollow waves along the beach. When a high-pressure ridge settles over the Iberian Peninsula and a low spins in the North Sea, the stars align for pumping, heavy, and firing conditions. This is the prime window for serious surf at Bakio.

Fair Surf Season (April, May, September)

Spring and early autumn offer a mixed bag. As the North Atlantic storm track shifts northward, April and May see average swell heights drop to 1.4m and 1.2m respectively, with shorter periods (10-11s). The swell energy is still predominantly from the NW, but it's less consistent. The ideal offshore wind percentage hovers around 22%. September marks a transition: the average height is similar at 1.2m, but period climbs to 10.3s, and ideal wind frequency rises to 26%. These months serve up fun, rippable waves on the better days, often with lighter winds and glassier mornings, but the power and consistency of winter are lacking. It's a time for groveling on smaller boards, waiting for a cold front to drop in and reignite the swell.

Low Surf Season (June - August)

Summer brings the doldrums to Bakio. Average wave heights bottom out at 1.0m from June through August, and periods shorten to 8.8-9.2s — typically average, punchy, but often weak. The predominant NW swells still roll through, but they're significantly smaller. Worse, the wind pattern is dominated by thermal breezes and the Azores High, resulting in a decrease in clean offshore conditions. Ideal wind blows only 16-18% of the time, with frequent onshore components from the N and NW that trash the wave quality. When a rare low-pressure system brushes the region, you might get a pulse of fun-size waves, but for the most part, it's micro to small and choppy. This is the low season: put away the step-up, break out the groveler, and expect to work for every ride.