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La Barqueta seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (December - April)

The heart of the dry season delivers Panama's most reliable surf window at La Barqueta. With the North Atlantic high pressure system firmly in control, persistent offshore winds from the N, NNE, and NNW blow clean across the beach over 50-73% of the time. The south Pacific storm track sends consistent, long-period (12-14s) SSW groundswells that groom perfectly under these glassy conditions. Average wave heights hover in the fun 0.9-1.1m range, making for rippable, punchy waves day after day. January through March are the standouts, with peak offshore consistency in February (73% ideal wind). December and April bookend the season with slightly lower wind percentages but the same quality swell. When the trades lock in, you're looking at clean, hollow peaks and long walls – this is La Barqueta at its best.

Fair Surf Season (May & November)

These transition months mark the shift between dry and wet seasons. The trade wind belt starts to weaken or reposition, and the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) begins its migration. Offshore winds become less consistent (ideal wind drops to 35-40%), but the swell window remains open with SSW pulses continuing at solid 1.2m averages and periods still in the 12-14s range. May sees a jump in 1.5-2m sets (almost 10% of the time), offering more power when the wind cooperates. November likewise maintains decent swell size but sees increasing onshore flow from the W and WSW. Expect a mix of clean mornings and afternoon seabreezes – pick your windows carefully for good sessions.

Low Surf Season (June - October)

The rainy season settles in, and the surf dynamics flip dramatically. The ITCZ sits directly over the region, pulling in moist, unstable air from the south. Onshore winds from the WSW, W, and NW dominate, blowing directly from the wrong direction for La Barqueta's SSW-facing beach. Ideal wind percentages plummet to just 33-36%, making clean conditions a rare prize. On the flip side, the south Pacific winter churns out its most powerful and largest swells of the year – average wave heights peak at 1.3m, and the percentage of 1.5-2m+ waves increases, especially from SW and WSW directions. However, these swells often arrive accompanied by bumpy, choppy conditions due to the prevailing onshore flow. Dedicated surfers can still score when a strong high pressure ridge temporarily noses north winds into the coast, but for most, this is a time for patience. October is the trickiest month, with the lowest ideal wind percentage (33%) and the highest proportion of onshore wind from W and WNW.