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La Isla seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (February - April)

February through April marks the window where La Isla sees its highest probability of offshore winds — still a precious rarity here, with ideal wind percentages peaking at 7% in March. During these months, the southeast Pacific subtropical high begins to weaken slightly, allowing occasional pulses of northerly flow to push down the coast. Combined with a steady diet of SSW and SW groundswells averaging 1.5-1.7m and periods in the 13-14s range, the result is clean, powerful waves that line up beautifully on the southwest-facing beach. This is the sweet spot: when the swell is firing and the wind finally plays nice, La Isla transforms into a world-class left.

Fair Surf Season (May - August)

Winter in the Southern Hemisphere brings the peak of the swell window. From May through August, average wave heights climb to 1.8-1.9m with periods consistently above 13s, generated by intense mid-latitude storms tracking eastward across the South Pacific. The predominant swell direction remains SSW, directly into the beach. However, the same large-scale pressure gradient that fuels these storms also strengthens the southerly trade winds, with S/SSW winds blowing 30-40% of the time at 10-20kph. This persistent onshore flow chops up the surface, making the surf bumpy and challenging to ride. When a brief lull or a rare northerly shift occurs, the waves are pumping and powerful, but those windows are fleeting.

Low Surf Season (September - January)

Spring and early summer see a drop in both swell size and wind quality. From September through January, the average swell height gradually decreases from 1.9m in September to 1.4m in January, while the southerly wind regime remains stubbornly entrenched — ideal wind percentages hover near zero for most of these months. The South Pacific storm track retreats, leading to fewer long-period groundswells and more background windswell. Waves are typically small to fun-sized (0.5-1.5m) and often messy thanks to persistent onshore flow. While there are occasional pulses of SSW swell in November and December, the lack of offshore winds means La Isla is usually a bumpy, grovelly affair during this period.