Lop Camping seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (October - March)
The North Atlantic really flexes its muscles during these months, with the polar jet stream dipping south and firing up one low-pressure system after another. Lop Camping, facing NW, is perfectly positioned to capture the lion's share of this energy. Average swell heights consistently exceed 1.5m, with periods often pushing into the 10-12 second range, bringing powerful, well-organized groundswell from the W to NW quadrants. Crucially, the percentage of offshore wind (from E, ESE, SE, SSE) climbs to 59-68%. This combination delivers clean, lined-up waves that are rippable and punchy, often with light offshores grooming the faces. December through February are the peak, but October and March offer slightly smaller but still excellent conditions with fewer crowds. This is the time to plan your trip for the best chance of classic Norwegian surf.
Fair Surf Season (April & September)
These transitional months see a drop in average swell size and period, but they still produce occasional windows of quality. April sees the average swell height fall to 1.2m with a period around 9.5s – still rideable, but less consistent. The wind pattern begins to shift, with offshore conditions occurring only about 50% of the time, and more variable directions. September marks the beginning of the autumnal ramp-up: swell heights pick back up to 1.2m, period to 9.3s, and offshore wind frequency improves to 49%. You can score fun, groveling waves in April and more solid, shoulder-high surf in September when a passing low aligns with a high-pressure ridge. Not prime time, but often uncrowded and worth checking.
Low Surf Season (May - August)
Summer brings a dramatic slowdown in North Atlantic storm activity. The jet stream retreats north, and the Norwegian Sea becomes a relative wind pond. Average swell heights bottom out at 0.8m and periods dip into the sub-8 second range – choppy, low-energy windswell is the norm. Worse, offshore wind frequency plummets to 18-34%. The dominant winds become northerly and northwesterly, bringing onshore, gutless conditions that ruin what little wave shape exists. While you might find a small, clean knee-high wave on a rare day with a light easterly breeze, consistent surf is virtually non-existent. This is the season for beach days, not surf missions. Plan your trip outside these months for any real wave action.
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Conditions at Lop Camping in November
November: Peak Consistency and Offshore Gold
November is statistically the best month for surf at Lop Camping. Average swell height is 1.6m, period 10.2s, and – crucially – the offshore wind frequency hits its annual maximum of 68%. The swell direction roses show a strong WSW (19.6%) and SW (14.7%) signal, with W (11.0%), WNW (8.1%), and NW (7.4%) also contributing. The wind is predominantly from the SE (28.8%) and SSE (12.8%), providing consistent light to moderate offshore flow. This combination produces clean, powerful, and well-shaped waves on a regular basis. The average surf size is in the fun-to-pumping range (1.5-2.5m), but with the long periods, it feels even bigger. When a deep low sits in the Norwegian Sea and a blocking high over Scandinavia sets in, Lop Camping can fire with epic, hollow, head-high-plus surf. November is the month to book your trip for the highest probability of excellent conditions.
Average Spot conditions at Lop Camping in November
Swell history for November
Wind history for November
Swell quality
Analyze the groundswell consistency at Lop Camping during November. Based on historical data, there is a % probability of groundswell occurring this month. The chart below provides a detailed breakdown of the average wave height distribution, offering deep insights into the swell quality and surf potential you can expect at Lop Camping for your next trip in November.
Ground swell
Ground swell by size
Wind conditions
Evaluate the wind and swell alignment at Lop Camping for November. Our analysis shows that favorable offshore or side-shore winds coincide with surfable swell approximately % of the time. The accompanying graph illustrates the average size distribution of waves during these optimal wind windows at Lop Camping.
