Newgale seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (October - March)
The North Atlantic delivers its full fury during these months, with average swell heights peaking at 1.6m in January and December and a solid 1.3-1.5m through the rest of the period. Wave periods often hover in the 8-9s range, offering punchy, rideable waves that can turn powerful when the 10-14s groundswells roll in. The dominant swell direction is WSW (25-30% of all swells), which is directly onshore for Newgale's WSW exposure. However, this also means maximum swell energy hits the beach. The catch: winds are predominantly onshore from the SW-WSW quadrant (over 30% of the time), making clean conditions a rare prize. When the high-pressure ridges align and deliver crisp NNE-ENE offshore airflow, expect hollow, lined-up waves with offshore winds grooming the face. The NAO index plays a key role: a strong positive NAO funnels deeper storms, while a negative phase can lock in continental easterlies, creating clean but smaller swell windows.
Fair Surf Season (April, September)
These shoulder months see a dip in average swell height to 0.9-1.0m and periods dropping to 7-8s. The Atlantic storm track starts to migrate north in spring and returns in autumn, offering shorter windows of quality. Swell direction still favours WSW (25-30% of the time), but a higher proportion of NNE and NNW swells appear, bringing variety. The offshore wind percentage improves to 12% in April and remains around 7-8% in September. These months are ideal for logging or a longboard when the conditions align. Spring often brings a mix of leftover winter groundswells and building windswells, while September feels the first whispers of the autumn storm trains.
Low Surf Season (May - August)
Summer settles in with average swell heights bottoming out at 0.8m and periods languishing around 6-7s. The dominant swell direction is overwhelmingly WSW (35-40% of the time), but the energy is mostly short-period windswell from local breeze. The northwest and north swell windows see a slight uptick, but these are mostly weak. The offshore wind window is small: only 5-8% of the time. The prevailing summer winds are from the SW-WSW quadrant, often 10-20kph, creating choppy, messy conditions. The wave heights rarely exceed 1m, and most days fall under the 'micro' to 'small' category. This is a time for beginners or those happy with groveling. Occasional weak long-period swells from the south can produce clean sandbars if a rare high-pressure ridge sets up easterly winds, but those days are few.
