Surf forecastStatisticsHistorical report

Ocean Reef Park seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (October - March)

The North Atlantic winter pattern delivers the goods to Ocean Reef Park from October through March, with average swell heights holding steady around 1.0 to 1.3 meters and periods climbing into the 7.7-8.2 second range. These months see the highest frequency of NE through ESE swell — the sweet spot for this east-facing beach. Offshore winds from the SW-WNW quadrant blow clean and consistent during this window, with ideal conditions prevailing 15-24% of the time. The climatological uptick in extratropical storms across the North Atlantic drives more powerful, longer-period groundswells that fold into punchy, rippable lines along the reef. When a high-pressure system sets up over the southeastern U.S. and a low spins off the coast, the stage is set for classic east coast surf.

Fair Surf Season (April & September)

April and September represent the shoulder periods, with average swell heights dipping to 1.0 meters and ideal wind percentages dropping to 18-19%. The dominant swell direction shifts slightly, with ENE and E pulses still feeding the beach, but the overall energy dials back as the storm tracks migrate north. Wind patterns become more variable, with an increase in onshore E to ESE breezes that mess up the face. Still, occasional cold fronts or early-season hurricanes can fire up a few good days, especially when a long-period northeast groundswell aligns with a clean offshore flow from the west.

Low Surf Season (May - August)

From May through August, Ocean Reef Park enters its summer doldrums. Average swell heights drop to 0.6-0.9 meters, and wave periods shrink to 6.2-7.4 seconds — mostly short-period, messy windswell. The dominant swell direction becomes E to ESE, which is onshore for this east-facing beach, and ideal wind percentages fall to 10-16%, with strong, consistent onshore flows from the east quadrants prevailing. The windrose shows a heavy concentration of E and ESE winds at moderate speeds, generating chop and crumbly waves. The reef does offer some shelter from the SE quadrant, but the lack of consistent, powerful groundswell makes this a time to explore other spots or stick to longboard groveling when the occasional tropical system passes by.