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Ribeira das Janelas seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (October - March)

When the North Atlantic cranks up the dial, Ribeira das Janelas transforms into a serious winter wave magnet. From October through March, the average swell height sits well above 2m, with periods consistently in the 11-13s range. This is when a strong negative NAO pattern can align the jet stream to send a conveyor belt of powerful low-pressure systems across the Atlantic, generating long-period groundswells from the N, NNE, NE and ENE quadrants - the sweet spot for this NE-facing stretch of coastline. Offshore wind conditions are most reliable here too: southerly to southwesterly winds (S, SSW, SW, WSW) blow clean and groom the faces, occurring around 18-21% of the time. Sure, you will have to sift through some onshore days when the wind clocks to the north, but when it comes together, the sets roll in with authority - heavy, hollow and firing.

Fair Surf Season (April, May & September)

As the seasons transition, the surf at Ribeira das Janelas becomes more inconsistent but still offers plenty of fun waves. April and May see average swell heights drop to 1.7-2.1m with periods of 10-11s, and while the winter fetch weakens, there are still plenty of mixed swell windows from the N to NW. The wind remains fairly cooperative with ideal offshore directions occurring about 16% of the time - trickier but far from hopeless. September marks the return of pulse: the ocean starts waking up again, with 1.6m average swell at a 10.5s period and ideal wind percentages climbing back to 17%. It is a shoulder-season mix of clean morning glass-offs and afternoon sea breezes, with some tasty head-high sets for those willing to gamble.

Low Surf Season (June - August)

Summer settles in with a flat spell for Ribeira das Janelas. From June through August, average swell heights bottom out around 1.4-1.5m, periods dip into the 8-9s range, and the wind becomes stubbornly unfavourable. The dominant wind shifts to a near-constant NNE-to-NE flow (onshore) that chops up what little waves arrive - ideal wind percentages plummet to just 3-12%. Most of the swell comes from the NNW and NW quadrants, which wrap in with less energy and often get raked by the cross-shore breeze. This is prime time for a grovel board or a flat spell break - think small, fun-sized, and best left to the dawn patrol. For consistent quality surf, plan your trip elsewhere during these months.