Table Top seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (October - March)
The North Pacific, while often overshadowed by its Atlantic cousin, roars to life during the late fall and winter months, sending powerful, long-period swells (10-14s) towards Table Top. This is the holy grail for this north-northwest facing beach, as swell from the N, NNE, and NW quadrants is perfectly aligned to wrap into the cove. The average wave height sits at a solid 1.5m to 1.6m during this period, with many pulses pushing into the pumping, firing 1.5-2.5m range. However, the Achilles' heel is the wind. A stubborn high-pressure system over the interior often sets up persistent NE to ENE winds, which are cross-onshore and mess up the face. The magic happens when a cold front pushes through, swinging the wind into the S, SSW, or SSE quadrants – true offshore flow that cleans up the lines. These windows, while accounting for only 22-31% of the time in the heart of winter, produce epic, glassy conditions that make Table Top a world-class destination. The months of October and March are the transition periods where the wind percentages climb (30-49%), offering a higher chance of combining clean conditions with solid swell. The NAO index influences the storm track; when it's negative, the jet stream backs west, feeding more direct NW swell into the coast, while a positive NAO tends to send more NE wind swell.
Fair Surf Season (April, May, September)
As the winter machine winds down, the swell energy drops but remains fun and rideable. April through May sees average wave heights decreasing to 1.1-1.3m, with periods of 8.7-9.6 seconds. The swell direction shifts more towards NE and ENE, which are not the primary optimal windows for Table Top, but the period can still be punchy. The silver lining is a significant improvement in wind conditions; offshore S and SSW breezes become more frequent, with ideal wind percentages jumping to 35-45%. This means more surfable, smoother waves even if smaller. September serves as a bookend to summer, with the return of stronger NW pulses. The average period climbs back to 9.1s, and the wind is ideal a whopping 47% of the time – the best of any month. It's a sweet spot for clean, head-high waves on a groveler or a shortboard.
Low Surf Season (June - August)
Summer effectively shuts down the swell machine for Table Top. The dominant swell is from the ENE and E, which barely wrap into this NNW exposure, resulting in small, weak waves averaging only 1.0m with short periods of 6.7-7.3 seconds. This is the season of groveling and micro-sessions. On top of the diminishing swell, the wind pattern, while still offering some S to SSW offshore days (29-45% ideal), is often challenged by a thermal low that can kick up light onshore breezes from the north in the afternoons. The swell from the N and NW near disappears, with the combined N+NNW swell accounting for less than 1% of the total. For the majority of the summer, the waves are choppy, low, and messy, best left for loggers and beginners at other spots. Occasional remnants of tropical storms far to the south can send long-period SE swell, but that is rare and typically blocked by the headlands.
