4/17/2023 0 Comments Surl inetworkSimilar winds were aimed at Hawaii but with less potential for land to block the swell train. The storm emerged back over to the east of New Zealand on Mar 21. Before it hit, these winds were aimed at Hawaii and over the Tasman Sea. On Mar 19-20, a rather large storm with 40-50mph winds slammed into New Zealand. There should be long-period hints of a new swell from the SW late Monday. There were no significant sources of surf from the South Pacific Mar 1 7-19. South Shore: A small bump in inconsistent surf towards midweek through next week… Surf will likely remain tiny to flat into the first week of April. Outlook: There is not much on the horizon as the Northern Hemisphere moves towards the late Spring-early summer season. This should spell nearly flat conditions early next week. Storm activity was minimal Mar 30- Apr 2. Due to the swell angle, it should be larger at the eastern exposures. Surf from this source should peak around dawn Saturday at 1-2’+. This is because long period energy travels faster than short period energy, enabling it to catch up. This will send longer period forerunners of 13-15 seconds from the NE arriving shortly after the arrival of the shorter period energy, around Friday morning. The system is then modelled to rapidly deepen to storm-force (45-60mph) and be stationary for 12-15 hours. This should bring in short-moderate period forerunners of 12-13 seconds from the NE overnight Thursday. It will direct an initial, narrow fetch of 30-40mph winds late Monday. It should drop to 1-2’+ by Friday morning and 1-2’ by Saturday morning.įinally: A powerful storm is predicted to develop off the coast of the western US on Monday and Tuesday. Surf should rise to 1-2’ by Wednesday afternoon, 1-2’+ Thursday morning, and 2-3’ Thursday afternoon. Moderate period forerunners of 15-16 seconds from the NW should arrive Wednesday morning. Distance, fetch length, and duration will limit surf potential. Next: On Mar 23-24, a large storm confined to the NW corner of the North Pacific directed a short, wide fetch of 40-50mph winds over the course of 12 hours. It should be down to traces (2’ or less) by Wednesday. Surf should drop to 2-3’+ by Monday morning and 1-2’+ by Tuesday morning. The NW buoy showed peak energy in the 12-14 second period band at 8’ of swell Sunday morning (larger than modelled), which should correspond to a local peak of 3-5’ late Sunday evening. The Barber’s Point buoy registered 17-19 second period forerunners well before dawn on Sunday. The source of the WNW swell was a compact, quasi-stationary cut-off low centered 1,600nm NW of Hawaii with storm-force winds of 45-60mph Mar 23-24. The source of the NNW swell was a fetch of 30-40mph winds that had poor aim at Hawaii from the Gulf of Alaska. Recent/Now: A small-moderate WNW swell gradually filled in and a short-period NNW swell slowly dropped over the course of Sunday, with surf rising from 1-2’+ Hawaiian scale to 2-3’+ by late afternoon. North Shore and West Shores: Get the waves while they last, dismal outlook for the following week… Remnant moisture could keep showers in play through the remainder of the period as trades fill in. The Kona low could produce scattered showers and thunderstorms Tuesday through Thursday. Winds should increase to light to moderate paces out of the ESE on Saturday, East on Sunday, and ENE at fresh paces early next week. On some of the days, sea breezes will prevail over the afternoon hours. Through at least Friday, winds will be light and out of the SSE-ESE. Models depict a ridge to our NE competing with the low. SSE-ESE winds for most of this period with potentially active weather Tuesday-Thursday…įor this period, the local winds will be highly dependent on a Kona low just 400nm NW of Kauai. Monday, March 27 th – Tuesday, April 4 th STBODY = we.FindElementByTag("tbody").SNN BIG PICTURE: Updated 8:15pm Sunday, March 26 ' iACLASSPosition = a string < ' iLocalPosition = a string Local: é única no elemento TBODY e o status que procuramos começa 14 caracteres depois disso. ' iACLASSPosition = the string < ' iLocalPosition = the string Local: is unique in the element TBODY and the status we are looking for starts 14 characters after this. ' span class="bold eventoLocal" Local: /span CURITIBA / PR
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