August proving to be banner month for surfers
Alex Coolman
For the third time this month, solid southerly swells are pounding the
Newport coast, bringing red flags to local lifeguard towers and smiles to
the faces of surfers. And it’s only mid-August.
Waves up to 10 feet hit south-facing beaches Wednesday, producing
currents that kept lifeguards busy.
Jim Turner, lifeguard captain with the Newport Beach Fire and Marine
Department, said guards made about 75 rescues over the course of the day.
There were no serious injuries associated with the waves, a merciful
relief from the wreckage brought on by some of this month’s earlier,
larger swells. But red flags indicating hazardous conditions flew at many
beaches.
The waves are expected to hold steady through the week, possibly even
bumping up a notch by Friday, lifeguards said.
But it’s no fluke that the surf is pumping so consistently at this
time of year, Turner said.
“It’s always this way,” he said, adding that this season’s combination
of powerful winter storms from the Southern Hemisphere and hurricanes in
Mexican waters is the cause of the pounding surf.
Wednesday’s waves were the product of south-southwest swells and a
smaller northwest wind swell. The mix made for nicely shaped waves at
some locations, but didn’t have quite the undercurrent of danger that a
single, powerful southern pulse can sometimes create.
“It was good, but it wasn’t so much that it wasn’t just fun and
comfortable,” Turner said.
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