Enough with the June weather
- Share via
DENNIS McTIGHE
We’ve re-named our ninth month Junetember. We’re mired in the dark
halls of the Temple of Gloom.
The water looks like whale blood, the waves are overhead only for
2-year-olds. It’s 65 degrees and drizzling here at my St. Ann’s
office at 1 p.m. on Monday.
Sorry, Divine Creator, but September’s issue was a complete fraud.
I know, you’re just testing our patience, but we’re about to become a
patient.
But at least we get to endure it in Laguna not Pomona (no offense
to Pomona, just using that spot as any generic flatland community).
And joining the fraud category was the surf. Sure there were five
named storms in the Eastern Pacific tropics, but all five had an
excuse. That’s zero for 13, ‘cause Marty just spent himself over
Northwest Mexico’s mainland after serving up 6 to 10 foot close
interval point break wonders all the way up the gulf of California
past Guaymas. San Carlos left point lighted up off the Richter for 30
hours.
Remember, Ignacio did the same track a few weeks ago. It’s become
the ocean of Cortez.
On the bright side, Arizona has benefited largely due to Ignacio
and Marty’s generous and much needed rains which totaled up to 6
inches from both systems.
Speaking of the ’39 hurricane, here’s a list of the strongest Baja
swells recorded from 1939 to 2003.
Of course the Granddaddy was the ’39 Chubasco -- wave heights were
15 to 25 feet.
September of 1963 -- a category five sits 200 miles west of the
tip and sends 12 to 18 foot waves in Orange County, but 22 to 24 feet
at the Wedge with a 104 degree Santana going on too! Truancy reached
an all time high at Laguna Beach High.
September 1966 -- a category five perched just inside our surf
window about 160 miles West Southwest of the tip. Pipeline comes to
Newport Point 15th Street, 165 degrees, 12 to 15 feet plus at 10
second intervals with a Santana heat wave and day-long glass or
offshore. What school?!
Your Tidbitter missed 44 days that fall semester of my senior year
‘66-’67. That late summer and fall were nonstop waves and hot
weather. Hey, it was Billy Hamilton’s fault. I was at Lowers or
Swamis during the school week. Then we’d study and do homework on
weekends when all the wave fields were zooed out. And we still got As
and Bs.
Unfortunately, our attendance was worse than F, they extended the
alphabet just for us, but we still graduated, barely. The surf turned
bad our spring semester so we showed up at school most of the time.
Gee, wasn’t that big of us?
Hurricane Claudia in July, 1976 -- the whole Newport Harbor
entrance had 20 foot monsters breaking top to bottom.
Hurricane Hyacinth, September 1972 -- a major El Nino that summer
pushed a string of Category 4s and 5s Northwest into our surf window.
Hyacinth was so south. Paulette was riding halfway to Anita St. from
2nd and Third reef at Brooks.
And this year we couldn’t buy even a three foot day.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.