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North Atlantic Winter Exposed

By Tony Butt - Published on 12th April 2010 | Viewed 15837 times.

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Upside-down winters have their .... Upsides© 2010 - Lou Short
 


IF you live in Europe, you might have noticed that, this winter, things have been, shall we say, upside down. The surf was completely different from any ‘normal’ winter, with places that usually get consistent surf either flat or onshore, and other spots that rarely work, pumping all winter. Because the surf is driven by the weather patterns, this tends to suggest that the weather patterns were upside down too. If you are a little more astute, you will have noticed that all the swells were generated from low pressure systems that developed right down in the south of the North Atlantic, where there is normally a large high pressure called the Azores Anticyclone. It seemed to stay like that from early December all the way through till the end of March.

I’ll say before we begin that I don’t have the definitive answer as to exactly why it happened like that, but I’m going to dig deeper into the problem bit by bit and see how far we get. First I’m going to look at what happened to the surf this year compared with last year (assuming last year was more ‘normal’ of course) in four different places: Northern Spain (where I live), Southwest England, Madeira and Cape Verde.


Northern Spain


In northern Spain, I can tell you first hand that we had an epic November with back-to-back swells and a couple of big-wave sessions as good as I can remember. But then the swells started to come from the west. It didn’t go flat, but it never really got much above six foot either. At my local spot, which is surfable between around eight and twenty feet, we surfed about six times, most of them in November, whereas during a normal winter it would break at least 30 times. You see, if the swell is too west it fails to reach most of northern Spain, tucked in behind two huge peninsulas called Estaca de Bares and Cabo Ortegal. The approximate swell window is shown in Figure 1.

In true scientific style, just to reconfirm what my own eyes were telling me, I looked at some archived wave data from the beginning of November 2009 to the end of February 2010, and compared it with the corresponding data for 2008-2009. For northern Spain, I compared the number of days of northwest, west-northwest and west swell directions. It turned out that this winter there were about the same number of west-northwest swells as last winter, but about twice as many west swells and only half as many northwest swells (Table 1).

From this we can suggest that northern Spain was worse than normal because most of the swells were generated outside the swell window (below the blue patch on the diagram).


Table 1: Number of days of different swell directions for northern Spain

....................................... W .. WNW . NW
....................2008-2009.....18......38......31
....................2009-2010.....34......41......16


Figure 1: Approximate swell window for Northern Spain. The edges of the window are curved because of the particular type of chart used.


Figure 1: Approximate swell window for Northern Spain. The edges of the window are curved because of the particular type of chart used.

Southwest England


Meanwhile, on the south coast of Cornwall, England, the tables were turned. This stretch of coast has some world-class setups, but due to a fairly narrow swell window (Figure 2) and the rare chance of a big swell coinciding with offshore winds, days of good surf are few and far between. However, this winter, instead of the usual mix of northwest swells that failed to wrap around to the south coast, or good swells hindered by strong westerlies, they had exceptionally good surf, particularly from December onwards. When Spain was bad, south Cornwall was good, and vice-versa. Steve England, a Porthleven legend who has hardly missed a session there since the mid 1970’s, reckons this winter was “definitely the most consistent in the last four years” and “the swell of Monday 11th [January] was the best high tide swell I’ve seen for ages”.

Again, just to confirm, I looked at the data archives for the same dates as above, but this time for south Cornwall. I compared the number of potentially surfable days at Porthleven, this winter and last winter. To get an approximate definition for ‘surfable’ I included any days with swell directions from the southwest and west-southwest, with peak periods longer than 10 s, and with winds from the east around to north. You don’t have to be really finicky as long as you define it the same for this year and last year; compare apples with apples, so to speak. It turned out that this year there were over five times as many potentially surfable days as last year (29 compared with a measly 5).

So, we can conclude that the south coast of Cornwall was better than it normally is because more swells were generated from inside the swell window (inside the blue patch).

Figure 2: Approximate swell window for the south coast of Cornwall

Figure 2: Approximate swell window for the south coast of Cornwall


Just one of 2010's south coast super swells ... Porthleven© 2010 - Geoff Tydeman
 


Southwest coast of Madeira


Down in Madeira, particularly on that magical stretch of coastline near Jardim do Mar, things weren’t so good. Instead of pristine, windless conditions and consistent, long-period swells wrapping down from the north, they had to put up with poor-quality west swells hitting the coast square-on, accompanied by strong southwest or west winds. Jardim do Mar surfer Adriano Longueira confirms that they had a particularly bad winter for surf: “From December till March, which is normally the perfect time to surf in Madeira, we only had good waves about five times. I’ve never seen a winter like this one – nothing but rain and storms – really bad.” Talking of rain and storms, this winter Madeira had the worst rains for 20 years, with serious flooding on 20th February that cost the lives of over 40 people.

Normally, the problem with the southwest coast of Madeira is that the swells are often not quite big enough to make those epic pointbreaks fire, especially if it has a lot of north in it. If the swell is more west, it will hit the coast more head-on and produce bigger waves, but the same weather patterns also lead to westerly winds. A very large northwest swell accompanied by northeast trades is the best combination.

The archived wave data from Madeira showed that the southwest coast had a lot less rideable days this year than last, mostly due to bad winds and poor-quality swells. This time I looked at the average windspeed for onshore winds (southeast around to northwest), the average wave height and the number of potentially rideable days (days with significant wave heights at 2 m or more, peak periods over 10 s and winds from the north-northeast around to the east). You can see by looking at Table 3 that this year there were more than twice as many onshore days, the onshore winds were almost twice as strong, and there were about half the number of potentially rideable days compared with last year. The wave heights were bigger this year, but that doesn’t mean the surf was any better.

From this data we can suggest that the southwest coast of Madeira was worse than last year principally because the storms came too close.


Table 3: Data for the southwest coast of Madeira

................. Mean onshore wind [kts] ... Onshore days ... Rideable days ... Mean wave height [m]
2008-2009..................5.1............................31.......................35........................2.4
2009-2010..................9.2............................70.......................21........................3.2


Cape Verde


Lastly, it seems that the islands of Cape Verde, way to the south, got much more surf than normal this year. Cape Verde isn’t known as a surfing paradise – probably due to the constant tradewinds it is more a windsurfing and kitesurfing destination. Still, there are some class waves and many undiscovered spots. Instead of fairly constant, but often small and windy surf, they got plenty of days of big, clean, Hawaiian-type conditions, with travelling windsurfers referring to it being “Just like Maui, but with better waves and no people”. On 20th February they had the biggest swell in four years, with fifteen foot waves at Ponta Prieta. This is a southwest-facing spot that is not fully exposed to the main swell, so I’m assuming that other spots would have been bigger.

The islands of Cape Verde are a long way south of the usual position of the North Atlantic storms, so the swells usually arrive spread out and diminished in height – a phenomenon known as circumferential dispersion. But not this year: the archived data shows an average wave height almost twice as high as last year (2.0 m compared with 1.1 m) and almost twice as many days of rideable swell (97 compared with 55). Again, I defined ‘rideable swell’ as coming from the north around to the west, and with peak periods of more than 10 s. The surf was extremely consistent, with up to 26 days of rideable surf at a time.

So, from this data we can probably say that Cape Verde had better surf this winter than last because the Atlantic storms were closer (but not too close like Madiera).


Digging a bit deeper


It is not difficult to guess the common denominator for those observations. This winter, all the storms just tracked a lot further south than they normally do. This can clearly be seen in two charts I have pulled out of the archives as typical representations of last year and this year (Figures 3 and 4). The first one, from last winter, shows a low pressure centred just south of Iceland and a high pressure near the Azores (the famous Azores Anticyclone). Northern areas are getting very strong westerly winds and southern areas will be getting big, clean surf. The second chart, from this winter, shows a low pressure centred straddled across the Azores, with strong westerly winds hitting the far south. The Azores Anticyclone has completely disappeared, and instead there is a strong westerly fetch. This is producing nasty weather in southern Portugal, Madeira and northern Morocco, no swell for northern Spain and, if the fetch swings around to the southwest, some good long-period swell for southwest England.

A nice simple way to express the state of the charts without actually having to look at a chart itself is to use the atmospheric pressure difference between Iceland and the Azores. This is called the NAO Index, and it is related to a climatic cycle called the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). A chart like Figure 3 will produce a large positive index, i.e. the pressure over Iceland is much lower than that over the Azores; and a chart like Figure 4 will produce a zero or negative NAO index, i.e. the pressure over the Azores is equal to or lower than that over Iceland. A zero or negative index can also occur if you get a large high filling up the North Atlantic, called a blocking anticyclone, which obstructs the formation of low pressures. The blocking anticyclone is actually a much more common occurrence than the strange patterns we had this winter.

The NOA index is shown as a graph in Figure 5. You can see at a glance how different it is this year from last year. You can even see how it changed radically from the end of November onwards, which was basically when the surf on the North Coast of Spain switched right off.




Figure 3: Atlantic chart for January 2009: NAO index ≈ +60 mb. The thick black line indicates the approximate position of the jet stream



Figure 3: Atlantic chart for January 2009: NAO index ≈ +60 mb. The thick black line indicates the approximate position of the jet stream



Figure 4: Atlantic chart for December 2009: NAO index ≈ -20 mb 2010: NAO index ≈ -20 mb



Figure 4: Atlantic chart for December 2009: NAO index ≈ -20 mb




Figure 5: NAO index for 2008-2009



Figure 5: NAO index for 2008-2009



Figure 6: NAO index for 2009-2010



Figure 6: NAO index for 2009-2010


Ultimate causes


Looking at the charts again, you can see that the jet stream, indicated by the thick black line, was also much further south than normal. The jet stream is the flow of air in the upper atmosphere which determines the trajectory of the storms in the lower atmosphere. A south-running jet means that all the low pressures will form in the south of the North Atlantic. A jet with a large meander in it means that the atmosphere contains that large blocking anticyclone I have just mentioned.

So, the jet stream controls the formation and trajectory of the low pressure systems. But what controls the jet stream? Well, that is a very good question, which scientists are still trying to answer. The behaviour of the atmosphere over the North Atlantic, whether we are talking about the lower or upper atmosphere, is extremely difficult to predict, particularly in the short term such as weeks or months. However, it seems that the long-term patterns might be more heavily dependent on the circulation patterns of the ocean than on most other things. The sea surface communicates its temperature to the overlying air, which then changes its pressure, temperature and movement, which, in turn, feeds back to change the water temperature. In other words, the atmosphere and ocean are in a constant feedback loop, passing information from one to the other, each one changing the other’s behaviour.

A recent study by Arnaud Czaja and Claude Frankignoul shows that changes in the sea surface temperature and changes in the upper air stream are strongly related to each other in the North Atlantic. A significant correlation was found between the changes in the behaviour of the atmosphere and changes in the sea surface temperature patterns, with the latter leading the former by up to several months. In other words, it suggests that the water temperature has an influence on what the atmosphere will be like in several months time. They state in their paper that this shouldn’t be taken as evidence of any cause-and-effect relationship, and (as always) that a lot more work needs to be done on this subject.

Lastly, the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is thought to have an influence on the storm tracks, but in the North Pacific. ENSO is a major climatic cycle mostly involving water temperatures, but which has a whole series of knock-on effects. In the North Pacific, the jet stream sometimes takes a more southerly track during the El Niño part of the cycle, which means you’ll get epic big surf in Hawaii, Central and Southern California but stormier than normal conditions in Northern California. In the North Atlantic, however, it is not quite so certain that this effect spills over.

Whatever the case, it’s all still bewilderingly complicated and we are only just beginning to understand it.


Steve Voyzey at the end of the motorway ... and yes it is secret© 2010 - Nick Turley/www.nickturleyphotography.co.uk


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This article has been given an average rating of 4.14 from 152 votes.
Comments
 
Archived Comments
garbarrage642 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Was seriously starting to crack up, been the worst winter/spring since I can remember. Was thinking about giving up surfing and taking up knitting instead. Hope things get back to normal next season. Better yet.. hope things are abnormal this summer.
sertimen651 days ago -6 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Hello Tony, very good article. I'll like to add that in south Spain, close to the Straits of Gibraltar we have had the strongest rains and floods in years. For example in Algeciras (Cadiz) we have now the highest rainfall from 1942 (over 2050 mm since september 2009), with big low pressures coming from the west and swells hitting the coast. In Tarifa we have had the best surf season I can remember, with massive swells and powerfull waves that have moved all the sand breaks in the southwest of Gulf of Cadiz. So another good winter to remember...
liamopluto653 days ago -3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Nice read! He forgot to mention Ireland though!!):
swell_chaser653 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
The governments of the world have been controlling our weather for years. Our cold winter was caused by a facility called EISCAT based in Norway and Svalbard that punched a hole in our ionosphere (Dec 10th 2009)allowing the super cold vacuum of space to penetrate briefly. Its all mad scientists and government try to control the weather. If your interested in my rambling then you should look up the Alaskan HAARP facility and what these ionosperic heaters are capable of. Blind, oh yes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Norwegian_spiral_anomaly http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAARP Peace out
BuzyG660 days ago -3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Long old read, most definately worth while. Have to agree this winter has been one of the best in the past twenty years in South Cornwall. Nice Phot of our local break me thinks.
Sparko661 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Interesting stuff - this winter the N Sea coasts of England and Scotland were even shittier than usual: no low pressures tracking over the N Atlantic to sit off Norway and send decent swell down to us - it was all shorter period E to S wind swell - surfable but dissapointing. Anyone have any idea how this will affect summer?
BuzyG660 days ago -3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Ye, there will be even more emitts falling off canoes at Fistral.
Kieran100665 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Tony - you claim to work in "true scientific style, just to confirm what my own eyes were telling me". Yet you made an error when you assumed that last year was more "normal". As you know, to infer changes on an inter-annual scale you cannot just compare 2 years. To be sure that last year was more normal you need to look at decadal to 30 year trends/averages and not just trust your own instinct. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed the article and do think that this winter was more unusual. However, you should either present a robust scientific analysis or more qualitative piece.
roli663 days ago -3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
oh dear oh dear. Couldn't just read it could you?
liam21908663 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
im currently studying a degree in geography, and agree with this article. the NAO is pushing the storms and jet stream further south, this also helps to explain the colder than normal weather and all the snow we (england/wales) experienced over the winter. but yeah, you cant really say that last year was normal, the NAO is in a constant fluxuation but i gues it is more common for it to be more possitive than it currently is...
plappers662 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
eh? he wasn't saying that. read the first sentence you mong. he thinks this year was away from the norm?. this was the coldest winter in 30 years in the UK. and if you look back at the met records for the last 100 it was easily in the top 10% coldest. the reason - a super south Jet stream - thats the point of the article.
Kieran100662 days ago -8 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
oh course this winter just gone was different than normal. my point was he should not use his own judgement to decide if the previous winter was normal as human subjectivity stands in the way of doing good science. he should have looked at long term averages to be sure his assumption of the previous winter being normal was correct. the other option would have been to keep to descriptive words such as "normal and "unusual" without presenting data in a semi-scientific style.
Tony Butt662 days ago -6 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Dear Kieran 100, Thanks for the comment. I am fully aware that to make a proper comparison I would have to look at a lot more data from the past. In fact, to cover the long-term cycles in the North Atlantic Oscillation I would have to go back way before direct records began and use proxies such as tree rings or ice cores. Maybe I should have pointed that out more clearly in the article instead of simply inferring that my analysis was assuming that "last year was normal". However, don't forget, this is an article offered for a general surfing audience and is only meant for entertainment; it is not a peer-reviewed scientific journal paper.
plappers661 days ago -5 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
If you are interested in putting last year and this year's weather in the UK into context you'd do well to have a butcher's through this website. Mr Eden, is pretty much the Daddy when it comes to meteorological record keeping and for my money his version of the CET is better than the official stats kept by the MO. he's as meticulous with his record keeping as any victorian recrd keeper and this link here will take you to a well thought out idea of flow indices. http://www.climate-uk.com/indices/01.htm
Jay1lk665 days ago -3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Another idea on the winter weather here http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20627564.800-quiet-sun-puts-europe-on-ice.html?DCMP=OTC-rss&nsref=online-news
Alec665 days ago -6 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
i was mostly surfing small swell spots this winter but at good size cause of all the sw swells. but what i would lie to know is, whats going to happen next winter?
groundsweller665 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Nice article, a good read for any surfer.
cyberfella665 days ago -7 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
I want to know where all the charts came from for this report. I want to learn the swell windows for north cornwall, north devon, north france, west ireland, and north west ireland, and north scotland. I also want to be able to see what the jet stream looks like at any given season as well as the lows - it makes so much difference to wave quality. i was on most of those south coast cornwall swells this winter, and it seemed like ever other week it was pumping from mid december through to mid march.
Jay1lk665 days ago -5 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
some of the charts can be found.... http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/cgi-bin/expertcharts?LANG=en&CONT=euro&MODELL=gfs&VAR=prec http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/ http://www.meteociel.fr/index.php Also some of the weather forums provide a huge wealth of information. I read through http://forum.netweather.tv/ enjoy...
PZphoto&travel665 days ago +2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
What about Canary Islands Tony ???????? Did you forgot Tenerife and Lanzarote ??
KIMBALINOS666 days ago -6 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
ok I'm really lazy, and I'll be honest with ya , I cant be bothered to read all tha stuff, so could somebody break it down for me!!!haha
s.t.e.v.e666 days ago -1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
and i thought it was just to do with el nino!
Sids Surf Shack666 days ago -5 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Some decent info there!!!
natxogm666 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
It's have been the best winter in 3-4 years in southern Spain
Dicer666 days ago +1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
very interesting read that, good work Tony!
goin left667 days ago -1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
now thats a good fucking article.. no corporate bs. just mother nature rippin up the earth and a good observation of it.
plappers666 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Interesting commentary there - it was interesting to note that at times this winter the Polar jet and the sub tropical jet over the North Atlantic had merged into one 'super jet' - that doesn't happen often and the amount of time the jet spent in the deep south was noteworthy too.
rawb666 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Has anybody considered the large body of arctic glacial meltwater identified around Svaarlbard in september 2009,(ref. Greenpeace) as a result of the accelerating global climate change? This is undoubtedly affecting the course of the north atlantic drift and thus the jet stream and all associated weather patterns.We could be experiencing a tast of major changes to come. Time to get our green heads on to save the surf as we know it! Bob U.K.
goin left666 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
i was going so green then.... boom global warming. more waves!!!!! lets all burn some c02 producers!
Puzzle Pusher667 days ago Unrated Rate Positive Rate Negative
so that's why Boscombe reef has been pumping so hard lol
Sneakybadger 667 days ago Unrated Rate Positive Rate Negative
Hahaha, indeed!
BuzyG660 days ago -1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
I think you'll find that was the wash from the ferry. Or some druk from London falling of the pier.
 
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