© 2013 ~Pablo Jiménez~
SWELL Chile is the brick wall at the end of the Pacific Ocean, halting all the power and fury of the southern ocean swells and smashing them on an ancient coastline of metamorphic and sedimentary rocks. Statistically, the entire coast of Chile is incredibly consistent; the ever-present S to W swell supply usually sweeps in between 190 © 2013 ~JC Lombardi~
WINDS Almost as reliable as the swell, Chile's wind pattern is largely due S, with a slight lean to the E for most months, especially in the morning as the desert land breeze blows SE, pretty much directly offshore. Overall, wind speeds can only be described as low to moderate (5-15mph) up north, then gradually gathering pace as you head south towards the storm belt. Much of the coast is also slightly tilted towards the NW, helping improve the offshore angle during S winds, particularly in the southern corners of beaches and in the lee of headlands. Taking all these factors together, it is not surprising to learn that 5 star surf days occur 30% of the time and 4 stars happen over 50% of the time almost every month. © 2013 ~Gustavo Yong~
TIDES Chile's tidal range sits at the high end of the micro tidal scale, measuring between 1.5-2m (5-6ft), but that much change in height can be the difference between rideable and ridiculous on the shallow slab reefs in Arica and Iquique. The rivermouths down south are also affected, and tend to prefer more water. It is surprising that the country with the world's longest north to south coastline has such little variation in tidal height, but it is all good news for surfers as it just adds to the consistency figures. © 2013 ~JC Lombardi~
CURRENTS & TEMPERATURES The bountiful Humboldt Current creates seasonal upwelling along the coast of Chile, bringing in 15-20% of world marine catches from just 1% of the world's ocean surface (up to 20M tons per year for Peru and Chile combined). It also keeps the coastal waters seriously cool for most of the year, with winter lows of 16 © 2013 ~Tom Ashton~
HOTSPOT - EL GRINGO Sometimes nicknamed the Chilean Pipeline, El Gringo is another tubular A-frame crashing close to the shore with serious power. It's a fast wave too, pushing surfers to go for broke and score a great barrel or get slammed on the reef. The left is the real deal with compression tubes and a more predictable rate of speed and openness, once the lurching air-drop has been negotiated. Paddling out to the left is fraught with nose-crunching duck dives and currents that can hold you in the impact zone for an eternity. Meanwhile, the symmetry-balancing right holds a bigger SW swell and throws wide before triangulating the wall into deeper water that provides a far safer paddling channel back to the peak. Tide is dependant on size, as it is usually the small swells that lure victims onto the barely watered rocky platform. If the description doesn't make it obvious this is an experts wave then the hazards may help. Ultra-shallow sharp reef studded with urchins and some barnacles, swept by currents and occasionally patrolled by aggressive sea-lions and the areas best surfers, who wont take any nonsense. It's cold, foggy and generally a scary vibe unless you feel right at home in the maw of one of Chile's best waves. Crowds have increased since Rip Curl ran the Search in 2007. © 2013 ~Caio Guedes~
HOTSPOT - EL BUEY El Buey is a big wave arena, 700m (2100ft) offshore from the modern beach scene of playa El Laucho. Even though it can break both ways, the left remains the better option, as it's always hollower than the right. The left will focus S-SSW swells into booming barrels, while the right will wall up anything with more W in it and offer roller coaster walls. The spot can hold 20ft (6m), but is quite wind sensitive. Breaks with medium consistency and is rarely-crowded over a large, shifting peak playing field. Set dodging experience and big lungs required when it heads beyond the triple-overhead mark. © 2013 ~El Pelecho~
HOTSPOT - EL COLEGIO Iquique's banner spot is Colegio, found just opposite the main high school. It's a thick, muscle-bound right that pumps up nicely as the swell increases and will handle up to the triple-overhead mark fairly effortlessly. Following the local trend for vertical drops into a draining barrel section, the difference here is it can keep spinning down the line for a good 100m. Picture perfect in the sparkling morning glass, it is still a challenging prospect and lesser surfers should beware. Handles most tides through the size range and prefers the push, with high giving more room for error on the peak. Needs at least headhigh conditions to start breaking and just gets better from there. So crowds of rippers and bodyboarders will be on hand when it is firing, which is fairly often and travellers need to show respect to both the locals and the wave. The Vertical Surf Shop is just across the road and a main hang out, with good stock of surfing essentials. Watch out for clean-up sets that close out the channel and keep an eye on the outside indicator bomboras. © 2013 ~JC Lombardi~
HOTSPOT - LA CÚPULA Regularly picked as a national contest site, Cúpula is regarded as the best wave in the region. It breaks best at 6-12ft (2-4m) and locals compare it to Tavarua. Exaggeration or not, the wave is indeed a long left with several tubular sections, breaking over magma rock reef. The occasional shorter right can be ridden as well. Friendly locals may give tips on how to handle the rocks sticking out in front of the wave and the urchins and seashells covering the seafloor. © 2013 ~Ertreg~
HOTSPOT - PUERTECILLO One of Chile's most sought after left pointbreaks and renowned for epic, long, sand dredging barrels. It's nestled in the lee of the stubby headland with good south wind protection, but that also means it needs a decent dose of swell to get going. Always much smaller than the waves in Pichilemu, ideal conditions include at least a 3m SW swell, SE or no wind, outgoing tide from mid and hopefully a mellow, mid-week crowd. When the sand is parked, waves of up to 700m are possible. It's pretty inconsistent and can be uninspiring when small and broken up. The land is privately owned by a corporation with development aspirations. Plans for a marina have been shelved but a large housing development may replace the natural environment, that has been impacted by decades of camping. Permission slips must be obtained before arriving at the camping area and surf camp. This is now reportedly only possible in Santiago. The access roads are rough and getting lost is easy. Summer crowds and drop-ins are a given and seeing 100 people in the line-up is normal for peak periods. The rip current is a constant drain and it is way too sucky for beginners or improvers to get much joy. © 2013 ~ChileSafari EcoSurfCamp~
HOTSPOT - PUNTA DE LOBOS Proclaimed "The best left pointbreak in Chile" by local big-wave maestro Ramon Navarro and few could argue when witnessing a monster SW swell detonating way outside the iconic rocks that guard the entrance to the bay. Lobos is not just for XXL days either, with a ripable, sand-bottomed section known as Diamante on the inside for the groms and the pilots. Further up the point, the El Mirador section has summer peelers rotating past the shoreline rock clusters, or muscle-bound walls linking from the rocks all the way to the beach sections in a lined-up SW-W swell. Too much S swell will ramp up the current, while W will shut down the outside barrels so SW @ 235 © 2013 ~Rasputamasifasin~
Punta de Lobos continued... Prefers lower tides, but will break right through. The paddle-out from the island rocks (Los Morros) has achieved legendary status for sketchiness - dashing across the slippery shelf from a hiding place in the rocks when there is a lull has caught many out. Experts only when it gets above double-overhead. Summer beach party scene, surf shop on point and skate ramp on the beach for flat days, which are pretty rare. Punta Lobos is one of the most consistent spots in the southern hemisphere, let alone Chile so don't expect to get it to yourself. © 2013 ~Glass Pichilemu~
HOTSPOT - BUCHUPEREO Buchupureo is the standout break with La Boca, meaning rivermouth, grooming the sand into really long lefts, breaking in 2-3 sections and it's protected from S winds. Barrel time can reach a handful of seconds and comparisons with Mundaka means it gets crowded at times. Has been the subject of many a secret spot campaign and remains a low key spot. Some vibe is bound to be encountered from the "we were here first" crew of non-domicile surfers. Consistency is as variable as the flow of sand from the rivermouth. © 2013 ~e-razzera~
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