
Given the pop culture stereotype of the “surfer dude” as perpetuated by the likes of Jeff Spicoli and Bodhi, non-surfers might be forgiven for assuming that surfers comprehend very little outside of scoring some “tasty waves” and “a cool buzz.” I guess when you get right down to it, the assumption is partly true. In terms of motivating factors, very few things get a surfer’s blood pumping like the anticipation of a good swell. One look at the amalgamation of influential factors that go into defining a ‘good swell,’ however, and the notion that surfers are merely wandering beach bums who happen into decent waves from time to time goes out the window.
Taking a quick look back at the history of surf forecasting, it’s amazing to see how far things have come. From ancient rituals and appeasement of various gods by early Polynesian cultures, to rudimentary isobaric chart readings and the SMB method developed during the 1950s, all the way to the accessibility of information via the internet and the subsequent rise of surf forecasting services like Wavetrak and Surfline. Today, websites like surfline.com and magicseaweed.com place countless wave forecasting tools, charts, and graphs at the fingertips of every surfer, creating an army of pseudo-informed wave riders. The missing piece among the plethora of colorful, easy-to-understand chunks of surf condition data is the nuanced tidbits of knowledge that can only come from time spent studying and surfing a given spot.