Ocean Beach
San Diego Surf Spots
Surf Guide
Not to be confused with its northern franchise, this small stretch of sand's most elemental physical trait is its location at the end of the Interstate 8. This is where anyone aimlessly heading west will end up, so the beach gets all kinds. It also receives all kinds of swell, and often offers ridable waves when the rest of central San Diego is dry. The town itself is a bastion of liberalism, while the rest of San Diego is, well, also dry. It's the hippiest, if not hippest, San Diego beach community. On the north end, Big Jetty is a hollow right breaking off of the southern jetty of the Mission Bay entrance. It begins with a steep peak and a small takeoff zone, but then elongates into a long, fast right wall. It sections depending on the sandbar and swell direction. Both sets and insiders are similarly shaped, and the break, although preferring a mid- to low tide, will break well on just about any tide. Closeouts are the rule with swell pushing 8 feet plus. The thing to consider here is the San Diego River. Closures are frequent due to runoff from storm events and sewage spills, and signage warning of pollution has been permanently established here. Many local surfers have gotten sick after surfing the jetty. Worse still is the fact that the jetty breaks directly in front of Dog Beach, the only area beach where dogs are allowed to run free, which means there are more land mines in the sand here than in all of Cambodia. Avalanche is a predominately left peak that breaks just north of the finger, or little, jetty bisecting Ocean Beach. It's consistent, and breaks on a variety of tides and just about any swell with a little west in it. Various peaks form just north of the main peak, holding both rights and lefts. This section of the beach is blackballed during summer months from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. During after-work sessions in summer, it's possible to see more neoprene out there than water -- i.e., it's crowded. The Ocean Beach Pier at the end of Newport Street is the most accessible spot in an area of accessible spots. Both right and left peaks, it's temperamental, shifty, unpredictable, perennially surfed and most often mediocre. This is not to say that it doesn't have its good days. When it is working well, usually it's the right peeling into the pier that is the main attraction. There's a mushy, rock-and-sand left on the south side of the pier that often shoots surfers through the pier's pylons at a snail's pace. Local lore says that this left was a solid reef/sand break before the construction of the pier in 1962, but nowadays one can only stand on the pier and imagine its former glory. Like other local spots, the breaks around the pier are happiest on a low to mid-tide, a swell with a little west in the mix and light wind.
Ability Level
All Abilities
beginner to advanced
Local Vibe
Doable
stuffy
Crowd Factor
Moderate
packed in summer
Spot Rating
Fun
1 to 6
Shoulder Burn
Light
3
Water Quality
Fair
5; 10 if the San Diego River is flowing
Ideal Surf Conditions
Swell Direction
W, NW, SW
Wind
E
Surf Height
3 to 6 feet
Tide
mid