Ala Moana Bowls

Surf Guide

Inarguably Town's most coveted -- and famous -- high performance wave. Ala Moana has a clearly formed and obvious lineup -- it's right where all those big dudes on big boards are sitting. Ala Mo', as it's often referred to, is a long left, with a few different tube sections and a range of takeoff spots, but it's most focused (and perfect) when a solid South swell detonates on the outside bowl section. The seabed next to reef was dredged for Ala Wai Harbor, thus the man-made interference bends swell and refracts it. And even though really big sets are still referred to as "Pole" sets, the pole that once indicated such incoming bombs is now gone. The Ala Moana Bowls left can hold solid size and breaks off toward the harbor channel, but Bowls also offers a shorter right on smaller days that will usually end as a closeout section on the very shallow inside reef. As you head west across Magic Island into Ala Moana Park, there are numerous quirky, crowded and hard to catch reefbreaks, including Tennis Courts, Big Rights and Kewalo Basin. All of these waves work best on the same swell as Waikiki, though tide and local knowledge definitely comes into play here. Click here for Surfline's Ala Moana Spot Check with Randall Paulson

Ability Level

Intermediate - Advanced - Pro

BegIntAdv

Advanced to pro; intermediate on smaller days

Local Vibe

Intimidating

WelcomingIntimidating

8. Very intense

Crowd Factor

Heavy

MellowHeavy

9. Very thick, very intense

Spot Rating

Perfect

PoorPerfect

9. When it's on, it will offer meaty barrels.

Shoulder Burn

Medium

LightExhausting

Water Quality

Fair

CleanDirty

4. It is a harbor, so pollution is inevitable.

Ideal Surf Conditions

Swell Direction

South-Southeast, South, South-West

Wind

North-Northwest, North-East, East

Surf Height

Head high+

Tide

Low to mid