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Surfing
For a dedicated surfer searching
for the perfect wave, Costa Rica is the place. Costa Rica boasts
both a Pacific and a Caribbean coast, some of the biggest and most
consistent year-round surf. The most efficient way to take advantage
of the surf in Costa Rica is to pick one or two towns to use as
your home base and use your rental car by day to explore the nearby
breaks. As most breaks are located within less than an hour drive
from your home base (and over half are located within 10 minutes),
this will allow you more time in the water and less time on the
road. Whatever your level of expertise, Costa Rican beaches have
something for you.
Caribbean:
The Caribbean has fewer breaks than the Pacific, but still offers
great surfing during winter and spring. Waves are short yet powerful
rides with sometimes Hawaiian-style radical waves. Occasionally
massive swells sweep over the coral reefs, creating demanding tubes.
You'll also experience exciting offshore cloud breaks, reef breaks,
point breaks, and more than 80 km of beach breaks. Just north of
Playa Bonita is Potrete, with a hollow right break at the south
end of a small bay. Farther south there are innumerable short breaks
at Cahuita. Puerto Viejo has the biggest rideable waves in Costa
Rica (up to seven meters at times). The mecca for surfers is Salsa
Brava. One expert recommends avoiding the Tortuguero region, where
sharks are abundant. The best time is late May through early September
(hurricane season) and December-March (when Atlantic storms push
through the Caribbean, creating three-meter swells).
Pacific
Coast: The Pacific Northwest offers more than 50 prime surf
spots. The best time is during the rainy season (May-October), when
the surf can build to three meters; there are large offshore winds
throughout the dry season (November-April), but the waves are smaller.
Tamarindo is the surfing capital, with lots of good surf spots within
a short driving distance; it also offers good hotels and is an excellent
jumping-off place for a surf safari south to more isolated beaches.
Hot spots such as Witch's Rock at Playa Naranjo (one of the best
beach breaks in the country, with strong offshore winds December-March)
require 4WD or boat for access. You can rent a boat from Playa del
Coco and other beach resorts for visits to Naranjo and Potrero Grande.
Just north of Tamarindo is Playa Grande, with a five-km-long beach
break acclaimed as Costa Rica's most accessible consistent break.
There's fine surfing the whole way south from Tamarindo, including
at Avellanas, with a "very hollow" beach break called
"Guanacasteco," and breathtakingly beautiful Playa Negra,
a narrow beach with fast waves breaking over a coral - and urchin
- encrusted shelf-definitely for experts only when the waves are
big. Continuing south you'll find Nosara, Samara, Camaronal, Coyote,
Manzanillo, and Mal Pais, all with good surf, lively action, and
several surf camps.
Central
Pacific: The Pacific Northwest offers more than 50 prime
surf spots. The best time is during the rainy season (May-October),
when the surf can build to three meters; there are large offshore
winds throughout the dry season (November-April), but the waves
are smaller. Tamarindo is the surfing capital, with lots of good
surf spots within a short driving distance; it also offers good
hotels and is an excellent jumping-off place for a surf safari south
to more isolated beaches. Hot spots such as Witch's Rock at Playa
Naranjo (one of the best beach breaks in the country, with strong
offshore winds December-March) require 4WD or boat for access. You
can rent a boat from Playa del Coco and other beach resorts for
visits to Naranjo and Potrero Grande. Just north of Tamarindo is
Playa Grande, with a five-km-long beach break acclaimed as Costa
Rica's most accessible consistent break. There's fine surfing the
whole way south from Tamarindo, including at Avellanas, with a "very
hollow" beach break called "Guanacasteco," and breathtakingly
beautiful Playa Negra, a narrow beach with fast waves breaking over
a coral - and urchin - encrusted shelf-definitely for experts only
when the waves are big. Continuing south you'll find Nosara, Samara,
Camaronal, Coyote, Manzanillo, and Mal Pais, all with good surf,
lively action, and several surf camps.
Southern
Pacific: The Osa Peninsula am Golfo Dulce have many virgin
surfing beaches. Getting there in rainy season can be problematic
but this does not stop diehards who arrive in droves. Then the waves
are at their grandest, and.. long left point can offer a three-minute
ride.
More information can be obtained
from the following websites
www.crsurf.com
www.latinsurf.com
www.surfcostarica.com
www.costaricasurfingtravelguide.com
Much
of the information on our site as it relates to Costa Rica is:
Courtesy
of Christopher P. Baker and Avalon Travel Publishing.
© 2004 Christopher P. Baker. All Rights Reserved.
A2Z Languages highly
recommends Christopher P. Baker's book: Moon
Handbooks Costa Rica. Click on the image to visit
his website where you can purchase this book or find out more about
the author.
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