One Palm Point Surf Guide

Surf spot guide

Ideal Surf Conditions

Swell Direction

S, SW

Wind

SE

Surf Height

Head high to triple overhead

Tide

Mid.

One Palm Point Surf Guide

There was a time in the late '90s and early '00s when feral surfers who'd formerly staked out positions at places like G-land, began to slip away to a rumored left-hand point somewhere off in Western Java. The way the stories went, this wave was much heavier, shallower and more treacherous than G-Land. At a time when Teahupo'o was surfed by a relative few, this discovery was pretty astonishing. Video footage that returned from those early exploits revealed surfers wearing fullsuits in the tropics simply to protect themselves from the razor-sharp coral heads and vicious dry spots and the inevitable close-out section. The video also revealed a wave that most civilian surfers wouldn't want anything to do with.

Because of other discoveries, and the fact that One Palm Point exists in a National Park, the wave went under exposed in the surf media during the early part of the century. Debates over planned surf camps or other developments then put the wave into Internet chat rooms. Today though, the best option to surf this wave remains the boat charter. Excursions here are often planned around full moons.

Ability Level

Advanced

BegIntAdv

Advanced

Local Vibe

Welcoming

WelcomingIntimidating

None.

Crowd Factor

Mellow

MellowHeavy

Light.

Spot Rating

Perfect

PoorPerfect

Really.

Shoulder Burn

Exhausting

LightExhausting

Heavy

Water Quality

Clean

CleanDirty

Clean

Hazards

This place is remote and the reef is shallow.

Bring Your

Shortboard

Access

Boat charter.

Bottom

Reef.

Best Season

March to November

Do you have local knowledge about One Palm Point?

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