Hobe Sound Travel & Surf Guide

Know Before You Go: Surf, Weather & Travel Info

About Hobe Sound Surf Travel

Hobe Sound Public Beach:

Hobe Sound Public Beach is one of South Florida’s better spots for large surf. Sand settles between the outside reef and the shore, and the waves reform over each successive sandbar. Good days at Hobe Sound serve up long walls that are perfect for the kind of high-speed turns that melt rails and dissolve fins. Smaller days wedge playfully over one section of reef. A small crowd tends to congregate in front of the lifeguard tower, mostly because it serves as a good landmark, but there are peaks up and down the beach. The bigger the swell, the higher the tide needs to be. Yet, smaller swells will only get mushy as the water pushes in. Hobe Sound is susceptible to unfavorable winds and can often be sideshore or onshore; however, if the wind is light, the waves may section but won’t close out.

Big days at Hobe Sound require fit surfers and longer surfboards. The set waves break more than a quarter-mile off the beach, and there is no easy way out, as strong currents drag you south. Longboards are not really a viable option because the lines of whitewater are relentless, requiring constant duck-diving. It sounds terrible, but a few waves each session make the adverse conditions worthwhile.

Blowing Rocks:

Blowing Rocks is named for the limestone rocks along the shoreline. When a sizable swell is running, geysers of whitewater spume through the outcroppings. Although Blowing Rocks is better known for its snook fishing, hollow lefts grind over the shallow reef on occasion. Stiff offshore winds keep the barrels open, but don’t go for any swan dives: it’s shallow. The place could easily cost you a fin or a pound of flesh. Blowing Rocks is super fickle and isn’t worth surfing under 4 feet.

Hobe Sound Surf Report

See the forecast for Hobe Sound