Surf Guide

Created by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the breakwater finger sticking into picturesque Santa Barbara Harbor works magic with the local sand flow, arranging those precious grains in such a fashion that they transform ordinary lines of swell into insanely hollow rights that can either peel on and on, or dump squarely onto your back, depositing you straight into the oh-so-shallow bottom. Most surfers think that Sandspit only breaks on the biggest of winter swells with that crazy backwash, chocolate water and frightening double-ups, but you'd be surprised at how many days it's surfable.Here's how Sandspit works: a set will approach the breakwater, hit the backwash, jack up right in front of some craggy jetty boulders and spin off down the line. The takeoffs are ridiculously steep and are often outright airdrops, so paddle into them like mad, hop up as soon as you can and look to pull-in from ground zero. When conditions are ideal, the wave is a straight tube, nothing else. No room for carves, reentries or floaters. Visualize Kirra, but on a smaller, colder scale. But it's also a dangerous place to surf. Not only is the bottom extremely shallow and the lips are like jackhammers, surfers have been known to get washed over the breakwater and deposited in fetus position on the other side. Watch that backwash.

Ability Level

Advanced

BegIntAdv

Advanced

Local Vibe

Welcoming

WelcomingIntimidating

Not a whole lot of it, but don't drop in on anyone or get in the way.

Crowd Factor

Heavy

MellowHeavy

Minimal when it's small, or you can surf it with 25 to 50 of your best bros when it's firing. The vibe is intense, so react accordingly and move quickly.

Spot Rating

Fun

PoorPerfect

Sand-sucking tube if you can keep up.

Shoulder Burn

Medium

LightExhausting

Minimal when it is small, treadmill on the hillclimb setting when it is pumping.

Water Quality

Fair

CleanDirty

It's a harbor entrance.

Ideal Surf Conditions

Swell Direction

W, WSW, preferably a swell period less than 15 seconds

Wind

N

Surf Height

waist-high to several feet overhead, when it becomes quite hazardous

Tide

low