Long Beach

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Long Beach surfspot characteristics

Swell Window
NE | SE
Optimal Swell Direction
E
Swell Size
2ft - 10ft
Breaks over
sand
Wave type
beach
Wave direction
left | right
Optimal Wind Direction
NW
Best Tides at
low | mid

More about Long Beach surfspot

Probably the most powerful beachbreak in northern Massachusetts, Long Beach consistently attracts the maximum available swell and magnifies it onto the low tide sandbanks. The southern corner has a hollow left breaking into the rocks, which is less likely to close-out than the rest of the beach.

General: This Gloucester enclave hosts one of the most powerful, most exposed beachbreaks in the state, Long Beach, where at lower tides plentiful sandbanks magnify any available swell. The southern corner of Cape Ann boasts a hollow left that breaks into exposed rocks at low tide. A little channel near the rocks helps with paddle-outs on big swells. Tides: Dead high tide brings backwash. Size: Knee-high to double overhead. Wind: NW Swell: NE, SE Bottom: Sand and rock. Paddling: You’ll take some gas when it’s good. Spot Rating: Massachusetts is a beachbreak goldmine if you know where you’re going. You could do a lot worse than Cape Ann.

Chargers preferred, cruisers accepted, barneys denied.

Parking (legally) is limited, expensive and sketchy.

September-March

Crowd Factor: The colder the water, the more chill the lineup. Local Vibe: Mellow, maybe some territorial behavior on the good days.

The most crowded spot in the Cape Anne area, which isn’t saying much. Parking is sketchy.

Gloucester beaches historically passed water quality tests at least 95% of the time.

Sharks, hypothermia, rocks.

Check surf reports near Long Beach