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Savaii Surf

The quality of many breaks on Savaii depends greatly on swell direction, as swells can be hitting from virtually any point of the compass. Winds are variable, and tides are also a factor. Savaii Surfaris' years of experience will ensure you'll surf the best waves possible during your holiday.

Samoa has surf all year, generally divided into the two seasons of South and North swells.

The consistent South swells, generated by the winter storms deep in the Southern Pacific Basin, typically occur from April to early November (the southern hemisphere autumn, winter and spring), but can happen at any time of the year. South-East trade winds blow intermittently from around May to October, and are most frequent from June to September, but even in these months, conditions are typically calm and glassy in the morning and often in the late afternoon as well.

From November to early April, North swells arrive from the tropical storms and hurricanes of the North Pacific, often the same swells that have already hit Hawaii's North Shore. Quality Southern swells are also common during this period, generated by regional cyclones in the mid-Pacific. In these months, the winds are predominantly North to North-West, with occasional South-East sea breezes.

In the shoulder season months of February-April and October-November, the perfect combination of swell and weather conditions can occur.

Water temperatures are warm all year round, averaging 24-28°C (80-85°F). On Sundays surfing is only permitted at certain breaks.

Savaii Surfing

South Coast Breaks

Coconut Grove: Solid left-hand barrel.
Fale' Right: Short right.
Last Resorts: Beach break style reef that on low tide picks up the smallest of swells.
Middles: Very consistent A-frame peak.
Aganoa Right: Sucky barrel.
Aganoa Left: Backdoor barrel.
The Point: Long down-the-line left.

North Coast Breaks

AB's: Long walled mellow right.
Blue Pools: Perfect left on big swells.
Cookie Monster: Sunset style peak right-hander for big swells.
Dougie Walters Stand: Long walled left.
Pastor Point: Fun workable right.
Pau Pau's Left & Right: Pair of peaks.
Runway Rights: Short barrelling right.
Super Sucks: Hollow right.
Turtles: Consistent, easy long-walled left.
Vaai Right & Vaai left: With good swell direction both these breaks offer great barrels.
Whiterocks: Left-hander that works well at 4 - 6ft on a big swell.

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