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Acesso
In between Cabo San Lucas and the San Jose Airport, on the only paved road that runs along the shore. The Costa Azul Surf Shop is on the land side of the road, the surf beach is almost across the street, but down the cliff. Access is through hotel/private property, but nobody seemed to mind.
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): In between Cabo San Lucas and the San Jose Airport, on the only paved road that runs along the shore. The Costa Azul Surf Shop is on the land side of the road, the surf beach is almost across the street, but down the cliff. Access is through hotel/private property, but nobody seemed to mind.
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): In between Cabo San Lucas and the San Jose Airport, on the only paved road that runs along the shore. The Costa Azul Surf Shop is on the land side of the road, the surf beach is almost across the street, but down the cliff. Access is through hotel/private property, but nobody seemed to mind.
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): In between Cabo San Lucas and the San Jose Airport, on the only paved road that runs along the shore. The Costa Azul Surf Shop is on the land side of the road, the surf beach is almost across the street, but down the cliff. Access is through hotel/private property, but nobody seemed to mind.
DistânciaTome um carro
CaminhadaCurta caminhada (5-15 mn)
Fácil de encontrar?OK
Acesso público?
Acesso especialNão sei
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Características do spot de surf
Qualidade do spot
Qualidade das ondasClássico regional
ExperiênciaTodos os surfistas
FrequênciaMuito consistente (150 dias/ano)
Onda
TipoPoint-break
DirecçãoDireita
FundoRecife (corais, rochas cortantes, etc...)
PotênciaPotente
Comprimento normal
Comprimento máximo
Marés, Ondas e vento
Direcção da ressaca
Direcção do vento
Tamanho da ressacaComeça em e vai até
Condição da maré
Movimento da maré
Mais detalhes
Cheio durante a semana
Cheio no fim de semana
Link Webcam
Perigos
Informações suplementares
3 sections (they are connected with the biggest swells):
Acapulcito: only breaks with big swells, long rides.
The Rock: the most popular, crowded.
Zippers: hollow fast right.
from a contributor:
"I just learned to surf recently (in Santa Cruz), but I think I am correct in saying that Costa Azul, for those who can make their way there, is unbelievable. I went in July and the water was bathwater warm, the sea was deep blue, the water was clean, the beach was pure white, there were only a handful of surfers sharing more than enough waves. AND THE WAVES were unbelievable. 5+ feet, consistent, powerful. The bottom was a little scary during low tide. I can barely surf and I was catching huge waves by accident (honestly caught one while paddling OUT). And the rides are LONG, all the way into the shore from way, way out. Later in the day conditions pick up and the waves get bigger (6-8ft), coming in sets of 3-5, making it really hard to paddle out, so I sat on the beach while my boyfriend and his buddy got pummeled. I know this sounds like a stupid chick review because I really don't know that much about surfing, but I do know that Costa Azul is a great place, and even if I'm wrong about surfing, where else can you buy beer for 50 cents and drink it while you are driving down the most amazing stretch of coastline?"
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): 3 sections (they are connected with the biggest swells):<br />Acapulcito: only breaks with big swells, long rides.<br />The Rock: the most popular, crowded.<br />Zippers: hollow fast right.<br /><br />from a contributor:<br />"I just learned to surf recently (in Santa Cruz), but I think I am correct in saying that Costa Azul, for those who can make their way there, is unbelievable. I went in July and the water was bathwater warm, the sea was deep blue, the water was clean, the beach was pure white, there were only a handful of surfers sharing more than enough waves. AND THE WAVES were unbelievable. 5+ feet, consistent, powerful. The bottom was a little scary during low tide. I can barely surf and I was catching huge waves by accident (honestly caught one while paddling OUT). And the rides are LONG, all the way into the shore from way, way out. Later in the day conditions pick up and the waves get bigger (6-8ft), coming in sets of 3-5, making it really hard to paddle out, so I sat on the beach while my boyfriend and his buddy got pummeled. I know this sounds like a stupid chick review because I really don't know that much about surfing, but I do know that Costa Azul is a great place, and even if I'm wrong about surfing, where else can you buy beer for 50 cents and drink it while you are driving down the most amazing stretch of coastline?"
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): 3 sections (they are connected with the biggest swells):<br />Acapulcito: only breaks with big swells, long rides.<br />The Rock: the most popular, crowded.<br />Zippers: hollow fast right.<br /><br />from a contributor:<br />&quot;I just learned to surf recently (in Santa Cruz), but I think I am correct in saying that Costa Azul, for those who can make their way there, is unbelievable. I went in July and the water was bathwater warm, the sea was deep blue, the water was clean, the beach was pure white, there were only a handful of surfers sharing more than enough waves. AND THE WAVES were unbelievable. 5+ feet, consistent, powerful. The bottom was a little scary during low tide. I can barely surf and I was catching huge waves by accident (honestly caught one while paddling OUT). And the rides are LONG, all the way into the shore from way, way out. Later in the day conditions pick up and the waves get bigger (6-8ft), coming in sets of 3-5, making it really hard to paddle out, so I sat on the beach while my boyfriend and his buddy got pummeled. I know this sounds like a stupid chick review because I really don't know that much about surfing, but I do know that Costa Azul is a great place, and even if I'm wrong about surfing, where else can you buy beer for 50 cents and drink it while you are driving down the most amazing stretch of coastline?&quot;
English (Traduzir este texto em Português): 3 sections (they are connected with the biggest swells):&lt;br &#47;&gt;Acapulcito: only breaks with big swells, long rides.&lt;br &#47;&gt;The Rock: the most popular, crowded.&lt;br &#47;&gt;Zippers: hollow fast right.&lt;br &#47;&gt;&lt;br &#47;&gt;from a contributor:&lt;br &#47;&gt;&amp;quot;I just learned to surf recently (in Santa Cruz), but I think I am correct in saying that Costa Azul, for those who can make their way there, is unbelievable. I went in July and the water was bathwater warm, the sea was deep blue, the water was clean, the beach was pure white, there were only a handful of surfers sharing more than enough waves. AND THE WAVES were unbelievable. 5+ feet, consistent, powerful. The bottom was a little scary during low tide. I can barely surf and I was catching huge waves by accident (honestly caught one while paddling OUT). And the rides are LONG, all the way into the shore from way, way out. Later in the day conditions pick up and the waves get bigger (6-8ft), coming in sets of 3-5, making it really hard to paddle out, so I sat on the beach while my boyfriend and his buddy got pummeled. I know this sounds like a stupid chick review because I really don't know that much about surfing, but I do know that Costa Azul is a great place, and even if I'm wrong about surfing, where else can you buy beer for 50 cents and drink it while you are driving down the most amazing stretch of coastline?&amp;quot;
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