#23 Postby Andrew92 » Fri Aug 08, 2014 10:51 pm
Frequent summertime visitor to the beaches of Southern California here.
I can vouch for what a lot of people are saying about the waters off the coast being cold year-round. I typically head over there once a year in July or so for a weekend when the heat gets crazy where I live (Arizona) and let me tell you, that water is refreshing to me like you wouldn't believe. Usually in the 60s or 70s, nothing like the bathwater I hear a lot about in Florida.
As for surf and storm surge, well, waves in some areas can be quite high so I could see a hurricane producing quite a lot of rough surf in some areas. In fact I seem to recall on one visit a couple years ago that there was a hurricane well to the south that kicked up slightly higher surf than normal along Newport Beach just south of downtown LA. But LA is also a very hilly area. To those who have never been there, most of those beach towns have some very high hills alongside them, Newport excepted since it is a manmade peninsula. I haven't been to Rancho Palos Verdes, but I have heard those cliffs are quite high there in particular.
The coast also runs on a mostly southeast-to-northwest trajectory, so for storm surge to really be a factor to begin with, such a hurricane likely would have to head straight northeast. I believe in doing so, a storm would be passing over more of those cooler waters than heading north. If there is one place I could think of only based on the shape of the coast if a hurricane was heading in the ideal direction of north, it would be Long Beach. I haven't been there since I go to that area to go swimming and Long Beach is more of a seaport so I can't say if it's hilly like most of the other places though.
But hey, I've also never actually experienced a hurricane before, so take my word with a grain of salt. Just going with what I have learned about hurricanes and what I already know about Southern California.
-Andrew92
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