Explore / Brazil · Pernambuco

Fernando de Noronha.

Now

  · updated 15 hours ago
swell
1.5m
11s
wind
9 kt
east
tide
0.82 m
rising
N E S W
▬ swell – wind
-3.85, -32.40
Next days outlook
beta

The week begins with a fading south swell around 1.5m at 10-11 seconds under light ENE wind, building slightly through midweek as the swell holds near 1.6m with moderate ESE flow. A fresh pulse arrives Friday with the week’s peak at 1.7m from east-southeast/north at 8 seconds under strong ESE wind, then eases slightly through the weekend while remaining wind-affected with heavy wind-sea and moderate to strong ESE flow. Looks like Wednesday dawn under light wind may offer the cleanest conditions before the wind picks up.

Spots

Swell height

<7s
7–11s
11–13s
13–15s
15–18s
18+s

 

Wave systems

  • primary
  • secondary
  • tertiary
  • wind sea

 

Power

small
solid / average
energetic
heavy

 

Wind speed

light
moderate
strong
blown out

 

Tide

 

Weather

 

Nearby regions

About Fernando de Noronha

Fernando de Noronha is a volcanic archipelago 354 km off Brazil’s north-east coast, administered by Pernambuco. The headline is Cacimba do Padre, a heavy beach-break tube under the twin rocks called Dois Irmãos. Boldró and Conceição, both within walking distance, hold up at smaller swells. The island sits at 3.8°S, directly in the path of North Atlantic winter storms, which makes it the rare Brazilian wave that fires hardest in Brazilian summer. UNESCO listed it as a World Heritage Site in 2001.

Peak runs December through March, when North Atlantic storms send long-period north to north-west swell straight at the island. Cacimba is rarely under 0.6 m through peak season and tops out around 2.5 m. Periods stretch past 13 s when it’s on. The east-south-east trade is dominant, offshore at Cacimba and Boldró all day. Swells run 5 to 6 days, and the gaps between are dead flat. February is the peak month, with the highest count of clean days.

Water sits at 26 to 28 °C year-round. Boardies, end of story. The hazards are the reef and the access. Cacimba breaks fast and shallow over rock; the inside dries on a low tide. Flights only land from Natal or Recife, and the island charges a daily environmental fee. 70% of the archipelago is a national marine park, with restricted hours at the protected beaches. If Cacimba is closing out, walk to Boldró.

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