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SOUTH COUNTY
Capitola Jetty When the swell is up, this spot deserves more than a passing look. A nice left careens in front of the jetty and to the right can go on forever, assuming your skag doesn’t hit the kelp-infested water. Also, about a block and a reef away is the infamous Toe’s Over, which needs a huge winter swell and a minus low tide to break.
The Hook Named for the copious amounts of kelp in the lineup that “hooks” around skags and booties, this nice little point break also has a lot of surfers that are “hooked” to the spot.
Manresa/La Selva Manresa is a mélange of peaks, valleys and sandbars. But a lot of the time the place is epic, breaking left and right and all over. Expect a long, grueling paddle during the wintertime to the outside.
Privates Longboard paradise. Clean right-facing lines peel off and make for a great ride that will take you all the way into the break known as Trees, and into the Capitola Wharf area.
Pleasure Point Like its moniker, this place pleasures just about everyone. As a result, it’s generally crowded with everyone from groms to experts, longboarders to ripping ultra thin-glassed rippers.
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SANTA CRUZ AREA
Cowell Everyone’s got to start somewhere, and this place is it. The bunny slope of surfing gets its fair share of beginners but it also has nice sloping waves that go on forever. Easy access and easy attitudes give Cowell a ride that, once mastered, leads to many more beautiful things.
Steamer Lane One of the best classic breaks in the world, Steamer Lane more than lives up to its reputation. With four reef breaks rolled into one spot—The Point, Middle Peak, The Slot and Indicators—the Lane, as it’s affectionately called, has it all. There’s even a surfing museum in the lighthouse.
Natural Bridges The best tube rides available anywhere when the conditions are just right. It’s a speedy right that peaks over an outer reef and peels toward the beach. There are always the butterflies in the park above the break, if you miss the surf.


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NORTH COUNTY Three Mile Primo reef break that is usually uncrowded (until now), especially during the weekdays. Three Mile, as with most North Coast spots south of Davenport, includes a long walk through Brussels sprouts fields.
Scott’s Creek Scott’s dishes out about every challenge a surfer can handle when it gets pumping. From long paddles and strong currents/rips to sharky waters and unpredictable peaks, Scott’s isn’t for the faint of heart or arms. But when it goes off, it’s heaven on water.
Waddell Creek Similar conditions for Waddell Creek as for Scott’s, except during the summer and early fall when Waddell is one of the world’s premier wind and kite surfing spots. Catch this right-breaking break early in the morning or keep on driving when it’s blown out.
Four Mile This one is much more popular with a local contingent that tends to stare hard and long at newcomers. Because of its bluff protected location, Four Mile isn’t aff ected (as much) by the inevitable afternoon summer winds as most spots on the North Coast. Reaches its full potential during west, northwest 10-foot and above swell
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