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taranaki
So youre a serious surfer looking for
a whole bunch of hot spots to check out with truckloads of varied
breaks and no downtime.
Well, the tight curves of the Taranaki coastline serve up some of
the best surf beaches in the country. When the swells up
you can choose epic fast-breaking barrels coming from three
points of the compass on any given day. New Plymouths
Fitzroy Beach faces north, Stent Road faces west, and Opunake
Beach faces south-west: so you are guaranteed adrenalin-pumping
rides all within a 60 km radius.
The head turning, jaw-dropping action starts at New
Plymouths main holiday spot, Fitzroy Beach. Heavy swells
from any westerly quarter roll over offshore sandbanks and
produce tasty, hollow waves all along the beach from East End to
the shipping port. Back Beach just south of the port, and
Paritutu Rock, also have good beach breaks stirred up by westerly
winds.
Oakura Beach (14 kms south of New Plymouth) is a beautiful
holiday resort with good sandbank breaks at high tide. It is a
popular venue for surfing competitions. Nearby Ahu Ahu Road has
left and right-hand reef breaks. Stent Road (37 kms from New
Plymouth) is regarded by many as one of New Zealands top
surfing spots. You take S.H.45 from New Plymouth and turn off
just past the settlement of Warea. An outstanding right-hand wave
breaks over a shallow reef on the point and travels into a
boulder-strewn bay. The west-south-west orientation of the bay
seems to attract every heavy swell that pounds the coast. The
result is consistently good waves that make Stent Road a
favourite spot for many surfers, but it is still uncrowded.
Opunake Beach (64 kms from New Plymouth) gathers up heavy seas
from the southerly quarter and surfs best on an incoming tide in
1-2 metre swells. Desperation Point, a 400 metre paddle from
Opunake Beach has left and right-hand reef breaks, which can rise
up to 6 metres in a heavy swell. You can chase the waves here for
the thrill of experiencing the big vertical drops, but caution is
needed around the jutting reefs.
Have a look at Greenmeadows just south of Opunake where heavy
swells throw up a long right-hand reef break.
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