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28 October 2014
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Porthleven
Porthleven
Porthleven on the South Coast of Cornwall

Porthleven is not for the faint-hearted but if you know what you're doing it can be very rewarding.

NORTH COAST

SOUTH COAST

SEE ALSO
Daily surf conditions
Surfing guide to Cornwall
Surf messageboard
webcams
WEB LINKS

National Data Buoy Centre
Wave watch charts

South West surf sites
:
A1Surf
One Stop Surf
Surf 98
Surfnewquay
6ftoffshore


Surf sites abroad:
Ripcurl
Quiksilver
Billabong
O'Neill
Surfermag
Surfingaustralia

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FACTS

+ There are currently 250,000 surfers in the UK.

+ The biggest surf normally occurs on a pushing tide, especially on the Bristol Channel coast.

+ Croyde Bay in North Devon and Fistral Beach in Cornwall are two of the most popular surfing beaches in Britain.

+ The first ever degree in surfing was offered by the University of Plymouth.

+ The record for the most number of surfers on a board was broken in 1989 at Fistral Beach, Newquay. Twelve surfers rode a 37ft longboard shaped by Tim Mellors.

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Porthleven is for expert surfers. It’s been described by many of the surfers who regularly ride what is renowned to be one of Britain’s best right-hand reef breaks as the 'beauty and the beast'.

Beauty because it breaks with machine-gun like precision over a shallow flat rock ledge with a very makeable tube on clean offshore days; the beast because the power of the wave means mistakes can be costly.

Hold-downs can be long on big overhead days, and the rip is wicked and there are caves to be wary of at high tide. But the sheer perfection when ‘Leven is on fades that into insignificance.

For the reef to kick in it needs a big south or south westerly groundswell with a light north to north-east wind to caress the wave face. Paddle out by the harbour channel to the reef on the right. Low tide is a definite no-go as the waves get super hollow and the reef is just too exposed.

Good from just before mid to just before high. On big tides there is a backwash off the rocks and harbour wall. The break faces south west and is popular with surfers and body boarders. Crowds can be a big problem when the wave breaks under 6ft.

To the left of the harbour is a smaller version called The Pier, which breaks both left and right and is less powerful than the main reef. Paddle out from the harbour.

Park where you can, which can be a headache in summer. All the shops needed for a decent pit stop are in walking distance.

Click on locations to take you to the corresponding beach guides.


Click here to take you to the North Coast

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