Understanding Weather Conditions for Paddle Boarding
Learn to read wind, waves, tides, and weather patterns to make safe decisions on the water.
Check three things before every launch: wind speed (under 10 mph for beginners), wave height (under 1 ft for beginners), and water temperature (dress for the water, not the air). Offshore wind is dangerous at any skill level.
Problem
Most weather-related accidents happen because paddlers misjudge conditions — they check air temperature but not water temperature, or don't understand that offshore wind can blow them out to sea.
Løsning
Use a structured pre-launch weather assessment: wind direction and speed, wave period and height, tide state, and water temperature. Understand how each factor affects your safety.
Audience: All paddlers who go on open water — lakes, bays, rivers, and ocean.
Steps
- 1
Check wind speed and direction — offshore wind (blowing from land to sea) is the most dangerous
- 2
Assess wave conditions — wave period matters as much as wave height
- 3
Know the tide — tidal currents can be stronger than your paddling speed
- 4
Measure water temperature — below 60°F/15°C requires thermal protection
- 5
Check visibility — fog and heavy rain reduce visibility and increase collision risk
- 6
Understand local hazards — submerged rocks, strong currents, boat traffic zones
Vanlige spørsmål
What wind speed is too high for SUP? ▼
Beginners: over 10 mph (8 knots). Intermediate: over 15 mph (13 knots). Advanced: over 20 mph (17 knots). If in doubt, do not go out.
What does wave period mean? ▼
Wave period is the time between successive waves. Short periods (under 8 seconds) mean steep, choppy waves. Long periods (over 12 seconds) mean smoother, more predictable swells.
Can I paddle in the rain? ▼
Light rain is usually safe. Heavy rain reduces visibility and can indicate changing wind conditions. Thunderstorms require immediate evacuation from the water.