Good afternoon, this is your Hawaii surf zone forecast for Thursday evening through Friday brought to you by the National Weather Service in Honolulu. We're tracking a pair of medium-period northwest swells moving through the islands right now. One's already peaking today with directions around 310 to 320 degrees, while another's on its way and should arrive Friday coming from 320 to 330 degrees. These swells will keep small surf rolling into north-facing shores through Saturday before gradually fading as we head into the weekend. For those eyeing the east-facing beaches, expect some wind wave action from the steady northeasterly trade winds. That energy will gradually decline through Friday, but then it's going to build right back up over the weekend, so there's more to come on that front. Here's where things get interesting. A larger north-northeast swell is brewing and will begin building into our region Saturday night, intensifying through Monday. This one's expected to bring advisory-level surf to both north and east-facing shores, especially late this weekend into early next week. If you're planning to get in the water, that's the window to watch. South-facing shores will experience small background pulses that should keep conditions above flat through early next week, so there's something for everyone regardless of which side of the islands you call home. Let's break this down by island, starting with Kauai. Tonight you're looking at five to seven feet on north-facing shores, three to five on the west side, and one to three on south-facing beaches. East-facing shores are showing four to six feet. Friday will maintain those north-facing heights at five to seven feet, while west and east-facing shores will see a slight dip. Expect mostly cloudy skies with numerous showers tonight, lows in the mid 60s, and northeast winds around 10 miles per hour. Friday looks mostly sunny with scattered showers, highs in the upper 70s, and northeast winds picking up to 10 to 15 miles per hour. Moving to Oahu, tonight's forecast shows four to six feet on the north shore and east-facing breaks, two to four on the west side, and one to three feet on the south. Friday stays relatively consistent with four to six feet on the north, three to five on the west, and three to five on the east. Weather-wise, tonight's mostly cloudy with scattered showers, lows in the upper 60s, and northeast winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour. Friday brings mostly sunny conditions with scattered showers, highs in the mid 70s, northeast winds around 15 miles per hour, and a very high UV index, so get that sunscreen ready. Over on Maui, north-facing and east-facing shores are showing four to six feet tonight, dropping slightly to four to six and three to five respectively on Friday. West and south-facing beaches will see one to three feet tonight, decreasing to one to three Friday evening. Tonight's partly cloudy with scattered showers and east winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour. Friday turns mostly sunny with scattered showers, northeast winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour, and highs in the mid 70s. For the Big Island's windward and southeast sides, north-facing shores are at four to six feet tonight before dropping to three to five Friday. East-facing beaches show four to six feet tonight and three to five Friday. South-facing shores remain small at one to three feet both days. Tonight north winds blow at 10 to 15 miles per hour with scattered showers and highs in the upper 60s. Friday brings mostly sunny skies with scattered showers, lighter north winds at 5 to 10 miles per hour, and highs in the upper 70s. The Big Island's leeward side rounds out our forecast with small one to three foot surf on both west and south-facing shores for tonight and Friday. Tonight's partly cloudy with scattered showers, south winds around 5 miles per hour becoming east after midnight, and lows in the upper 60s. Friday looks sunny with isolated showers, southwest winds around 5 miles per hour, and highs in the lower 80s. Remember, rip currents will be present in and near the surf zone, with strength increasing as surf size increases. Swimmers should exercise caution and enter the water near lifeguard stations. For real-time beach hazard and safety information at individual beaches throughout Hawaii, visit hawaiibeachsafety.com. This has been your Hawaii surf zone forecast. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI