Dive Planning and Weather Reports
Typical Diving Conditions in the Monterey Area
Temperature
About 10°-15° C (typically coldest in the spring when upwelling follows prolonged NW winds)
Visibility
From a couple of feet to over 50' depending on time of year and location (pea soup during plankton blooms resulting from upwelling + sunshine; often clear in the fall and in winter between storms, but turbid after rain run-off and wave action; can be spectacular at Carmel Bay dive sites, especially when oceanic water is close to shore).
Typical diving depths
From about 20' to 60' feet in kelp beds inside the bay, and deeper (75'-100') at reefs beyond the kelp (e.g. Hopkins Deep Reef); the kelp beds off Cabrillo Point, where Hopkins is situated, are found on granite substrate to a depth of about 60'. Carmel bay kelp beds along the shore are found on rocky substrate as deep as 70'-80', while the Pinnacles off 17 Mile Drive start in about 60' and drop off to 120' +.
Waves and Currents
Currents are not usually a problem, although they are occasionally strong at offshore sites such as Yankee Point, Pinnacles, and sometimes even Deep Reef. Wind waves and surge can be significant at certain times of the year, especially at exposed locations, and on the open coast conditions can deteriorate very rapidly with little warning.
Additional Weather Resources
- Cabrillo Point Wave Buoy (CDIP)
- CDIP/SIO Experimental Monterey Bay Swell Forecast
- Monterey Tides
- NWS Marine Weather- Monterey Bay (Monterey Bay marine forecast)
- NWS Marine Weather- South of Pt. Pinos (incl. Carmel Bay)
- NWS Coastal Marine Zone forecasts
- Ocean Water Quality
- Weekly Acoustic Buoy Feeds Hopkins and MBARI