Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Los Osos, CA
![]() | Sunrise 6:52 AM Sunset 5:41 PM Moonrise 2:51 AM Moonset 12:13 PM |
Marine Forecasts
NOTE: Zones were updated 3/20/2025. If your report is out of date, please click Edit
PZZ670 Point Piedras Blancas To Point Sal From 10 To 60 Nm- 718 Pm Pst Wed Feb 11 2026
Tonight - SW wind 10 to 20 kt. Seas 9 ft, subsiding to 7 ft. Wave detail: sw 2 ft at 6 seconds and W 9 ft at 11 seconds. A chance of showers.
Thu - SW wind 5 to 10 kt, becoming nw 10 to 15 kt in the afternoon. Seas 6 to 7 ft. Wave detail: nw 6 ft at 10 seconds and S 2 ft at 15 seconds.
Thu night - NW to N wind 15 to 25 kt. Seas 7 to 8 ft. Wave detail: nw 8 ft at 9 seconds.
Fri - N wind 15 to 25 kt, becoming nw 20 to 25 kt in the afternoon. Seas 8 to 10 ft. Wave detail: N 3 ft at 7 seconds, S 2 ft at 14 seconds and nw 9 ft at 17 seconds.
Fri night - NW wind 20 to 25 kt, becoming 15 to 20 kt after midnight. Seas 10 to 11 ft. Wave detail: nw 3 ft at 7 seconds, S 2 ft at 15 seconds and nw 10 ft at 17 seconds. Patchy fog after midnight.
Sat - N wind 10 to 15 kt, becoming W 5 to 10 kt in the afternoon. Seas 9 to 10 ft. Wave detail: N 2 ft at 6 seconds and nw 10 ft at 15 seconds. Patchy fog in the morning.
Sat night - SW wind 5 to 10 kt, becoming S 15 to 25 kt after midnight. Seas 8 to 9 ft. Wave detail: sw 4 ft at 5 seconds and nw 9 ft at 14 seconds. A slight chance of showers in the evening, then showers likely after midnight.
Sun - S wind 20 to 30 kt. Seas 8 to 10 ft. Wave detail: S 7 ft at 7 seconds and nw 7 ft at 14 seconds. Showers.
Sun night - S wind 20 to 30 kt. Seas 10 to 11 ft. Wave detail: S 7 ft at 7 seconds and W 9 ft at 15 seconds. Showers with a slight chance of tstms.
Mon - SW wind 20 to 30 kt, becoming 25 to 30 kt in the afternoon. Seas 10 to 11 ft, building to 11 to 13 ft. Wave detail: sw 7 ft at 8 seconds and W 12 ft at 14 seconds. Showers.
Mon night - SW wind 25 to 35 kt. Seas 13 to 14 ft. Wave detail: sw 12 ft at 9 seconds and nw 8 ft at 13 seconds. Showers.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
winds and seas higher in and near tstms.
PZZ600 718 Pm Pst Wed Feb 11 2026
Synopsis for the southern california coast and santa barbara channel including the channel islands national marine sanctuary and national park - At 03z or 7 pm pst, a 1013 mb surface low was near san francisco, and a 1020 mb surface high was 300 nm southwest of los angeles.
7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Los Osos, CA

NEW! Add second zone forecast
| San Simeon Click for Map Wed -- 02:53 AM PST Moonrise Wed -- 05:08 AM PST 4.64 feet High Tide Wed -- 06:55 AM PST Sunrise Wed -- 12:13 PM PST Moonset Wed -- 01:14 PM PST 0.15 feet Low Tide Wed -- 05:42 PM PST Sunset Wed -- 08:48 PM PST 3.17 feet High Tide Wed -- 11:47 PM PST 2.98 feet Low Tide Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
San Simeon, California, Tide feet
| 12 am |
| 3.2 |
| 1 am |
| 3.4 |
| 2 am |
| 3.8 |
| 3 am |
| 4.2 |
| 4 am |
| 4.5 |
| 5 am |
| 4.6 |
| 6 am |
| 4.5 |
| 7 am |
| 4.2 |
| 8 am |
| 3.5 |
| 9 am |
| 2.7 |
| 10 am |
| 1.8 |
| 11 am |
| 1 |
| 12 pm |
| 0.4 |
| 1 pm |
| 0.2 |
| 2 pm |
| 0.2 |
| 3 pm |
| 0.6 |
| 4 pm |
| 1.2 |
| 5 pm |
| 1.9 |
| 6 pm |
| 2.5 |
| 7 pm |
| 2.9 |
| 8 pm |
| 3.1 |
| 9 pm |
| 3.2 |
| 10 pm |
| 3.1 |
| 11 pm |
| 3 |
| Port San Luis Click for Map Wed -- 02:49 AM PST Moonrise Wed -- 05:00 AM PST 4.69 feet High Tide Wed -- 06:53 AM PST Sunrise Wed -- 12:13 PM PST Moonset Wed -- 01:07 PM PST 0.15 feet Low Tide Wed -- 05:41 PM PST Sunset Wed -- 08:40 PM PST 3.20 feet High Tide Wed -- 11:40 PM PST 2.98 feet Low Tide Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION |   |
Port San Luis, California, Tide feet
| 12 am |
| 3.2 |
| 1 am |
| 3.5 |
| 2 am |
| 3.8 |
| 3 am |
| 4.2 |
| 4 am |
| 4.6 |
| 5 am |
| 4.7 |
| 6 am |
| 4.6 |
| 7 am |
| 4.1 |
| 8 am |
| 3.4 |
| 9 am |
| 2.6 |
| 10 am |
| 1.7 |
| 11 am |
| 0.9 |
| 12 pm |
| 0.4 |
| 1 pm |
| 0.2 |
| 2 pm |
| 0.3 |
| 3 pm |
| 0.7 |
| 4 pm |
| 1.3 |
| 5 pm |
| 2 |
| 6 pm |
| 2.6 |
| 7 pm |
| 3 |
| 8 pm |
| 3.2 |
| 9 pm |
| 3.2 |
| 10 pm |
| 3.1 |
| 11 pm |
| 3 |
Area Discussion for Los Angeles/Oxnard, CA
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FXUS66 KLOX 120632 AFDLOX
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard CA 1032 PM PST Wed Feb 11 2026
SYNOPSIS
11/238 PM.
Other than a few lingering showers around this afternoon, expect dry conditions and a warming trend for late this week through Saturday. A strong storm system will affect the region starting on Sunday and Monday, bringing the potential for heavy precipitation with flooding and mountain snow, thunderstorms, strong winds, as well as marine and beach hazards. These conditions could last through much of next week.
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard CA 1032 PM PST Wed Feb 11 2026
SYNOPSIS
11/238 PM.
Other than a few lingering showers around this afternoon, expect dry conditions and a warming trend for late this week through Saturday. A strong storm system will affect the region starting on Sunday and Monday, bringing the potential for heavy precipitation with flooding and mountain snow, thunderstorms, strong winds, as well as marine and beach hazards. These conditions could last through much of next week.
.SHORT TERM (WED-SAT)...11/1030 PM.
***UPDATE***
Cool temperatures today following the overnight storm which brought strong winds and 0.75 to 2.5 inches of rain to much of the area, with higher totals focused on south-facing slopes and higher topography. High temperatures trended 5 to 10 degrees below normal, with highs in the upper 50s to mid 60s. Looking at a brief warming trend into Friday, before the next low approaches and the current forecast looks on track.
***From Previous Discussion***
To the north, weakening upper- level ascent around the initial upper low will still maintain low precipitation chances (generally less than 30%) north of Pt. Conception through early tonight. Any additional rainfall amounts should be a tenth inch or less area- wide. Also, while the back-edge of richer moisture aloft is stalling over the area, most of this moisture is concentrated high in the atmosphere, as the midlevel dry slot from the initial upper low previously overspread the region. Thus, a general clearing trend will continue to be noted through the rest of today, with increasing sunshine especially for locations west/north of L.A. County. However, a steady stream of high clouds will persist over the L.A. area -- through tonight and all the way through Thursday night -- owing to the steady-state character of the moisture channel, anchored by the circulation around the reinforcing upper perturbation.
In response to these developments, precipitation development is mostly not expected starting later this evening. While the initial upper low will eventually move southward along the California Coast Thursday into early Friday, its diffusion and prior influx of the dry slot will be unfavorable for precipitation, though a couple mountain showers cannot be entirely ruled out around the peak of the diurnal heating cycle on Thursday, especially over the San Gabriels, however this activity should remain largely inconsequential. Thereafter, a low- amplitude, progressive, and shortwave ridge will cross the region through Saturday, resulting in no precipitation area-wide.
A surface ridge will be slow to build north of the area causing local pressure gradients to turn modestly offshore and favor both weak Santa Ana winds and weak NW/N winds for Thursday into Friday.
Temperatures through Thursday will remain cool (near to below normal) in most areas with highs in the 50s and 60s. Temperatures in the coastal valleys and L.A. Basin will rise into the upper 60s and the lower 70s for Friday into Saturday, as midlevel heights rise. However, the strength of warming on Saturday will be tempered by the influx of mid and high clouds ahead of the next system. A few areas of patchy fog near the coasts and in the southern Salinas Valley cannot be ruled out each morning and night, especially when the ridge builds over the area Friday into Saturday, though confidence in fog development is too limited for inclusion in the forecast -- given the progressive pattern aloft and uncertainty in the re-establishment of the marine layer.
.LONG TERM (SUN-WED)...11/238 PM.
Medium-range model guidance is continuing to suggest increasing probabilities for a much cooler pattern featuring multiple rounds of precipitation starting Sunday-Monday. This would be in conjunction with a longwave, high-amplitude trough developing offshore and along the Pacific Coast vicinity, and eastward.
Uncertainty inherent to the forecast regarding weather conditions and related impacts remains significant. However, in general, numerical models are offering above-average consensus regarding the longwave pattern over the local area for this distant of a time range. While the details remain uncertain, there is growing concern for heavy precipitation and cool-temperature impacts in the extended outlook starting Sunday and continuing throughout much of next week.
At this time, numerical models are gaining consensus on the most energy coming through Sunday through Monday, in the form of a complex, deep trough perhaps containing multiple low centers.
While exhibiting some characteristics similar to the system that affected the local area this past Tuesday night, the upcoming Sunday-Monday system appears to be associated with considerably colder 500-mb temperatures, perhaps as low as around -30C. Some model solutions indicate a prominent shift in the tilt of the parent upper trough to negative during the emergence of the energy, characterized by a 500-mb speed maximum perhaps upwards of 100 kt. The surface reflection of these upper features is comparatively more diffuse owing to the broader upper troughing, though intense low-level mass responses and atmospheric momentum should undoubtedly be boosted by the intense ageostrophic circulation around the jet streak. So, while the complex interactions between upper low centers is highly uncertain and will influence mesoscale-driven impacts, the large-scale pattern is appearing increasingly conducive for convection to spread across much of the area, accompanied by bursts of heavy rain in one or more squall lines capable of flash flooding, strong to perhaps severe convective or gradient wind gusts, and heavy mountain snow with snow levels falling to around 6 kft. The exact details and timing are uncertain, though a wide array of hazards is becoming increasingly likely Sunday-Monday.
Looking further ahead, the aforementioned cold core will remain anchored across the western CONUS throughout much of the remainder of next week, reinforced by multiple impulses of compact vorticity and accompanying speed maxima pivoting through the western rim of the larger-scale troughing. It appears Southern California will be beneath the trajectory of multiple impulses.
Each impulse will have the potential to boost precipitation rates and winds within a rather long duration of on-and-off showers and blustery conditions. Significant dispersion exists amongst models concerning these impulses, though next Wednesday-Thursday is a more-likely period of stronger jet energy passing over the local area, providing more precipitation and gusty winds. Regardless, temperatures through the week in most areas will be in the 50s and lower 60s -- below seasonal normal readings -- while snow levels gradually fall in response to cold advection with each passing impulse. Cold-weather impacts could become of increasing concern through the week.
Regarding precipitation totals through the period, there remains substantial variability from model to model, though most areas will likely experience at least 1 inch of liquid-equivalent of precipitation (perhaps upwards of a few to several inches of precipitation). The progressive nature of each impulse following the Sunday-Monday more-favorable-for-flooding event may tend to mitigate subsequent flooding impacts. However, increasingly saturated ground conditions could offset the short-duration precipitation character to maintain, or even boost, flooding concerns through the week, and uncertainty regarding hydrological impacts grows quickly through the course of next week. And then regarding storm-total snow in the mountains, elevations above 6 kft could receive upwards of multiple feet of snow. As snow levels lower, lighter snowfall accumulations -- though still potentially significant -- could impact elevations as low as 3 or 4 kft including the Grapevine of the Interstate-5 corridor, if enhanced mositure can adequately phase with cooling aloft. This will depend on numerous mesoscale factors for which uncertainty is significant.
Interests across the local area are encouraged to monitor the latest information from the National Weather Service in Los Angeles/Oxnard, California, as forecast details become refined over the coming days.
AVIATION
12/0342Z.
At 2335Z at KLAX, there was a deep moist layer up to around 4800 feet.
Overall, moderate confidence in 00Z TAF Package. There is a 25% chance of cigs at any site from 12/08Z to 12/16Z due to recent rains. Most likely chances for cigs at KPRB.
KLAX...Moderate confidence in TAF. There is a 20-30 percent chc of cigs from 12/08Z-12/16Z. Good confidence that any east wind component remains below 6 kts through the forecast period.
KBUR...Moderate confidence in TAF with VFR conditions expected.
MARINE
11/738 PM.
Northwest winds will increase to 20-25 knots across the waters southwest to southeast of Point Concpetion (including nearshore)
later Thurs afternoon through the evening. The waters southwest to west of Point Concpetion will feature NW to NE winds remaining at Small Craft Advisory levels through Sat morning. A 40% chance of SCA level winds exists for the inner waters south of Point Conception Fri afternoon and evening. Additionally, the waters northwest of Point Conception will see increasing NW to NE winds and seas late Thurs night, and a SCA will likely be needed (60% chance).
While winds are expected to remain below SCA levels for the nearshore waters along the Central Coast, there is a 30% chance for NW to NE gusts reaching 25 knots late Thurs through Sat morning.
A series of storm systems will begin to enter the region Sun, bringing hazardous winds and seas along with rain and a low chance of thunderstorms to the entirety of the coastal waters through at least the middle of next week. There is a moderate chance for widespread Gale Force winds early next week. Confidence is growing in dangerous conditions for all boaters, thus it is encouraged to think about altering plans during this timeframe.
BEACHES
11/209 PM.
Southwest and west facing shores will be particularly vulnerable to developing the southerly swell and surf through this evening, especially the Santa Barbara South Coast, Ventura County Line, Leo Carrillo, and Zuma Beach.
Swell and surf will likely drop below high surf advisory criteria for Thursday, but high surf is likely to develop again from Friday. It is likely that the swell and surf will remain at or above high surf criteria through the upcoming weekend.
The latest swell models continue to highlight a period of very large waves developing for early next week. There is a high to likely (50-70 percent) chance of widespread high surf between Sunday night and Wednesday as a combination of southwesterly and west-northwesterly swells impact the coasts. Sets above 10 feet will be possible across all coasts, but higher chances for west to northwest facing coasts. There is a 20-40% chance of damaging sets developing between Tuesday and Wednesday, highest for northwest- facing shores along the Central Coast. In addition, there is also some concern for coastal flooding. However, confidence is low with how impactful it will be.
LOX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CA...NONE.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory in effect from 3 PM Thursday to midnight PST Thursday night for zones 650-655. (See LAXMWWLOX).
Small Craft Advisory in effect from 3 PM Thursday to 9 AM PST Saturday for zones 673-676. (See LAXMWWLOX).
***UPDATE***
Cool temperatures today following the overnight storm which brought strong winds and 0.75 to 2.5 inches of rain to much of the area, with higher totals focused on south-facing slopes and higher topography. High temperatures trended 5 to 10 degrees below normal, with highs in the upper 50s to mid 60s. Looking at a brief warming trend into Friday, before the next low approaches and the current forecast looks on track.
***From Previous Discussion***
To the north, weakening upper- level ascent around the initial upper low will still maintain low precipitation chances (generally less than 30%) north of Pt. Conception through early tonight. Any additional rainfall amounts should be a tenth inch or less area- wide. Also, while the back-edge of richer moisture aloft is stalling over the area, most of this moisture is concentrated high in the atmosphere, as the midlevel dry slot from the initial upper low previously overspread the region. Thus, a general clearing trend will continue to be noted through the rest of today, with increasing sunshine especially for locations west/north of L.A. County. However, a steady stream of high clouds will persist over the L.A. area -- through tonight and all the way through Thursday night -- owing to the steady-state character of the moisture channel, anchored by the circulation around the reinforcing upper perturbation.
In response to these developments, precipitation development is mostly not expected starting later this evening. While the initial upper low will eventually move southward along the California Coast Thursday into early Friday, its diffusion and prior influx of the dry slot will be unfavorable for precipitation, though a couple mountain showers cannot be entirely ruled out around the peak of the diurnal heating cycle on Thursday, especially over the San Gabriels, however this activity should remain largely inconsequential. Thereafter, a low- amplitude, progressive, and shortwave ridge will cross the region through Saturday, resulting in no precipitation area-wide.
A surface ridge will be slow to build north of the area causing local pressure gradients to turn modestly offshore and favor both weak Santa Ana winds and weak NW/N winds for Thursday into Friday.
Temperatures through Thursday will remain cool (near to below normal) in most areas with highs in the 50s and 60s. Temperatures in the coastal valleys and L.A. Basin will rise into the upper 60s and the lower 70s for Friday into Saturday, as midlevel heights rise. However, the strength of warming on Saturday will be tempered by the influx of mid and high clouds ahead of the next system. A few areas of patchy fog near the coasts and in the southern Salinas Valley cannot be ruled out each morning and night, especially when the ridge builds over the area Friday into Saturday, though confidence in fog development is too limited for inclusion in the forecast -- given the progressive pattern aloft and uncertainty in the re-establishment of the marine layer.
.LONG TERM (SUN-WED)...11/238 PM.
Medium-range model guidance is continuing to suggest increasing probabilities for a much cooler pattern featuring multiple rounds of precipitation starting Sunday-Monday. This would be in conjunction with a longwave, high-amplitude trough developing offshore and along the Pacific Coast vicinity, and eastward.
Uncertainty inherent to the forecast regarding weather conditions and related impacts remains significant. However, in general, numerical models are offering above-average consensus regarding the longwave pattern over the local area for this distant of a time range. While the details remain uncertain, there is growing concern for heavy precipitation and cool-temperature impacts in the extended outlook starting Sunday and continuing throughout much of next week.
At this time, numerical models are gaining consensus on the most energy coming through Sunday through Monday, in the form of a complex, deep trough perhaps containing multiple low centers.
While exhibiting some characteristics similar to the system that affected the local area this past Tuesday night, the upcoming Sunday-Monday system appears to be associated with considerably colder 500-mb temperatures, perhaps as low as around -30C. Some model solutions indicate a prominent shift in the tilt of the parent upper trough to negative during the emergence of the energy, characterized by a 500-mb speed maximum perhaps upwards of 100 kt. The surface reflection of these upper features is comparatively more diffuse owing to the broader upper troughing, though intense low-level mass responses and atmospheric momentum should undoubtedly be boosted by the intense ageostrophic circulation around the jet streak. So, while the complex interactions between upper low centers is highly uncertain and will influence mesoscale-driven impacts, the large-scale pattern is appearing increasingly conducive for convection to spread across much of the area, accompanied by bursts of heavy rain in one or more squall lines capable of flash flooding, strong to perhaps severe convective or gradient wind gusts, and heavy mountain snow with snow levels falling to around 6 kft. The exact details and timing are uncertain, though a wide array of hazards is becoming increasingly likely Sunday-Monday.
Looking further ahead, the aforementioned cold core will remain anchored across the western CONUS throughout much of the remainder of next week, reinforced by multiple impulses of compact vorticity and accompanying speed maxima pivoting through the western rim of the larger-scale troughing. It appears Southern California will be beneath the trajectory of multiple impulses.
Each impulse will have the potential to boost precipitation rates and winds within a rather long duration of on-and-off showers and blustery conditions. Significant dispersion exists amongst models concerning these impulses, though next Wednesday-Thursday is a more-likely period of stronger jet energy passing over the local area, providing more precipitation and gusty winds. Regardless, temperatures through the week in most areas will be in the 50s and lower 60s -- below seasonal normal readings -- while snow levels gradually fall in response to cold advection with each passing impulse. Cold-weather impacts could become of increasing concern through the week.
Regarding precipitation totals through the period, there remains substantial variability from model to model, though most areas will likely experience at least 1 inch of liquid-equivalent of precipitation (perhaps upwards of a few to several inches of precipitation). The progressive nature of each impulse following the Sunday-Monday more-favorable-for-flooding event may tend to mitigate subsequent flooding impacts. However, increasingly saturated ground conditions could offset the short-duration precipitation character to maintain, or even boost, flooding concerns through the week, and uncertainty regarding hydrological impacts grows quickly through the course of next week. And then regarding storm-total snow in the mountains, elevations above 6 kft could receive upwards of multiple feet of snow. As snow levels lower, lighter snowfall accumulations -- though still potentially significant -- could impact elevations as low as 3 or 4 kft including the Grapevine of the Interstate-5 corridor, if enhanced mositure can adequately phase with cooling aloft. This will depend on numerous mesoscale factors for which uncertainty is significant.
Interests across the local area are encouraged to monitor the latest information from the National Weather Service in Los Angeles/Oxnard, California, as forecast details become refined over the coming days.
AVIATION
12/0342Z.
At 2335Z at KLAX, there was a deep moist layer up to around 4800 feet.
Overall, moderate confidence in 00Z TAF Package. There is a 25% chance of cigs at any site from 12/08Z to 12/16Z due to recent rains. Most likely chances for cigs at KPRB.
KLAX...Moderate confidence in TAF. There is a 20-30 percent chc of cigs from 12/08Z-12/16Z. Good confidence that any east wind component remains below 6 kts through the forecast period.
KBUR...Moderate confidence in TAF with VFR conditions expected.
MARINE
11/738 PM.
Northwest winds will increase to 20-25 knots across the waters southwest to southeast of Point Concpetion (including nearshore)
later Thurs afternoon through the evening. The waters southwest to west of Point Concpetion will feature NW to NE winds remaining at Small Craft Advisory levels through Sat morning. A 40% chance of SCA level winds exists for the inner waters south of Point Conception Fri afternoon and evening. Additionally, the waters northwest of Point Conception will see increasing NW to NE winds and seas late Thurs night, and a SCA will likely be needed (60% chance).
While winds are expected to remain below SCA levels for the nearshore waters along the Central Coast, there is a 30% chance for NW to NE gusts reaching 25 knots late Thurs through Sat morning.
A series of storm systems will begin to enter the region Sun, bringing hazardous winds and seas along with rain and a low chance of thunderstorms to the entirety of the coastal waters through at least the middle of next week. There is a moderate chance for widespread Gale Force winds early next week. Confidence is growing in dangerous conditions for all boaters, thus it is encouraged to think about altering plans during this timeframe.
BEACHES
11/209 PM.
Southwest and west facing shores will be particularly vulnerable to developing the southerly swell and surf through this evening, especially the Santa Barbara South Coast, Ventura County Line, Leo Carrillo, and Zuma Beach.
Swell and surf will likely drop below high surf advisory criteria for Thursday, but high surf is likely to develop again from Friday. It is likely that the swell and surf will remain at or above high surf criteria through the upcoming weekend.
The latest swell models continue to highlight a period of very large waves developing for early next week. There is a high to likely (50-70 percent) chance of widespread high surf between Sunday night and Wednesday as a combination of southwesterly and west-northwesterly swells impact the coasts. Sets above 10 feet will be possible across all coasts, but higher chances for west to northwest facing coasts. There is a 20-40% chance of damaging sets developing between Tuesday and Wednesday, highest for northwest- facing shores along the Central Coast. In addition, there is also some concern for coastal flooding. However, confidence is low with how impactful it will be.
LOX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
CA...NONE.
PZ...Small Craft Advisory in effect from 3 PM Thursday to midnight PST Thursday night for zones 650-655. (See LAXMWWLOX).
Small Craft Advisory in effect from 3 PM Thursday to 9 AM PST Saturday for zones 673-676. (See LAXMWWLOX).
| Stations | Dist | Age | Wind | Air | Water | Waves | inHg | DewPt |
| MBXC1 | 3 mi | 75 min | 60°F | |||||
| 46215 - Diablo Canyon, CA (076) | 9 mi | 49 min | 60°F | 8 ft | ||||
| CPXC1 | 12 mi | 39 min | N 7 | 53°F | 30.20 | 49°F | ||
| PSLC1 - 9412110 - Port San Luis, CA | 12 mi | 57 min | ENE 4.1G | 59°F | 30.20 | |||
| 46011 - SANTA MARIA - 21 NM Northwest of Point Arguello, CA | 28 mi | 45 min | W 7.8G | 58°F | 30.19 | 50°F |
Wind History for Port San Luis, CA
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Terminal Aerodrome Forecast (TAF) for KSBP
Wind History Graph: SBP
(wind in knots)GEOS Local Image of Southwest
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