Cocoa Beach has over 30 miles of sandy beach and is a popular destination for surfers. It is also the closest beach to Orlando making it a favourite destination for people wanting a break from Disney World and the theme parks.
"Cocoa Beach is renowned for its calm, consistent waves. That, combined with the fact the water is shallow enough to simply wade out past the breakers, makes it an ideal place to learn to surf. You can take a lesson, rent a board, or bring your own. It's one of the best places to surf in the state, making it one of the top things to do in Cocoa Beach." Source: (
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Surfing enthusiasts agree the best location for surfing is near the Pier at Cocoa Beach. For beginners, Sebastian Inlet Park has easy to catch waves.
A report by Terrell Forney on 4th September 2019 on Local 10.com, following Hurricane Dorian reads as follows;
Surfers hit the water in Cocoa Beach after Dorian's outer bands pass through
'There's really no damage from what I could tell,' resident says
COCOA BEACH, Fla. - A light rain shower that soaked the beach near the Cocoa Beach pier Wednesday afternoon did not sway people from gathering on the sand and in the water.
In fact, the calm after the storm is somewhat of a surfer's paradise.
"As soon as the wind switched for the back half of the storm, though, it's perfect. It's really, really clean lines that are just rifling down the whole beach," surfer Scott Marion said.
Marion considers himself one of the more responsible surfers. He said this is the first time he's been in the water in nearly a week.
"Any average person shouldn't be out trying to surf the last couple of days," he said.
More than two dozen other surfers crowded the water Wednesday now that Hurricane Dorian's close encounter is just about a thing of the past.
One man was injured by his surfboard in an accident, but the waves, though calmer, are still very much a big attraction in the area.
Residents said they didn't know what to expect as weather conditions deteriorated overnight.
"It was pretty mild," Sara Lane said. "We got like a little rain. It was not even bad as some of the rainstorms we get through here most of the time. We had very little wind. Sometimes the gusts would pick up just a little and we would have just steady rain and then it would go away."
As the worst of the hurricane's outer bands brushed by Tuesday night, several thousand people in Brevard County did lose power, but the overall damage was very minimal.
Just a few miles made all the difference between dealing with a disaster or not.
Dorian may have skirted the coast, but it spared this part of the Sunshine State from its wrath.
"The palms that come off the trees were down, but that's about it," Lane said. "And there's really no damage from what I could tell."
Business owners, meanwhile, are happy to get back to normal operations.
"We're in pretty good shape here," John Foy, of The Fat Snook, said. "I just gotta pull the panels off and with the storm away, we'll be open for business at 5:30 as usual."
The Fat Snook has been shut down for days because of the threat posed by Dorian. Pounds of fresh fish went unsold during what is typically a busy Labor Day weekend.
But Foy's not complaining.
"We didn't lose any power here," he said. "A few branches down (and) pretty much that's all I saw up and down here. I think we fared well."
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