La passe de Colombier

17.920483 N / -62.874717 O

La passe de Colombier Surf Spot Guide, Saint Barthelemy

La passe de Colombier represents one of Saint Barthelemy's most exclusive and challenging reef breaks, offering powerful, ledgy slabs that demand respect and experience. This is not a spot for casual surfers or those still building their skills. The wave breaks over sharp coral and rocks, creating the kind of intense, hollow sections that draw only the most committed big wave riders and experienced reef surfers to this remote corner of the island.

Geography and Nature

Located on the northwest coast of Saint Barthelemy near the village of Colombier, La passe de Colombier sits within a protected marine reserve. The area is characterized by rugged, undulating hills that descend toward turquoise waters backed by pristine natural landscape. This is one of the most remote and untouched areas of the island, far from the developed resort zones. The coastline features dramatic rocky outcrops and reef formations that create the distinctive wave characteristics the spot is known for.

Surf Setup

La passe de Colombier works exclusively on northwest swells, with southeast winds providing the best offshore conditions to shape the waves. The break is a powerful reef and coral formation that produces both right and left-hand waves, though conditions tend to favor one direction depending on swell angle and tide. The bottom is sharp and unforgiving, composed of reef, coral, and rocks that create ledgy, slab-like sections with significant power. Expect hollow, fast-breaking waves that demand precise positioning and committed takeoffs. All tides can work here, though the wave character changes throughout the tidal cycle.

Consistency and Best Time

La passe de Colombier is not a consistent everyday break. Waves appear sporadically, making this a spot you visit when conditions align rather than a reliable daily option. The best window runs from mid-November through March, when northwest Atlantic swells regularly reach Saint Barthelemy's northern exposures. During peak winter months, you might see waves ranging from 2 to 4 meters, with occasional larger sets during significant swell events. Outside this window, the break rarely produces rideable waves.

Crowd Levels

This spot remains virtually empty throughout the week and on weekends. The remote location, challenging access, and specialized nature of the break mean you will likely have the place to yourself or encounter only a handful of dedicated local surfers who know the spot intimately.

Who It's For

La passe de Colombier is exclusively for advanced and expert surfers with significant reef break experience. This is not a learning environment. The sharp bottom, powerful ledges, and demanding wave shape require excellent positioning, strong paddling ability, and the mental fortitude to handle intense, hollow sections. Only experienced reef surfers should consider paddling out here.

Hazards to Respect

The sharp coral and rock bottom poses serious injury risk from falls and wipeouts. Sea urchins inhabit the reef, and the powerful slab sections can create strong currents. Respect the break's intensity and know your limits before committing to paddling out.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer months from June to October bring water temperatures around 26 to 28°C, requiring only a thin 2-millimeter spring suit or rash guard. Winter from December to March sees temperatures drop to 24 to 25°C, where a 3-millimeter full suit provides adequate warmth. Spring and fall months hover between 25 to 27°C, making a light 2 to 3-millimeter suit comfortable.

How to Get There

Saint Barthelemy is served by Gustaf III Airport (SBH), located 3 kilometers from the main town of Gustavia. From the airport, drive or take a taxi northwest toward Colombier village, approximately 8 kilometers away. Parking is extremely limited at the Colombier trailhead, with space for roughly 10 vehicles. From there, hike down the coastal trail for approximately 600 meters and 20 minutes to reach the break. Alternatively, access via private boat is possible for those with marine transport.

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La passe de Colombier La passe

Saint Barthelemy
17.920483 N / -62.874717 O
Day trip
OK
View Surf Spot
Level: Pros or kamikaze only...
Public access: 
Special access: Paddle > 20mn or Boat
CONDITIONS
Level
Pros or kamikaze only...
BREAK TYPE
Reef-coral
WAVE DIRECTION
Right and left
WAVE QUALITY
Sloppy
FREQUENCY
Sometimes break
BOTTOM
Reef (coral, sharp rocks etc..)
POWER
Powerful, Ledgey, Slab
NORMAL LENGHT
Short (< 50m)

La passe de Colombier Surf Spot Guide, Saint Barthelemy

La passe de Colombier represents one of Saint Barthelemy's most exclusive and challenging reef breaks, offering powerful, ledgy slabs that demand respect and experience. This is not a spot for casual surfers or those still building their skills. The wave breaks over sharp coral and rocks, creating the kind of intense, hollow sections that draw only the most committed big wave riders and experienced reef surfers to this remote corner of the island.

Geography and Nature

Located on the northwest coast of Saint Barthelemy near the village of Colombier, La passe de Colombier sits within a protected marine reserve. The area is characterized by rugged, undulating hills that descend toward turquoise waters backed by pristine natural landscape. This is one of the most remote and untouched areas of the island, far from the developed resort zones. The coastline features dramatic rocky outcrops and reef formations that create the distinctive wave characteristics the spot is known for.

Surf Setup

La passe de Colombier works exclusively on northwest swells, with southeast winds providing the best offshore conditions to shape the waves. The break is a powerful reef and coral formation that produces both right and left-hand waves, though conditions tend to favor one direction depending on swell angle and tide. The bottom is sharp and unforgiving, composed of reef, coral, and rocks that create ledgy, slab-like sections with significant power. Expect hollow, fast-breaking waves that demand precise positioning and committed takeoffs. All tides can work here, though the wave character changes throughout the tidal cycle.

Consistency and Best Time

La passe de Colombier is not a consistent everyday break. Waves appear sporadically, making this a spot you visit when conditions align rather than a reliable daily option. The best window runs from mid-November through March, when northwest Atlantic swells regularly reach Saint Barthelemy's northern exposures. During peak winter months, you might see waves ranging from 2 to 4 meters, with occasional larger sets during significant swell events. Outside this window, the break rarely produces rideable waves.

Crowd Levels

This spot remains virtually empty throughout the week and on weekends. The remote location, challenging access, and specialized nature of the break mean you will likely have the place to yourself or encounter only a handful of dedicated local surfers who know the spot intimately.

Who It's For

La passe de Colombier is exclusively for advanced and expert surfers with significant reef break experience. This is not a learning environment. The sharp bottom, powerful ledges, and demanding wave shape require excellent positioning, strong paddling ability, and the mental fortitude to handle intense, hollow sections. Only experienced reef surfers should consider paddling out here.

Hazards to Respect

The sharp coral and rock bottom poses serious injury risk from falls and wipeouts. Sea urchins inhabit the reef, and the powerful slab sections can create strong currents. Respect the break's intensity and know your limits before committing to paddling out.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer months from June to October bring water temperatures around 26 to 28°C, requiring only a thin 2-millimeter spring suit or rash guard. Winter from December to March sees temperatures drop to 24 to 25°C, where a 3-millimeter full suit provides adequate warmth. Spring and fall months hover between 25 to 27°C, making a light 2 to 3-millimeter suit comfortable.

How to Get There

Saint Barthelemy is served by Gustaf III Airport (SBH), located 3 kilometers from the main town of Gustavia. From the airport, drive or take a taxi northwest toward Colombier village, approximately 8 kilometers away. Parking is extremely limited at the Colombier trailhead, with space for roughly 10 vehicles. From there, hike down the coastal trail for approximately 600 meters and 20 minutes to reach the break. Alternatively, access via private boat is possible for those with marine transport.

La passe de Colombier Surf Spot Guide, Saint Barthelemy

La passe de Colombier represents one of Saint Barthelemy's most exclusive and challenging reef breaks, offering powerful, ledgy slabs that demand respect and experience. This is not a spot for casual surfers or those still building their skills. The wave breaks over sharp coral and rocks, creating the kind of intense, hollow sections that draw only the most committed big wave riders and experienced reef surfers to this remote corner of the island.

Geography and Nature

Located on the northwest coast of Saint Barthelemy near the village of Colombier, La passe de Colombier sits within a protected marine reserve. The area is characterized by rugged, undulating hills that descend toward turquoise waters backed by pristine natural landscape. This is one of the most remote and untouched areas of the island, far from the developed resort zones. The coastline features dramatic rocky outcrops and reef formations that create the distinctive wave characteristics the spot is known for.

Surf Setup

La passe de Colombier works exclusively on northwest swells, with southeast winds providing the best offshore conditions to shape the waves. The break is a powerful reef and coral formation that produces both right and left-hand waves, though conditions tend to favor one direction depending on swell angle and tide. The bottom is sharp and unforgiving, composed of reef, coral, and rocks that create ledgy, slab-like sections with significant power. Expect hollow, fast-breaking waves that demand precise positioning and committed takeoffs. All tides can work here, though the wave character changes throughout the tidal cycle.

Consistency and Best Time

La passe de Colombier is not a consistent everyday break. Waves appear sporadically, making this a spot you visit when conditions align rather than a reliable daily option. The best window runs from mid-November through March, when northwest Atlantic swells regularly reach Saint Barthelemy's northern exposures. During peak winter months, you might see waves ranging from 2 to 4 meters, with occasional larger sets during significant swell events. Outside this window, the break rarely produces rideable waves.

Crowd Levels

This spot remains virtually empty throughout the week and on weekends. The remote location, challenging access, and specialized nature of the break mean you will likely have the place to yourself or encounter only a handful of dedicated local surfers who know the spot intimately.

Who It's For

La passe de Colombier is exclusively for advanced and expert surfers with significant reef break experience. This is not a learning environment. The sharp bottom, powerful ledges, and demanding wave shape require excellent positioning, strong paddling ability, and the mental fortitude to handle intense, hollow sections. Only experienced reef surfers should consider paddling out here.

Hazards to Respect

The sharp coral and rock bottom poses serious injury risk from falls and wipeouts. Sea urchins inhabit the reef, and the powerful slab sections can create strong currents. Respect the break's intensity and know your limits before committing to paddling out.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer months from June to October bring water temperatures around 26 to 28°C, requiring only a thin 2-millimeter spring suit or rash guard. Winter from December to March sees temperatures drop to 24 to 25°C, where a 3-millimeter full suit provides adequate warmth. Spring and fall months hover between 25 to 27°C, making a light 2 to 3-millimeter suit comfortable.

How to Get There

Saint Barthelemy is served by Gustaf III Airport (SBH), located 3 kilometers from the main town of Gustavia. From the airport, drive or take a taxi northwest toward Colombier village, approximately 8 kilometers away. Parking is extremely limited at the Colombier trailhead, with space for roughly 10 vehicles. From there, hike down the coastal trail for approximately 600 meters and 20 minutes to reach the break. Alternatively, access via private boat is possible for those with marine transport.

Wave Quality: Sloppy

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Surf Conditions:

Wave type
Reef-coral
Normal lenght: Short (< 50m)
Good day lenght: Short (< 50m)
DIRECTION
Right and left
Good swell direction: NorthWest
Good wind direction: SouthEast
frequency
Sometimes break
Swell size: Starts working at 1.0m-1.5m / 3ft-5ft and holds up to 3m+ / 10ft+
power
Powerful, Ledgey, Slab
Best Tide Position: All tides
Best Tide Movement:

Nearby surfspots

No Surf Spots found near La passe de Colombier, Colombier.
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Nearby surfhouses

No Surf House found in Colombier.
We are working to add more soon!

FAQ

The best window for surfing La passe de Colombier runs from mid-November through March, when northwest Atlantic swells reach the northern exposures. Waves appear sporadically, with peak conditions in winter months offering 2 to 4 meter waves and occasional larger sets. It works exclusively on northwest swells with southeast winds providing offshore conditions, and all tides can work though the wave changes with the cycle.
La passe de Colombier is exclusively for advanced and expert surfers with significant reef break experience. It demands excellent positioning, strong paddling, and mental fortitude to handle the sharp coral and rock bottom, powerful ledgy slabs, and intense hollow sections. This is not suitable for casual, beginner, or intermediate surfers still building skills.
La passe de Colombier features powerful reef and coral breaks with sharp rocks creating ledgy, slab-like sections and hollow, fast-breaking waves. It produces both right and left-hand waves, favoring one direction based on swell angle and tide, requiring precise positioning and committed takeoffs. The bottom is unforgiving, with significant power in all tides.
La passe de Colombier remains virtually empty, with only a handful of dedicated local surfers due to its remote location and challenging nature. Fly into Gustaf III Airport, then drive or taxi 8 kilometers northwest to Colombier village trailhead, where parking fits about 10 vehicles. Hike 600 meters down the coastal trail for 20 minutes, or access by private boat.
La passe de Colombier stands out as one of Saint Barthelemy's most exclusive and challenging reef breaks, offering powerful ledgy slabs in a remote, protected marine reserve with pristine natural landscape. Its sporadic northwest swell dependency, sharp coral and rock bottom, and intense hollow sections draw only committed big wave and experienced reef surfers to this untouched northwest coast corner.

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