Dog Beach, Nahant
Local Rules
Experts only.
Where to launch
The beach is small, and there is debris that could rip your kite. Due to the gusts, you run risk of lofting into the road, which has happened before. Another warning: this beach is called Dog Beach for a reason... locals take their dogs there to do their business. So be careful of the dog crap, as well as for the local dogs and their owners.
Restrictions
No known restrictions.
Hazards
Sharp razor clam shells and submerged rocks on the right.
Tide Information
High tide can cause the beach to disappear and make setting up hard and launching dangerous. Please do not come here to set up at high tide. Too many things can go wrong.
Directions
128 Nahant Rd, Nahant MA
Parking
Park at Long Beach and walk over. Parking anywhere else without a permit will get you a ticket or towed. People have been doing this for years and the police take notice and have repeatedly told kiters to stop doing this. So... DO NOT PARK ON THE GRASS OR DROP YOUR GEAR OFF. There, it's been said.
Best Direction
Beach Faces
Onshore Wind
Side Shore Wind
SideOn wind
Session Reports
|
Mon, 01/02/2012
Dog Beach 1/2/12 |
Sat, 11/12/2011
Sunset ride at Dog Beach |
Sat, 07/09/2011
wonderful dog beach |
Sun, 03/27/2011
Dog Beach on Sunday 3/27/2011 |
|
Sun, 01/09/2011
All Alone at Dog |
Sat, 11/20/2010
Gusty Dog |
Fri, 10/08/2010
Dog Beach Session |
Wed, 08/04/2010
Dog Beach, Wednesday 8/4/10 |

Comments
MassKiters,
Last night we had a great session at Dog Beach, only to end with a discussion with officer Conti of the Nahant Police Dept. I had run back to grab my car from the Long Beach lot pulled my car onto the grass (thought it would be a good idea to get off the road) to load my already packed up gear when our friend in blue rolled in. Here is the short of our talk.
1. Do not pull onto the grass!! Allegedly the grass is private property, and by pulling onto and off of the grass from the road it is some sort of traffic violation, and he basically threatened to tow my car. Not a ticket actually tow my car.
2. Dropping off from the street. I would not recommend even stopping in the road to drop stuff off. I posed this question and he wouldn't give me a straight answer, so my best advice is to hoof our equipment in.
Please spread the word regarding the parking. He said this has been going on for three years now. We need to communicate this through out the kiting community or we may see our cars being towed or even bans on kiting at dog beach.
Can we post this in the Parking section for Dog Beach please?
I think of Dog Beach as being completely different at low tide vs high. I only go at low.
At low, the beach is actually pretty big. If you launch and land at the edge of the water you have a couple of kite lengths buffer from the rock wall and the road. The kiting is even farther out. Yeah hitting a rock or trap isn't fun (done it) but it isn't as life threatening as hitting the rock wall and road!
Maybe the description should highlight in bold the EXPERTS ONLY warning. It's very easy to miss the "local rules" mention of it. I didn't notice it the first time I looked. We could also emphasize somewhere that high tide is especially dangerous- almost no beach, rock wall, road, unpredictable gusts. This should all be repeated in the "Hazards" section, IMHO.
After the recent accident I thought that the police might shut it down completely, for the safety of drivers on the road.
Living on the North Shore I'm usually hitting Revere or Nahant, and have found ikitesurf's meters to be pretty limited as far as showing me what the wind is actually doing. That's most true for Dog Beach. I just found this wunderground map that has a live wind meter not far from Dog:
http://www.wunderground.com/wundermap/?lat=42.42629242&lon=-70.92574310&...
For example right now it's reading 15mph SW on their Nahant meter, while ikitesurf/windalert shows the nearest meter, Revere, at 1.5mph, SW!! Very handy if you're looking at going out to Dog.
It's not necessarily a good idea to park on the grass right in front of the beach so you can drop your stuff off. Cops do take notice. Also, it behooves us all to launch with the kite facing the water. I've already seen 2 people take pretty big diggers with kites ultimately flying into the road.
Skipper's Journal: Sunday, April 13th, 2010
Dog Beach, Nahant, is a hidden gem with 50/50 favorable and unfavorable spot to ride within the kiting community. It remains off the beaten path because of the circumstances of accessibility and beach conditions. You either like it or hate it because of its obscurity or the fact it is the only spot within Boston vicinity that works in any west wind direction. On any given westerly, windy weekday during, after work or on the weekend more and more kiters can be seen flocking to Dog Beach Nahant. Known to myself and many other old school kiters as well as the new schoolers Dog Beach has remained a spot less talked about for many reasons. The first being is it a dangerous spot to ride given the conditions, second accessibility and third cleanliness. If you look beyond that it really has a lot to offer and teach every kiter about reading your conditions and environment. This is one of those spots where you really have to be conscientious about your where you are riding and how much time you have to ride safely. People have asked me to describe it many times and I have to say that the every description and every experience I've had there is different. Some love it a lot more hate it and some won't bother at all. For me it's like playing the lottery taking a chance to get a great west wind session close by home or a nightmare because of the conditions aren't ideal. Wind or tide they determine the possibility of any session there.
The beach if often littered with debris, such as driftwood, spaghetti grass wet or dry, trash and the occasional, semi-sun cooked dog shit pile left by the careless owner of some cute pooch. In any instance it can be an environmentalist's nightmare. What it is to many kiters is a very narrow beach with a sharp boulder jetty, broken clam shells littered on the dry sand and lurking in the water. Even in the semi sandy/muddy bottom of Dog beach inches below are many clam beds underneath your feet ready to slice your foot open. There are embedded, rusted lobster pots/traps in the sand a certain places just looming under the surface of the water you can't see until it's too late.
I've seen many kiting accidents at this place due to riders not really paying attention to their surroundings or the conditions of the winds and beach. If you look at it from that perspective Dog Beach isn't for everyone because you have to understand it and understand the environment. Onshore winds with a very narrow beach at high tide and a long walk to ridable water at low are both at opposite ends of the spectrum. Either way danger is always lurking down wind of you or beneath your feet and board. Typical westerly winds are onshore or side on shore and what looms down wind is the danger of the large granite boulders that protect the dune and Little Nahant Causeway to sage brush shrubbery laced with bladder popping needles and then the roadway where many kites have gone halting auto traffic. Dog Beach is not a place to keep a kite in the air while you are standing on it. It is meant for two things, launch/land your kite and go riding. Get your kite up, go out and ride and stay out until you are done. Paying attention to the tides will better favor a safer kiting experience at this spot. As I have been telling many new kiters to the area, the spot or just kiting, Dog Beach is dangerous if you are ignorant of what is around you. High tide riding is simple. Think about how much beach you have and what you need to land/launch. Once your kite is up keep it low and towards the water. Body drag at least two line lengths to deep enough water that your kite won't be flying over land because there is no room for error. Out going tide riding: Pay close attention to the tides and time your session accordingly because the water drains out of the bay leaving only inches of water in scattered and broken clam beds just below the sand as well as the occasional rusted and sharp lobster pot/trap. Low tide be prepared for a long walk out to rideable water and wear booties.
If you follow these suggestions Dog Beach can be a great place to ride so long as you take the time to understand it. Where else can you ride into the sunset with the Boston Skyline in the background? Ride, respect and enjoy this spot.
[img_assist|nid=4081|title=Dog Beach|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=480|height=257]
The pin on the map is at Long Beach.
It's been changed, thanks.