In December, La Grande Plage in Biarritz no longer belongs to anyone in particular. A few walkers, running dogs, and a handful of stand-up paddlers enjoying something summer never allows: space.
Paddleboarding in winter: a different practice
Stand-up paddle in winter changes in nature. A wetsuit is essential — at least a 4/3, a hood if there’s wind. But in return you get conditions that make the experience different. The waves are longer, more hollow. Visibility to the horizon is often better than in summer. And the solitude on the water — real, physical — is something overloaded summers no longer offer.
What you see from the water in December
The Atalaye cliff, the Rocher de la Vierge, the coast towards Anglet — all this exists in summer too, but surrounded by a crowd of colourful SUP boards and rental kayaks. In December you’re alone or nearly so. You watch terns diving. You hear the sea. It’s a different version of the same place, and some prefer it.
To start or continue
Several Biarritz surf schools offer SUP rental in winter at off-season rates. The best window is 9am–11am when the sea tends to be calmer before the land breeze picks up.