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Access
Take Highway 22 from the City of San Juan towards the West. Continue on Highway 2 west and get off on the town of Quebradillas, (about one hour and 15 minutes from San Juan). This coastal town also happens to have some of the best surf breaks on the Island and is home to the point breaks like Puerto Hermina, and Noli's Point. Take State Road # 113 heading south towards Guajataka Lake from the town of Quebradillas. Follow Hwy 113 until you get to the Guajataca Lake 20 minutes later. Look to your right as you cross over the reservoir road and you can't miss the giant ditch.
English (Translate this text in English): Take Highway 22 from the City of San Juan towards the West. Continue on Highway 2 west and get off on the town of Quebradillas, (about one hour and 15 minutes from San Juan). This coastal town also happens to have some of the best surf breaks on the Island and is home to the point breaks like Puerto Hermina, and Noli's Point. Take State Road # 113 heading south towards Guajataka Lake from the town of Quebradillas. Follow Hwy 113 until you get to the Guajataca Lake 20 minutes later. Look to your right as you cross over the reservoir road and you can't miss the giant ditch.
English (Translate this text in English): Take Highway 22 from the City of San Juan towards the West. Continue on Highway 2 west and get off on the town of Quebradillas, (about one hour and 15 minutes from San Juan). This coastal town also happens to have some of the best surf breaks on the Island and is home to the point breaks like Puerto Hermina, and Noli's Point. Take State Road # 113 heading south towards Guajataka Lake from the town of Quebradillas. Follow Hwy 113 until you get to the Guajataca Lake 20 minutes later. Look to your right as you cross over the reservoir road and you can't miss the giant ditch.
English (Translate this text in English): Take Highway 22 from the City of San Juan towards the West. Continue on Highway 2 west and get off on the town of Quebradillas, (about one hour and 15 minutes from San Juan). This coastal town also happens to have some of the best surf breaks on the Island and is home to the point breaks like Puerto Hermina, and Noli's Point. Take State Road # 113 heading south towards Guajataka Lake from the town of Quebradillas. Follow Hwy 113 until you get to the Guajataca Lake 20 minutes later. Look to your right as you cross over the reservoir road and you can't miss the giant ditch.
Location
Public access?
Owners
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Spot Characteristics
Spot info
Spot quality
Experience
Type of spot Drainage Ditch
Indoor/Outdoor Outdoor
Designed for Not designed...
Good for Skate, BMX
More details
Week crowd
Week-end crowd
Localism
Atmosphere
Contact information
Name
Street
City
State or province
zip code
Phone
Website
Email
More details
Size 0
Open From to
After dark
Requirements
Pads
Helmet
Features
Skate
Urban
Pool
Equipment info
Surface/Construction Concrete
Condition Good Condition, Average
Designed/Build by
Additional Information
This gargantuan concrete ditch is actually the spillway for the Guajataca Lake in case it ever overflows (which has never happened yet). You got to see it and ride it to appreciate the size of this place and the fun factor of riding it. This place has been popular since the 1970s and one of the very first sites on the Island where skateboarding was born and developed. This place has an extensive local history... Walls are more than 50 feet of concrete at a 45 degree slant. The ditch goes downhill for about 200 meters and offers a variety of angles and increasing incline. Best to ride with a downhill mid-size board or a standard board with softer park rider wheels. Local crew, but light-hearted and no localist. Good parking area where you can see your car... (make sure you lock it anyway). No Lights. Local food options nearby. Water activities at the lake and incredible scenery. Hard to rate this place on a standard scale. This place is on a scale of its own.
English (Translate this text in English): This gargantuan concrete ditch is actually the spillway for the Guajataca Lake in case it ever overflows (which has never happened yet). You got to see it and ride it to appreciate the size of this place and the fun factor of riding it. This place has been popular since the 1970s and one of the very first sites on the Island where skateboarding was born and developed. This place has an extensive local history... Walls are more than 50 feet of concrete at a 45 degree slant. The ditch goes downhill for about 200 meters and offers a variety of angles and increasing incline. Best to ride with a downhill mid-size board or a standard board with softer park rider wheels. Local crew, but light-hearted and no localist. Good parking area where you can see your car... (make sure you lock it anyway). No Lights. Local food options nearby. Water activities at the lake and incredible scenery. Hard to rate this place on a standard scale. This place is on a scale of its own.
English (Translate this text in English): This gargantuan concrete ditch is actually the spillway for the Guajataca Lake in case it ever overflows (which has never happened yet). You got to see it and ride it to appreciate the size of this place and the fun factor of riding it. This place has been popular since the 1970s and one of the very first sites on the Island where skateboarding was born and developed. This place has an extensive local history... Walls are more than 50 feet of concrete at a 45 degree slant. The ditch goes downhill for about 200 meters and offers a variety of angles and increasing incline. Best to ride with a downhill mid-size board or a standard board with softer park rider wheels. Local crew, but light-hearted and no localist. Good parking area where you can see your car... (make sure you lock it anyway). No Lights. Local food options nearby. Water activities at the lake and incredible scenery. Hard to rate this place on a standard scale. This place is on a scale of its own.
English (Translate this text in English): This gargantuan concrete ditch is actually the spillway for the Guajataca Lake in case it ever overflows (which has never happened yet). You got to see it and ride it to appreciate the size of this place and the fun factor of riding it. This place has been popular since the 1970s and one of the very first sites on the Island where skateboarding was born and developed. This place has an extensive local history... Walls are more than 50 feet of concrete at a 45 degree slant. The ditch goes downhill for about 200 meters and offers a variety of angles and increasing incline. Best to ride with a downhill mid-size board or a standard board with softer park rider wheels. Local crew, but light-hearted and no localist. Good parking area where you can see your car... (make sure you lock it anyway). No Lights. Local food options nearby. Water activities at the lake and incredible scenery. Hard to rate this place on a standard scale. This place is on a scale of its own.
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