1992 Newspaper Clipping Of Volusia County Rogue Wave
ORLANDO, Fla. – It was the summer of 1992.
Independence Day weekend was almost here and Volusia County lifeguards were preparing for the beaches to be packed, however, no forecaster could predict what happened that Friday night.
All week, producer Katrina Scales is diving deeper into some of her favorite random Florida facts from 2022.
On this episode of Your Florida Daily: the story of the mystery wave and how it challenged scientists to confirm what sailors around the world already knew.
That rogue waves are real.
Listen below:
Just before midnight on July 3, 1992, a wave appears from the darkness, 18 feet tall and 27 miles long.
The wave crashes ashore smashing cars parked on the sand and pushing sailboats into the streets. The wall of white water spanned from Ormond Beach, down to New Smyrna Beach and surged high enough to lap the bottom of Daytona’s Main Street Pier.
Then, the water receded and it was calm again.
Although people were walking on the beach, no one was reported missing. According to news reports, a few dozen were treated for minor injuries.
No one had seen anything like this phenomenon.
The head Volusia County beach lifeguard was quoted at the time saying they were lucky the freak wave struck at 11:00 at night instead of 11 a.m. Saturday, otherwise, they’d be “counting the dead.”
Associated Press article describing 1992 'rogue' wave in Volusia County
But such a large landslide would have registered on seismic monitors — and it didn’t.
Without an explanation, speculation exploded. One local official theorized that it was a “big burp of natural gas.” Another blamed the Daytona mystery wave on a meteorite strike.
Tales of monster waves arriving without warning in oceans, rivers and lakes before disappearing without a trace had been reported for nearly two centuries.
According to the National Weather Service, today’s accepted explanation for the Volusia wave is that it was caused by a “squall line” pushing wind and water into the coastline.
Katrina Scales is a senior content producer for News 6 Mornings, News 6 at Noon, News 6 at 4:30 p.m. and for WKMG's numerous digital platforms. She is the voice and producer behind the award-winning podcast "Your Florida Daily". Katrina grew up in Brevard County and began her journalism career in radio before joining News 6 in 2021.