/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/25/tradewind-swells
freeride76
Monday, 25 March 2024

We’ve got an extensive high pressure belt with weak cells in the Tasman and near Indian Ocean and a stronger cell in the Bight. Compared to summer high pressure we’re seeing a slight seasonal shift northwards in the belt although later in the week the strong high in the Bight does move towards Tasmania at a more typical summer latitude.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/22/few-fun-beachies
freeride76
Friday, 22 March 2024

Light winds continue into Mon and likely until Wed as the as the W-E progression of the next high cell (and subsequently fronts) slows and allows more intrusion of the S’ly fronts into the lower Tasman. S swells from frontal activity now look a notch more active next week, especially at S facing beaches in NENSW.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/20/ely-swell-just
freeride76
Wednesday, 20 March 2024

The NZ high and a long monsoon trough has generated a useful fetch of tradewinds in the eastern swell window, which has maintained E’ly swells in the sub-tropics, E/NE in temperate regions.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/18/east-swell-keeps
freeride76
Monday, 18 March 2024

Pretty typical late Summer pattern with a high in the Tasman and a maturing trade-wind flow in the Coral Sea, linked to an active monsoon trough with a small embedded low in the Coral Sea. There is a tropical cyclone in the Gulf of Carpentaria which formed over the weekend but this system is expected to track inland over the NT and Kimberley regions and not be a swell source for the East Coast.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/15/stacks-swells
thermalben
Friday, 15 March 2024

We’re between easterly pulses at the moment and the void will be temporarily filled by short/mid range energy trading today’s change.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/13/another-barrage
freeride76
Wednesday, 13 March 2024

We’ve still got a broad trade wind flow in the Coral Sea, extending out into the South Pacific and anchored head and tail by low pressure along the monsoon trough. That’s producing heavy swells in the sub-tropics (full blown Point surf equivalent to cyclone swells) although we’ll now see a slow easing trend into the end of the week.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/11/non-stop-action
thermalben
Monday, 11 March 2024

Our current swell event is a byproduct of a strong trade flow through the Northern Tasman and lower Coral Sea, extending back into the South Pacific. 

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/08/extended-run
freeride76
Friday, 8 March 2024

There was a nice, lingering tail to the S swell event but we’re now entrenched in a classic late Summer pattern with strong high pressure moving into the Tasman, setting up a downstream blocking pattern and very healthy tradewind fetch through the Coral Sea, extending E into the South Pacific and south into the Northern Tasman.

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/06/s-swells-easing
freeride76
Wednesday, 6 March 2024

Classic late Summer pattern sets up this weekend with high pressure straddling New Zealand, a monsoon trough strung across Northern Australia extending into the South Pacific and a long, broad tradewind fetch between the two broadscale atmospheric features. The fetch is so broad and long and super-charged by low pressure embedded along the Northern Flank that we’ll see quite an energetic E’ly swell build over the weekend and extend into most of next week. 

/reports/forecaster-notes/south-east-queensland-northern-new-south-wales/2024/03/04/sizey-s-swells-en
freeride76
Monday, 4 March 2024

Current ASCAT (satellite windspeed) passes show a long fetch of severe gales in the southern swell window and wave buoys are all in an aggressive upwards curve as strong S swells build along the Southern NSW Coastline. We’ll see strong pulses of swell from this system until Thurs with easing leftovers until the end of the working week. To the north an extended trade-wind fetch is setting up through the week with another long playing E’ly swell event from that pattern, favouring the sub-tropics for size.