Solid, easing NE swell tomorrow
Solid, easing NE swell tomorrow
The NE swell energy building today will peak tomorrow morning ahead of a late afternoon change. The rest of the period is a bit so/so and still up in the air.
The NE swell energy building today will peak tomorrow morning ahead of a late afternoon change. The rest of the period is a bit so/so and still up in the air.
Nothing special this period with dicey winds, mucking with smallish westerly swells.
Plenty of swell and good winds to work around this period in the wake of today's large, powerful SW groundswell.
Nothing major for the Mid Coast, but plenty of swell for the South Coast albeit with mostly onshore winds. There's a couple of small windows for cleaner surf.
We’ve got a warning out for a developing tropical cyclone north-east of Vanuatu, which will probably occur within the next 24 hours. This is contained with an active monsoon trough, which currently stretches from Indonesia, across Northern Australia into the western Pacific and then across to the South Pacific, somewhere south of the Cook Islands and about at SE Qld latitudes. More in the Forecaster Notes.
There'll be opportunities for decent waves this period, but picking the windows will be the hardest part. One for the savvy.
The northern Tasman Sea and South Pacific remains very active under the influence of an MJO, and we’re still on track for a sustained run of sizeable E/NE swell for our region. More in the Forecaster Notes.
By and large, swell prospects for the next few days look much the same as the last few. However, conditions will change across the region, ultimately switching favouritism from the north to the south. More in the Forecaster Notes.
Looks like a couple of crappy days ahead. It’s still a little too early to be confident in the specifics regarding next week’s outlook, but broad brushstrokes remain much the same as discussed on Monday. More in the Forecaster Notes.
Lots of action out of the east and north-east over the coming weeks. It'll be a matter of working the local winds.