"Stay happy and you'll be perfectly fine" - Jack Norris

As you were

Hello Friends,

Not much going on at Dee Why this morning. You want more exposure to the east for the little swell that’s out at sea to have any prospect of a wave. The trendlines are not good for today, but the models show a small perk for tomorrow morning and I’m really liking the look of next week. If those supercomputers are right we could see a very long period south pulse toward the end of next week. I hasten to add that long experience shows these big calls typically get scaled back as we close in on the date in question. In this particular case though I’m cautiously hopeful because the predictions are for a general and solid uptick over a stretch of four to five days. So there ought to be something

So, have yourself a top old day and get up to some good somewhere, somehow!

 

 

Weather Situation

A cold front is moving across NSW. The front will move over the Tasman Sea during Friday and a low is expected to develop east of Tasmania. Northerly winds will increase in the north ahead of the front, and westerly winds will increase over the central and southern coast in the wake of the front.
Forecast for Friday until midnight

Winds: West to northwesterly 10 to 20 knots tending westerly 20 to 30 knots during the afternoon then increasing to 25 to 35 knots by early evening. Seas: 1 to 2 metres increasing to 2 to 3 metres by early evening then increasing to 4 metres later in the evening. Swell: Northeasterly 1 metre. Isolated thunderstorms during this afternoon, more frequent offshore.
Forecast for Saturday

Winds: West to southwesterly 20 to 30 knots tending south to southwesterly 10 to 20 knots around dawn then tending east to southeasterly up to 10 knots during the afternoon. Seas: Up to 3 metres decreasing to 1.5 metres around dawn then decreasing to below 1 metre around midday. Swell: Northeasterly about 1 metre tending southerly about 1.5 metres from the late morning.
Forecast for Sunday

Winds: West to southwesterly 5 to 10 knots tending northeast to northwesterly during the afternoon then tending north to northeasterly 10 to 20 knots during the evening. Seas: Below 1 metre increasing up to 1.5 metres during the evening. Swell: Southerly about 1.5 metres.