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

Nice, very nice start Mr Huey

 

 

Hello Friends,

NW breeze and a touch more east to the two metre, 10 second south swell wrapping into the Dee Why stretch. Early risers were on it and when the bomb sets rolled in, they were looking at overhead wave faces.

Outlook is for the swell to fade as the day goes along but with luck there’ll still be something for the late afternoon crew. Wind will be mainly offshore this morning and then will come around to the NE after lunch.

This morning’s assortment of swell forecast interpretations is calling for a drop to marginal by tomorrow morning and could be close to flat by close of play. Aside from a possible slight perk into mal-able range on Thursday, it currently looks as though the east coast could be in for a prolonged stretch of marginal to tiny conditions. Here’s hoping the predictions turn out to be unduly pessimistic…

In the meantime, get out there if you possibly can and no matter how the dice roll, have a top day!

TIDES: H @0830 L @1435

Weather Situation
A high pressure system near Adelaide extends a ridge across NSW. The high will move northeast today as a cold front approaches western Victoria, the front is expected to cross Victoria and southeastern NSW tomorrow. The high, centred over southeast Queensland or the northern Tasman Sea will then extend a ridge to the south, over NSW, for the remainder of the week.
Forecast for Tuesday until midnight
Winds
West to northwesterly 10 to 15 knots tending north to northeasterly during the afternoon. Winds tending west to northwesterly 10 to 20 knots early evening.
Seas
Below 1 metre increasing up to 2 metres early evening.
Swell
Southerly about 2 metres.
Wednesday 14 September
Winds
West to northwesterly 10 to 15 knots.
Seas
Up to 1.5 metres.
Swell
Southerly about 1 metre.
Thursday 15 September
Winds
South to southwesterly 5 to 15 knots tending southeasterly up to 10 knots during the afternoon then tending northeasterly during the evening.
Seas
Below 1 metre.
Swell
Southerly about 1 metre.