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

The waiting game continues

Hello Friends,
High overcast as we rolled into the first Wednesday of Spring. The ocean was pretty close to flat at Dee Why. Out at sea the swell’s about a metre from 155 degrees at 10-11 seconds. If you’re really keen, there might be an ankle to knee high set to be found at south magnets, but you’ll be doing well to find anything more than that.
We’ll see what the Goat says tomorrow, however from what I’m seeing on the models, there’s not much to encourage a surfer in the forecasts. Spring’s not a great season, but one always hopes…
Look after yourselves and mask up where you can’t maintain distance.

Electro-boarder zipping about over the flatness

Nothing up the beach toward the pole

Weather Situation
A high pressure system is forecast to drift across from the west, moving into the Tasman Sea today. Strengthening northerly winds on Wednesday will continue on Thursday ahead of a cold front which is expected to bring a southerly change to the far south coast on Friday before pushing north along the coast during Saturday.

Forecast for Wednesday until midnight
Winds
Northerly 15 to 20 knots, reaching up to 25 knots offshore during the morning.
Seas
Below 1 metre, increasing to 1.5 to 2 metres offshore.
Swell
Southerly 1 to 1.5 metres, decreasing to around 1 metre during the morning.
Weather
Mostly sunny.
Thursday 3 September
Winds
Northerly 15 to 25 knots.
Seas
Below 1 metre, increasing to 1 to 2 metres offshore.
Swell
Southerly around 1 metre.
Weather
Sunny.
Friday 4 September
Winds
North to northwesterly 15 to 20 knots tending north to northeasterly during the morning then shifting south to southwesterly in the evening
Seas
1 to 2 metres, decreasing to 1 to 1.5 metres during the morning.
Swell
Southerly 1 to 1.5 metres, decreasing to around 1 metre during the evening.
Weather
Partly cloudy. 50% chance of showers. The chance of a thunderstorm in the morning and afternoon.