Photos: Right Said Alfred
Photos: Right Said Alfred
He's already been spinning in the Coral Sea for a fortnight, yet the first week of Tropical Cyclone Alfred's existence offered limited surfing opportunities: a few mysto waves north of K'Gari and jumped up beachbreaks on the Sunshine Coast.
Once Alfred moved far enough south, however, a new stage began. With the increase in energy, waves moved beyond the beachies and onto the points - which in South-East Queensland means rights....long rights that test your straight line speed and your leg strength. They'll test your paddling fitness too.
On Sunday March 2nd, photographer Andrew Shield had the choice of shooting yet more lumpy not-quite-doing-it Kirra, or truck north towards the eye of Alfred.
He chose the latter.
"I've been up that way a few times," said Shieldsy, "and it’s usually the funnest 2-3 foot waves you’ll find anywhere but this time it was the next level up."
With just 200 of his best mates, Shieldsy scored long 3-4 foot rights marked by their consistency. There were even "a few decent-sized barrels" said the always understated photographer. Late in the day, the rising tide slowed the too-fast sections and the foreshore carpark emptied leaving only those who were camping the night.
By Monday, Alfred's south-bound track had shut down the fun factory so Shieldsy pointed his chariot in the same direction.
The ocean around Coolangatta was cleaner than it had been for a few weeks, while, according to Shieldsy, "the swell was large but not overly big for the fairly straight banks at Kirra."
The north-east direction made for minimal sweep but very fast waves, verging on closeouts. The morning low tide passed and the incoming tide saw an increase in quality - which goes against the prevailing wisdom.
"After that empty Kelly Slater Kirra session last year," explains Shieldsy, "a lot of crew have learned a that waiting for a lower tide can be a myth when the swell is solid."
The higher tide, for Kirra at least, makes for slower running and more makable waves, while no less hollow.
"It was crowded but not ridiculously so," said Shieldsy, "and a lot of young guys and girls scored some crazy waves."
Clean cyclone lines sweep into Coolangatta Bay - aerial view
Similar angle as above but taken from land
Mick O'Rafferty gets the horns and a shaka
Cal Robson teasing the shocky
By Monday afternoon, sets were beginning to wash through Kirra so early on Tueday morning, says Shieldsy, "everyone was holding their breath to see if the larger swell would still be surfable at Kirra."
As it happened, there were still wash throughs yet as the tide rose through the morning the conditions changed - it was some of the best Kirra seen in years.
"I grabbed a few land angles," says Shieldsy, "then sat on my ski down the end of Kirra watching the surfers get barrelled."
"It was a nice few days," says Shieldsy, who, if you need to be reminded, is fond of an understatement.
Ten wave sets were common, sometimes more, as Alfred sat at the optimum distance and direction from the Gold Coast
When cyclone swells hits the Gold Coast, everybody wants a view
Harry O'Brien on top of his speed management
We still haven't figured out who this is yet
Young Max McGillivray
The slumped shoulders of the surfer inside says it all
Token empty photo - there may have been one or two all day
By late Tuesday, and even more so on Wednesday, the swell had largely overpowered Kirra and the swell energy moved to the outer banks. This made for tricky conditions inshore that lent themselves towards ski assistance.
Comments
A Victorian just watching the feed shouting and whooping at the screen - amazing, loved it! I did feel for the many paddling out getting caught just inside and absolutely thumped - but that's the price. Certainly well worth the price.
Unusually - Portsea was pretty good this morning... but no match!
Interesting to hear that the next cyclone was to be ‘Anthony’, but apparently there is a rule that cyclones can’t be named after a serving prime minister , so Alfred it is!
Yeah Scrap.
Great photos, if you scored a barrel or more, please give generously to the less well off...
I hope the diesel dudes, jetski assisted surfers, & bredbull help the flooded folk on the east coast this week & the clean up in months ahead.
http://www.bom.gov.au/products/IDQ65231.shtml
Tell you what..... bloody glad that Jet skis in the line up is not the Vicco norm. That would shit me to tears....
… at one point, the fella filming the live-feed on YT, counted 37 skis. THIRTY SEVEN!!!
There's almost nothing interesting to me now about anything that involves a ski. The number of mental waves we've seen over the years is enough, there's a saturation of content, and it's just all a bit tedious, without an inch of romance in the story of a wave you've used $20k and 10 litres of fuel to tow yourself into. An unsponsored surfer paddling a big board into a huge pit? I'll watch that ten times over and people will talk about it for years after the fact.
Sometimes I think about how growing up skating, it was considered immoral and scandalous to publish pics of tricks that someone didn't land, and how applying such a thing to tow ins could actually be good for surfing too.
Check Mark Healey's latest outer reef mission. Just him on a big gun, getting smashed, snapping his leggie and swimming in, but getting some waves too.
Surfing as it should be. No skis involved.
Check Mark Healey's latest outer reef mission. Just him on a big gun, getting smashed, snapping his leggie and swimming in, but getting some waves too.
Surfing as it should be. No skis involved.
I surfed that spot quite a bit when I was on the NS.
Had some great lefts out there on Kona winds and W swells.
Pretty nuts to think Mark had never surfed there before that session.
dandandan - on point!
From Maritime Safety Queensland:
I ask that anyone interested in providing footage (and, if requested, able to provide a statement regarding that footage) pass info on to our reception email so that we can track and address.
Here is the MSQ (Gold Coast) reception email box: GoldCoast.Maritime@msq.qld.gov.au
MSQ gets pulled in every direction during these moments, so any capture of PWC rego/date/time/distance issues footage would greatly assist the team in taking up post event with operators.
That's great Stu, but you've also defended guys whipping through crowds at ours before. Will you take the same stance when that happens again and not post vids on swellnet showing it?
Probably not, though it'd depend on the circumstances.
They're a pretty tight-knit crew with paddlers and skis all knowing each other. They can sort themselves out without outside interference - which is the way it should be.
Bollocks.
They are breaking the maritime laws.
See how the "Sorting themselves out" goes when someone is
crippled or killed.
Should go well in court.
That's fine, it's their business to take care of, not mine.
As a point of order: I used to surf Solander a bit while people were towing, and sometimes there'd be video edits made of the sessions. That was 20 years ago. Since then, there have been hundreds, possibly thousands, more videos uploaded to the 'net, most of them with the PWC rego visible, and yet (as far as I'm aware) there hasn't been a case brought against a ski rider out there.
Why not? If people feel so strongly then act on it. It's not my place to do it for them, I don't live there anymore.
Doesn’t matter about being tight-knit it’s about the safety of others and normalising shit behaviour.
out of interest, can anyone see this comment?
No.
Nah mate, can’t see it
Comment?
The amount of sand that gets transported during swell events like this one must be immense. It'll be interesting to see what happens at various places after the dust has settled. Probably mostly bad banks, but surely there will be the odd good one.
I was talking to someone yesterday saying it's morbid how a cyclone sends everyone into a panic, but surfers get really excited. He laughed and said "mate if you think the surfers are frothing you should hear the blokes with metal detectors at the moment - chomping at the bit to see what turns up after all this sad is shifted!" haha.
Kidding! Ha.
Incredible!
From Maritime Safety Queensland:
I ask that anyone interested in providing footage (and, if requested, able to provide a statement regarding that footage) pass info on to our reception email so that we can track and address.
Here is the MSQ (Gold Coast) reception email box: GoldCoast.Maritime@msq.qld.gov.au
MSQ gets pulled in every direction during these moments, so any capture of PWC rego/date/time/distance issues footage would greatly assist the team in taking up post event with operators.
Dylan Longbottom your Gone .
Sure is Udo, what a fool and an idiot
Blame Tom Tit, err Tate on the Goldie.
Certain pros are licensed to murder as they are good for tourism apparently.
Imagine the racket of all those fuckers on skis.
Surprised a few haven't been snotted on returning to shore.
Old mate on the Sunny coast paddling bombs twice as big as the muppets on the Goldy were getting tugged into.
Respect!!
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10213301991940397&set=pcb.923122876...
Wow, that's some heavy water as well, look at the lip. Awesome!
Legend effort eh!!
LOB paddled into a 12ft Burleigh bomb yesterday. Hope someone got it on video. He didn’t make the drop but was the most fucked up thing I’ve seen all swell.
https://www.surfer.com/news/mick-fanning-20-dollar-surfboard-brother
Getting Hammered by comments as a Burn
Slow mo i think Goofy was to Deep and lost some Speed when his Tail Slid ?