Early Forecast: Fiji Pro
Corona Fiji Pro
Tuesday August 20th - Thursday August 29th
It's been seven years since the Championship Tour stopped off in Fiji, but here we are, less than a week out from the highly anticipated return of the Fiji Pro.
Before we get into the forecast, however, it's worth taking a look at the rankings. Since 1999, when Fiji first came onto the tour, the contest was held earlier in the season, in either May or June. This year, it's being run as the last contest of the regular season.
Point being, the Final 5 will be decided at Cloudbreak.
As it stands, only first placed John John and Caity have their positions secured. The other four positions are up for grabs. In the men, this means surfers down to, at a stretch, ninth-placed Crosby Colapinto have a shot at a Final 5 slot. Though realistically, the cut-off would be eighth-placed Gabriel Medina. And despite Gabs being the last realistic hope to make the 5, many fans would suggest he has a better chance than some of the surfers above him.
The women, with the same points but less surfers in the field, are more open to shake ups, with possibly only tenth-placed Tyler Wright too far adrift to have a chance.
OK, the forecast. It's been a generally quiet period in Melanesia. Last months Trials event to decide the men's wildcard was to run during the best day in July, though it had to wait till August 1st for a contestable day. Tevita Gukelau won and will face John John and Kanoa in Round One, while in the women, Sierra Kerr received the wildcard and will surf against Caity and Sawyer Lindblad.
Continuing the quiet spell, the lead up to the event has been small, and that'll continue past the first day of the waiting period - Tuesday August 20th. Fortunately, there is some activity forecast through the waiting period, though it'll test Cloudbreak's reputation as a magnet during sub-optimal swells.
As many Swellnet readers will be aware - you have been reading the articles, right? - the current position of the westerly storm track has both shifted north and, at least in our region, is focussing towards the Indian Ocean and Western Australia.
This isn’t ideal for Cloudbreak, as its prime swell window is south of Australia, and the best swells travel north-east from under Tasmania then either up into the Tasman Sea or towards New Zealand.
At present, the pattern for swell in that region has been to track south-east, away from Fiji. However, we do have one system that will go against the grain. That being a strengthening polar frontal system pushing up and across New Zealand this Sunday/Monday, with a strong front just ahead of it moving off New South Wales on Saturday.
The initial frontal system moving off NSW should generate a small to moderate-sized spike of mid-period swell for the second day of the waiting period - see image below. It won't be classic Cloudbreak, the size will only be 3-4 feet, however it'll arrive from a great south-west direction. The swell should then ease from a similar size on the morning of day three.
Fortunately for the organisers, they'll only have to wait a day or two for the follow up swell to arrive. Looking at the stronger polar storm, there are a few things going for it but also a few things going against it.
Firstly, the cons are its development immediately south-west of New Zealand - which is late in Cloudbreak’s swell window. This will result in New Zealand effectively cutting the swell-generating fetch down the middle, with half going towards Fiji and the other half towards Tahiti - see image below.
Also the fetch strength looks to be mostly below gale-force resulting in lower-period energy pushing up the Tasman Sea. This isn’t ideal, but as mentioned earlier, Cloudbreak is eminently dependable and when it comes to less-than-optimal swells it can make a silk purse from a sow's ear
The pros for the swell are the northward projection of the system towards Fiji and its broad nature.
What we can expect is a moderate to large-sized, mid-period south-southwest swell that may show up later Thursday, though peaking Friday morning - which is day four - in the 6 foot range. Saturday should still reveal good but easing 3-5 foot sets, and smaller again into Sunday.
Local winds for the first few days of the waiting period will be favourable and from the east-south-east, with stronger east-southeast trades for the second pulse of swell.
It's possible the organisers will have the contest wrapped after these two pulses, however during the waiting period there'll be an eastward shift in activity that'll benefit Fiji. The frontal activity currently in the Indian Ocean will begin to push further east and across Australia later next week.
The models are suggesting one of these frontal systems will generate a good pulse of mid-period south-west swell for the 27/28th. That's still a fair way out and there's lots of weather between now and then, but nevertheless we’ll keep a close eye on this over the coming week and provide updates below.
Comments
Cheers Craig. Been waiting on the forecast. So continues the familiar trend of this year. No classic swells but some glimmers of hope (accept bells that was absolute dog shit). Here’s hoping they punch above forecast.
Actually fairly positive and looking like a good event for me.
Trials footage:
thanks for the forecast ... there is a lot of energy in the Southern Ocean and South Pacific at the moment, and I have high hopes for some decent waves at Cloudbreak.
the wsl is evil
the choice of abu dhabi make that undeniable
Yep. I'll second that unfortunately.
The new CEO has shown he is just another heartless stooge who puts money before humans.
Lets hope the athletes protest against that contest, especially the females.
There won't be any protest and there won't be any questioning.
WSL will find a way to weave it into their greenwash/sportswash narrative.
I HOPE you're wrong about that Steve, but the history of the WSL shows that you're probably correct.
What a fucking sad day for surfing :(
Is being gay illegal there? Wonder if Tyler Wright will show?
Also is Kelly the most deluded person to ever walk this earth, how he can paint himself as an environmentalist while building wave pools in the desert is hilarious. Who falls for his bullshit?
@goofyfoot
From Wikipedia
"Homosexuality is illegal in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and under the federal criminal provisions, consensual same-sex sexual activity is punishable by imprisonment; extra-marital sexual activity between persons of different sexes is also illegal."
Theoretically speaking, Tyler would be thrown in jail on arrival. Not sure that's going to happen but I have a feeling she WILL boycot this event? Otherwise all her previous rantings about equality, etc will just be paying lip service.
...and IF Kelly still had a tiny bit of street-cred left, it's now completely gone.
@swellnet - Please ask Kelly for an interview regarding all this?
Tyler has qualified for next years first half of the tour though.
She hasn't indicated retirement.
So, unless she fails next years cut (which will be rejigged) she will be a candidate to surf there.
Of course...
Too early for me. Have deleted dunce comment about qualification.
That sounds interesting. I wonder how/what she will do about this contest.
I expect the whole LGBTQ thing will be quietly swept under the carpet and Tyler will show, with wife likely staying home.
Unless the mainstream media gets a hold of it and makes a big story about it.
I can't see Tyler going quietly but?
This is Tyler's chance to shine! To show us what she's made of.
Yes, she's painful to listen to at times, but I feel her heart and morals are in the right place, unlike the WSL.
I remember Tom Carrol boycotting a/some contests in South Africa during the apartheid era. Anyone have more details on that?
We'll see.
This is a very big deal for the WSL: access to Middle eastern petro-state dollars.
Abu Dhabi is set to increase crude oil production from 4.5million barrels/day to 5 million b/d by 2027.
3rd largest fossil fuel producer in OPEC, 7th largest world-wide.
Tyler will be very tightly media managed I expect.
Money will trump virtue signalling, as it always does.
Word on the street has it that the tour goes to Abu Dhabi straight after Pipe, so Tyler is eligible, being it’s before the cut.
Maybe they can help Dirk with his failing shale oil business as part of the deal
a bit of virtue signalling in the water perhaps
Tyler actually may have to put her money where her mouth is for this one, interesting times.
At least it’ll be entertaining to see the wozzle’s mental gymnastics on display during this event, not to mention surely a Kelly wildcard/cameo just for that extra cringe factor.
If tyler is to compete will she wear the "pride" flag on her jersey?
Hmmm what a MORAL dilemma! $$$$$ V's Morals. I won't allude to which will win this dilemma (she want's to make money buttttt also disapproves of it: Tylers dilemma in a nutshell!) Never a dull moment !!!
Ok, back to tahiti....
Who thinks we might get an upgrade in the swell ?
You mean Fiji Lanki ?
Yes
abu dhabi, you say? at least we're not wetting the bed about Trestles any more... well, for now.
can't wait for this comp, my money's on Gabs to place big and get himself a spot in the final fives's.
Fiji ?
sorry, wasn't clear, yep, can't wait for the Fiji comp.
2 foot or 10 foot Gabs is near unstoppable at this spot... as long as there's enough sets in a heat.
Gabby had one wave on a small day years ago that was incredible..... tube piggy piggy
He was so far back that one cameraman gave up.
It was filmed long angle he was behind the whole foam ball and rode through foam, whole inside of the wave was foam .........
Geeze forecast not looking so hot !
Looks good to me LD!
Swells in the 6ft range for days three and four, then slower thereafter. Hopefully they get a start Wednesday as the swell builds.
Current wind forecasts for Wed arvo not looking overly favourable. They may choose to run the women Wed.
Days 3 and 4 being this coming Friday and Saturday? I’m not seeing 6ft for this coming Saturday. What fetch are you seeing Craig?
Day 3/4 are Thursday/Friday.
Ahhh shit sorry got my dates wrong. I’m still not seeing 6ft come Friday.
It's from this fetch below NZ, arriving late Thursday and easing slowly Friday. Wouldn't be surprised if a couple of bigger bombs over 6ft TBH.
In that last image the fetch is aimed straight at the south island of NZ. You expecting it to wrap up the east coast of NZ and up to Fiji?
Still plenty west and south-west of NZ to get up there. Hence in the above article mentioning NZ splitting it but with Cloudy being a magnet they'll get it.
Deffo expect 6ft sets later Thurs into Fri.
Ok, fingers crossed for Friday then.
Think they have enough swell to run the whole event in decent waves?
Overlapping heats a must .
Looks to go quite after this swell.
Oh i just saw Kelly on insta - just landed in Fiji. “This is great because only the best of the best are here now after the cut” really Kelly ? I’d forgotten he got a wild card…..so enjoyed Olympics without him.
It’s like he can’t reconcile the fact that he’s not one of them any more. And yep did t miss him at all at the Olympics.
And if he get knocked out early it will be like “i’m tired with the new baby, habent surfed much etc etc
He has already said that. On arrival today. Oh I’ve only surfed about 5 times in the last 2 months. Yawn
# Kelly baubles.
@ lost
To be fair Kelly was talking about the condensed format so they could potentially run the contest in one swell duration .
Unfortunately that didn't happen
Can they get it done in 3 days? W/T/F, maybe S, looks rubbish after that.
They have 24 men’s heats and 8 women’s heats in the first 2 days then 1 day for finals which is quarters onwards. So 3 days. Seems strange after Olympics to see so few women.
Really don't understand having wildcards after the cut, isn't it hypocritical to the concept of the cut
Yes, he is sponsoring this event or was that tahiti.
Conflicts of interested parties
# One more time..............
P.s he's not retiring though .
Hoping they all get a chance to surf clean offshore
before taking on those cross shore sections
Off for today I see due to small swell and crappy winds.
Gonna make it interesting to see what they run the finals in now then.
Indeed, surprised the first little mid-period swell didn't show that well. I think afternoon winds were the main issue.
Going to need to run over lapping heats, start early finish late.
Run into the night with helmets and headlamps
...
Four minutes into Heat 1... Already a solid 6ft+.
Just a quick recap on Friday afternoon's unexpected westerly breeze - I reckon these winds were most likely the result of a 'rotor'.
Rotors are atmospheric waves that develop in the lee of mountain barriers (in this case, the Nakauvadra Range which extends over 4,000ft above sea level, on the north-west region of Viti Levu), when conditions are just right.
The vertical downward motion in the lee of the mountain forms a small eddy which can bring about a reverse wind at the surface (the opposite to the gradient flow).
Interestingly, the models did pick up this small local wind change (see image below, though just north of Cloudbreak). I was skeptical that it'd influence the break given its small, spatial coverage and the fact that just 15-20km south of the lineup, winds were still 25kt SE - but there ya go.
FWIW, I wonder whether this effect also contributed to the small window of favorable winds in Tahiti for Day 3 of the Olympics, that coincided with the rare W/SW swell.
Spot on Benno and i reckon yep, definitely influenced that day 3 in Tahiti as it provided a bit of a cushion to keep those winds coming around the corner.
I've witnessed Eddy wind before it's a fascinating event, usually though it's not running back out through a large line up like cloud break ..ie usually at a beach with cliffs behind it where the trade wind is higher and being pushed back.
sometimes winds tend to slightly Eddy around points and headlands.
I was travelling inland recently in high desert and watched some mini tornado's fascinating.
not really much info online explaining eddy's...