Surf incoming from Tasman low with best winds and swell mid/late week

Steve Shearer picture
Steve Shearer (freeride76)

South-east Queensland and Northern NSW Surf Forecast by Steve Shearer (issued Mon Sep13)

SE Qld Forecast Summary (tl;dr)

  • Small bump in short period S/SSE swell Tues PM, favouring NENSW
  • Stronger S to SSE swell building Wed, holding Thurs with period of favourable winds AM
  • Better angled SE swell Fri, easing into Sat with good AM winds
  • N’ly winds on the weekend 
  • More S swell next week, favouring NENSW

Northern NSW Forecast Summary (tl;dr)

  • Small bump in short period S/SSE swell Tues PM, favouring NENSW
  • Stronger S to SSE swell building Wed, holding Thurs with period of favourable winds AM
  • Better angled SE swell Fri, easing into Sat with good AM winds
  • N’ly winds on the weekend 
  • More S swell next week, favouring NENSW

Recap

Small S swell expected on the weekend, got lost somewhere on the Mid North Coast with  3ft waves reported from S facing beaches in that region. Further north small levels of E swell padded out wave heights Sat morning in the 2ft range, clean before a’noon N’ly winds freshened and blew it to smithereens. Sunday was eye-lid peeling Northerly winds, surfable at only the most protected backbeaches with a small mix of swells on offer.

Today has seen mostly NE windswell in the 1-2ft range, with pre-frontal N’ly winds before a S’ly change which is currently just north of Ballina.

This week (Sep 13-17)

This week will be dominated by a low in the Tasman, which is expected to form tomorrow along a NW-SE angled trough line extending from far NENSW across the Tasman sea down to the North Island. This low and a slow moving high pressure cell- now drifting across the Bight and expected to track over Tasmania mid-week will hold a pattern of S’ly winds and developing SE swell through the week. S’ly winds will ease from Thurs as the pressure gradients between the two systems ease. This system looks good in snap shots but has a few flaws which will limit surf potential, read on for details.

Short term looks ordinary with a regime of mod/fresh S’ly winds along the coast and short period windswell on offer in NENSW through tomorrow. SEQLD will be north of the trough line and developing low axis so should see a more SW flow, though with little surf expected it’ll be mostly academic.

 With wind and swell from the same direction quality will be very ordinary through both Tues and Wed. Size will top out around 2-3ft Tues and build a few notches through Wed, mostly short period windswell from proximate S to SSE winds  on the low’s SW flank, though swell periods are expected to bump up during Wed, keep expectations low due to prevailing S’ly winds slashing up surface conditions. 

The second half of the week looks a better bet.  Our Tasman low drifts ESE towards the North Island through Wed, in a favourable position for swell development but windspeeds are strongest on the western and north-western flank, aimed up the Tasman sea pipe at South Pacific targets. That will put a lid on wave heights for the East Coast. 

The ridge should slacken by Thursday, although there will still be a S’ly flow along the coast, odds are increasing for at least a good window of lighter winds if not a morning offshore breeze. We’ll dial that in on Wed. SE swell is expected to be in the 3-4ft range Thursday, possibly with some 5ft sets at more S exposed locations in NENSW, and grading smaller 2-3ft in SEQLD. Expect a roll off in size at more sheltered spots away from the wind. 

Friday should be the first proper clean offshore day of the week, based on current modelling. With high pressure SE of Tasmania and the low now close to the North Island, weak pressure gradients should see a regime of light land and seabreezes although still with a S’ly component. Although the strongest fetch of the low is aimed up away from the East Coast, the supporting fetch of SE/SSE winds extending through the Tasman should see plenty of fun, 3-4ft surf through Friday. 

An afternoon pulse of more ESE angled swell is on the cards too as the low flares up next to the North island late Wed into Thursday. Stay tuned for details on that on Wed.

This weekend (Sep 18-19)

With the dominant high drifting away to the South of  New Zealand later next week, a small high cell drifts NE into the Tasman. This high then becomes squeezed by an approaching front, bringing freshening N’ly winds this Sat. Waves look fun for the AM session with ESE swell generated by the low directing winds out of or near Cook Strait later this week. That should see surf in the 3ft+ range, slowly easing through the day. Expect a light W to NW flow early before freshening N to NE winds. Sat morning will be the best of it this weekend.

Swell continues to ease through Sun, dropping back below the 2ft mark through the day. The approaching frontal system is likely to further freshen winds from the N, so back beaches are likely to be the only surfable spots.

Next week (Sep 20) and beyond

Back to S swells next week as a series of deep polar lows approach and pass the lower Tasman Sea. Models are offering divergent outcomes of these lows as they enter our swell window so we’ll need to revise estimates on Wed (and possibly Fri) but the basic pattern can be blocked out now. 

A broad, zonal fetch centred on Tasmania is expected to enter the swell window Sun, with a Bass Strait fetch likely to see a small increase in S swell early Tuesday in NENSW depending on timing. SEQLD will likely be tiny to flat.

GFS then progs a much more significant, and better angled fetch of SW gales to severe gales through Mon, from an intense polar low. That would suggest a strong pulse of S swell either later Tues and into Wed.

EC has a much more modest system entering the swell window, so we’ll need to keep expectations in check.

Further fronts are expected through next week, though at this stage the orientation of winds is very zonal (W-E), suggesting a few small S swell pulses into next weekend favouring S facing beaches south of the border. High pressure is expected to be in the more seasonal position so N’ly winds are most likely.

Check back Wed for a clearer picture on the long and short term.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comments

Mad Dog's picture
Mad Dog's picture
Mad Dog Tuesday, 14 Sep 2021 at 7:33am

Great stuff Steve, thanks man.
This surfer is off to a nice little back beach for the weekend, it faces hard south, so bring on those Northerlies!

freeride76's picture
freeride76's picture
freeride76 Tuesday, 14 Sep 2021 at 12:12pm

WSW winds persisting through the morning (as opposed to f/cast strong S'lies).

indicates trough line and subsequent low axis is located further south than models suggested yesterday.

Implications ahead for local winds and surf.

Sprout's picture
Sprout's picture
Sprout Tuesday, 14 Sep 2021 at 12:22pm

Shhhhh...