Wave height
Shows the size of the measured sea state offshore. It is not automatically the breaking-wave height at your spot.
SwellOracle Academy · Intermediate
A surf buoy is an offshore snapshot. The useful reading comes from connecting its timestamp, wave variables, wind and position before translating it to your beach.
First check when the buoy measured the conditions and whether it is a physical observation or a marine model estimate. A recent physical reading is the strongest offshore reference, but it still describes the buoy location, not every beach.
Shows the size of the measured sea state offshore. It is not automatically the breaking-wave height at your spot.
Shows the spacing of the strongest wave energy. Combine it with height to distinguish short wind sea from a more organized swell.
Shows where the measured energy is coming from. Compare it with coastline exposure, headlands and island shadow.
Some buoys publish wind speed and direction; others publish wave data only. When present, wind helps explain surface texture and whether local wind sea is mixing with the primary swell.
Read the timestamp, identify the source, then pair height with period and direction. Check wind and the buoy's distance from the surf spot. Finally compare a nearby station or model point and confirm local warnings, tide and visible conditions.
Often a more organized swell signal, but direction and local exposure still decide what reaches shore.
May describe local wind sea or a mixed sea state with less organized lines.
Useful as background only; do not present it as current surf or fill missing fields.
A buoy cannot account for every reef, bay, tide or wind shift. Check whether its station actually publishes wind; if not, use a clearly labelled marine-model wind field or a local coastal source instead of inventing a value. Offshore wind can also differ from wind at the beach.
Use the buoy reading to understand offshore energy, then open the regional cluster and compare stations from the same coast. Never turn an offshore number into a safety guarantee.
A buoy reading becomes useful when you connect time, source, wave variables, wind and coastal exposure instead of reading one number alone.