SwellOracle Academy

Turn a marine forecast into a surf decision.

A marine forecast is most useful when you connect the forecast window with a recent observation and the coastline you actually plan to surf.

Start with the forecast window

Check the forecast date, update time and basin before reading the numbers. A wave forecast describes expected conditions, while a buoy shows what an instrument recently measured offshore.

Combine three sources

Wave forecast

Use predicted height, period and direction to identify the likely swell window.

Physical buoy

Use a recent NOAA/NDBC or regional observation to confirm whether the signal is arriving.

Marine model

Use a model point for regional context when no physical buoy is close to the coast.

Read sea conditions at the coast

Wind, tide, coastline orientation and local shelter can change what reaches a surf spot. A strong offshore swell does not guarantee clean waves at every beach.

Compare height, period and direction together, then check official warnings and visible local conditions before entering the water.

Continue learning

How to read the swell

Height, period and direction as a first reading.

Open lesson

What is swell period?

How seconds change energy and behavior.

Open lesson

How to read swell direction

Angle, exposure, refraction and coastal shadow.

Open lesson

How to check buoy data

Timestamp, source, variables and context before trusting a reading.

Open lesson

Practical takeaway

Use a marine forecast to plan a window, a buoy to confirm the offshore signal and local conditions to decide whether the surf is actually worth entering.