BEST SURF SPOTS IN AUSTRALIA
The best breaks and swells of Australia's never-ending, sun-drenched coastline.
AUSTRALIA is definitely renowned one of the world’s premier
surfing destinations. Its 37,000 km coastline is blessed with beach,
reef and point breaks to challenge the most experienced board-rider. For
the less adept, there are countless easy-rolling swells that beginners
can paddle onto safely and with confidence.
There are Surfing Australia accredited surf schools that operate at or
near all of these locations, so learn-to-surfers can experience them
too. For more
information, visit Surfing Australia.
Your own magic surfing experience could happen just about anywhere, but
for the best of the best of Aussie waves, these are some very worthy
contenders.
NORTH COAST
Photo by: Tourism NSW |
When the surfing counter-culture took hold in Australia in the late 1960s, the NSW north coast quickly became the promised land for anyone with a board and a hankering for an alternative lifestyle communing with the waves. “Discovered” in the early 1970s, the point break at Angourie remained relatively unheralded for the next two decades, but it’s world famous nowadays as home break of Aussie surfing legend Nat Young. Endlessly filmed and fawned over, the right-hand point-break at Lennox Head rates a mention in any discussion of Australia’s best wave.
Whether your preferred spot is Tallow Beach, Watego’s, Main Beach, the wreck at Belongil or elsewhere along the Byron Bay coast, the compelling factor here has always been the vibe. Kombi vans, dreadlocks, hippie gatherings, communal drumming and a collective feeling that there’s nothing to do tomorrow but get up and do it all again, belong at Byron as nowhere else.
NOOSA POINT BREAK, QLD
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One of the best and most photogenic long-board breaks in the world, the point at Noosa is capable of producing a genuine 200 metre ride on its best days. In a decent swell especially there’s always a big crew of locals riding it who really know how to “walk the plank”, but when it’s smaller it’s perfect for beginners – a long, easy-rolling cruise.
SNAPPER ROCKS, QLD
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Snapper Rocks is a sand bottom point break considered as a world renowned surfing spot on the Gold Coast. Snapper, located at Rainbow Bay, is home to the world-famous ‘Super Bank’, regarded in surfing circles as the longest, most consistent and most hollow wave in the world. The swell here often reaches six to eight feet, and one good, clean wave can transport you from Snapper to Kirra, a distance of almost two kilometres.
Snapper Rocks hosts elite international surfing events such as:
- Quiksilver and Roxy Pro,
- Rip Curl Masters
- MP Classic.
SEAL ROCKS AND PACIFIC PALMS, NSW
Photo by: Tourism NSW |
Lighthouse Beach and Treachery Beach at Seal Rocks are south-facing and known for generating epic waves when a south swell rolls in. Just 22km up the road at Pacific Palms, Boomerang Beach and Bluey’s Beach are blessed with their own postcard waves shaped by prominent headlands, and often visited by cheeky dolphins that love showing the rest of us how surfing should really be done. This part of the NSW coast has remained miraculously undeveloped too; there’s nary a high-rise, nightclub or casino in sight, making it the perfect place for a true ‘soul surfer’ experience.
NORTHERN BEACHES, NSW
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Beginning at Manly Beach and running 20km north to Palm Beach, Sydney’s northern peninsula offers a succession of surf beaches unmatched by a city environment anywhere else on earth. Manly itself has playful beach breaks and punchy barrels, plus the offshore Queenscliff “Bommie” (bombora), joy for big wave riders. Neighbouring Freshwater Beach is much loved by bodysurfers and youngsters on body-boards; this is also where surfboard-riding was first introduced to Australia by Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku, on 15 January 1915. Continuing north, the 6km coastal corridor between Dee Why Beach and North Narrabeen is widely considered Sydney’s blue-ribbon surfing belt, with the legendary Long Reef bombora (known locally as “Butter-box”) situated smack in the middle. The surfing tribes of Mona Vale Beach, Newport Beach, Whale Beach and Avalon Beach can all make a good case for choosing their own local breaks over their neighbours’, or you could try all four beaches in a lazy half-day. Finally, the distinctive burnt-orange sands of Palm Beach mark the end of the peninsula, its 1.5km procession of beach breaks offering thrills and spills for surfers, body-boarders and wave-ski paddlers.
TORQUAY - BELLS BEACH, VIC.
Photo by: Getty Images |
Historically and spiritually, Bells Beach is the home of Australian surfing and today is still the site of the country’s oldest and most prestigious professional surfing event; nowadays named the Rip Curl Pro, the winner still receives the traditional clanging bell trophy.
Swells from the Southern Ocean slow down and steepen over the shallow reefs to produce outstanding surf that can rise to five metres or more, so when it gets big, most of us are best advised to think of surfing Bells as a spectator sport.
CRESCENT HEAD, NSW
Photo by: Tourism NSW |
The coastline beginning just north of Port Macquarie through to Crescent
Head is accessed via Point Plomer Road, which ribbons the coast for
25kms. Along this route are four perfect right-hand point-breaks,
tailor-made for long-board riders, grommets and beginners and capable of
generating miracle rides of 200 metres. The point break at Crescent
Head itself is revered by long-boarders the world over, and some of the
sport’s best have been filmed here “Hanging Ten” or cross-stepping the
length of their 10-foot planks. Halfway between Crescent Head and Point
Plomer is the brilliantly named Delicate Nobby, a wedge-shaped rock
formation that starts just off the beach and spears out into the
Pacific, creating beach breaks on either side.
MARGARET RIVER - YALLINGUP AND PREVELLY PARK, WA
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260km south of Perth, the tiny resort village of Yallingup marks the
beginning of the famed Margaret River winery region, where wine
enthusiasts and ‘waxheads’ (board-riders) have long converged in equal
numbers. With several breaks that range from mild to monstrous depending
on the swell, Yallingup is considered the best all-round surfing
destination on Australia’s west coast.
Further south, Prevelly Park is the heart of serious Margaret River surfing territory, where swells up to six metres get spun into perfect barrels across the treacherous offshore reef. No place for beginners or the faint-of-heart, “Surfers Point” at Prevelly even attracts the big-name big-wave lunatics from the US and Hawaii, and it’s one of the few places in Australia where board-riders wear helmets and nobody laughs at them.
Further south, Prevelly Park is the heart of serious Margaret River surfing territory, where swells up to six metres get spun into perfect barrels across the treacherous offshore reef. No place for beginners or the faint-of-heart, “Surfers Point” at Prevelly even attracts the big-name big-wave lunatics from the US and Hawaii, and it’s one of the few places in Australia where board-riders wear helmets and nobody laughs at them.
The source: http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/journal/eight-greatest-surfing-spots-in-australia.htm
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