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Bells Beach seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (May - September)

Winter in the Southern Hemisphere brings the Southern Ocean to life, and Bells Beach feels the full brunt of its fury. From May through September, powerful extratropical lows march eastward across the Roaring Forties, generating long-period groundswells that pulse into the Great Australian Bight. While the predominant swell direction is from the southwest and south-southwest, these swells wrap around the cape and hit Bells' SE-facing reefs with added west in the direction. The real key to quality during this period is the wind: high-pressure systems slide north of Victoria, parking a ridge that funnels cool, offshore winds from the northwest and west. Ideal wind percentages soar above 50%, meaning you'll find glassy conditions more often than not. Wave periods average 12.6-13.0 seconds – that's powerful, lined-up surf in the 1-2.5m range, offering plenty of hollow sections and long walls. This is the prime window for Bells.

Fair Surf Season (March - April & October - November)

The shoulder months pack a punch but require more patience. March and April see the tail end of the winter swell machine, with periods still solid (11.9-12.5s) and swell heights holding around 1.3m. Offshore wind frequency dips from 43% to 30%, so you'll often deal with seabreezes from the east and southeast that put a chop on the face. October and November are the transition back into summer; the storm track shifts south, weakening the swell supply, and periods drop to 11.5-12.3s. Ideal wind percentages sit in the 30-38% range, with more mixing of onshore ESE and SE winds. When a strong high parks itself just right, you'll get clean conditions and solid SW groundswell – but you have to pick your days.

Low Surf Season (December - February)

Summer in southeastern Australia is the quietest time for Bells. The Intertropical Convergence Zone and subtropical ridge dominate, pushing the storm track deep into the Southern Ocean. Average swell heights hold at 1.2-1.3m, but wave periods drop to 11.0-11.2s – shorter, weaker, more wind-swell energy mixed in. Worse, the predominant winds shift to onshore from the SE and S, often under the influence of a lazy east-coast trough. Ideal wind percentages bottom out around 23-24%. While there are still rideable days, you'll be groveling on small, weak waves with bumpy surfaces. The occasional south-swell from a distant low can provide a fun session, but it's the low season for a reason.