UrbanJungle1966
Contributor
I grew up in Cronulla so spent my youth snorkelling and surfing in all kinds of conditions. Now I dive if it looks a bit hairy I first go out in just my swimmers as some shoulder height waves will go straight past you and some will put you flat on your bum. Anything bigger than that unless you are skilled at it I reckon you could get into trouble or worse hurt yourself carrying 30kg of dive gear.
In anything large I kit up completely and as soon as there is enough water under me put on my fins, reg in and hug the bottom going out. I also make myself as heavy as possible.
High tide is better than low tide as usually the waves are fuller and don't dump as much or they break right on the beach which is easy as you just wait for a lull and run/swim as fast as you can to get out. If you look out and the waves have a definite tube shape to them consider not going out as you will get smashed if it is shallow enough to catch you. If the wave is breaking smoothly down the face you are usually pretty right.
Getting in well again it just depends. You can body surf fully kitted up, you can also curl into a ball, hold on tight to everything and let the waves do their work on you. You will get in
. Again when getting in I go in a heavy as possible hugging the bottom until the waves start affecting me. Once they start taking hold I usually inflate fully and let them carry me in. Rocks can be a bit of a bitch but if you go in feet first and try to stay as far inside the wave as you can you usually miss most of them. When it gets shallow enough to stand take fines off and just jump back into the wave as they hit letting the wave push you to shore.
In anything large I kit up completely and as soon as there is enough water under me put on my fins, reg in and hug the bottom going out. I also make myself as heavy as possible.
High tide is better than low tide as usually the waves are fuller and don't dump as much or they break right on the beach which is easy as you just wait for a lull and run/swim as fast as you can to get out. If you look out and the waves have a definite tube shape to them consider not going out as you will get smashed if it is shallow enough to catch you. If the wave is breaking smoothly down the face you are usually pretty right.
Getting in well again it just depends. You can body surf fully kitted up, you can also curl into a ball, hold on tight to everything and let the waves do their work on you. You will get in
