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Durban Weather


Surfing from Blythedale
Sub-tropical KwaZulu Natal is sandwiched between the Indian Ocean to the east, the Drakensberg mountains to the west, tropical Mozambique to the north and the Cape to the south. Hot and humid in summer, warm and dryer in winter, Natalians live in a sub-tropical paradise. The surf is generally characterised by hollow beachbreaks and exposed reefs best surfed in glassy offshore conditions early or late in the day.  In winter, southern storm swells must travel further to influence this coast. While you get fewer winter swells than the Cape, the swell is often cleaner and more orderly. The greater the swell travels, the cleaner and more orderly it becomes. In summer, the KwaZulu Natal coast has surf almost every day, especially spots exposed to the ocean. There are perhaps four reasons for this. The continental shelf comes right up to the coast in parts, which means the deep ocean is nearby. Prevalent NE winds brings plenty of sloppy wind swell. Then there are fairly regular groundswells from the south.

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