Category: Insights

  • The Surprise Benefits of Manually Journaling Surf Sessions

    About a month into manually tracking my surf sessions I made two surprising discoveries that changed the way I approach surfing. In this quick post I’ll explain both the obvious and hidden benefits that tracking have brought me in my quest for stoke.

    Why I Started Tracking

    I started logging each session with the intent of understanding the nuances of the breaks I was surfing. I wanted to know what breaks worked based on the incoming swell size and direction. I was unorganized but consistent, writing down each session on one line of my notebook. I mainly wrote down the surf break name, time of session, swell size and direction, and how good it was; sometimes I would add in things like who I surfed with, what the crowds were like, or an unusual event like seeing a pod of dolphins.

    It worked fairly well for its intended purpose. It surprised me with several unintended benefits.

    Surprise Findings

    Improved Attention Allocation

    The act of tracking itself forced me to pay closer attention to what I was doing which benefited my surf forecasting. It’s simple and obvious and works… but despite having heard at least a dozen “high performers” mention it across multiple productivity podcasts, I hadn’t really tested it yet.

    I had heard locals around my area talk about the swells in a language that seemed foreign. I knew the basics from reading surf forecasts – swell size, direction, tides, and winds. But the local legends I occasionally talked to described the conditions with a much deeper level of understanding. They were queued in to the swell angle, period, local weather patterns, and seasonal trends. I was going off green bar or yellow bar from the free report.

    A big south swell would roll in and I’d get excited, making arrangements with friends for what I expected to be a stoke-filled session the next day. Then I’d feel gutted, checking it from the lookout to see every wave walling up and closing out. “There isn’t enough West in the water” – a side comment from another surfer rang in my ears on one of these depressing mornings. I didn’t know what it meant and it frustrated me even more.

    After a particularly hard let down from a run of good swell but mostly bad surf, I cracked. I was tired of setting false expectations because I didn’t know how to match the swell forecast to my local breaks. Something had to change. I heeded the advice of the success gurus and started tracking my surf sessions.

    I was surprised at how quickly my forecasting improved. It wasn’t that I was connecting the dots between my ‘epic’ sessions and bad ones – I’d need a much larger data set than just a handful of sessions logged before those insights arose. My improvement came instead from a shift in focus.

    Writing down the details of each session forced me to think about my decisions. I’d log a session as ‘super fun’ but be surprised when I noted the swell size and angle. It turned out that at my local breaks small secondary swells were much more important than I’d previously expected.

    I also realized the value of matching my board to the wave and started paying closer attention to board selection. Incidentally, as I continued tracking I ended up learning a lot about my own surf style. Despite what I thought was true, I actually found more stoke on bigger boards instead of the ‘cooler’ and more ubiquitous high performance shortboard – the tracking didn’t lie.

    That was just the start…

    Unexpected Moments of Stoke

    My first not-so-obvious insight was that my ‘stoke’ after each session was influenced much less by wave quality than I had expected. Of course I was super stoked on the days with perfect peaks, but those were rare occurrences and my notes were still full of ‘super fun’ sessions in average surf. What was going on?

    This is where the unstructured aspect of my notes was key. Looking back through my best sessions I found that many of them had okay conditions for surf but scribbled in the margins I had noted other experiences that kicked up the stoke level. A nice sunrise, dolphin sighting, or chat with a fellow surfer increased my stoke. A session with a close friend magnified it.

    I had expected there to be a clear connection between the quality of the waves and my stoke level, but it wasn’t that simple. While a great wave is sure to draw a stoke, there are a host of other delights to be discovered just by paddling out.

    The Lasting Value

    After I learned the nuances of my local breaks and was predicting swells much better I could have stopped tracking my sessions. I improved my board selection, placed more weight on getting a friend or two to join me, and did my best to admire nature during the lulls. But my final insight is what has kept me tracking despite already internalizing its main lessons.

    Looking back through my pages of notes I’m continually surprised at how much I surf. If in March you asked me how much I’d surfed or how stoked I’d been in February, I’d likely be off by 40% or more. I simply don’t have the memory to recall every session. I can barely tell you what I had for lunch more than 24hrs after scarfing it. Like most people, I only remember the extraordinary events… and sometimes even those fall out over time.

    Since I place so much weight on surfing, I generally gauge my happiness on how often I get out and how good my sessions are. If you catch me in a week of flat surf, my outlook on life is much dimmer than a week of peaky nugs. This is the simple reality of the human condition.

    My notebook, however, is a source of truth. If I logged it I can be confident it happened. Flipping back through the pages I’m always surprised at the number of ‘fun’ or ‘super fun’ sessions I had that have dropped from my memory. But that extra note in the margins, like who I surfed with or the one standout wave I had, is enough to jar the memory and bring a piece of it back.

    I get a short hit of stoke from recalling these fun sessions. But what’s more valuable is the sense of fulfillment I have when I see a series of dates with consistent sessions and decent stoke ratings. Despite whatever family drama or work disaster is at hand, I can look back and know I’ve done something good with my time here on earth. For me, a life well lived is one with frequent sessions and a regular reminder that I’m on track goes a long way.

  • The Best Surf Journal Apps

    There are several surf journaling apps on the market but they are surprisingly different. From expensive and complicated to simple and free… here’s a review of the top journal apps for surfers.


    1. The Top Recommendation: Surf Journal App

    Surf Journal App | Best Surf Journal Apps

    If you’re just getting started with journaling your sessions, the Surf Journal App (surfjournal.app) is highly recommended. It’s free, easy to use, and has the essentials: session rating, pictures, weather data (swell, tide, wind), and notes.

    • The Inspiration: It was built to replace manual tracking. Keen surfers who track their sessions to pinpoint what conditions work best at their go-to breaks typically use notebooks or spreadsheets. Surf Journal App helps surfers collect and organize the same info – easier and more accurately.
    • Weather Data: It features Automatic Weather Data Integration. When you log a time and location, the app retroactively pulls swell and weather data (wind, swell, tide) for that specific window. This turns a subjective “fun session” into an objective data point without requiring a wearable device.
    • Unique Utility: The “Surf Stats” and “Surf Map” views provide a macro-level look at surf locations and time in the water that hardware-centric apps often bury under micro-metrics like top speed.
    • The Verdict: Best for getting started – simple, fast, easy, and free.

    2. Visual Verification: Surfline & Dawn Patrol

    For surfers who want to track down to wave count, top speed, and watch themselves via cams after their sessions… the Surfline/Dawn Patrol ecosystem is the call.

    Dawn Patrol Surf Journal App
    • The Utility: It syncs wearable GPS timestamps with fixed camera networks to provide Cam Rewinds. This is the only platform that eliminates “subjective bias”—allowing you to see exactly how your turns look from the beach.
    • The Compromise: It is geographically tethered. At remote or “secret” spots without Surfline cameras, the primary value is lost, leaving you with an expensive subscription ($99+/year) for standard GPS tracking.
    • The Verdict: Good for technical progression at filmed breaks; not as useful for breaks without cams.

    3. Algorithmic Rigor: BreakFinder (Garmin)

    Garmin’s native surf tracking is historically inaccurate. BreakFinder is the specialized solution for users who demand high-fidelity wave telemetry.

    BreakFinder Surf Journal App
    • The Mechanism: It utilizes a three-stage GPS speed gating algorithm. It requires an 11 km/h burst to trigger a wave count and a 12 km/h average to validate the ride.
    • The Innovation: It is the only app currently using vertical G-force analysis to identify and ignore duck-dives, solving the “phantom wave” problem that plagues the Apple Watch and native Garmin apps.
    • The Verdict: The best choice for data purists who prioritize wave-count accuracy (97.5%) over social features or video clips.

    4. Predictive Intelligence: LazySurfer

    LazySurfer helps identify ideal conditions for surf breaks by monitoring your logged sessions and attributing a score. This paid app is best for surfers who are primarily looking to automate connecting the dots between fun sessions and swell, tide, and wind conditions.

    Lazy Surfer - Surf Journal App
    • The Tech: It analyzes your historical session ratings against real-time buoy conditions to give you a personalized forecast.
    • The Value: It identifies the specific swell and tide variables that led to your highest-rated sessions and pings you a week in advance when those conditions return. It effectively digitizes “local knowledge.”
    • The Verdict: Highly effective for surfers with complex local breaks that don’t fit standard “Good/Epic” forecast models and are willing to pay for a personalized forecast app.

    Comparative Analysis of Leading Platforms

    PlatformPrimary StrengthAccuracy TypeCost
    Surf Journal AppSpeed & Macro-StatsEnvironmental (Auto-Buoy)Free
    SurflineVisual FeedbackVerified (Video)High Sub ($99/yr)
    BreakFinderWave CountingTelemetric (97.5%)$5 / month
    LazySurferPredictive ForecastsStatistical (ML-Based)$99 / year

    Final Assessment

    The “best” app is defined by your primary objective:

    1. For a free and easy start: Use Surf Journal App. It provides the lowest friction and still has the data your need to dial in conditions at surf breaks.
    2. For technical coaching: Use Surfline + Dawn Patrol. Video evidence is the fastest way to fix technical dings.
    3. For pure wave data: Use BreakFinder. Its G-force filtering makes it the most accurate tracker on the market.
    4. For lowering forecasting time: Use LazySurfer. It turns your journal into a personalized forecasting engine.