Ah, the london surf forecast, I remember it well...
Which SE spot are you surfing?
I got quite good at forecasting when I lived in the UK and had to travel for four hours to get to a decent wave (these days I just rock up at the beach).
MSW etc. is okay, but use it as 'data', not a forecast - look at the swell size, period, wind speed and wind direction and make your own conclusions rather than relying on their over-simple star system. If there's a webcam at your "local", look at MSW, make a prediction and then see whats really happening. Then start doing that as a forecast. Learn how MSW works at your spot.
If you want to really do it yourself (which can be useful for planning 5 days in advance), all you really need is pressure charts:
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/ ... ssure.htmlWhere you're surfing makes a big difference here - if you're on the south coast you want a big low pressure system (lots of lines packed together in a circle) out in the middle of the atlantic (towards the equator preferably), but if on the east coast the same but up in the north sea.
So the critical bits...
You want a low pressure system to be there for a while to generate waves.
You want it to be far away - a low pressure system on top of you will just be blown out.
The wind basically follows the lines of the low pressure system in an anticlockwise direction (in the northern hemisphere, other way around for the southern hemisphere).
The closer the lines (isobars) the stronger the wind.
To get a really nice swell (rare in the SE), ideally you'd have your low pressure system a little way away, but have a high pressure (very few lines) over europe/SE UK producing light winds. So a bright winters day a day or two before a storm or a few days after will often work best for SE england.
Note that for a really big storm that's very far away, it takes a couple of days for the waves to get to the UK, but by the time it gets there should have a really nice 12s+ period.
Easy
