Weather Forecast
18.50°C
Current Temperature
33.00km/h
Wind speed
18.74°C
Water Temperature
0.92m
Swell
0.62m
Tide
10/11
UV
Entrance Point forms the northern tip of a large accumulation of sandy ridges, which have been deposited by waves and tides at the southern entrance to Corner Inlet. In places, the sand ridges are 3 km wide. They parallel the southern beach, but curve around into the inlet behind the northern beach. A mobile, cuspate, sandy foreland marks the boundary between the tide dominated northern beach and wave dominated southern beaches. Hunter Point, which rises steeply to 350 m high Mount Hunter, separates the two southern beaches; with the large Lighthouse Point forming the southern boundary of Hunter Beach. All beaches can only be reached by boat or on foot. The nearest walking track reaches the southern side of Lighthouse Point. The northern beach lies in lee of the extensive ebb tidal shoals and faces north-east. It consequently receives very low waves and has a steep beach face in lee of variable tidal channel and shoal deposits. Once around the point and down the straight east facing southern beaches, the tidal shoals while still present, begin to move offshore and dissipate. This allows wave height to increase down the beach, reaching 1 m at the southern end. These waves, plus occasional higher waves, have built a steep beach face, fronted by a deep trough and longshore bar paralleling the beach. Low waves surge against the beach, while only larger waves break on the bar.
Beach Length: 3.6km

Patrolled Beach Flag Patrols

There are currently no services provided by Surf Life Saving Australia for this beach. Please take the time to browse the Surf Safety section of this website to learn more about staying safe when swimming at Australian beaches. Click here to visit general surf education information.

Information

Train
Bus
Passenger ferry

Regulations

Hazards

Winds

Weather

SLSA provides this information as a guide only. Surf conditions are variable and therefore this information should not be relied upon as a substitute for observation of local conditions and an understanding of your abilities in the surf. SLSA reminds you to always swim between the red and yellow flags and never swim at unpatrolled beaches. SLSA takes all care and responsibility for any translation but it cannot guarantee that all translations will be accurate.