WindyTy: a powerful, real-time surf forecasting tool

Surf forecasting is increasingly popular. Nowadays, several websites and smartphone apps promise the perfect wave and wind prediction. A surf report is no longer a secret formula but an industry standard.

The question is: how do you deliver data? With numbers, colors, and arrows, or with innovative 3D maps? WindyTy, a wind map and weather forecast system for surfers, kitesurfers, windsurfers, sailors, and pilots, believes it offers the right tool.

The WindyTy website displays the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) model in high resolution, but it also features the Global Forecast System (GFS), the North American Mesoscale Forecast System (NAM), and the NOAA Environmental Modeling System (NEMS).

"We do not combine them; we display them separately. In detail forecast, we use Services of Meteoblue, but in the future, we want to utilize our data from ECMWF," explains Tomáš Slavkovský, project manager at WindyTy.

The forecasting tool has everything you need to know before hitting the surf: wind speed and direction, wave height, swell period, cloud cover details, humidity, rain, and snow data.

"Major wind forecasting services for kiters and sailors rely on GFS as the only global model. And that is the reason why they fail so often," notes Ivo Lukacovic, a wind addict and the founder of WindyTy.

The team behind WindyTy promises that both the desktop tool and the Android/iOS apps will be "free, lightweight, and fast, despite the considerable data acquisition costs of the ECMWF model."

Top Stories

Kelly Slater's entrepreneurial journey has always been relatively kept under the radar, with surfing doing most of his talking. Let's take a look at how the Floridian planned the move from waves to the boardroom.

Jack Robinson and Gabriela Bryan have taken out the 2024 Margaret River Pro.

Surpoel, Europe's first indoor wave pool, is already pumping waves. The Dutch structure, powered by 24/7 Waves, has entered the testing stage.

Geoff McCoy, one of the world's most innovative and creative surfboard shapers, passed away at home in Byron Bay, Australia, at the age of 79 after complications following a heart attack.