Lagundri Bay surfing

Lagundri Bay

Lagundri Bay on Nias Island is Indonesia's original perfect right-hander — a shallow lava reef point break that produces smooth, perfectly tapered walls spilling over into deep almond-shaped tubes for hundreds of meters at a time. The highly sheltered cove funnels Indian Ocean south swells and shapes them into world-class barrels, with vertical drops and punishing lips that deliver deep-throated, nine-second tube rides on the best days. The wave handles a wide range of swell from head-high to triple overhead (3-15 feet), with the most significant swells arriving during June, July, and August from consistent south-southwest groundswell. Winds are generally favorable during the dry season (May-October), with light offshores grooming the faces through most mornings. The reef is sharp volcanic rock and relatively shallow, so booties are recommended and wipeouts carry real consequence. Located 128 km off Sumatra's west coast, reaching Nias requires a flight to Gunungsitoli followed by a several-hour overland journey to the southern tip of the island.