gcdave, interesting comment about the seagulls, there was a massive flock of them just in front of the carpark...the heavy conditions didn't seem to concern them at all!
I realised on the drive to the airport I should have used the video function on my phone but simply forgot about it.
I commenced my 24-hour adventure having seen the seabreeze charts indicating the big winds were on their way and didn't really look at my BOM app for possible rain etc...when I kited earlier on the Monday there were plenty of breaks in the rain squalls so conditions were heavy, but not too crazy, and I have kited on the Sunny Coast a couple of times when the ocean looked like all the white caps had joined to turn the surface into froth!!! I have even previously experienced sand almost cover my board and bar, re-rigging after a downed and inverted kite during a downwinder from Currimundi to Pt. Cartwright!
Unfortunately for Sydney the conditions just got heavier and heavier and I definitely thought to myself whilst watching Pete, "Shoot, this feels like standing on a beach during a cyclone!" and it was only the next morning, Tuesday, I heard Carl Stefanovic refer to the storm as a Cat 2 Cyclone, an East Coast low (I always thought the systems had to be sub-1000 to be a low!!!???)...anyway I was hiding from the wind beside his white van trying to hold the phone still to record the images using his side mirror as a tripod to steady my hands. A few other cars were turning up and mad tourists like me were hopping out of the car to feel the force of Mother Nature...and one bird was out, hair flying, taking selfies and pretty much letting her full body weight "fall" into the wind and the power was just about holding her, preventing her from toppling over!!!
On the drive to the airport I saw some trees had fallen over, Botany Bay was totally chopped out and the rain was starting to really kick-in (when Pete launched the rain was not too bad and that was the time to get the photos), I mainly sat in my hire car with the binoculars and windscreen wipers on the rest of the time I was there.
Pete did eagerly mention, "But mate, tomorrow is the day" meaning Tuesday, with seabreeze on full brown arrows the entire day and that he had been waiting for the swell to pick up that Monday before heading to the beach. I wonder if he headed out that day???
On a side note, I did get to the airport and was able to get on an earlier flight (by 30 minutes) and shared the flight with the QLD Reds rugby team (returning from Sth Africa) and was seated next to a former Wallaby captain, so I took the opportunity to give him a few pointers on forward play in the modern game

Oh yeah, and that flight was a little delayed off the ground, so by the time I landed back in Brissie the good wife had two sleeping kids in the car and had circled BNE airport a number of times and was well ticked off by the time I was picked up...nothing like riding the emotional roller-coaster in one day, the penthouse to the dog house