• niktemadur@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    So that’s how places like Mont Saint-Michel and Labrador become notable for their tides. I didn’t know about Northwestern Australia, though. And I have been to the one at the northern portion of the Sea Of Cortez.

    It was quite a sight and outta sight, we were camping at the beach in Puertecitos, about a three or four hour drive south of Mexicali. The sands were dark and it was a New Moon night, pitch-black all around including the ground as I walked seaward during low tide, everyone else was already asleep. It was a little bit scary but I pushed on. My eyes had lost the horizon in a completely flat landscape, except for a barely perceptible ghostly sea glow from afar.

    Quite unknowingly, step by accidental step and being at the exact time and place, I had stumbled into an extraordinary, disorienting and thrilling environment of sensory deprivation except for gravity.

  • palitu@aussie.zone
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    9 months ago

    So how does it work that Broome in North West Australia has something like 12m tides?

  • LordOfLocksley@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Imagine a country with an ego so fragile, they have to cut Europe and Africa in half just to make themselves the centre of attention