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  • #16
    Originally posted by Stores View Post
    Would agree with you Alan, about the 2 hour gap off side. In my Geography lessons I would show them a photo of high and low tide at Southport beach and Neist Point on the Isle of Skye. The tidal range is roughly the same but on Skye you can fish on the same rock all tide, at Southport the tide comes "in" about 2 miles..........how can that be?




    Discuss





    Now let me show you some fishing photos from last summer.....................




    No wonder they made me redundant lol
    easy at Southport the beach's are level and no doubt nearer sea level, so a small rise in height would mean a greater distance covered, whereas the same rise in sea level will be negligible on a rocky coast which the top of the rock is no doubt well above sea level.
    Alan

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Charlton View Post
      easy at Southport the beach's are level and no doubt nearer sea level, so a small rise in height would mean a greater distance covered, whereas the same rise in sea level will be negligible on a rocky coast which the top of the rock is no doubt well above sea level.
      Alan,

      As you have answered the question correctly and in more detail than is needed to explain the causes of WW1 and the Schleswig - Holstein crisis combined you automatically achieve an A* in A Level Geography, a place at a university of your choice and an overdraft facility the size of the National Debt.

      Seriously it's really difficult for most to get their head around the rise and fall of the tide.....especially when the waves come in and out, not up and down.........

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by Stores View Post
        Alan,

        As you have answered the question correctly and in more detail than is needed to explain the causes of WW1 and the Schleswig - Holstein crisis combined you automatically achieve an A* in A Level Geography, a place at a university of your choice and an overdraft facility the size of the National Debt.

        Seriously it's really difficult for most to get their head around the rise and fall of the tide.....especially when the waves come in and out, not up and down.........
        the university of life will do me, and as the learning goes on to your dying day, under the new rules governing students overdrafts I can borrow as much as I like so long as I pay back after studies finish and I get a job, so I will go to my grave a happy man.
        Alan

        Comment


        • #19
          I thought the tide went in and out, untill i fished eyemouth, this was my first experiance of the tides going up and down...

          I seem to remember a very similar line in a book i read once, can quiet remember who the auther was though any ideas Stores??
          Happy to help, Keen to learn!

          Fishing marks Seaham - Lynemouth
          http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...!467&encType=1

          Fishing Marks Lynemouth - North
          http://www.bing.com/maps/Default.asp...!739&encType=1

          Popular lure Marks

          Comment


          • #20
            Found this general map (real time) haven't had time to investigate if you can zoom in to specific areas etc.
            Strömungen
            Tides & Sea State For North Shields
            http://www.mumm.ac.be/EN/Models/Oper...n=northshields

            Comment


            • #21
              You can tell I've got too much time on my hands


              Geography – Year 9 – Friday Afternoon - Cannock

              Gentlemen, today we shall be looking at the North Yorkshire Coast and what has happened to it over the last 2000 years and what’s likely to happen to it in the future.

              Sir

              Yes Smith?

              I’ve never seen the sea.

              Hands up those who have never been to the seaside (10 raise hands – sea is 70 miles away)

              You who have seen the sea…………..where?

              Benidorm…..Magaluf……..somewhere hot Sir………. Rhyl…..(looks of incredulity)

              Oh God……………….

              OK, 2000 years ago the coast of Yorkshire was about 10 miles further out to sea than it is today.

              How do you know Sir?

              Because we have found evidence of Roman settlements out in the sea and the coastline keeps getting washed away, even today.

              Is it the sea, coming in and bashing the shore that washes it away Sir?

              Well, yes and no, Tompkinson. The sea doesn’t actually come in…it goes up and down but it does bash against the shore.

              So Sir, the waves come in but the tide goes up and down…………why don’t the waves go up and down like the tide?

              Well because the waves are sort of directed by the wind but whatever the direction of the wind the tide still goes up and down. Yes Potter?

              So the waves come in and the tide goes up and down………….so where has half of Yorkshire gone?

              Ah well…now we’re getting somewhere…….most of the top of Yorkshire was carried from the north by ice and dumped at the seaside.

              Sir? How can ice carry anything?

              Saints preserve us!!!!!!! Ice is an agent of transportation and about 10.000 years ago ice brought boulder clay to Yorkshire.

              Sir?

              Smithers?

              We use clay in Art and when we throw it up on the ceiling it sticks. When we make those crappy mugs with it it’s rock hard. How come it wears away?

              Sir?

              Taylor?

              We’ve got ice on our street at the moment but it’s not an agent of transportation.

              That’s because it’s not heavy enough – ice moves as a result of its own weight.

              Isn’t that fatism Sir? You could get reported.

              Shut up Lewis… ice moves because it is so heavy – like in the glaciers of the Andes and Himalayas.

              What’s a glacier Sir?

              It’s a river of ice that slowly creeps down a valley.

              How fast does it creep Sir?

              Well, in the 1950’s this plane took off from somewhere in South America and flew so high it encountered the Jet Stream

              Is that for jets only?

              Shut up Green………… the jet stream is a powerful wind that made the plane late arriving in Santiago……..so late it wasn’t seen for 30 years. Yes Williams?

              How can planes fly in streams……you did say streams didn’t you?

              YES………….but air streams not water type streams. Anyway this plane appeared from the glacier snout………….WHAT Bullock?

              My dad has a pig with a snout – it craps all over the garden

              30 minute detention Bullock…………….moving on. The tide and the wind have formed and destroyed the Yorkshire Coast. Any more questions?

              Sir?

              Wilson?

              What causes the tide to go up and down and/or in and out?

              Good point Wilson….it’s the moon pulling the water towards it (and a bit of the sun). Where it pulls the hardest it’s high tide. When it takes a rest it’s low tide.

              So Sir you’re saying the man in the moon is responsible for pulling the tides?

              That’s right Boyd and if you remember that you’ll pass your GCSE

              Sir – what if I mention that my dad used to go to the Man in the Moon in the 70’s and used to pull loads of things ……..will I get extra marks?



              side
              Last edited by Stores; 07-01-2011, 09:35 PM.

              Comment


              • #22
                Originally posted by Stores View Post
                You can tell I've got too much time on my hands


                Geography – Year 9 – Friday Afternoon - Cannock

                Gentlemen, today we shall be looking at the North Yorkshire Coast and what has happened to it over the last 2000 years and what’s likely to happen to it in the future.

                Sir

                Yes Smith?

                I’ve never seen the sea.

                Hands up those who have never been to the seaside (10 raise hands – sea is 70 miles away)

                You who have seen the sea…………..where?

                Benidorm…..Magaluf……..somewhere hot Sir………. Rhyl…..(looks of incredulity)

                Oh God……………….

                OK, 2000 years ago the coast of Yorkshire was about 10 miles further out to sea than it is today.

                How do you know Sir?

                Because we have found evidence of Roman settlements out in the sea and the coastline keeps getting washed away, even today.

                Is it the sea, coming in and bashing the shore that washes it away Sir?

                Well, yes and no, Tompkinson. The sea doesn’t actually come in…it goes up and down but it does bash against the shore.

                So Sir, the waves come in but the tide goes up and down…………why don’t the waves go up and down like the tide?

                Well because the waves are sort of directed by the wind but whatever the direction of the wind the tide still goes up and down. Yes Potter?

                So the waves come in and the tide goes up and down………….so where has half of Yorkshire gone?

                Ah well…now we’re getting somewhere…….most of the top of Yorkshire was carried from the north by ice and dumped at the seaside.

                Sir? How can ice carry anything?

                Saints preserve us!!!!!!! Ice is an agent of transportation and about 10.000 years ago ice brought boulder clay to Yorkshire.

                Sir?

                Smithers?

                We use clay in Art and when we throw it up on the ceiling it sticks. When we make those crappy mugs with it it’s rock hard. How come it wears away?

                Sir?

                Taylor?

                We’ve got ice on our street at the moment but it’s not an agent of transportation.

                That’s because it’s not heavy enough – ice moves as a result of its own weight.

                Isn’t that fatism Sir? You could get reported.

                Shut up Lewis… ice moves because it is so heavy – like in the glaciers of the Andes and Himalayas.

                What’s a glacier Sir?

                It’s a river of ice that slowly creeps down a valley.

                How fast does it creep Sir?

                Well, in the 1950’s this plane took off from somewhere in South America and flew so high it encountered the Jet Stream

                Is that for jets only?

                Shut up Green………… the jet stream is a powerful wind that made the plane late arriving in Santiago……..so late it wasn’t seen for 30 years. Yes Williams?

                How can planes fly in streams……you did say streams didn’t you?

                YES………….but air streams not water type streams. Anyway this plane appeared from the glacier snout………….WHAT Bullock?

                My dad has a pig with a snout – it craps all over the garden

                30 minute detention Bullock…………….moving on. The tide and the wind have formed and destroyed the Yorkshire Coast. Any more questions?

                Sir?

                Wilson?

                What causes the tide to go up and down and/or in and out?

                Good point Wilson….it’s the moon pulling the water towards it (and a bit of the sun). Where it pulls the hardest it’s high tide. When it takes a rest it’s low tide.

                So Sir you’re saying the man in the moon is responsible for pulling the tides?

                That’s right Boyd and if you remember that you’ll pass your GCSE

                Sir – what if I mention that my dad used to go to the Man in the Moon in the 70’s and used to pull loads of things ……..will I get extra marks?



                side
                That's class

                Comment


                • #23
                  Happy to help, Keen to learn!

                  Fishing marks Seaham - Lynemouth
                  http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=...!467&encType=1

                  Fishing Marks Lynemouth - North
                  http://www.bing.com/maps/Default.asp...!739&encType=1

                  Popular lure Marks

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Far to much time on your hands, get a hobby, like fishing or writing
                    Alan

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      time on hands

                      excellent david
                      AUDENTES FORTUNA JUVAT

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        brilliant
                        stop what ya deein and.........

                        PB : cod 9lb 2oz Lynemouth Dec 10'

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