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Walt
 
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Default Question: Judging High Tide by the Moon

N1EE wrote:

1 pt to you Wally.

High Tide will be somewhat close to the
mid point between moonrise and moonset.


In theory.

I have not researched many lcoations but I'd
estimate +/- an hour for more locations.


You need to do some more research. Use the following two resources to
compare moonrise/set times and tides for various locations:

http://www2.shore.net/~mcmorran/tide/tideform.html
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/RS_OneYear.html
(be sure to correct for daylight savings time)

For instance, try comparing Virginia Beach, VA and Solomon's Island, MD
.. Moonrise/set times are within a couple of minutes of each other, but
the tides are six hours out of synch.

Why? Well, obviously it takes some time for the large bulge of water
that is the tide to make its way up the Chesapeake Bay. Since water
doesn't move instantly, moonrise is essentially useless for predicting
tides on large bays.


--
//-Walt
//
// Sigs suck. Oh, the irony.