Growing up, we had a game called “fight the tide” where we would build sand castles in the intertidal zone with a stick in the peak of the castle. Last stick standing wins a chocolate bar.
Growing up, we had a game called “fight the tide” where we would build sand castles in the intertidal zone with a stick in the peak of the castle. Last stick standing wins a chocolate bar.
Ebb is the state of the tide going out, Flow is coming in.
Intertidal is an interesting thought, but isn’t it already taken by the area that is covered by high tide and exposed at low.
I was wondering about the point where it is halfway between high and low, whether it is ebbing or flowing. Slack is more the high or low point where it switches from ebbing to flowing.
Isn’t that more like Slack-tide when a high or low tide turns and becomes still (Stau like traffic?)
Median-Tide?
Never liked the way half-tide sounded, I think I’m liking Mean-Tide, or Median-Tide if I’m feeling fancy.
Mean Tide?
I think you’re right about slack and stand, and ebb and flood would work but it’s usually just a glimpse when I drive over a bridge that makes me think about it, so I don’t know which way it’s going.
I grew up on the coast, so I never really thought about tides just that that was the way it was. Then I married someone from a landlocked country and every time we drive over the bridge over the cove near our house I comment when the tide is high or low since they are used to lakes, and I’m never quite sure what to say when it’s in the middle.
As good a selection as any
Meddle, Pink Floyd
It’s usually that way here too, but yesterday, for whatever reason, there was no stress.
Cat politics. I don’t even pretend to understand it.
So does the Remzle.
Cat in the sun.
Please don’t bury me down in the cold cold ground
In all seriousness I’d rather they cut me up and pass me all around.
It’s even softer than it looks, at least at first.
I would add James McMurtry "Ruby and Carlos" , "lights of Cheyenne "or "Hurricane Party"
The Glass Cannon
The Daily Beans
Behind the Bastards
Everything @_danny@Lemmy.World said is fair.
I would add, as someone who read “The Lightning Tree” but not recently, it is recognizable as the same story with quite a bit added. It’s a nice novella and I like Rothfuss’s turn of phrase, but it doesn’t have the meat of the main story or the whimsy of “Slow Regard of Silent Things”
Also it is a little weird that the author’s note starts with “You might not want to buy this book”, of course I got it out of the library so I guess I can’t complain.
Do they pay Anthony Burgess for the rights to their band name?