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Ocean Calendar Tide Charts

Phone: 1800 999 970



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23.01.2022 LAST CHANCE before Christmas, to get or give your Ocean Calendar tide charts. Available for NSW (and Southern Qld) or Victoria. Delivered anywhere in Australia. Even down chimneys.



18.01.2022 I was lucky enough to be in the Maldives recently - and to check out how this seafaring, archipelagic nation clocked the tides. The Maldivians had a calendar - passed down primarily through oral traditions - with 27 two-week periods or "stars" because they were determined by the position of constellations in the night sky. Each two-week period was associated with a particular activity and many of them to do with fishing, sailing and the sea. (The photos below show a tradi...tional Maldivian sailing boat and a larger, motorised dhoni.) The Nakaly Calendar was divided into the only two seasons that matter on the equator, the months of the easterly winds and the monsoon season that arrives with south-west winds. As sea-loving travellers we also divide the seasons. Game fishing season in the Maldives is December to March. The best snorkelling is from January to April. The best surfing is from March to November. There are many ocean calendars among the seafarers and the archipelagos of the world. But the only one in Australia that shows daylight, moon times and tides clearly is the Ocean Calendar Tide Chart. Get one now online!

13.01.2022 To all beach lovers: Helping people enjoy the beaches and stay healthy during lockdowns, Ocean Calendar Tide Charts for 2021 are selling fast. One for Victoria and one for 'NSW and southern QLD' beaches. Still the best tide calendars in the world: showing daylight hours and tide times and heights to scale so the tides are easier to read for the whole family. And carry more detail than any other tide table, to help you better plan fishing, surfing, boating or casual beach visits.

09.01.2022 This photo is not relevant to the tides at all, being above a landlocked country. But a reminder of the beauty of clouds, and how at the coast in nature you see skies you didn't think were possible. This is A "fallstreak hole", who'd have thought, at sunset over Niederlenz, Switzerland. Pic by Indra Joshi.



03.01.2022 It's not hard to see these astounding animals under a pier this time of year. Flinders, Rye or Portsea pier. Lower tides can be easier. But don't harass a dragon. Respect the sea.

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