Massive ocean surge hits French coast

A group of people walk on the mudflats at low tide around the Mont Saint-Michel off France's...
A group of people walk on the mudflats at low tide around the Mont Saint-Michel off France's Normandy coast. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
Onlookers gather at high tide to enjoy the spectacle of waves crashing on the coast at Penhors in...
Onlookers gather at high tide to enjoy the spectacle of waves crashing on the coast at Penhors in Finistere, western France. REUTERS/Mal Langsdon
People dig for shellfish during a record low tide in Saint Malo, western France. REUTERS/Stephane...
People dig for shellfish during a record low tide in Saint Malo, western France. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

France's North Atlantic coast was experiencing its first giant tide of the millennium as the full moon and this week's solar eclipse combined to help create an ocean surge not seen there since 1997.

At the picturesque Mont Saint Michel island where some of the biggest tides in the world occur, visitors gathered to watch the sea disappear from sight, exposing areas visible only every 18 years, before returning at pace. The next peak tide is not due until 2033.

France's National Hydrographic Service was expecting to measure more than 14 metres between low water on Saturday afternoon (local time) and high water in the evening around the famous Abbey-topped rock off France's northwest coast. Average tides in the area measure 8.7 metres.

Saturday morning's high tide was also close to peak levels as the sea rushed in from over 13km out.

Despite warnings from the authorities about the dangers of being caught in the fast-moving water, a 70 year-old man died after being swept away at Soulac in the southwesterly Gironde area, a police statement said.

"Fishing on foot" is a favourite coastal pastime during extreme tides as people set off on the ebb to collect shellfish and crabs in the shallows.

Still, relatively calm weather has meant that some coastal flood preparations look unnecessary and made the phenomenon less spectacular than some had hoped.

"For the 'tide of the century', I am a bit disappointed," said tourist Jean-Bernard Delamarche in Saint-Malo further west along the coast which also has big tides. "We came one year, we were staying at the Hotel Ibis and we could not get out of the hotel because the street was flooded. But it's true that it is impressive."

The lowest tide, measured from the port of Granville up the coast from Mont Saint Michel, was at 3:16pm local time, with the highest due at 8:10pm.

The largest tidal ranges in the world occur in Canada at the Bay of Fundy and Ungava Bay where, according to the Canadian Hydrographic service, tides can reach 17 metres in height.

 

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