Here is a Flickr album of some pictures. Many thanks to Fran Ward and Thornbury Sailing Club – and Simon. It was great to be out on the tide rather than viewing from the shore as usual. The inflatable kayak seemed fine! And there was someone with a homemade double canvas canoe. We tried that too. And we swam in Oldbury Pill. Click on the picture to go to the slide show.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
A Link to the Tide and Time Centre, National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, has been added to the blog role, and here.
Tide & Time at the National Oceanography Centre showcases some of the fascinating achievements made in the Liverpool area in understanding and predicting the tides.
See the website here
Tidal Village (night); Severn Estuary; By artist Luci Gorell Barnes.
(Posted by the artist Luci Gorell Barnes)
I choose a high tide just before sunset and as we turn the corner it seems that the river is already huge and full. At the bank I see that there are a few feet left to go and we tether the houses and set them out onto the water. The tide slaps them in against the banks and I push them back out into the current with a stick pulled from the hedge, lamenting the lovely long bamboo pole I left propped against the wall at home.
I film the houses as they bob, bump and separate. I step into a channel about 18 inches wide to get a better shot and drop straight down into water up to my waist. It’s growing dark and the lights in the houses look magical to me, so Rich keeps filming. My camera went in with me and now lies wet and useless in my pocket, but I feel strangely warm despite being soaked through. The dark pours in and we haul the houses out of the river and walk back to the car under a nearly full moon. It’s a surprisingly chilly night and even when I’m back home I find it hard to warm up. It’s as if the cold has soaked right into me, right down to my bones.
Epilogue from ‘The Metronomic Society: Natural Rhythms and Human Timetables’; by Michael Young; 1988; Thames and Hudson
Drift; by Richard Hughes; Bristol 6th May 2018
A live performance of the music composition Drift by Richard Hughes, including improvised participation from audience.
Tidal Cultures blog features on the new Marine Coastal Cultures blog
Thanks to Dr. Cormac Walsh, Universität Hamburg and the other editors.
From MCC blog
“Rarely is sufficient attention paid to the multiple and diverse ways of knowing, experiencing and relating to the coast and marine.
This network aims to bring together scholars from a wide range of rich and diverse inter/disciplinary traditions focusing on the lifeworlds and socio-materialities of coasts, seas and oceans. We invite scientists and scholars working across the environmental humanities and social sciences, as well as artists, writers, dramatists and policymakers with an interest in marine and coastal themes.” Source
Tidal Landscapes. A night exploring the shifting and cyclical nature of tidal landscapes through music, installation and sound. Bristol 6th May 2018
From Luci Gorell Barnes
You are warmly invited to Tidal Landscapes
A night exploring the shifting and cyclical nature of tidal landscapes through music, installation and sound.
Alongside three other artists Alex Goodman, Richard Hughes and Yas Clarke, I will be showing Tidal Village – an emerging piece of work with ideas and images about flooding and loss that I am exploring on the high tides of the Severn Estuary.

Pdf flyer Tidal Landscapes
Britain at Low Tides Series. Episode 4 series 2 on the Severn Estuary
This television series looks at archaeology and other heritage sites which are exposed and/or accessible at low tide around the British Coast.
Episode 4 series 2 focused on the Severn Estuary. It can be see here on line for a month. (Maybe in UK only).
See here
This series is created in association with CITiZAN (the Coastal and Intertidal Zone Archaeological Network)
Wrecked: a kind of multi-film Deep Map of the Thames Estuary and various artistic and ethnographic type investigations of environmental damage thereof
This is a pretty amazing and substantial film artwork about the Thames Estuary and environmental damage by Alistair Oldham
Click on the image to go to the site
A sound-slide compilation by commissioned WaterCityBristol artist Nick Hand Presented at the ‘Down By The River’ event, held at CentreSpace Bristol in July 2017.
The Pill Hobblers from HYDROCITIZENSHIP on Vimeo.

