Watch the tide at Oak Island

Monitor your tide tables before visiting Oak Island.

Maine boaters have the opportunity to experience some of the state’s most spectacular natural wonders, whether in the form of seals basking on a seaweed-covered shoal or the awesome topography of a place like Mount Desert Island’s Somes Sound, the only fjord on the East Coast. But by far the most impressive and powerful natural wonder that the Pine Tree State dishes up four times a day is the coming and going of the tide, and one of the best places to experience this force is at Oak Island (NOAA Chart No. 13305), on the north side of North Haven.

Forget to monitor your tide tables before transiting this narrow passage dividing West Penobscot Bay from the east bay and you’ll soon discover why all the local captains have suddenly opted for the Fox Island Thorofare instead. “Not only can you have the tide going against you in the Oak Island passage, but there’s also the Webster Head doldrums, where the warm air rising off North Haven, pushed by the prevailing southwesterlies, creates a calm spot,” remarks Noah Barnes, captain of the passenger schooner Stephen Taber out of Rockland. “You always need to be thinking about the tide in that spot.”

Barnes points to a couple of other troublesome tidal locations around Penobscot Bay, including the Muscle Ridge Channel off Owls Head and Dice Head near Castine, as spots where a foul tide can run several knots at its peak and even create huge waves for unsuspecting sailors. Though he admits to occasionally being on the wrong end of this natural phenomenon, Barnes says Maine’s tides serve an important purpose in the Maine boating scene. “They scare the daylights out of visiting yachtsmen, which is a good thing as far as we’re concerned,” he quips. “A twelve-foot tide is simply baffling to most people, but up here it really is a factor in how you go about planning your day and the possibilities of where you go.”

 

Views expressed in blogs such as Media Mutt and others published on Down East.com reflect neither Down East's editorial stance nor the views of Down East Enterprise.

Reader Comments: 
Log In Post anonymously
Add your comment:
Create an account, or please log in if you have an account. Anonymous comments are enabled.
Email address (not displayed publicly)  Password
 
Enter your comments below:
   
Verification Question:
What is 10 + 2 ?     This is so we know you are a human and not a spam robot.



MAINE DIRECTORY!

Down East Editors' Choices
& Down East Readers' Favorites...


Add your own favorites. Click on any directory and select "Add free listings" or email favorites to online@downeast.com.

Upcoming Events

Rufus Porter Museum Cultural Heritage Series 2008
05.11.2008

The Third annual Cultural Heritage Series is scheduled for July 8 - 12, 2008 in Bridgton, Maine. The series is highlighted by a 3-day class Rufus...

Cabinet of Curiosities: The Museum, Science Collections, and You
05.11.2008

This exhibit, curated by the museum’s co-chief scientists, Paula Work and David Work, shows the many facets of the museum’s science...

Journeys West: The David and Peggy Rockefeller American Indian Art Collection
05.11.2008

This exhibition features Pueblo paintings, Navajo blankets and silverwork, embroidered Dakota leatherwork, Nez Perce weavings, basketry from...

Journeys West: The David and Peggy Rockefeller American Indian Art Collection
05.11.2008

This exhibition features Pueblo paintings, Navajo blankets and silverwork, embroidered Dakota leatherwork, Nez Perce weavings, basketry from...

Recent Acquisitions & Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
05.11.2008

Among the recent additions to the museum’s permanent collection are works by Joanne Baldinger, Jeffrey Becton, Bob Brooks, Rudy Burckhardt, David...

Recent Acquisitions & Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
05.11.2008

Among the recent additions to the museum’s permanent collection are works by Joanne Baldinger, Jeffrey Becton, Bob Brooks, Rudy Burckhardt, David...

Progressive Gourmet Dinner
05.11.2008

Weekend inclueds tours of three historic Freeport B&B's and the entree catered by the Azure Cafe'.

Taking Different Trails: The Artists’ Journey to Katahdin Lake.
05.11.2008

This exhibition features the work of twenty contemporary artists and their views of and from Katahdin Lake in Township 3, Range 8. All of the...

Show all events »