Drift
through tidal channels in the company of gray reef sharks.
Ride the currents
through tidal channels filled with schooling sharks.
Not exact matches
Tankers exiting Vancouver harbor must transit
through the shallow Second Narrows
channel during «high slack water» — a short
tidal window of about 20 minutes that provides loaded tankers with less than two metres of under - keel clearance.
Outer reef slopes provide dramatic drops in exceptional clear waters, while the
channels that cut
through the reefs attract schooling fish and sharks on
tidal changes, creating exciting opportunities for drift dives and big animal viewing.
Strong
tidal currents flow in and out
through the cut and are especially strong at mid-water in the center of the
channel.
In British Columbia,
tidal fluctuations of up to 17 feet can generate tremendous currents
through the narrow
channels and straits.
And
through the use of hydraulic rotary cutter head pipeline dredges and Rolligon amphibious ditcher - spreaders, use, instead, these navigation
channel dredge spoils to reconstruct the fringe marshes and
tidal creeks of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.