Frazz by Jef Mallett for September 14, 2019

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    Bilan  about 5 years ago

    After a little more global warming, the time of high tide will matter.

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    Concretionist  about 5 years ago

    It turns out that even the rocks distort just a little bit under the influence of the Sun and the Moon. Which can matter when it comes to a seismic fault that’s just  on the edge of releasing.

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    Charles Spencer Premium Member about 5 years ago

    The captain and the kid.

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    T Smith  about 5 years ago

    However, Come Monday…

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    wrloftis  about 5 years ago

    I live approximately 350 miles from the Atlantic Ocean, so I don’t qualify as an ocean dweller. Conversely – as a person from the southeastern US – I don’t qualify as a midwesterner. What I AM is an original Parrothead. When I heard Pencil Thin Mustache on the radio I was intrigued; when I heard Captain And The Kid I was hooked for life. Does that make me a ’tweener?

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    Kroykali  about 5 years ago

    Has Buffet written anything since the ’70’s that has gotten radio airplay?

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    MarcSeebass  about 5 years ago

    ♫It’s hard for me to stop my heart♫♫Love never knows when the time is right♫Time and Tide was by Basia

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    Lou  about 5 years ago

    I live on an island on the edge of the ocean. If you don’t think time matters, trying running for the 6:15AM ferry so you can make it to work.

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    MichaelHelwig  about 5 years ago

    Rising sea levels means rising levels in major rivers, too. There are habitable areas far inland that won’t be habitable in the future.

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    The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member about 5 years ago

    Um, Frazz, New York is “right on the ocean.” How many New Yorkers have you met to whom “time doesn’t seem to matter”?

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    rlaker22j  about 5 years ago

    new latitude always gives you a new attitude

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    danketaz Premium Member about 5 years ago

    There’s always the fans ‘a mile high in Denver (where the rock meets timberline).’

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    1MadHat Premium Member about 5 years ago

    If you concede that Lake Michigan is in the Midwest, it does have tides, but they amount in height to about nickel taking a nap. However, we do have a phenomena called a sietch. As a good low pressure system runs down the lake, the local water level comes up under it and the water can be pulled along with it. When this wave coincides with a north wind, it can pull water away from the shore, briefly lowering it, followed by the wave that was created. Marinas in Chicago usually have floating docks, kept in position by sliding on poles driven into the bottom. As the wave comes by, it lifts the dock off the 8 to 10 foot poles, and the wind moves the dock, taking boats with it.

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    mauser7  about 5 years ago

    I thought I saw “Time & Tide” open for Jimmy in Key West once.

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  about 5 years ago

    Blog PostsFrazz15 hrs ·

    Something I’ve learned, and forget way too often, is that to understand what matters, you have to understand what doesn’t. That’s lesson one. Lesson two is figuring out that some things matter sometimes, and sometimes the same things don’t.

    So simple. Soooooooooooooo complicated.

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    rgcviper  about 5 years ago

    Personally, I’ve always wondered what it’d be like to be wasted away like a Cheeseburger in Paradise in Margaritaville …

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    asrialfeeple  about 5 years ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppYgrdJ0pWk

    Time and tide wait for no man.

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    gammaguy  about 5 years ago

    FWIW, the Great Lakes experience tides, and the ocean tides cause the Hudson River to rise and fall as far north as Albany.

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