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Monday, March 23, 2015

"Supertide" in France Transforms Mont Saint-Michel into an Island


Toronto Star
March 23, 2015
A supertide turned France's famed Mont Saint-Michel into an island on Saturday and then retreated out of sight, delighting thousands of visitors who came to see the rare phenomenon.

A supertide that occurs every 18 years submerges a narrow causeway leading to the Mont Saint-Michel, on France's northern coast.
AP

A supertide that occurs every 18 years submerges a narrow causeway leading to the Mont Saint-Michel, on France's northern coast.

A supertide turned France's famed Mont Saint-Michel into an island on Saturday and then retreated out of sight, delighting thousands of visitors who came to see the rare phenomenon.

The so-called "tide of the century" actually happens every 18 years. Although the tide rushes in and out along the whole northern French coast, it's especially dramatic at the UNESCO world heritage site, an ancient abbey normally linked to the mainland only by a narrow causeway at high tide.

But the supertide, said to rise at the pace of a horse's gallop, turned the Mont briefly into an island Saturday, while the day's low tide allowed people to walk on the expansive flat seabed.

Among those at the abbey on Saturday was Wilfred James, who drove six hours from central France in time for the morning tide.

"It's been a long time since we've seen Mont Saint-Michel surrounded by the sea. I was born in this region and I never saw it like this," he said.

Tidal specialist Nicolas Pouvreau told France 24 the morning surge was a few centimetres short of expectations.

People gather waiting for the wave named "Mascaret" on the walkway leading to Mont-Saint-Michel.
GUILLAUME SOUVANT/Getty Images

People gather waiting for the wave named "Mascaret" on the walkway leading to Mont-Saint-Michel.
An even higher tide was predicted for Saturday night and the abbey was staying open until 10 p.m. to accommodate visitors.

In France's Landes region, a fisherman who was out on the flats lost his footing and was swept away to his death just as the tide started rising again on Saturday, local officials said.

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