All of this is published in advance (not including things like storm surge etc), but you have to be quite specific about the location. I'd just type into the search engine, "Tomales Bay tide chart", or "Lost Coast Tides", or whatever.
All of this is published in advance (not including things like storm surge etc), but you have to be quite specific about the location. I'd just type into the search engine, "Tomales Bay tide chart", or "Lost Coast Tides", or whatever.
Go to https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/tide_predictions.html
Search for your place name, for example the Santa Cruz CA station is https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/no...tml?id=9413745
You can specify a date range (it says the max range for the plot is 31 days, but those 31 days can be in the future, past, etc), and make a plot. Or you can click the big blue "Click Here for Annual Published Tide Tables" button on the right, then pick a year, and download a nicely formatted PDF.
Tides are influenced by local topography to some extent, so it is better to check the actual stations you are interested in rather than trying to offset from a different place.
The tide chart book for Massachusetts is called "Eldridge's", IIRC. It's published yearly (since the 19th century) and should be available at any boat shop.
Full of all sorts of useful information (for sailors anyway) as well.
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