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The Bay of Fundy in eastern Canada has the highest tides in the world, anything up to 16 metres difference between low tide and high tide. And the effects of that show up in a few places around here. Like Hopewell Rocks, where Im not standing on a beach right now, Im standing on the ocean floor. Thats how far the tide is out. Actually, Im kind of sinking into it. But in a few hours time, those rocks will be half-way underwater, and if I stuck around, I would be drowning in very cold, very fast and very deep ocean. But Im not going to do that! Instead, Im going to go about 40km that way, to-- --Moncton. Its the next morning, its very cold, and Im flying a drone to try and get a shot of the tidal bore. This is one of the few places in the world where, every high tide, a wave of water washes upstream against the current. But the most obvious sign of the tides around here is in-- --Saint John, at the Reversing Falls, where a massive river meets the Bay of Fundy at a narrow chann