Tides & Flow Table

How to Use the Table

  • (A) HW Hull Time
    Enter the published High Water time at Hull for the day.
  • (B) Time Correction
    Apply the known correction for each lock (e.g. -1h 30m, +45m, etc.).
  • Adjusted Time (A ± B)
    This gives the local tidal reference time for that lock.
  • Ebb / Flood Notes
    • Identify whether you are travelling on:
      • Flood tide (incoming)
      • Ebb tide (outgoing)
    • Note any lock-specific guidance (e.g. “leave 1 hour before HW”, “on start of ebb”).

Latest Safe Departure

  • Based on navigation guidance, lock keeper advice, or pilot books.

Your Calculated Departure

  • Final decision time after considering:
  • Boat speed
  • River conditions
  • Safety margins

EXAMPLE

LockHW HullCorrectionAdjustedNotesDeparture
Keadby14:00-1:3012:30Leave at start of ebb12:15

Full version available to download a printable version here

Key Notes (Important for Real Use)

1. Nature of These Corrections

Best departure windows typically begin.

These are rule-of-thumb pilotage values, not official tide tables.

They represent the time difference from Hull High Water when:

The tide turns, or
Best departure windows typically begin.

2. Ebb vs Flood Strategy

  • Heading upstream (towards York / Naburn / Cromwell):
    • Leave on the flood tide
    • Aim to arrive before slack water or early ebb
  • Heading downstream (towards Trent Falls / Humber):
    • Leave just before or at High Water
    • Ride the ebb tide down

3. Critical Sections

  • Trent Falls (confluence) is highly tidal and timing-sensitive.
  • Keadby ↔ West Stockwith is one of the most timing-critical stretches.
  • Selby ↔ Naburn has a strong tidal push—don’t arrive late on ebb.

4. Always Confirm With:

  • Lock keepers (especially Keadby, Cromwell, Naburn)
  • VHF where applicable
  • Updated navigation notices

Simple Working Example

  • HW Hull: 14:00
  • Keadby correction: -1h 30m
  • Adjusted: 12:30
  • Departure: ~12:00–12:30 (to catch ebb)