IN A FISHING COUNTRY 



causes for this, Sir Napier Shaw says: — 

 'One of the intriguing mysteries about air 

 currents is the difference of their behav- 

 iour when they have to pass one another. 

 If they use the British rule of the road and 

 keep to the left, they pass one another 

 amicably, an anticyclonic area is set up, 

 and the finest of fine weather reigns be- 

 tween; it is the result of that dispensation 

 that we (in England) have been enjoying 

 all the summer (of 1921). But when the 

 currents pass one another according to the 

 Continental rule of the road and "keep to 

 the right," no sooner do they come within 

 range than they curl themselves up into all 

 sorts of violent contortions and the worst 

 of weather is the result.' 



Of the familiar weather signs such as 

 'Evening red and morning gray etc' some 

 are especially relied upon at Murray Bay: 



Pliiie avnnt sept heures, beau temps 

 avant onze heures. 



Arc-en-ciel du soir met le beau temps 



en Fair; 

 Arc-en-ciel du matin met le mauvais 



temps dans le chemin. 



But your evening rainbow is distrusted if it 



'fishes in the seaM 



68 



