
Watch
water swirl down the drains of different sinks and tubs. Does the water
turn the same direction (clockwise or counterclockwise) in each one? Can
you make it go the other way by stirring?
Explanation
The water may have swirled
clockwise down one drain and counterclockwise down another. Stirring can
often make it go either way.
It’s often said that water goes down counterclockwise in any drain that’s north of Earth’s equator—and clockwise south of the equator. The idea comes from the fact that Earth’s spin makes big, slow wind systems turn in these directions. North of the equator, hurricanes and cyclones turn counterclockwise. Those to the south turn clockwise.
But the force of Earth’s spin works only on slow-turning systems.
On fast systems, other things have greater effects—such as the
shape of the drain or small currents left over from filling the basin.









