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IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 2
36
Features 33
Sensory Overload
Are you scaring away more fish than you catch?
By Lenny Rudow
36
Fish Logging Apps That Turn Bytes Into Bites
You can boost your catch rate with an injection of modern-day tech and your cell phone.
By Ryan Gullang
38
38
Shoreline Fishing for Trophy Blue Catfish on the Potomac
Since their introduction into the James River and subsequent invasion of the Chesapeake Bay, blue catfish have been providing thrilling opportunities for anglers to extend their fishing season all year round. By Aaron Weinstein
40
Going Numb for Yellow Neds
Yellow perch are happy to bite — no matter how cold it gets. By Lenny Rudow
46
43
Cedar Point Area Wrecks and Obstructions
There’s structure galore, within shooting distance of Cedar Point. By Wayne Young
46
No Baltimore Boat Show?
Five things you should have, would have, could have seen at the show. By Lenny Rudow
48
Fishing for Beginners: How To Fish for Ribbonfish
This unusual species is on the upswing in our area.
By Devin Garner
on the cover
“Nap time? I’m not lettin’ go of this rod!” Photo by Bobby Van Dyke
8 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
All The Right Gear To
Departments 12 14 16 20 22 24
Notes From the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow
45 50 52 53 54 56 57 57 58 59
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CATCh MoRe Fish!
Fishing News By Staff Hot New Gear By Staff Calendar Reader Photos
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Fishing Reports By Mollie Rudow Tips & Tricks By Staff Paddler’s Edge By John Veil Tides & Currents Brokerage: Used Boats for Sale
winter StriperS
Marketplace: Services, Supplies, and Much More
Chain piCkerel
Index to Advertisers Biz Buzz What’s New at FishTalkMag.com?
Plan Of Attack: Angling Tactics 19 Rainy Day Bass and Winter Wreckage By Staff
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow 30 Twin Vee 26 Center Console GF: No Boundaries
31 Sea Fox 249 Avenger: No Comparison 32 Clam Nanook XL: Boating Bivalve
Coming in March FishTalk • Western Wonders: Riding Rt. 219 to the Fish • Ice-Out Bluegills
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A n n a p o l i s Ya c h t S a l e s . c o m | 4 1 0 . 2 6 7 . 8 1 8 1
from Notes the Cockpit
I
By Lenny Rudow
t’s funny how your mind can play tricks on you, but memorabilia can set the record straight. The other day during an encouraging drop in temperature I was crawling around in the attic looking for my bag of long-neglected ice fishing gear, when I found an old shoebox full of photos. I glanced at a few of the ancient pics inside before finding the snapshot of one of the most memorable catches of my life, a 14-pound, 10-ounce sea trout. There it was on glossy paper, held up by a wildly grinning 12-year-old me in braces. Then I made the mistake of flipping the picture over, and reading the unfortunate print on the back: “1980, Gum Thickets, on soft crab. 10 pounds 14 ounces.” Yikes! My 14/10 was actually a 10/14? Oh well. At least I still have the fond and clear memories of the 58-inch striper I never measured and a 25-pound bluefish that didn’t get weighed. Those, fortunately, weren’t evidenced on film. Recently, however, a FishTalk reader sent me a note along with some memorabilia that provided some interesting evidence of the state of the Bay. Dear Lenny, As an avid reader of your magazine, books, weekly fishing reports, and fan of your Thursday podcasts, I want to thank you for bringing so much useful information my way. I have attached a copy of an old document from my fishing files circa 1971 (maybe a few years before). As you can see near the bottom, the DNR secretary at the time was J. Millard Tawes, from Crisfield, who served as our governor prior to this. The purpose was obviously to oppose a saltwater fishing license in Maryland, however, it is the chart on striped bass that you may find interesting. Over the last 10 years or so I have measured many of the fish caught in the area within five miles of the Bay Bridge, and they consistently average just two-thirds of the weight listed for any particular length on the chart. I know you have written and spoken on the subject many times, and thought this historical document might be of personal interest. Warm Regards, Allan S. 12 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Personal interest, indeed. If you zoom in tight, the lettering at the bottom of the table reads “Chesapeake Biological Laboratory,” so this would seem to have been produced by a reputable scientific source of the time period. And it puts a 21-inch fish at 4.75 pounds. A 25-incher, at 9.75 pounds. Interestingly, if you Google around a bit you can find plenty of length/weight tables that reflect similar numbers. I can’t say that I weigh the 21- or 25-inch rockfish that I catch these days with any regularity. In fact, I took my scale off the boat several years ago after
it showed my must-be-over-50-pound cobia was 48.9 pounds. It now rests in a closet, bearing the moniker “Dream Crusher.” But I’m thinking I’ll have to dig it out an put it back on the boat. Because I don’t know about you, but it seems to me like Allan’s findings are a lot closer to modern reality than that 50-year-old chart. And if he’s right, it’s not just my memory that needs to be set straight.
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Letters Red in the Face
Dear FishTalk, ’ve never caught a big redfish in the Bay on my own boat (a 22’ center console) and I really want to make it happen. I’m going to plan a week off next year and focus solely on giant reds — where would be the best place to try? - Dan L, via email Dear Dan, A lot depends on your timing. Early in the year, say in April, your best bet is probably going to be fishing the shoals near Cape Charles. Slightly later, usually around mid-May, there’s commonly a nice run in the shallows of the Tangier and Pocomoke Sounds. In mid-summer and into early fall, the open waters of the Middle Bay generally become a better zone. And later in the fall heading for the mouth of the Bay again becomes the move. Of course, every season is different. We’d suggest going to the fishing reports at FishTalkMag. com, scrolling back through time to look at these runs from a historical perspective (you can go back over three years and look at how the reports match up from place to place, season to season), and then deciding which timeframe best matches your schedule and planning where to spend your week accordingly.
I
Dear FishTalk, This one’s for the Beatles fans out there. Q: What did the boy octopus say to the girl octopus? A: I want to hold your hand hand hand hand hand hand hand hand… - Anonymous Dear Anonymous, Octopus are mollusks, not fish. We do think they’re cool creatures (especially the bright green ones, which are really sublime), but they are NOT fish — what do you think we are, a bunch of suckers?!
Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com
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Fish News By Lenny Rudow
D
Shell Game
o you have a pile of old oyster shells sitting out behind your shed? If so, it’s time to get to work—the Oyster Recovery Partnership (ORP) says they’re in dire need of shell. Due to the Covid-19 effect, restaurants and festivals (which normally save their shells for ORP pickup) had generated just 14,000 bushels from January to November. In 2019, the ORP picked up 31,000 bushels of shell during that same time period. “Oyster shell is the best material for getting young oysters into the Chesapeake Bay, making it the single most important resource to the oyster restoration process,”
##Cobia anglers will take home fewer fish in 2021, but minimum size remains the same.
says Tommy Price, ORP’s Shell Recycling Alliance operations manager. “Right now, we’re ex##There are over 70 OR periencing a major shell shortage P oys ter shell drop-z ones, so find your neares t and we’re calling on the public to one and bring ‘em a load. help us close that gap.” According to the ORP, natural for Environmental Science Horn Point oyster shell is vital to a healthy oyster Laboratory Oyster Hatchery in Cambridge population because it is the preferred before being replanted in the Bay. material onto which oyster larvae attach Grab your bucket, fill it with shell, and themselves and grow. In fact, every half bring it to one of the 70-plus public oyster shell can host up to 10 spat, or baby oysters. Once collected, the oyster shell is aged shell collection sites throughout the region. You can find a listing of sites at outside for one year, washed, and set with oysterrecovery.org. spat by the University of Maryland Center
2021 VA Cobia Regs Set
V
irginia has announced the new cobia regulations for 2021, changed to meet the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission cobia management plan. The new regs limit anglers to one fish per person, with the boat limit lowered from three fish to two fish. The season will run from June 15 through September 15, minimum size remains 40 inches (only one over 50 inches allowed), permitting and reporting requirements remain in place, and gaffing is not allowed. For the full regs, visit mrc.virginia.gov.
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Sedimentary Lifestyle
he Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) has announced that sediment studies by the Watershed Approach to Toxics Assessment and Restoration team found that, while there are areas of higher concentrations than others, overall the amount of toxic buildup behind eight dams on the Brandywine River is lower than expected. There are PCBs, dioxins, furans, and chlorinated pesticides present, and fish consumption advisories remain in place. However, DNREC says recent improvements have been documented and future improvements are anticipated.
16 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Lifetime Legends
T
he Maryland Sportfishing Advisory Commission announced its inaugural awards for lifetime achievement this winter. Honorees included the legendary fly angler Lefty Kreh (posthumously), who may well be the most famous Maryland angler to ever have lived, and Baltimore County angler Dr. Ken Lewis. (Editor’s note: We’ve fished with Ken and have got to say, he’s an uber-nice guy and a dedicated angler and conversationalist; many congratulations, Ken). The award was established by the commission to honor individuals who have provided sustained efforts in habitat management, conservation, education, research, or other meaningful contributions that benefit recreational angling in Maryland.
A
Dead Zone Diminishes in 2020
ccording to the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS), the Chesapeake Bay dead zone was below average in 2020 thanks to weather conditions and reduced nutrient runoff. VIMS scientist Dr. Marjy Friedrichs and Anchor QEA consultant Dr. Aaron Bever estimated the total amount of hypoxic water in the Bay as the lowest in five years, and one-third less than in 2019. Relatively cool temperatures during the months of May and September helped, as did winds from Hurricane Isaias which mixed the Bay water during the first week of August, cutting hypoxic zones by half.
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he 708-pound bluefin tuna caught last February by Capt. Jake Hiles of Virginia Beach, VA, has been certified as the new state record. The 114.5-inch monster was caught about 80 miles from Rudee Inlet on a Penn 130vsx. After the fish was weighed, Hiles and fellow angler Jeff Landis put out the word on social media that there was free bluefin tuna for the taking, and much of Virginia Beach ate well that evening.
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FishTalkMag.com February 2021 17
Fish News ##October 7-10, 2021 we will have our boat show back!
T o u rna m ent N e w s
T
I
Show Me the… BOATS!
f you’ve been going through boat-show withdrawal, we have some good news: Annapolis Boat Shows has announced the five-year schedule for upcoming fall shows. The United States Powerboat Show will be held Thursday through Sunday the first full weekend in October (with the sailboat show the next Thursday through Sunday), from 2021 through 2025. We boat-lovers missed the shows desperately in 2020 and even though these future shows are still a ways off, a steering committee consisting of county health officials, representatives from economic development, the city of Annapolis, and the boat show producers and their contractors, will be working hard to ensure the health and safety of everyone in attendance. October 7 to 10, we will have our boat show back, people! Visit annapolisboatshows.com to learn more.
Rockfish Roundup
he 2020 Mid-Atlantic Rockfish Shootout took place as planned this December, but the results were a complete sweep that no one could ever have planned for. Mystic Lady caught a 39.8 pounder, a 31.15 pounder, and a 27.1-pound rockfish to take all three top spots—and since they were in the big fish and second biggest fish calcuttas, they completed that sweep by pocketing an eye-popping $42,785. The only prize money left on the table was the $1607 that team All Floored Up took home thanks to their 26-pound rockfish, and another thousand-odd dollars split between the fifth through seventh place teams. Now that’s what we call a B-I-G win for Mystic Lady!
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Plan Of Attack
Rainy Day Bass
R
ainy days can trigger awesome bass bites in freshwater venues, especially if you tweak your tactics to fit the bill. What’s the numberone factor that you’ll often be faced with? Low light conditions. When heavy cloud cover and liquid sunshine come into play, consider: 1. Casting blade-baits. Spinners, spinnerbaits, Roadrunners, and other lures with blades provide vibrations, which alert the fish to their presence and help them hone in on your offering. Note, however, that silver bare metal blades won’t do much reflecting when there’s little sunlight streaming through the water. In a heavy overcast, blades with a color matte finish like white, chartreuse, and dull orange will often out-perform shiny blades.
##Wreckfish will strike bare metal jigs, making them a good candidate for targeting when the spiny dogs are in town.
##Rainy days can be quite productive, as long as you adapt your tactics to the conditions.
2. Casting topwater. That topwater bite may usually be best only at sunrise and sunset, but low light conditions can extend it by hours and sometimes, through the entire day. Pick walk-the-dog lures with rattles, to provide the fish with multiple ways of locating your lure in the dim lighting.
T
3. Casting very loud rattling lures. Rat-L-Trap, we’re talking about you and your ilk. These lures make a ton of noise and vibrations and even a halfblind bass could find one in near-darkness.
Winter Wreckage
here’s a good weather-window, and you have a serious hankering to run offshore even though warmwater species won’t be back for months? If you can make the run to the Norfolk, you could go on a winter wreckfish adventure. (Editor’s note: we’ve heard of wreckfish being caught in the Washington, too, but haven’t been able to verify it. In the Norfolk we’ve seen up to four in a day with our own eyes). The biggest problem with making winter drops in the deep is spiny dogfish. They often set up shop in the Mid-Atlantic region, and make it nearly impossible to use bait for groundfish unless you go out to 800’ or deeper waters. Wreckfish, however, will hit a bare jig with abandon. Here’s how to make it happen: • Locate hard, rocky bottom or other significant structure in 400’ to 600’ of water. • Drop down large 12- to 20-ounce jigs, on fast-action jigging rods spooled with braid (65-pound is a good choice) and topped with 10’ to 20’ of 80-pound monofilament leader. • Bounce the jig vigorously, just over the bottom. Make sure that on the end of the down-swing, you feel the lure tapping against solid bottom.
• The moment you feel a strike, swing for the stars. Then keep your rod tip high and apply maximum pressure for at least eight or 10 seconds. Those fish live in hidey-holes and if you let them run at the beginning of the fight, they’ll often drag your line against the structure they live in, abrade that line, and then break you off.
When giving this fishery a shot it’s a good idea to bring along some bait, and see if you can get away with adding some stink to your hooks. If the dogfish don’t make it impossible to use count your blessings; you’ll have a better shot at the wreckfish as well as tilefish, too.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 19
HOT NEW GEAR
Editor’s Note: We wish we could personally test every item that appears on these pages, but that simply isn’t possible. So that you know the difference between when we’ve physically tested a piece of gear and when we’re writing about it because it’s newsworthy and we think you’ll want to know about it, we’ve developed this FishTalk Tested button. When you see it printed next to something in this section, it means we’ve personally run it through the wringer.
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Piscatorial Pleasures
ooking for an ultralight reel that doesn’t cost an arm and a leg, but is smooth enough to tackle 10-pound bass on six-pound test? Enter: the Piscifun Carbon X 1000. This was the first-ever Piscifun to be fish-tested by a FishTalker, and if the Carbon X 1000 is any indication of how the rest of their gear is made we think that this company is going to be around for a long, long time. The Carbon X has a carbon fiber body, sideplate, and rotor, and weighs a mere 5.7 ounces. That’s feather-light, even for an ultralight. Gear ratio is 5.2:1, it has 10 ball-bearings plus a roller bearing, and maximum drag pressure is an eye-opening 8.8 pounds. We tested the reel in tidal rivers and millponds where it wasn’t subject to any serious saltwater so we’re not going to speak to how it’ll do in the brine, but the reel is salt-rated and we certainly didn’t see any evidence of corrosion or rusting after a season of use. Fishing with the 1000 for perch, pickerel, bass, and crappie, two things really stood out: the uber-light weight, and the smoothness of the reel. After casting and retrieving on well over a dozen trips through the course of three months, we’d say the reel feels like many models that cost twice the price — both when you’re cranking line in and when a fish is pulling line out. The 1000 holds 100 yards of six-pound mono or 110 yards of 10-pound braid, and the Carbon X line includes four sizes up to a 4000 that holds 215 yards of 12-pound mono or 270 yards of 30-pound braid. Price: MSRP range for the line is $104 to $114 but real-world pricing is more like $70 to $81. Visit piscifun.com for more information.
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Mass Extinction
ou want to fish like Spiderman? That won’t be a problem if you own a NetGun UltraNet-HD. This .308 caliber net gun (yes, it does actually blast the net via firing a blank shell) is a combination between a Remington bolt-action 700 and nylon or Dyneema net of 10-by-10 or 16-by-16 feet. Pull the trigger, and you’ll encircle your prey at ranges of 20 to 30 feet with only “moderate to heavy” recoil. Added bonus: the quick-detach option allows for fast follow-up shots! According to the manufacturer the UltraNet-HD is designed for large animal captures, so you can just tell the DNR officer that you were being attacked by a tiger and everything should be fine. Maybe. Note: there’s also a Tactical Net Launcher available for law enforcement and “drone capture.” Price: $3250; $120 for a box of .308 caliber blank loads. Visit netgun.com for more info, and remember, if you have a phone you have a lawyer. LEGAL DISCLAIMER: We do not vouch for the legality (or sanity) of using a NetGun UltraNet-HD to go fishing. Or tiger hunting.
20 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
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Feeling Fishy
ou want to paddle your way to the fish in a light, compact kayak that’s inexpensive but still has a comfortable, high-end, adjustable seat? Feelfree kayaks has expended their Moken line with the Moken 10 V2, which includes their multi-position EZ Rider seat. Other new elements incorporated into this micro-machine include a reinforced standing platform, two flush-mounted rodholders with leashes, an integrated Uni-Track accessory rail, and adjustable foot pegs. Transportation is aided by the craft’s light 65-pound weight, and a roller wheel that’s built into the keel. Price: $649. Visit feelfreeus.com for more info.
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uFish an iRod?
here’s a new entry from iRod hitting the streets this winter, called the Genesis III. Available in four spinning models ranging from medium-light to medium-heavy in 7’1” to 7”7” lengths and 23 casting models from light to heavy and in 6’9” to 8’6” lengths, they’re built on graphite blanks with WXW wraps, Fuji Alconite guides, contoured EVA handles, and a “down loop” hook keeper that the manufacturer says is less likely to bend or break. What really grabbed our attention, however, was how iRod backs up the Genesis III: it gets a limited lifetime warranty against defects in workmanship and materials. Price: $150. Visit irodfishing.com to learn more.
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Pitching Ponies
e were stoked when we discovered that our Team FishTalk/PropTalk Fish For a Cure tournament winnings included a bumper crop of Coltsniper lures, including the Walk Hi-Pitch, which we promptly started casting. This is a walk-the-dog style topwater, and it has a sweet side-to-side swim as one would expect. The hooks are 3x and are wired through the body, to maximize strength. On the outside the lure looks phenomenal, with a vibrant finish that reflects a rainbow of colors on a light gray/white base. The surprise comes when you give a Walk Hi-Pitch a shake. The rattles are a bit more subtle than most, and yes, they do sound like they’re of a slightly higher pitch than the norm. As far as we could tell the fish like those rattles just fine, though, and the first time we tried slinging one out from the rocks at Mayo Beach the stripers attacked without hesitation. Thumbs up folks, thumbs up. Price: $11.99. Visit fish.shimano.com to learn more.
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Winter Reading
f you find yourself trying to fill up the hours of an unfishable winter day, we have the solution — FishTalk contributor Wayne Young has two new books out that examine wrecks, obstructions, and natural formations found in the Chesapeake Bay. The first, “Hook, Line, and Slinker,” examines fish-attracting anomalies in the Maryland portion of the Bay and Potomac River. Then “Phantoms of the Lower Bay” picks up at Smith Point and takes a detailed look at the Virginia portion of the Chesapeake. In both books, Young utilizes NOAA bathymetric imagery and sonar scans to generate amazingly detailed illustrations that go along with the historical and anglingoriented explanations of each zone of interest. If you read FishTalk, you’re already familiar with Young’s work and just how much information you can get from his articles, so imagine having complete books you can use as references, prior to fishing new waters or exploring your own home turf like never before. Price: $21.75, available at Amazon.com and some local tackle shops.
F or mor e g e ar r e vi e ws , visit : fishtal k mag . com / gear FishTalkMag.com February 2021 21
C hesapea k e C alendar Brought to you by
For Chesapeake Bay boating news, visit proptalk.com
February through Feb 28 CCA Pickerel Championship
Open in all Maryland waters. Prizes for the largest single fish, longest threefish stringer, longest fly-caught pickerel, kayak/SUP division, youth division, and also largest perch and crappie of the tournament. This is a catch-photo-release tournament held on the iAngler platform. $50 for CCA members, $75 for nonmembers and includes membership.
through Feb 28 Riverside Marine Winter Boat Show
At Riverside Marine in Essex, MD. 30 boats on display, free admission, heated Covid-friendly tent, personalized appointments, demo rides all winter if weather permits, winter boat show prices. Appointments required: (410) 686-1500.
through Dec 31 Virginia Saltwater Sportfishing Association 1st Annual Fishing Tournament Compete all year to catch
the top stringer of citation fish. Learn more at joinvssa.org
3
FSFF Monthly Meeting
Free State Fly Fishers. 7 to 9 p.m. via Zoom. Speaker: Tom Parnham, Maryland Department of Natural Resources. Tom is a FSFF member, he oversees Maryland’s tidal water monitoring program, Maryland DNR’s Click Before You Cast website, and writes the Bay conditions section in the weekly Maryland Fishing report. Tom will discuss how to get the most out of the site, hidden features, and new features under development. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@gmail.com for the Zoom link prior to the event.
22 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
3
Understanding Marine Weather Online Seminar
Through J/World’s seminar you will gain a basic understanding of air masses, temperature and pressure gradients, wind, clouds and storms. This knowledge will be applied to understanding and using weather charts, chart symbols, and electronic data available by smartphone, VHF radio, and weatherfax. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuition: $90.
4
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
The Mallows Bay-Potomac River National Marine Sanctuary: The Ghost Fleet and Beyond. Speaker: Dr. Susan Langley, Maryland State Underwater Archaeologist. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM First Mate members.
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Evening Virtual Lecture Series
7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Mariners’ Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. Topic: Virginia Waterways and the Stories of Freedom Seekers in the Underground Railroad, presented by Dr. Cassandra Newby-Alexander. All virtual lectures are free and require advance registration and a personal Zoom account. Viewers may also submit questions and comments to the presenters during their respective lectures.
6
FSFF Club Fly Tying
Free State Fly Fishers. 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. via Zoom. Join us as one of our members instructs us on how to tie three fly patterns and demonstrates proper tying techniques. Patterns will be two Shad flies and a Girdle Bug. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@gmail.com for the Zoom link prior to the event.
6-7
Online Maryland Boating Safety Class
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. This course satisfies the requirements for operating a vessel on Maryland waters, and a Certificate of Boating Safety Education will be issued upon satisfactory completion. Instructors teach two sessions. Attendance at both online sessions is required, followed by an online test, taken at your convenience. Course cost is a $20 per student donation (funds support the USCG Auxiliary’s educational programs). Presented by the Havre de Grace Maritime Museum. To register: email Abe at: ais1234@gmail.com, with the subject line “MD Boating Safety Course” and provide your name, street address, and DOB or call(443) 504-3880.
10
VHF Radio Communication Online Seminar
J/World Annapolis will cover VHF radio strengths and limitations, basic radio controls, proper channel usage, various routine and distress calls, use of the USCG Rescue 21 system, digital selective calling (DSC), proper radio language and etiquette, and more. 7 to 9 p.m. Tuition: $60.
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AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
The Battle of the Chesapeake, 1781: Military Decider for the American Revolution. Speaker: Dr. Bill Cogar, executive director of Historic Naval Ships Association. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM First Mate members.
Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com
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Using the Navionics App Online Seminar
J/World Annapolis’s seminar will provide you with an overview of the basic features of the Navionics App for smartphones and tablets. Some of the features that will be covered in this seminar are: How to subscribe to Navionics maps and load them onto your device, how to search for locations such as marinas, restaurants, and anchorages, how to set water level depth shading and shallow areas, how to view weather, tides and currents information, how to create routes using waypoints, how to record and save tracks from a passage, how to find your boat on the map, how to measure distance between two points, how to download maps for offline use, and more. 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. Tuition: $90.
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Virtual Civil War Lecture Series
Select Fridays at 12 p.m. Topic: African American Medal of Honor Recipients during the Civil War. Presented by the Mariners’ Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. All virtual lectures are free and require advance registration and a personal Zoom account. Viewers may also submit questions and comments to the presenters during their respective lectures.
19-28
Bosun’s Boat Expo
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Bosun’s Marine-Maryland (formerly Grande Yachts) in Grasonville, MD. Coast Guard Auxiliary, tackle shops, engine technicians, and electronics experts will be present to answer all of your boating questions. For one weekend only, all new boat purchases will come with a free Garmin electronics package, a savings worth up to $30,000.
##The Riverside Marine Winter Boat Show runs now through February 28. Appointments required.
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AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
Changing Fisheries of the Chesapeake Bay: Radical Changes in Recent Years. Speaker: Lenny Rudow, Angler in Chief at Rudow’s FishTalk Magazine. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM First Mate members.
March
20
FSFF Monthly Hands-On Session
Free State Fly Fishers. 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. via Zoom. Joe Bruce will work through the steps for bending wire into articulated connectors and then demonstrate how to tie articulated two-color Bullethead Darters. This is a club-sponsored event, free to FSFF members. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@gmail.com for the Zoom link prior to the event.
5
Virtual Civil War Lecture Series
Select Fridays at 12 p.m. Topic: Spirits on USS Monitor: Alcohol and the Civil War Navy. Presented by the Mariners’ Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. All virtual lectures are free and require advance registration and a personal Zoom account. Viewers may also submit questions and comments to the presenters during their respective lectures.
6-7
Get Your Maryland Boating Certificate!
America’s Boating Club Rockville will present official Boat Maryland safe boating course online from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. This state-approved course fulfills all legal requirements, provides you with a solid foundation for boating, and gives you a Maryland Boating Certificate card which you need to legally operate a boat. The class is presented via Zoom and costs $10. Registration Deadline: January 15. Pay at this link. Contact: jmckinney2606@gmail. com.
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Evening Virtual Lecture Series
7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Mariners’ Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. Topic: War in the Tropics: Two Authors Talk about the Role of Florida and the Caribbean in the Civil War, featuring Robert N. Macomber and John V. Quarstein. All virtual lectures are free and require advance registration and a personal Zoom account. Viewers may also submit questions and comments to the presenters during their respective lectures.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 23
Reader Photos
presented by
Marine Engine Sales, Parts & Service 410-263-8370
www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com ##Mark introduces newly minted angler Gabe to his first keeper rockfish.
##Greg Rice, Mike VanCamp, Cathy Anders, and Mike Middledorf ran down south to Wanchese this fall for a sea trout trip on the Real Thang.
##Big Sherm and Fabrizio enjoyed some surprises while perch fishing this fall.
##Nate and Wes mastered running the trotline this summer.
Send your fishing pics to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 24 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Kevin and Matthew found ‘em at Love Point, fishing with Pop Pop last fall.
##Surprise catch! Landon tied into this kingfish while drifting bloodworms off Chesapeake Beach.
##Cory took a trip to Pawley’s Island, where this fine red fellow joined the beach party.
##Lanny Flanary got this way-cool 11-spot, bluetailed redfish near Flag Harbor.
##Bob was fishing for perch in Bodkin Creek when this toothy critter attacked!
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 25
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Eli got his first striper, and… brother Ollie got his first speck – both while fishing the Rappahannock. Nice pair of fish, guys.
##James Vorsteg got this chunky snake on the Transquaking.
##Chris Nolte Jr encountered this whopper of a bass – seven pounds, two ounces – while casting a black Berkley Choppo.
##Wayne got his first cobia last season!
##Kenny had an awesome day fishing with Pop Pop this fall.
26 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Regina caught this 25-incher fishing off Ft. McHenry. Now that’s what we call a beautiful catch and a beautiful pic! Photo courtesy of Gil Nyland
##Arlie caught his first striper (of many!) this season aboard the Miss Grace.
##Mike got a little soggy on the kayak, but came home happy!
##Aline Nyland proves that little fish can generate big smiles.
##Who’s happier about the fish, Sam or his pooch? We’re not sure!
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 27
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Mason’s first catch, a 27-inch catfish caught at Swan Point. Nice way to start, Mason!
##Tim Ferry was fishing Wachapreague when this 25-incher jumped on the line.
##Alexis got a 22-incher in the South – nice fish and even nicer smile, Alexis!
##Phoebe got her first croaker this summer in the James River. Photo courtesy of William Harcum
##Tom Krenzke got this chunky 27-incher in the mouth of the Patapsco this fall.
Send your fishing pics to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 28 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Olivia caught the monster of the day!
##Grant had a great day kayak trolling near the Key Bridge.
##Ryan and his dad Carlos got a nice mix of species, in Ocean City this fall
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 29
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow
Twin Vee 26 Center Console GF
No Boundaries
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kay, I’ll admit it: I’m a cat nut. No, I’m not talking about a love for furry felines, I’m talking about a passion for powercats. Sure, some look a bit different from the norm and some others have unusual traits as compared to V-hulls, but the bottom line is that you simply can’t beat a well-designed cat when it comes to reducing wave impact and making the ride as smooth as possible. And for someone like me who has an aging, aching bad back, when the seas kick up that can make the difference between a day of misery and a day of fun fishing. So yeah, boats like the Twin Vee 260 Center Console GF catch my eye. The entire Twin Vee line has undergone a lot of changes in recent years, and while that applies to the 260, this model remains a cornerstone of their fleet. It’s the perfect size for a combined Bay/ offshore angler, with a shallow 1’8” draft, a good layout for light-tackle casting, a tow-able 8’6” beam, and the capability to make long canyon runs (range is over 250 miles at a notch over 30-mph cruise with twin Suzuki 150s) in changing conditions. Added bonus: since the cat design carries the beam all the way to the bow, the 260 Center Console GF has as much deck space as many boats with two or three more feet of LOA. Trollers who plan to deploy planer boards and a web of lines will love the “Fish Connect” T-top, which has six vertical rocket launchers stacked under the four gracing the back of the top. Plus there’s tackle stowage and a 40-gallon livewell integrated into the leaning post, under-gunwale racks, a raw water washdown, and room for six flush-mount gunwale holders plus six more in the transom. Naturally, you expect to find all those fishy features in a boat like this. What you may find surprising, however, is what they put this boat together with. Hardware like rodholders, hinges,
30 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Quick Facts LOA: 25’6” | Beam: 8’6” | Displacement: 3600 lbs. Draft: 1’8” | Fuel Capacity: 138 gal. | Max. Power: 300 hp
cleats, and through-hull fittings are top-shelf Gemlux 316-grade stainlesssteel. Pumps are Pentair Shurflos. The bow roller is a Lewmar. The compass is a Ritchie. And the switch panels with waterproof lighted rocker switches and breakers are hand-built by New Wire Marine in Charleston, SC, rather than arriving in the US of A on a container ship. What’s even more surprising is that even with all this high-grade hardware Twin Vee manages to keep the pricing reasonable on the 260 Center Console GF. MSRP starts under $90,000 and a well-equipped boat isn’t too far above the $100K mark, which is significantly less than many new 26-footers. How’s it possible? Again, there’s a unique powercat advantage at play: a cat needs less horsepower than a monohull of the same size to attain similar performance. Remember when we mentioned cruising speed for this boat with a pair of Suzuki 150s? That power package also provides a top-end of over 40 mph. To get a 30plus mph cruise/40-plus mph top end with an average 26-foot monohull, you’d be rigging with 200s. On top of that, we’d point out that going with Suzuki’s DF140s will provide darn similar performance, chop even more off the bottom line, and would also lop 234 pounds off the transom. Is there room for improvement? Of course — there is on any boat — and in this case we point to the windshield. It’s a relatively svelte Florida-style
wrap-around, and those of us who plan to charge forth to distant blue water destinations in imperfect conditions or on chilly days may want to add a panel of Isinglass for additional protection. We also note that the optional underwater lights are blue, which is great for looking cool and all, but greens attract one heck of a lot more fish and we’d swap ‘em out. One other item we need to note: though this is clearly a fishboat first and foremost, it does have a few of the family-friendly perks that can help seal the deal. There’s a head compartment in the console, and a large forward console seat plus a small aft-facing U-seat built into the foredeck. The boat also comes with a six-gallon freshwater system and a pull-out vegetable-sprayer in the transom, plus an integrated dry box with built-in USB and 12-V ports at the helm for your electronic devices. Will a powercat be the top pick for everyone out there? Of course not. But, might it be the ideal boat for you? There’s only one way to answer that question, and it goes beyond merely reading about or even looking at the Twin Vee 260 Center Console GF. You have to wait for the wind to kick up, let the seas build, and then take one for a test run. Your back will thank you for it.
Area Dealer
Total Marine, Grasonsville, MD (410) 604-6000, or totalmarine.com.
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Sea Fox 249 Avenger: No Comparison
here are a gazillion and one center consoles out there, and running into one that’s truly unique is a rare event these days — but that’s exactly what happened one chilly afternoon late this fall, when we bumped into a Sea Fox Avenger 249. Truth be told, we’re not even sure it’s entirely legit to call this boat a center console. Nor is it a side console. So, what gives? The 249 Avenger has a center console, but it extends to starboard all the way to the boat’s gunwale. Yes, that does eliminate working a rod around that side of the console. But upon close inspection, what stretching that console across the beam gets you is rather amazing. Pop open the console entry, step down inside, and you have not only a head compartment but also a berth. Yes, a berth inside the console on a 24-foot boat. It’s large enough for a single adult, but perhaps more importantly, there’s enough room for a couple of kids to nap. Family anglers with ankle-biters are going to be very attracted to this unusual design, which truly is one of a kind.
But that’s not all the center/side console gains over the norm. On the aft end, you get a flip-down jump seat. In the front, you have triple-wide forward seating and end up with just as much bow seating as you’d get with a bowrider, without giving up the fishability of a forward casting deck (just leave the extra cushions at home, or stow them inside that uber-huge console compartment). Added bonus: the double-wide windshield provides far more protection than the usual and three people can comfortably sit behind it, while on most CCs of this size two people have to huddle to get a wind-break. We also noticed that if you’re sitting in the bow, the forward-raked backrests mean it’s actually comfortable and more reclinerlike than bench-seat-like. Console design aside, the 249 Avenger has all the fishing goodies you expect from a center console angling machine. There’s a 40-gallon lighted livewell in the transom, rodracks under the gunwales, four flush gunwale rodholders, fishboxes under the bow seats, a 36-quart removable cooler, fresh and
raw water washdowns, and coaming bolsters. The hard top, which comes standard on this model, includes spreader lights and can be optioned-up to include five rocket launchers and a pair of kingfish-style angled rodholders. The bottom line? The Sea Fox Avenger is unlike any other boat we’ve seen in recent years, and it fits a niche that many parents of young children will need to have filled: the availability of an enclosed berth as well as a head compartment, plus extra protection while cruising, on top of the fishability of a kind-of-sort-of center console layout. Mom? Dad? Are you listening…?
Area Dealer
Rhode River Boat Sales, Edgewater, MD, (443) 406-4796 or rhoderiverboatsales.net.
Quick Facts: LOA: 24’4” Beam: 8’6” Displacement: 3524 lbs. Draft: 1’2” Transom Deadrise: 18 degrees Fuel Capacity: 117 gal. Max. Power: 300 hp
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 31
Hot New Fishboats
Clam Nanook XL
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Boating Bivalve
f it has a hull and sits atop the water, we say it counts as a fishing boat — and that includes the Clam Nanook XL. Sure, it’s intended for use when the H2O is solid as a rock. No, there’s no transom to clamp on an outboard. But in its own weird way the Nanook XL does have a cuddy cabin, and if you find yourself inside of it, you’ll almost certainly be fishing. (If not, we’d rather you kept the rest of the story to yourself). Comfort perks include a pair of swiveling seats, side access doors, and windows for watching your tipups. Added bonus: in a strong breeze the poly sled base slides easily over the ice and the shelter acts as a sail, so you can use it as an ice-boat. LEGAL DISLAIMER: Do not use this rig as an ice boat.
Area Dealers The internets
Quick Facts LOA: 5’1” | Beam: 7’6” | Displacement: 72 lbs. Draft: 0’0” | Fuel Capacity: Two hearty ice anglers Max. Power: Two hearty ice anglers
For more fishboat reviews, visit: FishTalkMag.com/fishboat-reviews
Cat Ride, Classic Style
Dealers Wanted! NC • VA • MD • DE
The Future of Offshore Sportfishing Combined With Classic Style and Appeal
www.FormulaX2MidAtlantic.com
Tideline 365 Offshore
WWW.TIDELINEBOATS.COM 32 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Formula X2 Mid-Atlantic Dan Lowery, Distributor Cell: 540-270-0567 Dan@FormulaX2MidAtlantic.com
Sensory Overload Are you scaring away more fish than you catch? By Lenny Rudow
Y
ou want to catch more fish? Of course you do! Heck, that’s why your eyes are skimming these words at this very moment. You’re thinking all the time about how to get more bites, increase your hook-up ratio, and out-fish other anglers. But, how often do you consider the opposite side of the equation: what might you be doing that discourages fish from biting? Most of us don’t think about this nearly enough. And while boat noise is the one thing many of us do consider as a potential fish-spooking factor, there’s actually a range of actions that we anglers do which has a clearly detrimental effect on our catch rates. Ready to stop scaring away the fish? Then you need to use common sense when considering these fish senses.
Something Smells Fishy
Sure, you might use scented lures and think about the scent trail created by baits, chum slicks, and attractants. But when’s the last time you paid attention to what the fish don’t like to smell? While on a weeklong press gig fishing for specks and reds in Port Aransas, Texas, I had the opportunity to meet Berkeley scientist John Prochnow, a key figure in the creation of GULP! baits. And I asked him if there were any smells he came across in his research that actually repelled fish rather than attracting them. “Absolutely,” Prochnow told me. “The worst is DEET, the active ingredient in nearly every form of bug repellent.” To test his claim for myself, the next evening I sprayed myself down with a popular bug repellent and made sure
##There’s no doubt that certain species, like this yellowfin tuna, have keen eyesight and are at times deterred by visible leader.
some “accidentally” got rubbed off onto my hands. Then, I walked down to the lighted pier at the fish camp with another angler on the trip. We rigged up identical soft plastic jigs (five-inch chartreuse Bass Assassins), and started casting. He out-caught me five to one before I couldn’t stand it any longer, and went inside to wash up. Lesson learned: avoid bug repellent entirely, if you want to catch fish. Prochnow also mentioned that suntan lotions with heavy perfume were another item that can put fish off their feed. Interestingly, some other items that people believe put a scent on a bait, most notably gasoline and WD-40, can’t even be detected by the fish. “It’s like putting a square peg in a round hole,” Prochnow explained. “The fish’s chemo-receptors simply can’t reg-
ister some chemicals, including gasoline and many refined oil products.”
The Eyes Have It
Sight is certainly a sense that most anglers focus on, though again, we almost certainly focus on what attracts fish as opposed to what might be scaring them. Unfortunately, it’s tough (read: impossible) for us to know if we see things the same as the fish do. To try to gain some insight, however, one could send scuba divers over the side of the boat and then troll around them with hookless baits and lures. So that’s exactly what we did back when I was on staff at Boating Magazine (and magazines had the budgets to do silly stuff like run scuba divers 60 miles out to Poor Man’s Canyon and troll over them all day).
##The chemical composition of DEET, one of the world’s most effective fish-repelling substances.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 33
Sensory Overload c o n t i n u e d
We learned quite a bit during the experience. As one might expect, the most natural-looking bait was a naked ballyhoo. Skirted ballyhoo with purple or black drew the diver’s attention from a distance. The same was true for blue/ white combinations. And scientists often tell us that in nature, contrast is what draws the eye more than a specific color. Of course, if you’re a fisherman you probably already know that some of the most effective lures boast significant contrast — blue/white Islanders, and red/ white Mir-O-Lures, for example. And surely, choosing a particular color pattern won’t scare off fish, right? We didn’t think so either. But the most interesting discovery generated by this (ahem) field work was completely unexpected: The V-shaped wake made by the leader entering the water was actually more visible than the lures or baits were, in many cases. And, according to our divers, it looked completely unnatural when the line entered the water anywhere near the bait. That’s a detail well worth consideration, the next time you choose whether to run a surface trolling line directly from a rod tip, or change the angle of attack with a flat line clip; when you choose which rigs to set from which outrigger clips; and whether you decide to add that chin weight, or not. Another interesting discovery: all of the leaders (50-, 80-, and 130-pound test) were visible to the divers below the surface, including (though noticeably less
so) fluorocarbon. Thinner diameter leaders were much harder to spot then heavier ones, to the extent that 50-pound mono was less visible than 80-pound fluoro. So minimizing leader diameter is another important consideration to take into account even when trolling.
Can You Hear Me Now?
If you’ve ever been fishing on the flats in Florida, you already know that the guides down there take noise quite seriously. In fact, if you slam a hatch on the boat, stomp on the deck, or even talk loudly, you’ll be rewarded with a glare — as the fish you were stalking shoots off into the distance. As we already noted, many anglers in this neck of the woods do realize that boat noise can have scare fish. But in Mid-Atlantic waters, we usually can’t see the fish’s reaction to the sounds we make and as a result, we have an “out of sight out of mind” mentality. In fact, every time you make a loud noise, every fish within casting distance can “hear” you, and/or sense the vibrations made by loud noises with its (internal) ears and lateral line. During another stint of field work, we tried dropping a hydrophone down under the boat to different depths, and listening to the sound levels created by different things we anglers do on a regular basis. The hydrophone was interfaced with a db-A meter (the device police use to measure sound levels at rowdy parties) so that each noise could be measured.
As one might expect, outboard motors created some noise under the boat. When idling along two-strokes, fourstrokes, and electric trolling motors all make a bit of prop noise, the volume of which was directly related to speed. But while a four-stroke remains very quiet in or out of gear, a two-stroke creates loud chatter when shifted into neutral. The same rattle-clank-bang of metal on metal which you hear above the water transmits below, as well. So if you run a two-stroke, you’re best served by motoring towards your hotspot and shutting down while the motor remains in gear, instead of shifting into neutral and allowing the motor to idle. With both types of motors, however, shifting into and out of gear created the loudest sound and caused a hair-raising metal-on-metal “bang.” Starting an outboard also created a metal-on-metal noise (though not as loud as shifting) when the starter engaged the flywheel. Engine noise was, however, only part of the story. Dragging a tacklebox across a fiberglass deck, slamming a hatch, dropping a lead weight to the deck, and stomping on the deck all created loud, startling noises 20 feet down. Even dropping a rod into a holder was detectable. In short, any physical contact between two hard items spiked the db-A meter — and could scare off your quarry. Truly bizarre implications arose when the hydrophone was towed
##An interesting experiment that will prove the impact of shifting into and out of gear: the next time you’re in a situation where you can watch the fish’s reaction, try it. You might be amazed at the results.
34 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
behind the boat in an offshore spread. With the hydrophone set about 50 feet behind three types of boats (a stern-drive, twin-diesel inboard, and outboard) in all three cases, the loudest sound heard near the baits was people’s voices. The tones of regular conversation could be clearly heard over and above all engine and propeller noise, and when someone yelled from the bridge to the cockpit or vise-versa, their voice practically drowned out the other sounds heard in the spread. Most of us have, at one time or another, had a billfish enter the spread, play with a bait or two, then leave. It’s usually said that these fish were “window-shoppers,” not aggressive nor ready to feed. But if this were the case, why would they bother entering the spread and billing the baits in the first place? A more likely explanation to their behavior lies in what the crew does when someone saw that bill: they yell at the top of their lungs, jump from their seat to the deck, dart across the cockpit…and, how many times has that marlin swam off, without ever eating a ballyhoo? Draw your own conclusions; I know I have.
Feeling the Pressure
Another sound few of us ever think about is that made by our fishfinders. Many electronics experts will swear that a fish can’t hear a fishfinder as it’s pinging away. Fire up a fairly powerful unit with a transommount transducer, however, and you can hear the “tock… tock… tock” yourself, if you lean over the transom. That doesn’t necessarily mean fish can hear it, of course, but while doing research for an article several years ago, I saw something with my own eyes that convinced me beyond the shadow of a doubt that fish, at least some species, can sense an active fishfinder. For this gig, we were granted permission to launch a small boat in the massive 500,000-gallon saltwater tank in the National Aquarium in Baltimore. I’d mounted three fishfinders and transducers on it; all were fairly weak units in the 100- to 300watt range. A second journalist was posted two flights below, watching as fish passed under the boat. We communicated via FRS radio, and she alerted me whenever a specific fish was about to be pinged by the finders. Our mission was to determine if I
could ID species with any of the units. Nope — turns out it was impossible to tell if the marks were snook versus sand tigers. The fascinating discovery we made, however, was that fish started avoiding the boat when the fishfinders were fired up. Sharks and rays in particular showed a dislike of swimming through the transducer cone, but other fish began swerving to keep from going under the boat as well. Now, we’ve all caught fish with an active fishfinder, and I’m not about to claim fish are aggravated by those sound waves. But they can in fact detect them, which means the fishfinder could have an effect, be it positive or negative, at any given time in any given situation. When you take all of the fish’s senses into account, it becomes easy to see how we could be scaring away far more fish than we attract. In fact, sometimes it makes you wonder how we catch anything at all. So remember to consider all of these factors the next time you go fishing — it’s a sure bet that doing so will help boost your catch rate. #
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FishTalkMag.com February 2021 35
Fish Logging Apps That Turn Bytes into Bites You can boost your catch rate with an injection of modern-day tech and your cell phone.
B
By Ryan Gullang
ack in ye olden days, people would log their catches in notebooks. Logging is still a great way to figure out trends and patterns, but it’s the 21st Century. Pen and paper are going the way of the Rolodex, polio, Xerox machines, and good music. As a millennial, I’m always looking for any opportunity to get out into the great outdoors and dink around on my phone. Luckily there are tons of logging apps to choose from; almost too many. To figure out which one was best, I downloaded the 30 most popular ones and tested them on the water.
Top Pick: ANGLR
Of all the apps I looked at, ANGLR Logbook is most likely going to be the one still on my phone when I inevitably drop it off the side of a boat within the next few months. By itself, ANGLR is easily the best all-rounder. Before your first cast, you punch in the body of water you’re fishing on, the gear you are using, and the type of fishing you plan on doing. After that, the app will log where you go, changes in weather conditions, and tidal fluctuations. Then, when you finally do catch a fish, you just press the log button and the app will automatically mark the location, time, and tackle. If you feel so inclined, you can manually add a fish pic to your entry along with the weight, length, and species. If you
36 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
don’t feel so inclined you can enter that data when you return to land from memory (which I often find results in logging much bigger catches). You can add waypoints to mark important locations like honey holes or particularly defensive osprey. And if you switch out your tackle mid-trip, you can make a note of it and quickly select your new rig from your virtual tackle box. Additionally, if you want to simultaneously avoid your loved ones and save precious time on the water, ANGLR provides an excuse to meticulously photograph and log all of your lures while on land. But, best of all the app is free. So, what’s the catch? Well, ANGLR sells periphery Bluetooth devices so that you can log catches, mark locations, and indicate a rig switch, without touching your phone. If you have $19.99 burning a hole in your pocket there’s the Bullseye, which is a button that can clip onto your clothing or rod. To log a catch, all you have to do is give it a click. But if you’re willing to fork out $130, then there are the Abu Garcia Virtual Rods, which have the button built into the grip and (crucially) a cool name. You do still have to whip out your mobile to snap a pic or manually enter data, but I haven’t found this to be a problem. If I’m catching fish in quick succession over a long drift, I tend to care more about where the fish are concentrated than their length. All that being said, ANGLR is far from perfect. It lacks any real data analysis and on a couple of occasions I’ve sent
##The author logged this catch in seconds, by clicking the ANGLR Bullseye.
the Bullseye hurtling into a river (I like to think it’s because my casts are so powerful) and had to wade in after it. Fortunately, it is water-resistant.
Runner Up: Fishency
The Fishency app also offers trip logging, a virtual tackle box, and it automatically logs much of the same data points (with the addition of moon phase). The user interface is clunkier than ANGLR’s; however, it does pool your logs so that you can easily figure out what lures work best, and where you catch the most fish. Fishency doesn’t offer any proprietary peripheral projectiles or sci-fi rods but, if you don’t want to get fish goo on your smartphone, you can get it on your smartwatch instead since Fishency can pair with Apple and Android watches, allowing you to quickly log a catch, its species, and your bait. Additionally, the developers claim that the app employs Artificial Intelligence, boasting “the more you use the app the smarter it gets,” which sounds like a slippery slope to a Blade Bait Runner or Honey Hole HAL 9000 existence. If that isn’t creepy enough, while fishing alone one night I found out that every time you log a catch a computergenerated voice tells you “fish logged.”
Honorable Mentions
There are a handful of other apps that fall slightly short of ANGLR and Fishency in some ways, but are better suited for particular types of fishing in others. Fishing Points logs the same data points as the other two apps but lacks the peripheral connectivity. However, it can be used to measure anchor drift, record trolling paths, and plot trotlines. FishBrain is packed with tons of cool features. It gives you weather, pressure, solunar, and tidal forecasts. If you’re willing to pay $9.99 a month, you’ll get access to FishBrain’s proprietary “bite time” prediction software. Also, if you are a newbie like me when it comes to discerning between fish species, the app offers a fish identifier. Just snap a pic of your mystery fish and it will tell you what it is. It’s astoundingly accurate, but I managed to baffle it with my goldfish. As another honorable mention there’s MyCatch. The app performs very in-depth catch analysis and has a comprehensive list of data fields, but unfortunately relies heavily on manual entry. However, it is outstanding in that it offers users the option to share their logs with local biologists and fisheries. That means that you can give back to the environment, and provide crucial population data to the organizations that maintain our waterways. While there are plenty of options out there, none of them will make you a better fisherman overnight. But fish logging apps show a lot of potential, seeing as your average smartphone has over 100,000 times the computing power of Apollo 11’s guidance system. So, hopefully, one of these apps can help you turn all those bytes in your pocket into bites on the end of your fishing line. #
##Fishbrain has some interesting and unique features that go well beyond logging.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 37
Shoreline Fishing for Trophy Blue Catfish on the Potomac By Aaron Weinstein
Since their introduction into the James River and subsequent invasion of the Chesapeake Bay, blue catfish have been providing thrilling opportunities for anglers to extend their fishing season all year round.
W
inter is trophy season for blue catfish, and fish over 40 inches can easily be targeted from the shore as well as from boats. While most of my personal experience is on the Potomac River, the techniques discussed here are applicable anywhere and can be fine-tuned to your closest waters. After getting the breakdown on the gear, baits, and locations necessary to get you on a big old blue, you’ll be ready to keep your fishing season rolling all year round.
Blue Catfish Gear
Big blue catfish love water with deep pockets and a strong current. Therefore, your gear needs to be up for the challenge. If you’re fishing from the bank, surf rods
##This MONS TER 47.5
10 feet or longer are necessary to cast long distances and provide the most effective backbone. Rods with a soft tip, heavy power, and moderate-to-fast action are best for ‘loading’ up the rod and delivering the pressure when you get a bite. You can size down the length if you’re fishing from a boat, but will still want a rod with medium-heavy power and moderate action to handle large fish. Spinning and conventional reels both work great, but if you’re fishing from shore, high line capacity is crucial to cast far and reach the bottom in 50 to 80 feet of water. The great part about this kind of fishing is that your reel can be as bulky as you want because you aren’t casting or retrieving with much frequency. Reels with a baitrunner feature or clicker are
##Note the float, used to keep
a bait just off bottom.
-inc h blue cat was hau
led in last Januar y.
helpful when working without proper rod holders, or when the fish are being picky. Letting them run for five seconds before turning on your drag can help hook even the pickiest fish. If I do have access to quality rod holders, I like to leave my drag cranked down to get a firm hookset right when the fish takes off. Terminal tackle is an important consideration because it can be the deciding factor between landing or losing the one bite that counts. With nearly all my catfishing, I use a simple fish-finder rig. Chances are, you’re typically already using similar gear to fish live bait or drift chunks. It consists of a sliding clip on the mainline (40-pound test braid is a good choice) followed by a bead, and tied off with a Palomar knot to a barrel swivel. From there, attach a leader of one to two feet of 50-pound test monofilament, and snell a 10/0 circle hook to the end. If I have the time and means, I will put a float two inches from the hook to lift the bait slightly off the bottom. Big catfish love structure as much as any other fish. So, if you’re fishing near structure and getting cut off, switch to a rig with a monofilament mainline for extra abrasion resistance.
Trophy Blue Catfish Baits
Most people think of catfish as scavengers, but the diet of a trophy blue largely consists of baitfish, clams, eel, and other live baits. One can catch catfish using “grocery store” baits like hotdogs and chicken livers, but a large catfish’s diet is nearly all live fish and can be specifically targeted by using live or fresh cut bait. Tackle shops, fish markets, and grocery stores are all great places to get fresh fish 38 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
to use for cut bait if you can’t catch your own. Fresh is always better than frozen, but I have had tremendous success using frozen white perch over the winter, so it’s good to know they aren’t too picky. Shad, mullet, and strips of carp are also great baits with the potential to catch a trophy.
Hotspots
Choosing the right location to cast your baits can be tough, but there are a few rules to follow to help avoid a skunk. First and foremost, deep water is key. After you cast, you should be free-spooling line for at least 10 seconds before your bait hits the bottom. Current and lead weight can change this time, but the best spots will pull line for 30 seconds or more after you cast. There are many spots around the Upper Potomac that reach 80 feet or more and during the winter, blues like to school up in these pockets. If you aren’t getting a bite in 15 minutes, recast. After 30 to 60 minutes with no bites, change spots. If you’ve found deep water but aren’t getting bit, look for a foam line towards the middle of the river. While this is not always the case, the foam on the surface can sometimes point to the fastest current which is generally in the channel. I have
had success aiming my casts into these zones, especially when I wasn’t getting bites closer in. This is when surf rods (or fishing from a vessel) come into play because they allow you to access areas that may be tough to reach from shore. On the Potomac, places like Fort Washington, the DC Tidal Basin, Georgetown Waterfront Park, Fletcher’s Boathouse, and Chain Bridge all hold trophy size catfish, especially through the winter. While it may surprise some, the upper Potomac is tidal and blue catfish do react strongly to its ebb and flow. The fact remains that you can cast the most appetizing bait in the world into a honey hole and still get skunked. More often than not, this is because the tides weren’t in your favor. Although patterns will change, from my experience, an outgoing tide is typically best, especially as it slows into a slack low tide. Oftentimes the break in current from a slack tide allows blues to spread out more, and they tend to feed heavily during these windows. Pair these conditions with a dawn or dusk bite, and you’ll be in big fish territory. Whether you’re a novice fisherman looking to add another fish to your list or a trophy hunter looking for something to
ruDow’s e-guiDes
##The author with a 32-pounder.
fill your off-season, you’ll be well on your way to catching monster blue catfish, all within minutes of the nation’s capital. Even if you aren’t local, bring your family and go fishing while they’re on vacation — better yet, bring them along and snag the fish of a lifetime. # Snakehead
This book is a collection of how-to and where-to striped bass fishing articles by noted outdoors writer Lenny Rudow.
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fish apex.com FishTalkMag.com February 2021 39
Going Numb for
Yellow Neds
##Find a hole and fish the deep water, and you have a good shot at success.
Yellow perch are happy to bite — no matter how cold it gets.
I
By Lenny Rudow
t’s so cold out that your five-star-rated thermos bottle can’t keep the coffee warm past 9 a.m. Every 10 to 15 minutes you have to clear ice off your rod guides, your fleece gloves are freezing to the rod handle, and if you don’t put the hook through your squirming minnow and get it back underwater in 30 second flat, it turns into a rigid bait-cicle. Ah, the joys of winter yellow perch fishing. While it’s true that fishing for yellow neds in the depths of winter can at times become a rather miserable endeavor, it can also lead to fantastic catches and fabulous February fish fries. Sometimes, both on the same day. And while there are many different ways of fishing for yellow perch at this time of year, ranging from ice fishing to boat fishing to bank fishing, there are some interesting constants that hold true no matter where, when, or how you fish. So if you decide to put this species into your crosshairs, remember:
40 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
1
Yellow perch like big minnow, the bigger the better. Huge, in fact, during the middle of the winter. Anyone who’s scooped a frost-covered dip net into the minnow bucket in search of a bait that wasn’t “too big,” but eventually ran out of options and used the three-inch monster minnow, can tell you that a shockingly small yellow perch can (and will) eat a shockingly large bull minnow. There truly isn’t such a thing as a minnow that’s too big, when you’re targeting this species. The same goes for shiners in freshwater, and more than one walleye angler has complained when a perch barely larger than the minnow triggered a tip-up and forced re-baiting. It’s a well-known fact that when water temps are very cold, most predators prefer not to chase small prey. They risk burning off more caloric energy than their meal will provide, especially if they have to go chasing it down. When fishing for stripers in the winter this means offering up a 10-inch bait, and when fishing for yellow perch at this time of year it means fishing with the biggest minnow in the bucket from start to finish.
2
Fish deep. Just how deep is deep? That depends on where you are, but as a general rule of thumb yellow perch will seek out some serious depth during the winter months. In a reservoir that can mean 30- or 40-plus feet will prove to be the best bet. In a tidal creek, they’ll often congregate in bends with holes twice the depth of the surrounding waters. And in rivers the main channel will usually be a go-to hotspot.
3
When the fish get finicky, use the eyeball trick. WARNING: this one’s sort of gross, so prepare yourself. Yellow perch like eating eyeballs. This is particularly true when ice fishing, but also proves effective in other circumstances when the fish get a bit finicky. Pop the eyeballs out of a dead minnow, bluegill, or another perch, thread one or two or three onto your hook or jig, drop it down, and jiggle. The results can be astounding. Unfortunately, putting a fish eye onto a hook can be a lot harder than it sounds. First, you have to squish it out of the fish’s head without popping it. Once it’s out
maintaining a grip is impossible, so instead pinch all your fingertips together to make a sort of a cup with their tips, with the eyeball sitting lens-down in the middle. But don’t spear that eyeball any old way. Get too aggressive and it’ll pop, leaving you with goocovered fingers and a skin-like sheath drooping from the hook. You need to rotate it so the back of the eyeball is exposed, where you’ll see a black dot with a little wiggly sinew (it’s called an optic chiasm according to Google) that used to attach the eyeball to the fish’s brain. Insert your hook point into that dot, slide it out through the side of the eyeball, and you can usually bait up without an unintended deflation. And as for the gross factor, don’t say we didn’t warn you.
4
Fish static, or with a very slow creep. When the water temps are at or near freezing, the fish won’t go chasing after a bait moving along at jogging speed no matter how enticing it may be. Quite often, placing it close to the fish and letting it sit will be the most effective way of fishing. When the fish are slowly
Yellow Perch February Fish Fry Ingredients: • Olive oil • 1 egg • 4 Saltine crackers • 1 cup panko crumbs • 2 tablespoons corn meal • 1 tablespoon Old Bay • 1 tablespoon garlic powder
t ##Mini deep fryers also work grea h! for cooking up some crispy perc
Crush the Saltines, and mix them with all the ingredients thereafter. Then scramble the egg. Dredge the perch fillets through the scrambled egg, coat them with the breading/spice mix, and sit them on a strip of wax paper or tin foil. Put a layer of olive oil into a pan, and put it on medium heat. When the oil’s hot drop in the fish chunks and fry for two to three minutes per side, until the breading begins to brown. Drain, and serve with tartar sauce.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 41
Going Numb for
Yellow Neds c o n t i n u e d
milling around or you don’t know exactly where they’re sitting, you may catch more by slowly moving the bait along at or near the bottom to cover some ground. But make it painfully slow. You need to present the bait to the fish at a snail’s pace, if you want to entice an attack.
5
Use J-hooks, and hook-sets. Circle hooks simply don’t work well with mid-winter yellow perch, because the fish tend to grab a bait, hold on tight, and more or less sit still. Sometimes they’ll go wandering off, but usually at a very mellow pace. As a result, whether you’re fishing tip-ups in a frozen lake or bottom rigs in a tidal creek you need to feel or see the strike and use a manual hook-set.
##Winter perc h fishing is a grea t way to get out of the house, in the depths of winter.
Okay: ready to layer up, and go chase those winter neds? If you’re wondering why you’d ever want to leave your climate-controlled house to torture yourself with such an
adventure, trust us on this: the couch that looks so warm and cozy right now will look 1000 times better, after a day of February yellow perch fishing.
with Lenny
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Cedar Point Area Wrecks and Obstructions
There’s structure galore within shooting distance of Cedar Point.
W
here the Middle Bay ends and the Lower Bay begins depends on one’s point of view. Although I worked in Maryland for a decade while supporting management of dredged material for the Port of Baltimore, it always seemed a bit odd to refer to Southern Maryland waters as the Lower Bay. Geographically, Virginia waters are the Lower Bay. But, when you’re looking down from above the Bay Bridge, anything below Cedar Point is a long way south, and thus the Lower Bay from a certain perspective. From a fishing perspective, what’s more important
By Wayne Young are the current interactions around Cedar Point that extend a few miles southward, especially in the fall as schools of bait fish move south, and the many fishing opportunities to be found in the vicinity. This area is where I caught my first monster redfish during a Walleye Pete walk-on charter. Southern Maryland is a long haul from Northern Virginia, and a lot of effort. So, a charter trip here and there is a welcome break. Plus, each trip is a learning opportunity. Going out with a charter captain or guide is a great way to gain local knowledge and fishing insights, and also how to fish safely in skinny
waters since many fishing spots are also hazards to navigation. But for starters, charted wrecks and obstructions around Cedar Point provide substantial fishing opportunities. There are two locations along the Chesapeake Ranch Estates where large reef balls were poured and deployed by residents to protect the steep cliffs and the homes above them. Homeowners are not able to install hard shoreline structures to protect the sandstone cliffs, which are inhabited by a Tiger Beetle species that is endangered in Maryland. Residents for years were therefore
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 43
##Unidentified barge wreck east of Cedar Point lighthouse ruins. Top and bottom right. Screenshots from NOAA Bathymetric Data Viewer. Bottom left – Screenshot from NOS DR H11918 (2010).
prevented from saving their homes from the progressive erosion of the cliffs and subsequent collapse. About 15 years ago, homeowners secured a permit to install reef ball breakwaters. There are two locations where triple lines of large reef balls were installed (sites one and two shown on the chart). When conditions favor striped bass foraging along shorelines, these are spots to check. The Little Cove Point Fish Haven, site three, is a short distance away. There are substantial shell piles and artificial reef structures made from materials of opportunity, especially in the southeast quadrant. This fish haven is worth checking out especially when wind conditions
44 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
make waters farther out in the Bay too rough. Site four is the demolished submarine Dragonet, Record Number 4013 in the Automated Wreck and Obstruction Information System (AWOIS). The sub was sunk as part of naval warfare research and development after World War Two. What’s left of the sub is too deep to provide reliable reef fishing opportunities in the Bay environment. Also very deep is the wreck of S-49 (AWOIS #2648), a pre-war submarine in the Patuxent River west of Point Patience, shown as site five. Another wreck that is more often passed over than fished is the barge Columbia (AWOIS #4007), site six. Yet there are
sometimes stripers there, so check the fishfinder when running by it. AWOIS #14340, site seven is a small, unidentified wreck. The wreckage has the appearance of a small recreational boat in an image screenshot taken from the Bathymetric Data Viewer (BDV). Site eight is a rectangular-shaped barge-like object inside the fish haven boundary. There is no record of a barge deployment in the fish haven, nor is there an AWOIS or Electronic Navigation Chart (ENC) wreck recorded at the site. So, this is either an undocumented wreck or undocumented barge deployment. The BVD image of this feature looks free of protrusions. Five linear clusters of granite were deposited at the fish haven at site nine. But due to the error associated with Loran-C that was used at the time of deployment, the clusters straddle the permitted reef boundary, mostly on the outside. For the full fish haven layout, see “Bridges Under Troubled Waters” (Young, 2018). Site 10 is another small wreck, with an image profile resembling a recreational boat. A charted but unidentified barge is located at site 11. There is an elongated object that extends at about a 45-degree angle from one corner of the barge. It seems too long to be a spud. There’s another object nearby. Perhaps this was cargo. Regardless, it’s a substantial structure. When the ruins are pressured by multiple boats, try the barge. Least depth is 17 feet, and most fishers head towards the visible ruins. There is another substantial structure at site 12. The narrow, elongated profile of three unidentified objects shown in a 3-D color multibeam sonar image resembles multiple causeways. At site 13, look for a trench along the alignment of a sewer
##Wrecks southeast of Cedar Point and sewer discharge pipe trench, middle right. Screenshot from NOS DR H22928 (2010). Other screenshots from NOAA Bathymetric Data Viewer.
discharge pipe. An unknown barge is located at site 14. The barge appears intact in the BVD imagery and is about 100 by 25 feet. Both images suggest that this is a deck barge with bulwarks to contain deck cargo. The barge appears to be intact. Although the lighthouse ruins (diagramed in “Bridges Under Troubled Waters”) are the primary sportfishing draw, the fish havens, wrecks, and shoreline structures offer a range of light tackle fishing opportunities. If one isn’t producing, check the others. #
Wayne Young is the author of “Bridges Under Troubled Waters: Upper Chesapeake and Tidal Potomac Fishing Reefs,” and “Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs, Voyage of Discovery.” Both are available at Amazon.com, and you can find his Facebook page at Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs. Look for his new books, “Phantoms of the Lower Bay” and “Hook, Line, and Slinker.”
W’S RUDO E E A K S A P C H E
RUDOW ’S A N D
I C A N T - AT L E M I D F R E
C H E S A P E A K E
Five Fall ke Chesapea Hotspots
A N D
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Winter Pickerel Tact ics That Work Cherrystone Reef
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FishTalkMag.com February 2021 45
No Baltimore Boat Show? Five Things You Should Have, Would Have, Could Have Seen at the Show
T
By Lenny Rudow
here’s finally some light at the end of this epically and unexpectedly long Covid-19 tunnel, but until we get there, we’re going to miss yet another boat show. The Baltimore show, which I have personally attended each and every year since the days when Captain Dad held a firm grip on my pint-sized hand at all times, will not be held in 2021. It’s the first time in memory that I won’t make the frigid walk from a distant parking lot to the Baltimore Convention Center, the first time I won’t enjoy that luscious Convention Center food, and most importantly, the first time I won’t be able to ogle the dozens and dozens of center consoles, runabouts, and cuddy cabins on display. Woe is me… but for most folks, it’s even woe-ier. Truth be told I’m luckier than the average boat-nut, because I’m still getting press releases, invitations to virtual press conferences, and personal invites to check out hot new fishing machines. So although there’s no show in the big B, I do know about and have at least gotten a glimpse or two of what would have been there in a (much longed-for, please make it so ASAP) normal winter. To that end, dear FishTalk readers, we thought it would be nice to bring you a rundown of the top five things you would have, could have, should have seen at the Baltimore Boat Show this month.
1
ePropulsion Spirit 1.0 Plus
Caymas 341 CC
The Caymas 341 CC was unveiled to the world at the February 2020 Miami International Boat Show, just before Covid’s evil was unleashed. We would have spotted it in our neck of the woods at the Annapolis show, but alas, that one didn’t happen either. Now, you won’t be able to see it at Baltimore. Had you, it’s a sure bet you’d have found it impressive. I was lucky enough to get in a day of fishing aboard this 33’6” long, 10’0” wide offshore fishing machine this fall, and while the 70-gallon pressurized livewell and 125-gallon fishbox wowed me, the coolest characteristic IMHO was our ability to rip across the water at speeds up to 60 mph and enjoy a “mellow” cruise in the low- to mid-40s. The seriously tricked-out SVVT twin-step hull is a thing of beauty to behold. We’re bummed you have to miss this one, but you can schedule your own personal boat show of sorts to see the 341 CC in the Mid-Atlantic region by calling North Point Yacht Sales at (410) 280-2038 in Maryland, (804) 885-4090 in Virginia, or by visiting northpointyachtsales.com. 46 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
2
The world of electric outboards is growing, and the newest offering from ePropulsion is an eye-opener. They sent us a test-model of this three-horse mini-might to try out this winter, and the results were rather shocking: on a 10’ pond-hopper previously rigged with a 55-pound thrust 12-volt electric, speeds doubled, range quadrupled, and battery weight was halved. The killer feature is an integrated lithium-ion polymer battery that clips onto the motor itself, eliminating multiple carry-on batteries and loose wires. The 46.2-volt, 1276 watt-hour power pack tips the scales at a mere 19.4 pounds and when millpond fishing for entire days at a time we have yet to burn up more than a quarter of the available juice. Check out epropulsion.com since seeing it at the boat show isn’t an option (boo!).
3
4
Humminbird Apex
Had you been able to attend the show and meandered from the boats to the accessories, undoubtedly you would have been intrigued when you saw the all-new Humminbird Apex. Thus far we haven’t been able to do more than look at one ourselves, although we’re currently setting up a long-term test on one so that we’ll be able to report back to you in the future. Meanwhile, note that this is Humminbird’s new top offering, incorporating tip top tech like MEGA Imaging (Side Imaging+ as well as Down Imaging+), Dual Spectrum CHIRP sonar, a full HD 1920 x 1080 touchscreen plus tactile keypad, One-Boat network integration, dual-core processing, and both flush and binnacle mounting options. These big beauties are available in 13.3”, 15.6”, and 18.5” displays. Visit humminbird.com to get the scoop.
5
Robalo R230
Robalo has recreated it’s 23’ center console offering, and no doubt it would have made a visit to Baltimore this year. Luckily, we got a peek at it during a visit to Waterfront Marine over the winter. What really reached out and grabbed us about this model was its comprehensive outfitting with tons of standard goodies that most other builders list as cost-adding options. A T-top with four rocket launchers, spreader lights, and a stowage compartment; digital gauges; hydraulic tilt steering; a lighted compass; a portable MSD; cockpit and bow coaming bolsters; four leaning post rocket launchers; an aluminum tandem axel trailer with a folding jack and LED lights — all of these things are standard features. And that’s on top of the stuff you expect, like the 25-gallon LED-lighted livewell, four flush-mount gunwale rodholders, and raw water washdown. Waterfront are the folks to ping, if you want to get your own personal time with the R230. Visit them at waterfrontmarine.com or call (443) 949-9041 to set up a viewing.
Sportsman Open 302 CC
After last year’s introduction of the Open 352 and the 2019 intro of the 267 OE, one might think that Sportsman Boats would take a breather for the 2021 model year. One would be wrong. They’ve kept up the new model pace with the 2021 302 CC, an all-new fishing machine that features a pair of 30-gallon insulated, pressurized “aquarium” style livewells with viewing ports, an integrated pod that can house a Seakeeper gyro stabilizer, a pair of 64-gallon insulated, macerated fishboxes, and a leaning post tackle station that’s large enough to hold a full selection of both inshore and offshore gear. Added Bonus: make sure you slap an eyeball on the hard top, which integrates speaker, light, outrigger, and overhead electronics mounting and is supported by uber-beefy extruded D-tubing. DoubleSuper Added Bonus: Due to the absence of the Baltimore show, area dealer Riverside Marine (riversideboats.com) is holding its own winter boat show at its Essex, MD location through the month of February. Thirty boats will be on display in a huge heated tent and there may be demo rides, weather permitting. Call (410) 686-1500 to make an appointment.
Naturally, had we enjoyed a 2021 Baltimore Boat Show there would have been lots of other boats and accessories to check out. And we’d have been standing in the FishTalk booth, waiting for you to swing by and chat a bit about the latest hot bite. Alas, it was not to be. And while we may have quite a wait before the 2022 Baltimore Boat Show, as of now it looks like the Bay Bridge Boat Show is a “go” for April 16 through 18 — we sure hope we’ll see you there.
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 47
Fishing for Beginners
h for How To Fis ribbonfish By Devin Garner
on This unusual species is . the upswing in our area
R
ibbonfish, otherwise known as cutlassfish, can be found throughout the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans and have even been caught throughout the Chesapeake Bay. The past few years we’ve seen an increase in their number and they’ve been caught as far up the Bay as the Choptank, so many people in our region are just now becoming interested in this unusual species. The fish is very popular in other countries throughout the world, as they are delicious to eat and the meat from the ribbonfish has been compared to flounder — not fishy, and very light. When feeding, mature ribbonfish can be found near the surface during the daytime and in greater depths during the night time. Younger ribbonfish do not follow the patterns of mature fish and typically can be found in greater depths during the day and shallower depths during the night. Oftentimes, ribbonfish can be found in schools. Members of the Trichiuridae family, ribbonfish can grow up to five feet long and can weigh several pounds, but are oftentimes around three feet in length. Typically, ribbonfish can be mistaken for an eel as they are long in their appearance and swim like a snake. In addition, they have
48 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
##Ribbonfish have rather dram atic teeth – look out! Photo cour tesy of Eric Packard
powerful teeth which prove helpful for hunting prey. As a result of their strong teeth and aggression, fishermen must take extra caution.
Ribbonfish Identification Ribbonfish can be identified by the following characteristics: • Spear-shaped head • Arrowlike teeth • Silver coloring • Low dorsal fin that extends through back • Long and extended thin body
Ribbonfish State Regulations Maryland, Virginia, and Delaware hold no size limit or bag limit and the season is open year-round. The lack of state regulations for ribbonfish throughout the region could possibly be tied to the fact that the species of fish is fairly new to the area, at least in the numbers seen in recent years.
Best Ribbonfish Baits Fishermen throughout the region have had the best luck catching ribbonfish with: • Squid chunks • Fish chunks • Shrimp
Popular Techniques for Ribbonfish Fishing Differing from other fish throughout the Atlantic coast region, ribbonfish are not picky and fishermen have used many different techniques to catch the fish, though they’re commonly caught by accident. Fishermen have found success both casting and trolling. When casting or trolling, it is important to target areas by structure and when fishing at night, those with a light source close to the water. Perhaps one of the biggest factors to keep in mind when fishing for these aggressive fish is to have a trace of wire leader or use a long, rigid lure such as a swimming plug or a spoon, to eliminate the potential of the fish biting off the line. When fishing with bait, fishermen throughout the region suggest that it’s best to use an eight- to 20-pound gear. In addition, it is suggested to use a 30- to 40-pound monofilament leader attached to a 2/0 hook. Fishermen can ensure that their line is not bitten off by attaching a six-inch trace of number three wire.
Best Places To Fish for Ribbonfish When setting out for your next adventure for ribbonfish, try to go at night as they primarily feed during the
night hours. As previously noted, a key tactic to catching the fish at night is a light source close to the water. Due to this, some ribbonfish experts suggest that when fishing from a boat you connect a fluorescent light tube to the boat’s main battery with clips. Target areas with muddy bottoms where the fish are concentrated, especially around walls, piers, and bridges. If one is seeking out bigger ribbonfish that have the potential to be a record-setting catch, it is important to go fishing in the ocean. Typically, bigger ribbonfish are found anywhere between two and 12 miles offshore. The fish begin running around an hour after the sunset in the evenings. The fish can also be caught throughout the sandy bottoms of inlets and rivers that are connected to the Bay. They can generally be located around structures and near light sources. While ribbonfish may not be a widely sought-after fish, they are nevertheless enjoyable to catch. On your next adventure out to the ocean
##Bob Keats and Larry Kline both caught ribbonfish all the way up in the Choptank River, in the summer of 2020. Photos courtesy of Marty Abel (left) and Susan (right).
or around the sandy bottoms or inlets connected to the Bay, keep an eye out for ribbonfish as they will
surely be looking to destroy your tackle — but will be worth the hassle once they are aboard the boat. #
Ever Have Trouble Finding Your Copy Of FishTalk? Not to worry, you can read every issue online!
Scan QR code using your phone’s camera or visit: fishtalkmag.com/read-fishtalk-online FishTalkMag.com February 2021 49
ch e sap e a k e
&
M id - atlantic
fishing reports Gathered over the past month by Mollie Rudow
Editor’s Note: We all know printed fishing reports are generalized, and days or weeks have passed before the report gets into your hands. For timely, up-to-date reports, visit our website FishTalkMag.com. Current reports will be published every Friday by noon—just in time for your weekend fishing adventures.
Coastal
Freshwater
Brrr… it’s chilly out there, people, and the weather can make fishing along the coast uber-difficult this time of year. We do know one thing for sure, though, and that’s the fact that you can catch tautog all month long on the wrecks and reefs from Delaware down through Virginia. That’s what we’ve been hearing about in most of the recent reports, and that’s likely what will keep a bend in angler’s rods for the foreseeable future. Crab chunks or whole crab baits sitting right on top of structure are the ticket.
Reports from the Eastern Shore millponds were a bit less reliable than usual earlier this winter thanks to weather that often riled water conditions, but they’ve still been producing plenty of pickerel, some bass, crappie, and in a few cases yellow perch. We’ve been hearing from anglers finding that minnow, minnow, and three-inch paddletails have been producing the bites. Tributary fishing for the same species plus catfish has been up and down, again depending on the weather, but when conditions allow the rivers can be depended upon for steady action through February. Note: as long as ice isn’t a problem in the tidal tribs, February often accounts for the best pickerel fishing of the winter season. And if you can locate a hole where pre-spawn yellow perch are balled up, be prepared for spectacular perch-jerking action.
Presented by:
##When the weather allows, bundle up tight and head to the inshore wrecks with plenty of crab baits to get in on those tog. Photo courtesy of the Big Worm
50 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
As we prepare this edition the Baltimore area reservoirs were icefree and fishable from shore with perch and bass accounting for most of the reports, and the Virginia reservoirs were still reporting solid action on bass, crappie, and landlocked stripers. We’re not even going to talk about Deep Creek, because of the unpredictable nature of the ice conditions there these past few years. Remember that unless they get washed out by heavy rains and/or snowfall, rivers and creeks in the western and northern reaches of our region should provide a solid option for trout fishing. Nymphs commonly do the trick on the wild fish, but also watch for the latest stockings, as putand-take fish do go overboard this month in many areas where FishTalkers prowl.
Way North February is a month of the year when the Way North zone of the Chesapeake shines, thanks to the yellow perch run. Barring any disastrous runoff (which can present a problem some seasons), yellow perch should be balled up in the deep holes right before the Susquehanna empties out into the Flats in between Havre de Grace and Perryville. If the weather grows cold enough to turn the water hard, ice fishing the North East is always an option (as is chopping holes around the Perryville docks).
Upper Bay Presented by:
Upper Bay anglers, count your blessings — the resurgence of pickerel in the northern tributaries is undeniably in a real boom. The Magothy, Rock Creek, Bodkin, and other tribs have been providing action like “the good ol’ days” for pickerel mostly in the 20” to 22” range with a few larger ones showing up, often to the tune of dozen-plus fish days. Minnow and small paddle tails are the usual offerings with spinnerbaits also producing some bites, and some nice yellow perch catches are also in the mix for those casting lures small enough to tempt them, or using minnow.
Middle Bay Presented by:
As in most areas of the region, the bulk of the Middle Bay anglers are breaking their cabin fever either hitting the tributaries for perch and pickerel, or by heading to freshwater options. We want to note that like many Upper Bay tribs the Severn has undergone a clear pickerel population explosion this year, and it’s not unreasonable to hope to break a dozen fish in an afternoon. On the eastern side of the Bay we’ve heard decent if not spectacular
reports from the millponds and also of some action (mostly for yellow perch but also some pickerel and largemouth bass) from the upper Choptank and feeders like Watts Creek. What about the wintertime warm-water discharge rockfish catchand-release options? Last year it was legal through March and as we put this issue together we hadn’t yet heard different, however, with the fluid and rapid changes in striper regs we’d recommend doing due diligence before making any trips. We’d also note that you’re likely to encounter egg-bearing females there at this time of year, and that it might be time to consider whether handling these fish is a great idea in the first place.
Lower Bay
With the Bay in the grips of winter, you know what we’ll suggest: hit the tribs! As with elsewhere in Chesapeake Country, there’s some great fishing to be found up those rivers. Right about now is when you’ll locate schools of yellow perch in deep holes just downriver of spawning areas, and they’re usually quite willing to bite as they prepare for their run. They will, of course, play second-fiddle to the big blue cats found in the upper Potomac, Rappahannock, and James Rivers. If you want to put a big-time bend in a rod, targeting those fish is the way to do it. Reports of success in all of these rivers has been constant as we prepped this edition of FishTalk and there’s absolutely no reason to believe that will change through February, as long as the weather cooperates.
Tangier and Lower Shore
Ready to hum a familiar winter fishing tune? Over the river and through the woods, up the Pocomoke and Wicomico we’ll go… The Pocomoke is a prime suspect for chilly weather mixed-bag fishing for bass, pickerel, perch, and crappie this month, and the upper Wicomico was producing some spectacular crappie fishing earlier this winter and should remain a solid bet through February. We’ll also note that all of the Lower Shore millponds tend to be productive this month.
##Pickerel will keep chewing all winter, and the February pre-spawn season is often the peak of the action for this species.
Way South Yes, anglers at the mouth of the Bay have the option of heading inland and hitting the tribs, but this is the one area in Chesapeake Country where saltier species may be on the menu this month. It’s too early to tell what the weather will do and how the fish will react, but last year specks and even an occasional red continued popping up in the lower Elizabeth and the Virginia Beach area inlets through most of the month. MirrOlures, plastics, and cut mullet all hold potential. The CBBT may well also offer up some fish, there in the form of tog, again depending on what the weather has in store for us. As a general rule of thumb remember that if water temps stay in the mid- to upper-40s tautog tend to remain active, when it goes into the lower 40s they slow down significantly, and if it drops to 40 or fewer degrees its generally best to try a different option.
Visit our current fishing reports to get the latest intel in a blink via this cell phone camera QR code link. FishTalkMag.com February 2021 51
Tips & Tricks
winter Chores Our regularly scheduled fishing tips will be interrupted this month to bring you this important update: get busy with those tackle maintenance chores, people! Spring will be here before you know it, and even year-round fishermen are sure to have a few weather-days stuck at home this month. So before February ends, make sure to:
• Disassemble the major part of your reels, wipe them down with a microfiber cloth, and lubricate as per manufacturer’s directions. • Go through your tackle and collect all the rusty old hooks, discolored plastics, and the other junk that wouldn’t bring 25 cents at a fishing tackle flea market. You probably have some old lures that you haven’t used in 10 years that belong in the same pile. Now throw all that junk away — it’s just cluttering up your tacklebox. • Pull all those rusty old knives off of the boat and out of your tacklebox, and sharpen ‘em up good. • Strip any reels spooled with monofilament over two seasons old, and replace the line. Mono weakens with age and UV exposure, and that 15-pound test is likely now 12-pound test. • Clip the first 10 feet of line off of each and every rod in your arsenal. That’s the section that sees the most wear, and you’ll probably get rid of multiple chaffed spots you didn’t even realize were there. • Remove all your reels from the rods, and clean off the foot of the reel and the reel seats (plus clamps, when applicable). Many people neglect to clean under there for years at a time and as a result, an awful lot of crud can build up. Then, it’ll work its way into the threads of the reel seat and cause perpetual problems. • Steal an old pair of your wife’s pantyhose (she won’t mind, we promise) and run it through all the guides on all your fishing rods. If it hangs up anywhere, you’ve just located a guide that has a chipped ceramic liner. Have it replaced before next season, because it’ll cause some serious line wear. • Take out all your umbrellas and tandems, and comb out the parachute filaments (yes, it does actually make a difference). And if any are dirty, give ‘em a wash.
And while you’re enjoying some wintertime tackle play, remember: this would be a great time to get some hooks with inline eyes, and switch all those nasty trebles on your topwater plugs and jerkbaits for singles. At the very least, consider snipping off one of the three tines on each treble. The fish will thank you for it. 52 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Paddler’s Edge
The Kayak Paddle
Is it a humble utensil, or a tricked-out multifunctional tool?
A
By John Veil
kayak paddle is a fairly simple object, which provides the propulsion for many small watercraft including kayaks. Kayak paddles vary by shaft length, blade size and shape, and material of construction. I use a 240-cm shaft (editor’s note: “240 cm” is Euro-speak for sayin’ 94.4882 inches, or 7.87401666 feet, according to Google). The least expensive paddles have an aluminum shaft and plastic blades. They are heavy. More costly paddles can use fiberglass or carbon fiber in the shaft and blades. These are lighter than the aluminum or plastic ones, but they also cost more. Many people think of a paddle purely for providing propulsion, but there are various other things a kayaker can do with the paddle.
or reflective tape to increase your visibility to boats and other kayakers. Then if you see a boat approaching that does not appear to see you, you can lift your paddle high and wave it.
Improve Visibility The first thing I notice when I spot a kayak in the distance is the paddle blades moving up and down. If your paddle has light colored blades (such as white, yellow, or orange), you’re all set. If you have black blades, like the carbon fiber paddle I use, you can add strips of bright colored
Measuring Depth Many kayak anglers install fishfinders and I have one on my larger kayak, but don’t really need it on the smaller kayak that I use most of the time. If you are paddling or fishing in shallow water and want to know how deep you are, grab your paddle near the blade on
##That author’s paddle shaft is also his ruler.
Improving Balance When Facing a Large Wave or Wake Tightrope walkers often carry long balancing poles to help them to stay upright. A paddle can be used in a similar way. If you spot a large wave or boat wake heading your way, pick up your paddle and lay it horizontally across your lap. Orient it so that the blades are parallel to the water surface. If you start to tip over, the flat blades will resist the tipping action and will improve your chances of staying upright.
one end and jab the other end into the water. Unless the depth is greater than the length of your paddle (editor’s note: approximately 7.87401666 feet), you can tell in seconds how deep it is. Similarly, you can get a good idea of the nature of the bottom composition (mud, sand, or hard material) by jabbing the paddle into the bottom. Pushing Off From Structure I spend a lot of my fishing time working close to structures like docks, pilings, fallen wood, rip-rap, etc. To minimize scratching my kayak, I try to avoid actually bumping into those structures. As I get close, I can reach out with my paddle and gently push myself off. Of course, you’ll want to make sure you don’t lean out far or push really hard, as that could lead to losing your balance and capsizing. Retrieving Lures Some paddles have a notch cut into one of the blades. This allows the user to place fishing line attached to a snagged lure into the notch, slide the paddle up or down as the case may be, and push the snagged lure off of the obstruction. Measuring Your Catch Many kayak anglers use plastic or metal measuring boards to learn the length of the fish they catch, but some kayak paddles come with inches (editor’s note: and hopefully not cm’s) printed on the shaft. This is not as accurate as using a flat board, but can be handy for getting a quick estimate of a fish’s length. The next time you look at a kayak paddle, just imagine all the ways in which it can be used — it’s certainly more than a mere propulsion device. #
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 53
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Tides&&Currents Currents presented by Tides
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WEEKLY FISHING REPORTS
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StationId: 8638863 StationId: 8575512 NOAA Tide Predictions Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Primary Station Type: Primary Baltimore, Fort McHenry, Patapsco River, MD,2021 Time Zone: LST_LDT Time Zone: LST_LDT Datum: MLLW Datum: MLLW
BALTIMORE February January
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8 Station ID: ACT F Source: NOAA NOAA Pre StationTide Type: H LS ChesapeakeTime BayZone: Bridge 9
NOAA Tide Predictions
Height
Time Time
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Times and Heights of High and Low Waters
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ANNApOLIS March February January
Height Height
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Annapolis, MD,2021
h h m m ft ft 12:58 AMAM -0.20.0 1 103:38 09:05 06:00 AMAM 0.80.5 M F03:24 12:19 PMPM -0.3-0.4 09:35 07:10 PMPM 1.11.1
cmcm h h m m ft ft -6 0 03:52 01:38 AMAM -0.1-0.1 1616 24 15 09:47 07:04 AMAM 0.90.6 -9-12Tu Sa 04:12 01:19 PMPM 0.0-0.4 34 34 10:05 08:04 PMPM 0.90.9
0 9 2 8
AM -0.1 AM 0.7 PM -0.3 PM 1.0
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01:41 AMAM -0.20.0 2 204:15 09:59 06:49 AMAM 0.90.5 Tu Sa 04:26 01:04 PMPM -0.2-0.4 10:20 07:50 PMPM 1.01.1
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02:00 05:30 AMAM 0.6-0.3 18 -9 02:01 05:56 AMAM 0.6-0.3 7 708:16 2222 12:05 AMPM -0.40.8 -12 24 08:05 12:50 AMPM -0.10.8
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4 1 1 4
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CHESApEAkE BAy BRIDgE TuNNEL March February
Time Time TimeHeight Height Height
cm -3 21 -12 34
h m ft ft cm ft cm cm h h cmcm m m h h m m h m ft ft cm ft cm -3 -3 AM 03:00 AM -0.1 AM -0.2-0.2 -3 -6 03:25 02:10 AM 04:07 AM 0.1 AM -0.1-0.3 3 -3 1 102:15 101:47 16-6 16 16 27 18 07:54 07:33 AM 09:30 AM 1.1 AM 0.7 2.8 34 21 8509:30 08:18 AM 10:29 AM 1.2 AM 0.8 2.7 37 24 0-12M M 02:28 01:47 F PM 03:49 PM -0.2 PM -0.3-0.2 -6 -9Tu-6 Tu 04:10 02:36 Sa PM 04:50 PM 0.1 PM -0.1-0.2 3 -3 27 27 08:27 08:04 PM 09:51 PM 1.2 PM 0.9 2.1 37 27 6409:52 08:35 PM 10:53 PM 1.0 PM 0.7 2.2 30 21
cm -9 1 82 -6 M 67
Time Time
Height Height
Time Time
Height Height
h m ft ft cm cm h m h m h m ft 04:22 AM AM -0.1-0.3 -3 -9 01:48 05:07 AM AM 0.1 112:27 1616 06:27 10:37 AM AM 1.0 2.7 30 82 08:03 11:12 AM AM 1.1 12:48 M 04:53 PM PM -0.2-0.4 -6 -12 Tu 02:29 Tu 05:21 PM PM 0.1 06:55 11:07 PM PM 1.0 2.6 30 79 08:22 11:37 PM PM 0.9
1 F
-3 05:15 AM AM -0.1-0.2 -3 -6 02:23 05:51 AM AM 0.1 2 201:08 1717 76 07:20 11:24 AM AM 1.1 2.6 34 79 08:45 11:49 AM AM 1.2 -3 Tu 01:42 Tu 05:41 PM PM -0.1-0.4 -3 -12 W 03:13 W 05:58 PM PM 0.1 67 07:38 PM 0.9 27 08:55 PM 0.8
-9 -3 04:54 02:59 AMAM -0.1-0.1 -3 -3 AM 04:34 AM -0.2 AM -0.3-0.1 -6 -9 04:20 03:31 AM 05:43 AM 0.1 AM -0.1 0.1 3 -3 3 3 1818 3 303:29 303:16 18-3 18 18 30 15 11:26 08:52 AMAM 1.00.6 30 18 09:39 09:33 AM 10:55 AM 1.3 AM 0.8 2.7 40 24 8210:53 10:02 AM 11:51 AM 1.3 AM 0.8 2.3 40 24 70 W Su 05:38 01:54 PMPM -0.1-0.3 -3 -9Th M 06:11 03:02 PMPM 0.2-0.2 6 -6W W 04:32 03:47 Su PM 05:18 PM 0.0 PM -0.1-0.2 0 -3Th-6 Th 05:48 04:19 M PM 06:12 PM 0.3 PM 0.1 0.0 9 3 0 W 11:08 08:32 PMPM 0.91.0 27 30 11:22 09:21 PMPM 0.70.7 21 21 09:58 09:36 PM 11:26 PM 1.0 PM 0.7 2.2 30 21 6711:05 09:50 PMPM 0.90.6 27 18
Th M 06:57 02:51 PMPM 0.0-0.2 09:16 PM 0.9 ◑
Times and Heights of Sa Hig
Times and Heights of High and Low Waters
ft -0.1 0.7 -0.4 1.1
AM AM PM PM
Th
F I S H TA L K M A G . C O M / F I S H I N G - R E P O R T S
/CO-OPS y T
m 2 9 0 6
W
F I S H TA L K M A G . C O M
12:00 301:53 AM AM -0.2 2.6 06:14 AM -0.1
-6 08:16 AM 1.1 34 W 12:15 02:40 PM PM 0.0 2.4 0 06:32 08:24 PM PM 0.8 -0.3 24
2
79 18 12:20 03:01 AM AM 0.1 18 09:30 Sa -3 06:38 AM AM 1.1 73 Th 12:31 Th 03:59 PM PM 0.2 -9 09:30 06:40 PM PM 0.8
3
02:01 503:36 AM AM -0.2 2.6 08:27 AM 0.1
16 11 17 12
Station 18 ID: 13 Source: NO Station Typ Time 12:38 Zone: AM 2 79 20 02:00 AM 2.2 3 67 5 04:29 AM 0.1 03:00AM -0.9E 20 07:04 AM12:06 0 3 11:11 08:29 4 AM AM 1.1 0.5 34 15 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.7F 19 14 F 12:57 PM06:48 2 61 Sa 02:14 PM 1.8 55
12:24 AM 12:57 01:07 19 -9 -3 05:31 03:41 AMAM -0.2-0.2 -6 -6 AM 05:28 AM -0.2 AM -0.3-0.1 -6 -9 04:55 04:17 AM AM 0.1 -0.1 2.2 3 -3 67 AM AM -0.2 2.6 -6 79 03:43 AM AM 0.1 1919 4 404:10 404:06 19-3 19 4 402:42 1919 06:35 AM 07:18 07:30 34 18 12:19 09:50 PMAM 1.00.6 30 18 10:36 10:39 AM 11:43 AM 1.4 AM 0.9 2.5 43 27 7611:36 10:59 AM AM 1.3 0.9 0.2 40 27 6 09:16 AM AM 1.1 0.0 34 0 10:18 AM AM 1.1 Su Tu PM 12:34 PM Th 01:12 F 01:19 0 -6F Tu 07:20 03:58 PMPM 0.2-0.1 6 -3Th Th 05:43 04:55 M PM 06:07 PM 0.0 PM 0.0 -0.2 0 0F -6 F06:44 05:15 PM 0.3 0.2 2.1 9 6 64 Th 03:41 PM PM 0.1 2.2 3 67 F 04:48 PM PM 0.3 06:53 PM ◑ 07:29 ◐ 07:28 27◐ 09:59 PM 0.6 18 ◑ 10:49 PMPM 0.90.6 27 18 ◐ 11:49 PM 0.8 24 18 3 09:15 PM PM 0.8 -0.3 24 -9 10:09 PM PM 0.8 10:28 10:33 PM 0.6 0.1
12:20 AM 2.3 7005:37 01:130.1 AM 2.2 67 505:00 AM -0.2 -6 -9 AM 21 -6 AM -0.3 0.0 05:08 AM AM -0.2 3 -6 5 5 504:58 20 2020 06:28 AM 07:30 11:37 AM 1.4 43 27 012:23 PM 1.30.9 0.3 40 27 9 -6 21 11:48 AM 0.9 2.4 11:59 AM Tu PM 12:35 PM 7307:44 W PM 01:20 PM 1.9 03:54 04:55 0.1 3 0Sa 0.4 12 6 58 F F Tu 01:03 PMPM 1.2-0.1 37 -3Sa W 01:14 PMPM 1.00.0 30 0F F06:57 06:05 PM 0.0 Sa 06:13 PM 0.2 06:590.8 PM -0.2 -6 ◐ 07:37 PM 0.1 3 10:03 11:46 PM 10:40 08:16 PMPM 0.00.8 0 24 ◐ 08:29 PMPM 0.20.6 6 18 11:27 PM 0.6 24 18 11:23 PM 0.6 18
-6 10:21 AM 1.1 34 F 02:16 04:46 PM PM 0.1 2.0 3 Sa 05:39 PM M0.3 12:36PM 9 03:18PM -0.5E Tu 01:30 Th 07:09 PM -0 08:31 08:23 9 10:12 PM PM 0.7 -0.2 21 -6 10:54 PM PM 0.8 0.3 24 09:12PM 06:00PM 0.7F 07:18
01:19 AM 2.4 7312:40 AM 0.8 24 02:05 AM 67 6 03:10 03:00 605:58 21 AM -0.2 -6-12 AM AM -0.2 2.7 -6 82 05:22 AM AM 0.1 18 -6 AM -0.4 0.0 06:02 AM -0.2 2.2 6 605:54 6 04:36 2121 2121 07:33 AM AM 0.1 3 -6 12 08:28 AM 09:39 09:30 12:42 PM 1.4 43 30 006:28 11:30 AM AM 1.1 0.1 34 3 12:08 PM AM 1.1 -3 21 12:58 PM 1.0 2.3 12:59 PM 0.9 0.4 W PM 01:32 PM 7001:15 1.2 37 27 55 Th PM 02:11 PM 1.8 Sa 03:29 Su 03:16 05:04 08:09 0.1 3 3Su Sa 05:54 PM PM 0.2 2.0 6 61 Su 06:35 PM PM 0.4 Sa W 02:10 PMPM 1.2-0.1 37 -3Su Th 02:10 05:55 PMPM 1.00.1 30 3Sa Sa 07:16 PM 0.1 Su 07:11 PM 0.2 6 12 08:240.4 PM 0.2 6 09:37 09:22 ◑ 07:55 PM -0.3 ◐ -908:44 PM 10:54 PM PM 0.7 -0.2 21 -6 PM PM 0.8 PMPM 0.00.7 0 21 09:31 11:23 PMPM 0.20.5 6 15◑ ◑09:30 ◑ 11:17 ◐ 11:48 Tu
2.2 3 67 6 01:42 AM 2 08:14 AM 0 0.5 34 15 12:12AM 03:36AM Sa-0.9E 02:05 PM12:48 2 1.8 12 55 07:00AM 10:06AM 0.8F 07:24 08:17 PM02:30 0 0.3 9 ◑ -0.6E 24 04:18PM 01:36PM W F Slack Maximum 07:18PM 10:12PM 0.5F 08:36 ◐ 82 22 04:02 AM 2.3 3h m 70 7 02:56 AM 2 06:20 AM 0.1 h m knots 22 0 01:08 10:28 09:27 AM 0 PM AM 1.1 0.4 34 12 01:00AM -1.1E 61 M 04:19 55 Su-0.8E 03:24 PM01:36 2 01:00AM 04:24AM M 07:31 PM PM 0.4 1.8 12 04:54AM 07:12AM 0.4F -6 10:20 PM 0.2 6 09:28 PM08:06 0 11:00AM 0.9F 09:54AM 12:30PM -0.5E Sa F07:36AM 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E 1.0F 03:00PM 06:48PM W0.8 2.4 Th 03:24 85 12:48 05:01 AM AM 24 73 04:13 AM09:48 2 08:42PM 11:12PM 0.4F 23 23 8 10:12PM ◑0.1 0.3 3 9 -3 07:19 11:21 AM AM 10:36 AM 0 64 Tu 02:06 Tu 05:18 PM PM 1.1 2.0 34 61 M 04:40 PM 2 -1.0E -9 08:24 11:15 PM PM 0.4 0.1 12 05:06AM 3 01:36AM 10:38 PM 0 01:48AM -0.7E 05:24AM 07:54AM 0.5F 08:12AM 11:48AM 1.0F -0.5E 02:24 10:42AM 01:18PM Sa Su 2 88 01:50 05:54 AM AM 0.8 2.6 24 79 05:20 03:30PM 06:30PM -0.7E 24 24 9 03:54PM 07:36PM 0.9F Th F AM08:48 Dis -6 08:18 12:08 AM PM 0.1 0.2 3 6 11:37 AM04:12 0 10:06PM 10:54PM 67 W 03:00 W 06:09 PM PM 1.1 2.2 34 67 Tu 05:44 PM11:00 2 09:14 PM 0.3 9 11:40 PM Ge 0 02:18AM -1.0E 12:18AM 0.4F 0.6F 05:54AM -9 25 12:06 -3 08:36AM AM AM 0.9 -0.1 27 06:17 AM03:18 2 02:36AM 06:00AM -0.7E 25 02:50 10 11:36AM 02:18PM -0.5E 88 06:41 2.8 85 Su M 0 09:15 AM AM 0.0 0 12:28 09:00AM 12:42PM 1.1F 04:54PM 08:18PM 0.8F F SaPM09:30 -6 Th 12:52 PM 0.0 0 Th 03:48 PM 1.2 04:30PM 37 W -0.9E 06:36 PM05:00 2 07:36PM 11:36PM 70 09:59 06:57 PM PM 0.3 2.4 9 73 11:24PM
January 20 15
5
02:23 AM AM 0.5 2.5 76 01:36 12:19 AM 03:00 AM 0.8 AM 0.6 2.2 24 18 67 7 04:21 712:30 22 22 22 18 -9 AM 0.8 24 15 AM AM -0.1 2.7 -3 7 712:48 7 05:40 06:58 08:42 AM AM -0.4 0.0 06:56 AM 09:27 AM 0.1 AM -0.2 0.4 3 -6 12 10:48 -3 24 06:59 AM -0.1 -3-12 007:28 12:42 PM AM 1.1 0.0 34 02:05 Th PM 02:36 PM PM 1.0 2.1 M 02:12 01:55 F PM 03:07 PM 1.2 PM 0.9 1.7 37 27 52 Su 04:43 Su Th 03:15 06:15 PMPM 1.30.0 40 0M F03:06 06:55 PMPM 1.10.1 34 3Su Su 01:52 1.3 40 30M64 Su 07:02 PM PM 0.2 2.0 6 08:23 08:54 PM PM 0.1 -0.3 3 -9 09:40 08:06 PM 09:15 PM 0.4 PM 0.2 0.2 12 6 6 10:42 PM -0.2 10:35 11:49 PMPM 0.00.6 0 18 10:23 PM 0.2 6 09:15 PM 0.1 3
12:10 03:03 06:22 AMAM 0.6-0.4 18-12 03:00 AMAM 0.60.5 8 809:19 2323 06:45 01:12 AMPM -0.40.9 -12 27 09:05 AMAM -0.1-0.3
03:28 AM AM 0.5 2.7 82 02:35 01:15 AM 03:56 AM 0.8 AM 0.6 2.3 24 18 70 801:34 23 23 23 8 18 15 AM 0.8 24 15 8 801:54 07:57 09:52 AM AM -0.4 0.0 07:50 AM 10:23 AM 0.2 AM -0.2 0.4 6 -6 12 -3 -9 08:11 AM -0.1 -3-12 008:35 01:46 03:07 F PM 03:43 PM PM 1.1 2.1 64 Tu 03:14 02:46 Sa PM 04:06 PM 1.2 PM 1.0 1.7 37 30 52 M M F04:18 07:27 PMPM 1.30.0 40 0Tu Sa 03:59 PMPM 1.10.8 34 24M M 03:02 1.3 40 34Tu 07:52 09:23 09:54 PM PM 0.1 -0.4 08:56 PM 10:06 PM 0.3 PM 0.2 0.1 9 6 3 11:30 PM 0.0 0 11:08 PMPM 0.10.1 3 3 10:13 PM 0.1 3 3 -1210:31
12:46 12:59 04:04 AMAM 0.60.6 18 18 03:54 AMAM 0.70.5 9 910:21 2424 07:16 07:34 AMAM -0.4-0.5 -12-15 10:02 AMAM -0.2-0.4
Time 10 January
Su h m ft cm cm Slack 0.1 3 Maximum 3 1 03:19 AMSlac -0 2.3 34 70 09:34 AM h m h m knots h 2 m 0.1 3 01:00AM 3 M -1.1E 03:42 PM -0 2.4 27 73 09:59 PM04:54 3 04:54AM 07:12AM 0.4F 09:54AM 12:30PM -0.5E Sa M 10:42 0.2 3 06:48PM 6 2 1.0F 04:10 AM04:06 -0 03:00PM 2.1 37 64 10:19 AM10:42 2 10:12PM 0.2 3 6 Tu 04:28 PM -0 24 01:36AM -1.0E 10:48 PM 3 05:24AM 70 07:54AM 0.5F 05:30 2.3 3 01:18PM 05:03 -0 10:42AM 11:36 3 -0.5E SuAM Tu 0.4 34 12 11:07 AM 2 03:54PM 07:36PM 0.9F 05:06 2.0 61 6 W 05:16 PM11:24 -0 10:54PM 0.2 24 6 11:40 PM 3 02:18AM -1.0E 2.3 3 70 06:01 AM06:12 -0 05:54AM 15 08:36AM 4 0.6F 0.5 34 02:18PM -0.5E 11:59 2 11:36AM 12:36 M AM W 1.8 55 9 08:18PM Th 0.8F 06:09 PM -0 04:54PM 06:12 0.3 ● 11:36PM 24 9
05:28 AM AM 0.7 2.8 21 812:25 06:46 11:50 AM AM -0.1-0.1 -3 01:51 M 05:50 PM PM 1.1 2.1 34 08:05 11:44 PM PM 0.2 -0.3 6
6 1
21 16
7 2
22 17
8 3
23 18
9 4
24 19
04:33 AM AM 0.5 2.8 85 03:33 02:11 AM 04:49 AM 0.9 AM 0.6 2.3 27 18 70 06:26 AM AM 0.7 2.9 21 902:35 24 24 24 9 901:32 21 15 AM 0.8 24 15 9 902:58 08:55 10:58 AM AM -0.5-0.1 08:41 AM 11:14 AM 0.1 AM -0.3 0.3 3 -9 9 07:49 12:44 AM PM -0.2-0.2 -6 -6-12 09:22 AM -0.1 -3-15 -309:42 02:16 02:38 04:03 Sa PM 04:51 PM PM 1.1 2.1 W 04:14 03:32 Su PM 05:02 PM 1.3 PM 1.0 1.8 40 30 55 Tu 02:52 Tu 06:47 PM PM 1.1 2.2 34 Tu Sa 05:17 PMPM 1.31.0 40 30W Su 04:48 PMPM 1.20.9 37 27Tu Tu 04:08 1.3 40 34W64 08:34 PM 0.0 0 08:45 10:16 10:53 PM PM 0.0 -0.4 09:42 PM 10:56 PM 0.3 PM 0.1 0.1 9 3 3 09:01 PM 0.2 6 11:49 PMPM 0.10.1 3 3 11:04 PM 0.1 3 0 -1211:17 12:40 AM -0.3 24 10 12:20 01:45 AMAM 0.00.5 0 15 25 01:49 AM 0.5 15 03:31 05:34 AM AM 0.6 3.0 18 91 04:26 03:04 AM 05:39 AM 1.0 AM 0.7 2.5 30 21 76 02:33 AM 0.8 1010 10 10 25 25 25 10 AM 0.7 21 10 03:57 AM 0.9 27 07:18 25 04:44 05:01 08:10 AMAM 0.7-0.5 21-15 08:22 09:49 11:58 AM AM -0.5-0.2 09:30 AM 12:00 AM 0.1 PM -0.3 0.2 3 -9 6 08:48 AM AM -0.2 2.9 -6 10:57 AMAM -0.2-0.4 -6-12 10:26 AM -0.2 -6-15 -610:46 W 01:33 W Su 11:20 03:16 AMPM -0.41.1 -12 34Th M 03:25 04:52 Su PM 05:55 PM PM 1.1 2.1 64 Th 05:09 04:15 M PM 05:53 PM 1.3 PM 1.1 1.9 40 34 58 W 03:45 PM PM 1.1 -0.2 34 05:35 PMPM 1.20.9 37 27W W 05:06 1.3 40 34Th 07:36 PM 06:09 09:37 PMPM 1.30.0 40 0 09:34 PM 0.1 3 11:02 11:51 PM PM 0.0 -0.5 0 -15 11:58 10:25 PM 11:44 PM 0.3 PM 0.1 0.0 9 3 0 09:48 PM 0.2 2.3 6 11:49 PM 0.1 3 03:00AM -0.9E 01:31 AM 12:55 -9 11 12:33 AM -0 11 01:04 02:42 AMAM 0.00.5 0 15 12:28 02:38 AMAM 0.10.5 3 15 11 04:23 06:32 AM AM 0.6 3.1 18 94 05:17 03:55 AM 06:25 AM 1.1 AM 0.8 2.6 34 24 79 03:27 AM 0.9 -0.4 27 -12 03:46 AM AM 1.0 -0.3 30 01:24AM 0.3F 1111 26 26 11 26 26 26 11 2626 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.7F AM 1.0 30 08:04 07:25 07:05 AM12:06 2 11 04:50 05:53 09:04 AMAM 0.7-0.6 21-18 05:32 09:08 AMAM 0.8-0.4 24-12 10:40 12:54 AM PM -0.5-0.3 10:19 AM 12:43 AM 0.0 PM -0.3 0.0 0 -9 0 09:42 AM AM -0.2 2.9 -6 88 10:10 AM AM 0.0 2.9 0 88 03:36AM 06:54AM -0.7E 04:18 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.5E 11:22 AM -0.2 -6-15 -911:44 Th 02:18 PM -0.2 -6 F 01:35 PM -0.2 -6 Th 01:13 PM 0 M Tu Th M 12:14 04:12 PMPM -0.41.1 -12 34F Tu 11:50 04:08 AMPM -0.31.0 -9 30Th Th 05:36 M PM 06:53 PM PM 1.1 2.2 F05:59 04:55 Tu PM 06:40 PM 1.3 PM 1.1 2.0 40 34 61 Th 04:30 PM 1.1 34 F 04:34 PM Sa 1.2 09:42AM 37 01:42PM 1.2F 06:00PM 09:12PM 0.7F 05:54 1.3 40 34F 67 Su 07:42 07:21 PM10:12 2 ● 08:21 10:33 06:19 10:20 PMPM 1.30.0 40 0 11:06 PM 0.0 0 10:28 PM PM 0.2 2.4 6 73 10:42 PM PM 0.2 2.6 6 79 06:57 PMPM 1.20.0 37 0 11:43 PM 0.0 0 05:24PM 08:36PM -1.0E 05:48
●
●
12:460.2 AM -0.5 -1512:36 AM 12:30 0.2 AM 6 27 12 27 01:04 03:26 AMAM 0.00.5 0 15 12:29 AM 04:45 AM 0.9 -0.2 0 15 05:11 AM AM 0.7 6 21 2727 1212 2727 07:25 AM 07:08 1.2 AM 37 -9 06:18 09:53 AMAM 0.9-0.5 27-15 05:39 AM 1.1-0.4 3.1 34-12 9406:06 11:07 AM -0.3 2.7 24-18 11:29 AM Tu 01:47 PM -0.4 Sa -12 12:41 W PM 01:24 0.0 PM -0.1 05:05 12:41 04:48 PMPM -0.31.0 -9 30F F12:13 PMPM -0.21.0 -6 30 Sa 05:34 PM 1.1 0 34 F Tu 01:04 PMPM -0.41.2 -12 37Sa W 06:16 07:461.2 PM 2.3 7006:46 PM 07:241.3 PM 2.1 40 0 11:25 11:03 06:36 PM 37 PMPM 1.30.0 40 0 07:39 PMPM 1.20.0 37 0○ 07:02 ○ 11:46 PM 0.0
-6 12 01:42 -12 12 01:21 AM -0 02:18 AM AM 0.9 -0.4 27 -12 04:39 AM AM 1.2 -0.4 37 12 04:16 2727 12:12AM 03:36AM -0.9E 82 08:08 07:46 AM 2 08:46 10:32 AM AM -0.2 2.9 -6 88 11:03 AM AM 0.0 3.0 0 91 12:30AM 02:30AM 07:00AM 0.8F -3 Sa 02:16 PM -0.3 -9 10:06AM F 0.3F 01:52 PM01:00 0 F 02:58 PM -0.2 -6 F 05:09 PM 1.1 34 Sa 05:17 PM 1.2 04:36AM 37 07:48AM -0.7E 05:18 -0.6E 64 11:05 08:01 PM 2 2.8 01:36PM 85 04:18PM Tu W 09:02 ○ 08:27 PM PM 0.1 2.5 3 76 11:23 PM PM 0.1 3 10:36AM 02:30PM 1.3F 07:18PM 10:12PM 0.5F Su M 10:54 06:12PM 09:30PM -1.1E ◐06:30 01:39 AM -1501:13 AM 01:150.2 AM -0.3 6 -9 13 12:21 AM 0.0 -0.5 03:02 02:30 13 28 04:30 04:13 01:04 AM 0.2 6 0 AM AM 1.0 -0.3 30 -9 05:30 AM AM 1.3 -0.4 40 -12 13 02:03 AM -0 02:22 AMAM 0.00.5 0 15 01:40 AMAM 0.00.5 0 15 05:36 AM 0.9 2.8 1313 13 05:00 2828 1313 2828 2828 08:15 AM AM 07:50 1.4 AM 43 27 85 08:23 AM 2 05:58 AM 0.7 3.1 09:24 08:50 10:49 10:36 06:24 AM 1.1 34 21 9406:55 AM AM -0.1 2.8 -3 85 11:56 AM AM 0.0 3.0 01:00AM 0 91 04:24AM 07:28 AMAM 0.8-0.6 24-18 07:05 AMAM 1.0-0.5 30-15 11:57 AM -0.3-0.2 -9 -6 11:18 -0.8E W 02:36 PM -0.4 Su -12 01:36 Th PM 02:04 -0.1 PM -3 Sa 02:27 PM 0 Sa 12:16 PM -0.4 -12 Sa 03:36 PM -0.2 -6 Su 02:59 PM -0.4 -12 05:54 05:27 -0.2 -6 Sa 05:45 PM 1.0 30 Su 05:59 PM 1.1 01:24AM 34 Sa W 01:51 PMPM -0.31.1 -9 34Su Th 01:33 PMPM -0.31.0 -9 30Sa 12:59 PM Su 06:14 PM 1.0 2.2 03:30AM 0.4F 07:36AM 11:00AM 0.9F 08:36 PM 08:06 1.3 PM 40 30 67 11:40 08:38 PM01:48 2 06:53 PM 1.0 2.3 09:42 09:12 PM 2.9 88 ● PM ○ PM ● -0.7E 11:45 1.2 37 30○ 7007:31 PM PM 0.1 2.5 3 76 05:42AM 08:48AM 06:12 34 PMPM 1.20.0 37 0● 07:12 ●08:18 PM 1.1 ○07:44 ● ○ 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E Th W 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F 0.4F 08:42PM 11:12PM TuAM11:36 12:58 02:30 AM AM 0.0 -0.5 0 -1501:49 AM 02:000.1 AM -0.3 3 -9 14 03:45 AM -0.2 34 -6 12:04 AM M0.0 ◑ 03:43 -0 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E 07:12 14 14 29 29 14 02:55 12:12 AM AM 0.0 0.0 0 0 05:00 AM 0.6 18 01:34 AM 0.1 3 06:42 AM 1.1 0 1414 29 11:21 AM -0.5 -1514 08:07 14 01:03 29 06:44 09:02 AM AM 0.8 3.0 08:311.5 AM 2.9 46 88 10:00 09:58 AM 2 08:14 05:21 AMAM 0.90.5 27 15 AM 1.2 37 24 9107:44 AM PM AM -0.1 2.6 -3 79 06:21 AM 1.4 43 01:02 Th PM 03:22 PM PM -0.3-0.4 F PM 02:450.0 PM -0.3 0 -9 Su 04:12 Su 04:00 PM 0 Su Th 02:37 11:40 PMAM -0.3-0.5 -9-15 F 06:05 PM 1.0 30Su Su 02:43 -0.1 -3 -9M-1202:32 Su 07:18 PM PM 1.0 -0.1 30 -3 M 12:49 PM 0.0 0 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.7E 07:28 09:23 PM PM 0.9 2.3 08:491.3 PM 2.3 40 70 10:20 PM 2.5 76 06:42 PM 1.1 02:12AM 10:12 PM 2 04:24AM 0.4F 08:54 06:40 PMPM 1.11.1 34 34 08:46 PM 1.2 37 27 7008:15 PM 34 08:12AM 11:48AM 1.0F 02:30 06:42AM 09:42AM -0.7E -0.7E 07:00 03:30PM 06:30PM Th F -0 12:25 AM -0.1 -3 15 01:34 03:19 AM AM -0.1-0.4 -3 -1202:25 AM 02:450.0 AM -0.4 0 -12 01:14 04:26 AM AM 0.1 -0.1 3 -3 12:47 AM 0.0 12:24PM 04:21 AM 04:12PM 1.3F 30 15 30 30 15 15 15 03:25 12:56 AM AM 0.0 0.0 0 0 03:00 AM 0.1 3 0 10:06PM W AM12:24 1515 15 08:49 30 07:12 AM Tu1.5 07:48PM 05:48 AM 0.6 18 07:31 09:47 AM AM 0.8 2.9 09:111.6 AM 2.9 49 88 07:23 10:36 AM AM 1.1 2.5 34 76 10:30 2 07:54 09:00 06:12 AMAM 0.90.5 27 15 AM 1.2 37 24 8808:34 AM 46 11:06PM -1.2E Sa 12:06 PM -0.4 -12 M 01:49 F 04:07 PM PM -0.2 -0.3 -6 Tu -9 03:30 Sa PM 03:26 0.0 PM -0.4 0 -12 M 01:46 M 04:46 PM PM 0.0 0.0 0 0 M 04:32 PM 0 M F03:23 12:29 PMPM -0.2-0.5 -6-15 M 03:26 PM 0.0 0 Tu 01:42 PM 0.1 3 06:44 PM 1.0 30 08:01 10:08 PM PM 0.8 2.3 09:331.2 PM 2.4 37 73 07:50 10:58 PM PM 0.9 2.4 27 73 07:26 PM 1.0 10:46 PM 2 09:29 07:23 PMPM 1.01.0 30 30 09:19 PM 1.1 34 24 7009:01 PM 30 12:18AM 0.4F 02:54AM 05:12AM 0.5F -0.7E 03:06 02:36AM 06:00AM AM -0.1 -3 03:04 AM 03:320.0 AM -0.4 0 -12 07:48AM -0.7E 1.1F 07:48 31 01:06 31 09:25 31AM 01:31 AM 0.0 F 0 10:36AM 09:00AM 12:42PM 31 08:05 Sa 06:39 AM 0.7 21 09:531.7 AM 2.8 52 85 05:00PM 1.3F -0.9E AM W 1.5 01:18PM 46 04:30PM 07:36PM Th 01:12 DIFFERENCES Spring DIFFERENCES Spring DIFFERENCES Spring Su 12:55 PM -0.4 -12 W 04:31 Su PM 04:080.1 PM -0.4 3 -12 08:36PM 08:30 02:37 H. PM 3 11:54PM -1.2E High Low H. Ht PM L. Ht 1.0 Range 30 High Low Ht 1.1 L. Ht 2.5 Range 76 High W Low Ht 0.1 L. Ht 11:24PM Range ○ 07:23 09:48 H. PM 10:19 PM 34 08:13 PM ●1.0 30 Sharps Island Light –3:47 –3:50 *1.18 *1.17 1.5 Mtn Pt, Magothy River +1:24 +1:40 *0.88 *0.88 1.0 Onancock Creek +3 :52 +4 :15 *0.70 *0.83 2.2 01:24AM 0.3F Havre de Grace +3:11 +3:30 *1.59 *1.59 1.9 Chesapeake Beach –1:14 –1:15 *1.12 *1.14 1.1 Stingray Point +2 :01 +2 :29 *0.48 *0.83 1.4 03:36AM 06:06AM 0.6F -0.7E 03:36 03:36AM 06:54AM 08:48AM 11:36AM -0.6E 1.2F 08:36 09:42AM 01:42PM Sevenfoot Knoll Light –0:06 –0:10 *0.82 *0.83 1.1 Cedar Point –3:16 –3:13 *1.33 *1.33 1.4 Hooper Strait Light +5 :52 +6 :04 *0.66 *0.67 2.0 Sa Su 02:12PM 05:54PM 1.2F -1.0E 02:06 05:24PM 08:36PM Th F St Michaels, Miles River –2:14 –1:58 *1.08 *1.08 1.4 Point Lookout –3:48 –3:47 *1.37 *1.33 1.4 Lynnhaven Inlet +0 :47 +1 :08 *0.77 *0.83 09:18PM 2.4 09:12 03:37 01:45 AMAM 0.00.5 1212 09:57 06:41 AMAM 0.8-0.6
10 5
25 20
11 6
26 21
12 7
27 22
13 8
28 23
14 9
29 24
All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All speeds are in knots. Tides & Currents predictions are provided by NOAA.gov 12:30AM 02:30AM 0.3F
54 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
12:36AM -1.1E -0.7E 25 04:36AM 07:48AM 15 10 30 M04:06 04:18AM 06:54AM 0.7F 1.3F 10:36AM 02:30PM Su
09:42AM 12:30PM -0.6E -1.1E 06:12PM 09:30PM Sa 09:24 03:12PM 06:42PM 1.1F 02:54 10:00PM 09:48 pon the latest information Disclaimer: available These as of the data date areofbased your request, upon theand latest may information differ from Disclaimer: available the published as These of the tide data date tables. are of based your request, upon the and latest mayinformation differ from available the published as oftide the tables. date of your request, and may differ from the pu 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.7E 04:30 M 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F Tu
F
11
31 26
09:42PM 02:18AM 05:54AM 08:36AM 11:36AM 02:18PM 04:54PM 08:18PM 11:36PM
-1.0E 0.6F -0.5E M 0.8F
18
02:48AM 06:12AM 09:12AM 12:36PM 03:18PM 06:12PM 09:06PM
-0.9E 0.8F -0.6E W 0.6F
3
03:00AM 06:06AM 09:30AM 01:00PM 04:00PM 07:18PM 09:48PM
Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown
03:00AM -0.9E 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.8E 12:24AM Source: 06:48AM NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.7F 10:00AM 0.8F 06:48AM Station 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.5E 01:30PMHarmonic 04:18PM -0.6E Th 02:00PM Tu Type: 06:00PM 09:12PM 0.7F 07:18PM 10:00PM 0.5F 08:36PM Time Zone: LST/LDT
19
4 ◑
12:12AM 07:00AM 01:36PM 07:18PM
03:36AM 10:06AM 04:18PM 10:12PM
-0.9E 0.8F -0.6E W 0.5F
20
12:48AM 07:24AM 02:30PM 08:36PM
◐ January
04:12AM 10:48AM 05:24PM 11:06PM
-0.8E 0.9F -0.6E F 0.4F
5
Slack Maximum 01:00AM 04:24AM -0.8E 07:36AM 11:00AM h m h m0.9F knots 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E Th 01:00AM -1.1E 11:12PM 0.4F 0.4F 108:42PM 04:54AM 07:12AM
12:12AM 06:36AM 01:42PM 08:06PM
03:30AM 10:00AM 04:42PM Su 10:30PM
-0.8E 1.0F -0.8E F 0.4F
01:00AM 07:12AM 02:36PM 09:24PM
04:18AM 10:54AM 05:42PM M 11:30PM
18 19
01:12AM 04:36AM -0.7E 07:36AM 11:18AM 1.1F 03:06PM 06:12PM -0.8E Sa 09:54PM
03:00PM 06:48PM
1.0F
04:06PM 07:30PM
22
0.9F
03:54PM 07:36PM 10:54PM
0.9F
06:00PM 09:12PM
0.7F
12:18AM 0.4F 02:36AM 06:00AM -0.7E 02:18AM -1.0E 09:00AM 12:42PM 1.1F 0.6F 304:30PM Sa 05:54AM 08:36AM 07:36PM -0.9E -0.5E 11:36AM 02:18PM Su edictions 11:24PM 04:54PM 08:18PM 0.8F
7
05:06PM 08:18PM 11:24PM
0.8F
01:06AM 0.3F
3
01:42AM 05:06AM -1.2E 04:42AM 1.7F 08:06AM 11:42AM 11:36AM -1.1E 02:36PM 06:12PM M 06:00PM 08:36PM 11:18PM
18
-0.8E 1.0F 03:30AM -0.9E 09:54AM Th 0.6F 03:48PM 09:42PM
18
12:00AM 1.1F 03:06AM 12:00AM 06:00AM -1.1E 09:30AM 06:36AM 01:00PM 1.0F 04:12PM 12:30PM W 07:42PM -0.9E 10:12PM 06:42PM
3
-0.6E 0.9F 04:00AM -0.7E 09:48AM 0.4F 04:00PM 10:30PM
12:42AM 06:54AM 12:54PM 07:18PM
1.5F -1.2E 1.3F Th -1.4E
18
NOAA Tidal SCurrent a on -0.8E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h 22-0.5E ee -0.6E 02:24AM 12:48AM 03:48AM 12:12AM 1.0F 12:48AM 1.1F 4
19
01:36AM 1.6F 0.9F 05:24AM -1.1E 09:00AM 06:36AM 10:18AM 02:54AM 06:00AM 04:36AM 07:30AM -0.9E 05:12AM 08:00AM -1.1E Sou ce 1.1F NOAA NOS CO OPS0.9F -0.7E 12:30PM 1.6F 03:36PM -0.9E 01:54PM 0.8F 05:06PM -0.7E 09:00AM 10:42AM 01:06PM 10:54AM 01:42PM 1.0F F Th 12:24PM F Ha Tu Th S a on Type mon c 0.3F 07:12PM -1.2E 09:30PM 0.5F 08:48PM -0.9E 11:06PM 0.3F 03:54PM 07:00PM 04:18PM 07:30PM 04:48PM 08:18PM -1.4E ◐ 10:18PM 10:30PM T me Zone LST LDT W ◑ 11:18PM Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683°
4
19
4
19
12:54AM 1.2F 05:06AM 07:48AM -0.7E 10:48AM 01:06PM 0.6F W 03:48PM 07:30PM -0.9E 10:24PM
02:48AM 05:36AM -1 08:48AM 11:42AM 1 02:36PM 05:54PM -1 09:00PM
3
NOAA T da Curren 12:18AM 1
01:42AM 1.1F 06:06AM 08:42AM -0.6E 11:42AM 01:54PM 0.5F Th 04:30PM 08:18PM -0.8E 11:06PM
4
03:54AM 06:42AM -1
La ude 36 9594° N Long National Oceanic and Mean F ood5D 297° T Mea 20 Sa F SaT mes and speeds o F max mum and m Atmospheric Administration
Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T)
01:48AM 05:06AM -0.5E 12:06AM 1.1F 03:12AM -0.7E 01:36AM 1.1F 04:36AM -0.5E 01:00AM 02:36AM 20Times 5 maximum 20 01:36AM 07:54AMand 11:42AM 06:12AM -1.1E 09:54AM 07:18AM 11:06AM 5 0.9F 20 1.1F 5 in0.8F 04:00AM 07:06AM 05:48AM 08:30AM -0.7E 06:24AM speeds of and minimum current, knots09:06AM 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 01:30PM 1.4F 04:42PM -0.9E 02:42PM 0.6F 06:00PM -0.7E 09:54AM 01:12PM 11:24AM 01:42PM 12:12PM 02:48PM 10:36PM
February
6
10:12PM 10:42PM 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.7E 12:06AM 0.3F 08:12AM 11:48AM 1.0F 02:24AM 05:48AM -0.6E 01:36AM 02:06AM 03:30PM 06:30PM -0.7E -1.0E 08:48AM 12:30PM 0.9F -1.0E F Su 210:06PM 05:24AM 07:54AM 0.5F 17 05:30AM 08:24AM 04:12PM 07:18PM -0.7E 0.8F 11:36AM 02:24PM -0.6E 11:00PM Sa 10:42AM 01:18PM -0.5E Su
3
-0.7E 01:54AM 0.9F 08:06AM -0.6E 03:12PM W 0.3F 09:36PM
12:36PM 1 Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2021 Chesapeake Bay Ent 209:54AM 03:24PM 06:48PM -1 ◐ 0 n mi N 09:54PM
Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 01:36AM 05:00AM -0.7E 12:00AM 0.3F 08:06AM 11:42AM 05:36AM h m h m0.9F knots 02:12AM h m h m-0.7E knots 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F Su Sa 01:18AM -1.1E 01:42AM -1.0E 09:48PM 04:06PM 07:18PM -0.9E 0.8F 16 04:54AM 07:42AM 0.7F 1 05:00AM 08:00AM 11:06PM 09:54AM 12:30PM -0.5E Sa 10:42AM 01:24PM -0.6E M 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E
21
F
03:42AM 10:24AM 05:06PM 10:54PM
-0.8E 1.0F -0.7E Th 0.5F
21
04:54PM 08:00PM
0.8F
Tu
F
W 0.4F 08:24PM -1.3E 10:36PM 09:54PM -0.9E 04:36PM 07:48PM 04:42PM 08:18PM ◐ 11:18PM 11:00PM March
1.6F -1.0E 0.8F 05:42PM 09:12PM -1.3E
06:00PM 08:54PM 11:42PM
0.6F
12:12AM 02:18AM 0.3F
01:12AM 1 05:00AM 07:48AM -1 11:06AM 01:30PM 0 04:18PM 07:48PM -1 10:48PM
January U.S. Department of Commerce February
Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 12:42AM 0.3F 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F 12:12AM S a 02:00AM Ma 1.2F mum S a 02:30AM Ma 1.0F mum S a 03:42AM Ma 1.7F mum S a 03:24AM Ma 1.1F mum 02:48AM 06:00AM 07:06AM 10:54AM 02:30AM 05:30AM 05:18AM 07:00AM 07:36AM 07:54AM 10:30AM -0.7E h m h m-0.5E knots 08:12AM h -1.0E m h m1.1F knots 09:24AM h -0.6E m h m-0.4E knots 10:12AM -1.0E 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F m m m m 10:54AM 02:06PM 1.2F 12:18PM 02:30PM 0.5F 01:42PM 04:00PMm 0.6F Su 02:06PM m04:00PMm 0.3F Sa Sa Su 02:06AM -0.8E 12:24AM -0.9E 01:48AM -0.8Em W Th Sa 04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 09:36PM 11:48PM 03:42PM 07:00PM AM AM E 0.3F AM AM E -0.7E AM AM E 06:48PM 10:12PM AM AM E -1.3E 05:18PM -0.9E -1.3E -0.7E 16 1 16 05:18AM 08:30AM 0.8F 03:36AM 06:42AM 0.9F 04:54AM 08:12AM 0.9F 10:12PM ◑ 08:42PM ◐ 09:06PM 105:18PM 16 106:42PM 16 11:36PM 11:00PM AM 12:48PM AM 02:30PM AM AM AM ◑ 11:54PM 11:54AM ◑ 02:48PM -0.7E AM 09:48AM -0.8E AM 11:30AM -0.8E AM
6
Tu
05:54PM 08:42PM F
6
21 For21 6 21 6 more information check out www.noaa.gov
M 0.6F PM
PM 06:54PM E Sa 03:54PM
Tu 0.8F PM
PM 08:36PM E M 05:48PM
0.6F PM
PM PM PM 11:24PM PM PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 09:54PM 01:06AM 0.3F 01:36AM 0.3F 02:06AM 05:18AM -0.6E 01:06AM 0.3F 03:00AM 1.4F 12:12AM 03:30AM 1.0F 01:12AM 04:48AM 03:18AM 06:36AM -0.6E 03:54AM 07:00AM -0.5E 08:06AM -1.0E 11:54AM 1.1F 03:36AM -0.5E 06:30AM -0.4E 06:30AM 09:18AM 08:06AM 10:18AM 08:42AM 11:18AM 02:18AM 02:48AM -0.7E 01:06AM 02:30AM -0.7E 05:18PM 01:18PM 1.2F -0.9E 01:30PM 1.0F 03:36PM 1.0F 06:54PM -0.9E -0.9E 09:06AM 0.4F 01:00PM 0.8F 12:06PM 03:00PM M 09:36AM Su 03:06PM M 03:30PM Th Su AM AM F E 01:24PM AM AM E -0.8E AM 209:24AM 2 17 05:36AM 08:42AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 0.8F 09:36PM 04:06AM 07:24AM 1.0F 09:54PM 05:24AM 08:48AM 0.9F 11:12PM 05:00PM 08:18PM -0.9E 0.9F 17 05:12PM 08:30PM -0.8E 10:42PM 04:36PM 08:00PM -1.4E 06:12PM -0.9E 206:12PM 17 207:54PM AM 10:42AM AM 01:42PM AM 12:12PM AM -0.9E W -0.8E AM 11:48PM PM 03:18PM Tu 12:06PM 02:54PM -0.7E W 12:48PM 03:42PM -0.6E Tu PM PM E PM E PM
22
02:30AM 1.1F 07:00AM 09:36AM -0.6E 12:48PM 02:48PM 0.4F 05:30PM 09:12PM -0.7E 11:54PM
7
Sa 07:00PM 09:36PM
7
0.4F
12:24AM 02:36AM 0.3F
22
22
PM
Su 04:54PM 07:42PM PM 10:36PM
0.7F
12:54AM 0.4F
7
PM
Tu 06:42PM 09:18PM
0.5F
02:06AM 0.3F
PM
PM PM
E Tu
1.8F -1.1E 0.6F M E AM -1.3E PM
22
PM
12:48AM 08:42AM 03:06PM 08:00PM 17
E W
PM PM
PM
04:24AM 11:30AM 05:12PM 11:06PM AM AM PM PM
S a 02:12AM Ma 1m 06:12AM 09:00AM -1 12:24PM m02:36PMm 0 AM 08:54PM -1A 105:24PM A 11:48PM AM
E M
PM PM
P P
PM PM
P P
1.1F 03:24AM 1 -0.8E 07:24AM 10:00AM -1 0.4F Su 01:48PM 04:00PM 0 AM AM A -0.8E 06:42PM 09:54PM -1A AM E 2 AM
7
PM PM
E
Tu
12:42AM 04:06AM 1.6F 01:00AM 04:30AM 1.1F 02:18AM 06:00AM 1.9F 01:48AM 05:24AM 1.3F 12:54AM 04:36AM 1 23 03:18AM 06:36AM 23 Station 8Depth: 23 04:42AM -0.6E 8 04:30AM 07:42AM -0.6E 04:54AM 07:48AM -0.5E 03:24AM -0.6E 07:30AM -0.4E T4996 Depth: Unknown ID: cb0102 22 06:24AM feet01:42AM 803:30AM 803:06AM 23Current 07:48AM 08:54AM -0.6E 09:42AM 12:24PM -1.2E 09:24AM 12:18PM -0.9E 8 08:30AM 11:06AM -1 NOAA Tidal Predictions NOAA Tidal Predictions 02:48AM -0.9E 03:00AM -0.8ECurrent 12:12AM -0.7E 10:24AM -1.0E 23 -0.8E 11:12AM 12:00AM -0.6E AM AM E 1.0F AM AM AM A 09:30AM 01:18PM 1.0F 0.8F 10:24AM 02:12PM 1.2F 1.0F 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 09:12AM 01:00PM 10:06AM 02:00PM 0.8F 01:30PM 0.9F 02:36PM 0.4F 04:06PM 0.7F Tu 18 03:48PM 06:06PM AM 0.6F M 3 02:54PM 05:30PM 0 18 18 3 18 M 3 Tu Source: M 04:12PM Tu 04:36PM 06:12AM 09:12AM 06:06AM 09:30AM 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 04:42AM 08:06AM 1.0F 06:00AM 09:30AM 0.9F 06:36PM F Sa M A/NOS/CO-OPS NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 3 18 3 AM AM AM AM E AM AM E AM AM E AM 05:00PM 08:12PM -0.8E 05:54PM 09:12PM -1.0E 05:54PM 09:12PM -0.9E 04:36PM 07:54PM -0.9E 05:30PM 08:48PM -0.8E 07:06PM -1.5E 02:36PM 07:24PM -0.9E 04:12PM 09:00PM 08:54PM 07:54PM 11:00PM -1A 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.6E W 01:00PM 04:00PM -0.7E Th 01:42PM 04:42PM -0.6E 10:30PM 11:36AM -0.9E 10:48PM 01:00PM -0.7E AM M W Th PM PM E AM PM PM AM PM PM Dep P Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: cb0102 Depth: Station 22 feet ID: cb0102 Depth: Station 22 feet ID: cb0102 Su 0.3F 11:36PM M W Tidal Th W Predictions NOAA Tidal CurrentPMPredictions NOAA Predictions NOAA Tidal Current NOAA T 06:12PM 09:06PM 0.6F 07:18PM 09:48PM 0.5F Station 08:06PM 10:30PM 10:12PM 0.4F PM Current Harmonic Type: Harmonic PM 06:00PM 08:36PM 0.6F PM 07:42PM E PM E PM PM E PM 11:36PM 11:18PM Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: Henry NOAA/NOS/C PM PM Source: PMof Cape Baltimore Harbor Approach (offLST/LDT Sandy Point), 2021 Chesapeake Bay Ent., 2.0NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS n.mi. N12:00AM Lt., ST/LDT Time Zone: 01:24AMVA,2021 0.3F 12:06AM Station 02:06AM Type: 0.3F 01:00AM 03:12AM 0.4F Type: 01:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F 02:00AM 0.5F 12:36AM Type: 03:00AM Harmonic 0.4F 01:42AM 05:06AM 1.8F 01:54AM Station 05:24AM 1.2F 12:12AM -1.4E Type: Harmonic -0.9E 02:06AMHarmonic 05:48AM 1 Harmonic Station Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Station Type: e03:36AM Tunnel, 24 04:18AM 9 24 9 24 03:00AM 12:06AM 03:24AM 12:24AM 03:42AM 01:00AM 04:18AM -0.6E 02:24AM -0.8E 12:48AM 03:48AM -0.5E 07:00AM 06:54AM -0.7E -0.9E 07:30AM -0.5E -0.8E 05:36AM 08:42AM -0.6E -0.8E 05:48AM 08:48AM -0.5E 04:36AM 07:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:30AM -0.5E Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683° W Latitude: 36.9594° N Longitude: 76.0182° W 9 24 9 24 9 08:54AM 11:30AM -1.1E 09:36AM 12:12PM -0.7E 03:18AM 2.0F 02:48AM 06:18AM 1.4F 09:30AM 12:12PM -1A2 Baltimore Harbor Baltimore Approach Harbor (off Sandy Baltimore Approach Point), Harbor (off 2021 Sandy Chesapeake Approach Point), (off Bay 2021 Sandy Ent., Ches AM AM AM AM Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT 409:42AM 19 4 19 4 19 06:24AM 09:24AM 06:48AM 10:00AM 0.8F 06:48AM 10:24AM 1.0F 07:12AM 10:54AM 0.9F 05:24AM 09:00AM 1.1F 06:36AM 10:18AM 0.9F 01:42PM 1.2F 0.7F 10:12AM 02:06PM 1.0F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.2F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.0F 10:18AM 02:00PM 1.0F 11:12AM 02:54PM 0.9F 4 19 4 19 4 02:54PM 05:18PM 0.8F Su 0.4F TuE76.3683° 10:36AM 01:18PM -1.3E 10:06AM 01:00PM 06:36PM 0 AM AM E 03:36PM AM AM AM Dir. AM297° AM Ebb-1.1E AM E 03:42PM AM A Su Tu W Tu W 05:42PM Sa WE (T) Tu Flood Dir. Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) Mean Flood Mean Dir. 112° (T) 76.3683° Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: Latitude: 39.0130° WN Longitude: Latitude: 76.3683° 39.0130° Longitude: Latitude: 36.9 gh and Low Waters 12:36PM 03:18PM 01:30PM 04:18PM 02:00PM 05:06PM -0.8E(T) 02:36PM 05:42PM -0.7E 12:30PM 03:36PM -0.9EN 01:54PM 05:06PM -0.7E 05:24PM 08:36PM -1.0E -0.5E Tu 05:48PM 09:06PM -0.9E -0.6E Mean 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.1E25° 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.0E 05:30PM 08:48PM -0.9E 06:18PM 09:36PM -0.8E M Th F Th F AM PM AM PM AM PM AM WN PM P 08:00PM 11:24PM -1.5E 08:24PM 11:42PM -0.9E 04:48PM 07:24PM 0.8F 0.8F 09:00PM AM M Tu Th F04:24PM 06:48PM Th
March
08:36PM 10:54PM 0.4F 09:24PM 11:30PM 0.3F Mean 0.5F(T) 08:48PM 11:06PM 0.3F PM 07:12PM PM 09:30PM E PM Mean PM Ebb E Dir. PM PM PM 25°(T) PM Mean E Mean PM 189 Dir. 25° Mean Flood Dir. 189° 25° (T) (T) maximum Mean MeanEEbb Flood Dir. Dir. 189° (T) Ebbin Flood Dir. DirP ◑Harbor ◐ and minimum current, Times0.5Fand speeds ofApproach maximum inFlood knots Times and speeds and minimum current, knots Baltimore Chesapeake Bay ◑09:54PM ◐09:36PM PM PM ofEntrance PM PM Times and speeds of maximum TimesPMand andspeeds minimum of maximum current, Times in and and knots speeds minimum of maximum current, Times inand knots and minimum speeds ofcur m
07:18PM 10:00PM
(2.0 n.mi. N -0.5E of Cape 12:30AM 02:30AM 0.3F -0.9E 01:00AM 03:00AM 0.3F -0.8E 04:06AM 0.5F -0.7E 01:42AM 04:06AM 0.5F 12:24AM 02:54AM 0.6F 01:06AM 03:42AM 0.5F (Off01:42AM Sandy Point) 02:36AM 2.1F 02:36AM 1.3F 01:06AMHenry -1.5E Lt.) 12:48AM -1.2E 12:06AM -1 12:12AM 03:36AM 12:48AM 04:12AM 01:12AM 04:36AM 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.5E 06:12AM 12:06AM 03:12AM -0.7E 06:06AM 01:36AM 04:36AM AM AM AM AM A Height Time Height 07:48AM -0.7E 05:18AM 08:18AM -0.5E 0.9F 5 06:42AM 09:36AM 06:42AM 09:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:36AM -0.7E 06:30AM 09:30AM -0.6E -0.7E 1.1F 20 -1.3E 10:12AM -0.9E 2.0F 03:42AM 07:06AM 1.6FJanuary 03:18AM 06:54AM 1 504:36AM 5 20 07:00AM 10:06AM 0.8F 20 07:24AM 10:48AM 07:36AM 11:18AM 07:54AM 11:42AM 0.9F 12:36PM 06:12AM 09:54AM 1.1F 01:00PM 07:18AM 11:06AM 0.8F 07:48AM 509:54AM 20 504:18AM 20 AM E 5 AM AM E 1.0F AM AM E 0.9F AM AM E March AM AM A January January February January February January March February January February March Fe 10:36AM 02:30PM 1.3F -0.6E 10:54AM 02:48PM 1.1F -0.6E 12:18PM 03:54PM 1.1F 11:24AM 03:00PM 12:12PM 03:42PM 12:24PM 04:06PM 1.2F -0.8E 04:06PM 06:30PM 0.8F 04:24PM 06:36PM 0.6F 11:24AM 02:06PM -1.3E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.2E 10:18AM 01:00PM -1P 01:36PM 04:18PM 02:30PM 05:24PM 03:06PM 06:12PM 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 01:30PM 04:42PM -0.9E 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E M W Th W Th PM PM AM PM AM PM PM PM AM Su M W Th W F Sa F Sa ftTu cm h m0.5F W ft 08:36PM cm 11:06PM Tu W F05:24PM 08:06PM 1.0F Sa F04:18PM 07:18PM 06:12PM 09:30PM -1.1E 06:30PM 09:48PM -1.0E 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.0E 06:24PM 09:36PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -0.9E 07:30PM 10:48PM -1.1E 09:00PM 09:18PM 04:54PM 07:30PM 1.0F 1 07:18PM 10:12PM 0.4F 09:54PM 10:36PM 08:24PM 10:36PM 0.4F 09:54PM ck Slack Maximum SlackSlack Maximum Slack Maximum SlackSlack Maximum Slack SlackPM Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum PM PM E Slack PM E PM E Slack PM PM E Slack PM Maxim Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum MaximumMaximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum SlackPM Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum SlacP 0.5 Maximum -15 04:58 Slack AM ◐ 0.0Maximum 0 ◐ 10:24PM PM 10:00PM PM 10:48PM PM PM 2.9 88 knots11:03 AM h h knots h h mh hh mm knots knots mh hh knots knots h mh hm mh mknots hh knots h m knots h mh hmknots mh mknots hh knots h m knots h mh hmknots mh mknots hh knots h m knots h h hmkn m m h m h m m 2.5hh m m 76knots knots h m m h mhh m m h mknots knots h m hmm m h knots h hm m mh mknots knots h hhmm m h knots h hm m mh mknots knots h mm m h hm mm h knots knots h mm m h hm mmh hmknots knots h mm m h hm mmh hmknots knots h mm m h hm mmh mknots knots 01:00AM 01:18AM 01:00AM -1.1E -1.1E 03:30AM -1.2E 01:42AM 01:18AM -1.0E 01:00AM -1.1E -1.1E 02:06AM 01:42AM -0.8E 01:18AM 12:18AM -1.0E -1.1E 03:30AM -1.2E 12:24AM 02:06AM -0.9E 01:42AM 01:24AM -0.8E 12:18AM -1.0E 04:36AM 03:30AM -1.4E 01:48AM -1.2E 12:24AM -0.8E 02:06AM 01:48AM -0.9E 01:24AM -0.8E 04:54AM 12:18AM 04:36AM -1.4E 03:30AM -1.4E 01:48AM -1.2E 12:24AM 03:06AM -0.8E 01:48AM -0.9E 06:06AM 01:24AM 04:54AM -1.0E 04:36A -1 0.5 -15 Tu 05:03 PM 01:48AM 0.1 3-1.1E 01:18AM -1.1E 01:42AM -1.0E 02:06AM -0.8E 12:18AM 12:24AM -0.9E 01:24AM 04:36AM -1.4E 01:48AM -0.8E 01:48AM 04:54AM -1.4E 03:06AM 06:06AM -1.0E 12:48AM 03:42AM -1.6E 02:54AM 05:42AM 01:00AM 04:24AM 01:36AM 05:00AM 12:00AM 0.3F 12:42AM 0.3F 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F 03:54AM 0.3F 02:24AM 04:54AM 0.6F 02:12AM 04:42AM 0.6F 01:00AM 03:42AM 0.7F 01:42AM 04:24AM 0.6F AM AM AM AM AM A 1 -0.8E 16 -0.7E 1 1 10:06AM 16 1 16 1 16 1 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 0.9F 16 1 16 1 16 1.8F 1 16 16-1.1E 1 12:24AM -1.6E 12:30AM -1.0E 02:00AM -1.6E 01:30AM -1.4E 01:06AM -1 04:54AM 07:12AM 04:54AM 04:54AM 07:42AM 07:12AM 0.7F 0.4F 05:00AM 04:54AM 08:00AM 04:54AM 07:42AM 0.8F 07:12AM 0.7F 0.4F 05:18AM 05:00AM 08:30AM 04:54AM 08:00AM 0.8F 07:42AM 06:24AM 0.8F 10:06AM 0.7F 03:36AM 05:18AM 1.8F 06:42AM 05:00AM 08:30AM 0.9F 08:00AM 08:00AM 0.8F 11:12AM 0.8F 04:54AM 10:06AM 03:36AM 1.5F 08:12AM 05:18AM 1.8F 06:42AM 08:30AM 07:54AM 0.9F 08:00AM 11:18AM 0.8F 06:24AM 11:12AM 04:54AM 1.6F 10:06AM 03:36AM 1.5F 08:12AM 06:42AM 09:24AM 0.9F 11:48AM 0.9F 08:00AM 11:18AM 0.8F 11:12A 04:54 1 3.0 91 11:21 PM 21 2.7 820.4F 605:42AM 6 21 6 21 603:24AM 21 606:24AM 21 607:54AM 4AM 07:42AM 0.7F 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.8F 05:18AM 08:30AM 0.8F 06:24AM 03:36AM 1.8F 06:42AM 0.9F 08:00AM 11:12AM 04:54AM 1.5F 08:12AM 0.9F 07:54AM 11:18AM 1.6F 09:24AM 11:48AM 0.8F 06:54AM 10:06AM 1.6F 09:12AM 11:36AM 0.8F 07:36AM 11:00AM 0.9F 08:06AM 11:42AM 0.9F 02:12AM 05:36AM -0.7E 02:48AM 06:00AM -0.5E 07:06AM 10:54AM 1.1F 02:30AM 05:30AM -0.4E AM AM E -0.7E AM AM E -0.7E AM AM E -0.8E AM AM E -0.8E AM -0.9E 08:48AM -0.7E 06:12AM 09:06AM -0.5E 07:42AM 10:36AM -0.7E 07:30AM 10:24AM -0.7E 06:36AM 09:36AM -0.7E 07:18AM 10:18AM -0.7E 09:54AM 12:30PM -0.5E 10:42AM 09:54AM 01:24PM 12:30PM -0.6E -0.5E 11:06AM 10:42AM 02:00PM 09:54AM 01:24PM -0.7E 12:30PM -0.6E -0.5E 11:54AM 11:06AM 02:48PM 10:42AM 02:00PM -0.7E 01:24PM 01:48PM -0.6E 04:42PM 09:48AM 11:54AM -1.1E 12:48PM 11:06AM 02:48PM -0.8E 02:00PM 02:42PM 01:48PM -0.7E 05:12PM 11:30AM 04:42PM 09:48AM -0.9E 02:30PM 11:54AM -1.1E 12:48PM 02:48PM 02:36PM -0.7E 05:36PM 01:48PM 05:12PM 11:30AM -1.3E 04:42PM 09:48AM -0.9E 02:30PM 12:48PM 02:42PM 02:36PM -0.8E 05:54PM 02:42PM 05:36PM 05:12P 11:30 -1A 07:06AM 2.2F 03:18AM 06:54AM 1.5F 05:12AM 08:36AM 1.9F 04:30AM 07:48AM 1.7F 04:18AM 07:42AM 1M F -0.6E Sa -0.6E F M 04:42PM Sa F Tu M Sa F M Tu M Sa F Tu M Tu M -0.8E Sa F02:42PM Tu M Tu -1.1E M Sa Tu 02:36PM 05:30PM 03:24PM 06:18PM 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F 2AM 01:24PM -0.6E 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E 11:54AM 02:48PM -0.7E 01:48PM 09:48AM -1.1E 12:48PM -0.8E 02:42PM 05:12PM 11:30AM -0.9E 02:30PM -0.8E 02:36PM 05:36PM -1.3E 02:42PM 05:54PM -0.9E 01:18PM 04:12PM -1.5E 02:24PM 05:30PM -1.1E AM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM P 03:00PM 06:48PM 1.0F 04:06PM 03:00PM 07:30PM 06:48PM 0.9F 1.0F 04:54PM 04:06PM 08:00PM 03:00PM 07:30PM 0.8F 06:48PM 0.9F 1.0F 05:54PM 04:54PM 08:42PM 04:06PM 08:00PM 0.6F 07:30PM 08:12PM 0.8F 10:36PM 0.9F 03:54PM 05:54PM 0.7F 06:54PM 04:54PM 08:42PM 0.8F 08:00PM 08:18PM 0.6F 08:12PM 11:18PM 0.8F 05:48PM 10:36PM 03:54PM 1.0F 08:36PM 05:54PM 0.7F 06:54PM 0.6F 08:42PM 08:48PM 0.8F 08:18PM 11:48PM 0.6F 08:12PM 11:18PM 05:48PM 1.4F 10:36PM 03:54PM 1.0F 08:36PM 0.7F 06:54PM 08:54PM 0.6F 08:48PM 0.8F 08:18PM 11:48PM 11:18P 05:48 1 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F 11:36AM 03:36PM 1.1F 01:18PM 04:54PM 1.1F 01:12PM 04:42PM 1.0F 12:30PM 03:54PM 1.0F 01:12PM 04:30PM 0.9F W Th Sa Su Sa Su M Tu F M Sa Tu M Tu M Tu W Th Sa Su Sa 10:48AM 01:30PM -1.4E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.1E 12:06PM 02:42PM -1.2E 11:24AM 02:12PM -1.3E 11:06AM 01:42PM -1 Tu F11:00PM Th F09:54PM M Tu Th F07:24PM Th 08:42PM 11:12PM 0.4F 09:48PM 04:06PM 07:18PM -0.9E 04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 09:36PM 11:48PM 0.3F 03:42PM 07:00PM -0.7E 10:12PM 10:42PM 10:12PM 10:42PM 10:12PM 11:30PM 11:00PM 10:42PM 11:30PM 11:00PM 11:24PM 09:54PM 11:30PM 11:24PM 09:54PM 11:24 0.4 -12 05:35 AM 07:12PM 0.2 60.8F -1.0E Th PM PM E PM PM E PM PM E PM PM E PM P 6PM 07:30PM 0.9F 04:54PM 08:00PM 05:54PM 08:42PM 0.6F 08:12PM 10:36PM 03:54PM 0.7F 06:54PM 0.8F 08:18PM 11:18PM 05:48PM 1.0F 08:36PM 0.6F 08:48PM 11:48PM 1.4F 08:54PM 10:36PM 1.7F 08:30PM 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E 10:30PM 08:12PM 11:30PM -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.0E 07:48PM 10:54PM -0.9E 07:24PM 0.8F 05:06PM 07:18PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:42PM 1.1F 05:24PM 08:12PM 1.2F 1 ◑ ◑ ◐ 11:00PM ◑05:00PM ◑04:48PM 07:54PM PM PM 2.8 85 11:37 11:00PM AM 2.4 73 ●11:30PM 11:06PM 2PM 09:54PM 11:36PM 11:24PM ●02:24AM 09:54PM 10:00PM 11:36PM 11:06PM 10:48PM 01:36AM 6-1.0E 02:06AM 01:36AM -1.0E -1.0E 02:18AM 02:06AM -0.9E 01:36AM -1.0E -1.0E 02:48AM 02:18AM 02:06AM 01:00AM -0.9E -1.0E 04:12AM -1.2E 01:06AM 02:48AM 02:18AM -0.7E 01:00AM -0.9E 05:36AM 04:12AM -1.3E 02:30AM -1.2E 01:06AM 02:48AM 02:48AM -0.9E -0.7E 05:48AM 01:00AM 05:36AM -1.3E 04:12AM -1.3E 02:30AM 01:06AM -0.7E 02:48AM -0.9E 12:12AM 02:24AM 05:48AM 1.3F 05:36A -1 0.4 -12 W 05:37 PM 0.2 2 -0.7E 17 2 2 17 2 17 0.5F 2 17 2 -0.7E 2 -0.6E 17 2 17 -0.9E 2 17 2 17 2 -0.7E 17 202:24AM 17 2 17 -1.2E 2 17 17-0.8E 2 05:24AM 07:54AM790.5F 05:30AM 05:24AM 08:24AM 07:54AM 0.8F 0.5F 05:36AM 05:30AM 08:42AM 05:24AM 08:24AM 0.9F 07:54AM 0.8F 05:54AM 05:36AM 09:18AM 05:30AM 08:42AM 0.8F 08:24AM 07:12AM 0.9F 10:54AM 0.8F 04:06AM 05:54AM 1.7F 07:24AM 05:36AM 09:18AM 1.0F 08:42AM 09:00AM 0.8F 07:12AM 11:54AM 0.9F 05:24AM 10:54AM 04:06AM 1.2F 08:48AM 05:54AM 1.7F 07:24AM 0.9F 09:18AM 08:54AM 1.0F 09:00AM 12:06PM 0.8F 07:12AM 11:54AM 05:24AM 1.5F 10:54AM 04:06AM 1.2F 08:48AM 1.7F 07:24AM 04:06AM 0.9F 08:54AM 07:00AM 1.0F 09:00AM 12:06PM 11:54A 05:24 1 01:48AM 05:06AM 12:06AM 0.3F 01:06AM 0.3F 01:36AM 0.3F 02:06AM 05:18AM 01:06AM 0.3F AM AM AM AM AM AM AM A 3.0 91 11:57 PM 2.6 02:06AM -1.0E 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07:00PM 10:18PM 07:12PM 10:30PM 08:12PM 11:30PM -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.0E 07:48PM 10:54PM -0.9E 12:54AM 04:00AM -1.4E ●06:30AM 0.1 3 PM 04:30AM 0.5 15-0.7E PM PM PM PM PM -0.7E 03:30PM 06:30PM 08:48AM 03:30PM 12:30PM 06:30PM 0.9F -0.7E 09:24AM 08:48AM 01:18PM 03:30PM 12:30PM 1.2F 06:30PM 0.9F -0.7E 09:36AM 09:24AM 01:30PM 08:48AM 01:18PM 1.0F 12:30PM 12:06PM 1.2F 03:06PM 0.9F 03:36PM 09:36AM 1.0F 06:54PM 09:24AM 01:30PM -0.9E 01:18PM 01:24PM 1.0F 12:06PM 03:30PM 1.2F 09:06AM 03:06PM 03:36PM 0.4F 01:00PM 09:36AM 1.0F 06:54PM 01:30PM 03:00PM -0.9E 01:24PM 05:18PM 1.0F 12:06PM 03:30PM 09:06AM 0.6F 03:06PM 03:36PM 0.4F 01:00PM 06:54PM 03:06PM 0.8F -0.9E 05:12PM 01:24PM 05:18PM 0.4F 03:30P 09:06 0S 6AM 11:42AM 0.9F09:42 02:12AM 05:36AM -0.7E -0.7E 02:48AM 06:00AM -0.5E 08:12AM 07:06AM -1.0E 10:54AM 1.1F 07:00AM 09:24AM 02:30AM -0.6E 05:30AM -0.4E 07:36AM 10:12AM -1.0E 07:54AM 10:30AM -0.7E 06:12AM 09:00AM -1.1E 06:54AM 10:00AM ● Th M F Th Su F Th M Su F Th Su M Su F Th M Su M Su 0.8F F Th M Su M 1.0F Su F03:00PM M 07:18AM 0.7F 04:18AM 07:48AM 1.2F 01:48PM 04:42PM -1.1E 02:42PM 05:12PM -0.9E 02:36PM 05:36PM -1.3E 02:42PM 05:54PM -0.9E 01:18PM 04:12PM -1.5E 02:24PM 05:30PM -1 10:42AM 01:24PM -0.6E 11:06AM 02:00PM 11:54AM 02:48PM -0.7E 09:48AM 12:48PM -0.8E 11:30AM 02:30PM -0.8E 07:06AM 10:30AM 1.7F F05:18AM Sa M Tu M Tu Tu M Tu 10:06PM 04:12PM 10:06PM 07:18PM -0.7E 05:00PM 04:12PM 08:18PM 10:06PM 07:18PM -0.9E -0.7E 02:30PM 05:12PM 05:00PM 08:30PM 04:12PM 08:18PM -0.8E 07:18PM 06:12PM -0.9E -0.7E 09:36PM 10:42PM 05:12PM -1.4E 05:00PM 08:30PM 08:18PM 06:12PM -0.8E 06:12PM -0.9E 09:54PM 04:36PM 09:36PM 10:42PM -0.9E 08:00PM 05:12PM -1.4E -0.8E 08:30PM 07:54PM 06:12PM -0.8E 11:12PM 06:12PM 09:54PM 04:36PM -1.3E 09:36PM 10:42PM -0.9E 08:00PM -1.4E 08:00PM -0.8E 07:54PM 11:06PM 06:12PM 11:12PM -0.8E 09:54P 04:36 -1 4PM 06:18PM -0.6E 0.9F 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F -0.6E 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 10:54AM 02:06PM 02:36PM 1.2F 05:48PM -0.9E 12:18PM 08:06AM 0.5F 12:00PM 0.8F 01:42PM 04:00PM 0.6F 02:06PM 04:00PM 0.3F 12:24PM 02:36PM 0.6F 01:30PM 03:24PM 0.3F 10:18AM 01:06PM 11:12AM 02:24PM -1.0E 08:12PM 10:36PM 0.7F 08:18PM 11:18PM 1.0F 08:48PM 11:48PM 1.4F 08:54PM 07:24PM 10:36PM 1.7F 08:30PM 04:06PM 07:30PM 04:54PM 08:00PM 0.8F 05:54PM 08:42PM 0.6F 03:54PM 06:54PM 0.8F 05:48PM 08:36PM 0.6F Sa Su W Sa Th Su Sa Su Sa Su 01:54PM 04:48PM -1.3E Su W 11:00PM 11:00PM 11:00PM 11:48PM 11:48PM 11:48 Su AM -0.7E E AM E 0.6F 10:12PM -0.7E AM 05:24PM E E 2.7 82 04:15 04:06PM AM 03:54PM 2.4 73-0.9E 8PM 07:18PM 04:18PM 07:42PM 05:18PM 08:42PM 09:36PM -1.3E 11:48PM 05:18PM 09:06PM 03:42PM -0.9E 07:00PM 06:42PM 10:12PM -1.3E 06:48PM -1.2E AM 05:54PM -0.6E A 07:12PM 0.9F 0.4F 05:54PM 08:30PM 10:42PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 09:54PM 11:24PM 02:12AM 04:24AM 0.4F 02:30AM 04:42AM 03:00AM-0.8E 05:42AM 02:36AM 0.3F 05:24AM 0.8F 11:00PM 02:06AM 05:06AM 0.8F AM 08:00PM 1.2F 12 0.7F 27 12 -0.8E 27 08:54PM 12 09:30PM AM 01:42AM AM 04:30AM AM AM AM AM AM AM A ◑ 0.3F ◑ 0.7F ◐ ◑ 0.3F ◐ 1.6F 0.2 6 10:41-0.7E AM 27 0.607:00AM 18 09:54AM -0.5E 11:06PM 11:36PM 11:54PM 11:00PM 11:48PM 11:54PM 12 06:42AM 12 01:06AM 27 02:18AM 12 10:24PM 11:06PM 09:42AM 08:36AM 11:30AM 08:12AM 11:12AM 07:30AM 10:30AM -0.8E 08:06AM 11:06AM 12:18AM 0.4F 12:18AM 0.4F -0.7E 12:12AM 01:06AM 0.3F 12:18AM 0.3F -0.7E 0.4F 12:24AM 12:12AM 02:36AM 02:18AM 0.3F 01:06AM 12:42AM 04:06AM 0.3F 27 12:24AM 1.6F 12:54AM 12:12AM 02:36AM 0.4F 02:18AM 01:00AM 04:30AM 0.3F 04:06AM 02:06AM 12:24AM 1.6F 12:54AM 02:36AM 02:18AM 01:00AM 06:00AM 0.3F 12:42AM 04:30AM 04:06AM 1.1F 02:06AM 12:54AM 01:48AM 05:24AM 0.4F 01:00AM 06:00AM 04:30A 1 AM PM E 0.3F AM PM E 0.3F PM 1.1F PM E 0.4F PM 1.9F PM E 0.3F AM 1.3F P 2.1 64 Tu 04:39 PM 2.0 61-0.7E Tu -0.7E W -0.6E F12:42AM Sa F02:18AM 8 23 8 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 23 23 8 12:24PM 04:12PM 1.3F 12:24PM 04:18PM 1.1F 02:18PM 05:42PM 1.0F 02:06PM 05:24PM 1.0F 01:24PM 04:36PM 0.9F 02:12PM 05:18PM 0.9F 02:36AM 06:00AM 03:18AM 02:36AM 06:36AM 06:00AM -0.6E -0.7E 04:30AM 03:18AM 07:42AM 02:36AM 06:36AM -0.6E 06:00AM -0.6E 04:54AM 04:30AM 07:48AM 03:18AM 07:42AM -0.5E 06:36AM 07:48AM -0.6E 10:24AM 03:24AM 04:54AM -1.0E 06:24AM 04:30AM 07:48AM -0.6E 07:42AM 08:54AM -0.5E 07:48AM -0.6E 11:12AM 04:42AM 10:24AM 03:24AM -0.6E 07:30AM 04:54AM -1.0E 06:24AM -0.4E 07:48AM 09:42AM -0.6E 08:54AM -0.5E 12:24PM 07:48AM 11:12AM 04:42AM -1.2E 10:24AM 03:24AM -0.6E 07:30AM -1.0E 06:24AM 09:24AM -0.4E 09:42AM -0.6E 12:18PM 08:54AM 12:24PM -0.9E 11:12A 04:42 -1P Tu W F Sa F Sa 01:00AM 04:12AM -1.2E 02:24AM 05:36AM -1.3E 02:48AM 05:48AM -1.3E 12:12AM 1.3F 01:48AM 04:36AM -1.5E 12:00AM 1 PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM 02:06AM 10:46 -1.0E PM 0.4 02:18AM -0.9E 02:48AM -0.7E 01:06AM -0.9E 02:30AM -0.7E 0.1 12:06AM 3 12 09:00AM 12:42PM 1.1F 09:30AM 09:00AM 01:18PM 12:42PM 1.0F 1.1F 10:24AM 09:30AM 02:12PM 09:00AM 01:18PM 1.2F 12:42PM 1.0F 1.1F 10:30AM 10:24AM 02:18PM 09:30AM 02:12PM 1.0F 01:18PM 01:30PM 1.2F 04:12PM 1.0F 09:12AM 10:30AM 0.9F 01:00PM 10:24AM 02:18PM 1.0F 02:12PM 02:36PM 1.0F 01:30PM 04:36PM 1.2F 10:06AM 04:12PM 09:12AM 0.4F 02:00PM 10:30AM 0.9F 01:00PM 0.8F 02:18PM 04:06PM 1.0F 02:36PM 06:36PM 1.0F 01:30PM 04:36PM 10:06AM 0.7F 04:12PM 09:12AM 0.4F 02:00PM 0.9F 01:00PM 03:48PM 0.8F 04:06PM 06:06PM 1.0F 02:36PM 06:36PM 0.6F 04:36P 10:06 0 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.2E 07:54PM 11:12PM -1.0E 08:54PM 08:42PM 11:48PM -1.0E 07:48PM 11:00PM -0.9E 08:24PM 11:30PM -0.9E ○ 0.3F F 01:06AM 0.3F Sa F 01:36AM 0.3F M 03:00AM 02:06AM 1.4F 05:18AM -0.6E 12:12AM 03:30AM 1.0F 01:06AM 0.3F 01:12AM 04:48AM 1.8F 1.5F 04:24AM 03:24AM 1.7F 1.5F 03:36AM Sa F04:06AM Tu M 11:54AM Sa F M Tu 12:06PM M Sa F12:48AM Tu M 07:00AM Tu 1.1F -0.8E M Sa F07:48AM Tu 10:54AM M Tu M Sa Tu PM PM PM PM 1.1F 07:12AM 10:54AM 1.7F 09:00AM 1.2F 08:54AM 04:06AM 03:42AM 06:36AM -0M 05:30AM 08:24AM 0.8F 04:30PM 05:36AM 08:42AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 0.8F 07:24AM 1.0F 05:24AM 08:48AM 0.9F ○ 07:36PM -0.9E 0.9F 05:00PM 04:30PM 08:12PM 07:36PM -0.8E -0.9E 05:54PM 05:00PM 09:12PM 04:30PM 08:12PM -1.0E 07:36PM -0.8E -0.9E 05:54PM 05:54PM 09:12PM 05:00PM 09:12PM -0.9E 08:12PM 07:06PM -1.0E -0.8E 10:30PM 04:36PM 05:54PM -1.5E 07:54PM 05:54PM 09:12PM -0.9E 09:12PM 07:24PM -0.9E 07:06PM -1.0E 10:48PM 05:30PM 10:30PM 04:36PM -0.9E 08:48PM 05:54PM -1.5E 07:54PM -0.8E 09:12PM 09:00PM -0.9E 07:24PM -0.9E 07:06PM 10:48PM 05:30PM 10:30PM 04:36PM -0.9E 08:48PM -1.5E 07:54PM 08:54PM -0.8E 09:00PM -0.9E 07:24PM 10:48P 05:30 4AM 05:48AM -0.6E -0.6E 11:24PM 03:18AM 06:36AM -0.6E -0.7E 03:54AM 07:00AM -0.5E 06:30AM 09:18AM 08:06AM -1.0E 11:54AM 1.1F 08:06AM 10:18AM 03:36AM -0.5E 06:30AM -0.4E 08:42AM 11:18AM -1.1E -1.3E 08:42AM 11:30AM -0.8E 0.7F 07:24AM 10:00AM -1.1E 07:48AM 10:54AM -0.8E 0 02:30PM 05:30PM -1.1E 03:18PM 06:00PM -0.9E 03:18PM 06:24PM 10:06AM 12:24PM 01:54PM 05:00PM -1.5E 09:54AM 12:12PM 11:36AM 02:24PM 12:06PM 02:54PM 12:48PM 03:42PM -0.6E 10:42AM 01:42PM -0.9E 12:12PM 03:18PM -0.8E 11:24PM 11:24PM 11:36PM 11:36PM 11:36PM Sa Su Tu W Tu W Tu W Tu W 2.7 82 05:19 AM 06:00PM 2.5 761.2F 0.6F 8AM 12:30PM 0.9F 09:24AM 01:18PM 09:36AM 01:30PM 1.0F 12:06PM 03:06PM 03:36PM 1.0F 06:54PM -0.9E 01:24PM 03:30PM 09:06AM 0.4F 01:00PM 0.8F 03:00PM 05:18PM 0.6F AM 03:06PM 05:12PM 04:00PM 0.5F AM 04:24PM 0.4F -1 08:54PM 11:24PM 0.8F 09:36PM 06:42PM 11:30PM 1.8F 06:12PM AM E 0.5F E 03:12PM AM 0.4F -0.9E AM E 08:12PM E 02:54PM A 05:06PM 08:18PM 0.8F 08:54PM 07:00PM 09:36PM 0.4F 04:54PM 07:42PM 0.7F 06:42PM 09:18PM Su M 0.4F Th Su F and M09:00PM Su M 05:42AM Su of01:48PM Mdiffer02:30PM sclaimer: These data are 0.5F based upon the latest information available as of the date of your request, may differ from the published tidal current tables. Disclaimer: These data are-0.8E based upon the latest information available the date your request, and mayAM from the10:30PM published tidal 02:54AM 05:12AM 03:06AM 05:18AM 12:12AM -1.0E 03:06AM 06:00AM 0.8F 02:12AM 05:12AM 0.8F 02:36AM 0.9F as 0.2 6 -0.7E 11:38 AM 11:42PM 0.4 12 13 28 13 28 13 2PM 07:18PM 05:00PM 08:18PM -0.9E 05:12PM 02:06AM 08:30PM -0.8E 06:12PM 10:42PM -1.4E 06:12PM 09:54PM 04:36PM -0.9E 08:00PM 07:54PM 11:12PM -1.3E 08:00PM 11:06PM -0.8E 06:42PM 09:54PM -1.1E 07:12PM -0.6E AM AM AM AM AMof AM AM AM -0.9E 09:42PM 09:12PM 11:24PM 10:36PM 01:24AM 0.3F 12:06AM 01:24AM 0.3F 0.3F 09:36PM 01:00AM 12:06AM 03:12AM 02:06AM 0.4F 01:24AM 0.3F 0.3F 01:06AM 01:00AM 03:24AM 12:06AM 03:12AM 0.4F 02:06AM 01:42AM 0.4F 05:06AM 0.3F 28 01:06AM 1.8F 02:00AM 01:00AM 03:24AM 0.5F 03:12AM 01:54AM 0.4F 01:42AM 05:24AM 0.4F 12:36AM 05:06AM 1.2F 03:00AM 01:06AM 1.8F 02:00AM 0.4F 03:24AM 0.5F 01:54AM 12:12AM 0.4F 01:42AM 05:24AM 12:36AM -1.4E 05:06AM 1.2F 03:00AM 1.8F 02:00AM 0.4F 12:00AM 0.5F 01:54AM 12:12AM 05:24A 12:36 -1A 13 13 28 13 07:48AM 10:36AM -0.7E 07:48AM 10:42AM -0.5E 03:36AM 06:24AM 0.8F 09:00AM 12:00PM -0.8E 08:18AM 11:18AM -0.8E 08:48AM 11:54AM -0.9E 2.3 70 W 05:41 PM 28 2.2 67-0.7E 9 24 9 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 24 24 9 0PM 11:48PM PM PM E -0.6E PM PM E -0.5E PM PM E -0.6E PM PM E -0.5E PM 1.4F P 03:36AM 06:54AM 04:18AM 03:36AM 07:30AM 06:54AM -0.5E -0.7E 05:36AM 04:18AM 08:42AM 03:36AM 07:30AM -0.6E 06:54AM -0.5E -0.7E 05:48AM 05:36AM 08:48AM 04:18AM 08:42AM -0.5E 07:30AM 08:54AM -0.5E 11:30AM 04:36AM 05:48AM -1.1E 07:36AM 05:36AM 08:48AM -0.6E 08:42AM 09:36AM 08:54AM -0.6E 12:12PM 05:42AM 11:30AM 04:36AM -0.7E 08:30AM 05:48AM -1.1E 07:36AM -0.5E 08:48AM 03:18AM 09:36AM -0.5E 07:00AM 08:54AM 12:12PM 05:42AM 2.0F 11:30AM 04:36AM -0.7E 08:30AM -1.1E 07:36AM 02:48AM 03:18AM -0.6E 06:18AM 09:36AM 07:00AM 12:12P 05:42 2 W Th Sa Su Sa enerated on: Fri Nov 22 19:07:36 UTC 2019 Page 2 of 5 05:00PM 1.3F 01:12PM61.2F 05:00PM 1.1F 09:24AM 12:18PM -0.7E 03:00PM 06:12PM 0.9F 02:18PM 05:24PM 0.9F 03:06PM 06:06PM 0.8F Generated on: Fri Nov 22 19:09:38 UTC 2019 PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM -1.1E 0.0 0 11:46 PM Th0.2 09:42AM 01:42PM 10:12AM 09:42AM 02:06PM 01:42PM 1.0F 1.2F 11:24AM 10:12AM 03:12PM 09:42AM 02:06PM 1.2F 01:42PM 1.0F 1.2F 11:24AM 11:24AM 03:12PM 10:12AM 03:12PM 1.0F 02:06PM 02:54PM 1.2F 05:18PM 1.0F 10:18AM 11:24AM 0.8F 02:00PM 11:24AM 03:12PM 03:12PM 03:36PM 1.0F 02:54PM 05:42PM 1.2F 11:12AM 05:18PM 10:18AM 0.4F 02:54PM 11:24AM 0.8F 02:00PM 03:12PM 10:36AM 1.0F 03:36PM 01:18PM 1.0F 02:54PM 05:42PM 11:12AM -1.3E 05:18PM 10:18AM 0.4F 02:54PM 02:00PM 10:06AM 0.9F 10:36AM 01:00PM 1.0F 03:36PM 01:18PM 05:42P 11:12 -1P W 01:18PM Sa Su Sa Su Sa -1.2E Su -1.1E Sa Tu Su Sa W Tu Su Sa Tu W Tu Su 1.0F Sa W Tu W Tu 0.9F Su Sa W Tu W 0.8F Tu Su W T 01:54AM 05:06AM -1.2E 12:00AM 1.1F 12:42AM 1.5F 12:54AM 1.2F 02:48AM 05:36AM -1.3E 12:36AM 02:48AM -0.9E 03:00AM -0.8E 12:12AM 03:30AM -0.7E 01:42AM -0.8E 12:00AM 03:06AM -0.6E 08:36PM 11:54PM 08:30PM 11:48PM 03:06PM 06:24PM 0.9F 09:18PM 08:30PM 11:36PM -0.9E 09:06PM ● -1.0E ○ -0.9E ●04:48PM 05:24PM 08:36PM -1.0E 05:48PM 05:24PM 09:06PM 08:36PM -0.9E -1.0E 06:42PM 05:48PM 10:00PM 05:24PM 09:06PM -1.1E 08:36PM -0.9E 06:42PM 06:42PM 10:00PM 05:48PM 10:00PM -1.0E 09:06PM 08:00PM -1.1E 11:24PM 05:30PM 06:42PM -1.5E 08:48PM 06:42PM 10:00PM -0.9E 10:00PM 08:24PM -1.0E 08:00PM -1.1E 11:42PM 06:18PM 11:24PM 05:30PM -0.9E 09:36PM 06:42PM -1.5E 08:48PM -0.8E 10:00PM 04:48PM -0.9E 08:24PM -1.0E 07:24PM 08:00PM 11:42PM 06:18PM 0.8F 11:24PM 05:30PM -0.9E 09:36PM -1.5E 08:48PM 04:24PM -0.8E -0.9E 06:48PM 08:24PM 07:24PM 0.8F 11:42P 06:18 01 PM PM 01:06AM 0.3F 0.8F 12:12AM 02:18AM 0.3F 1.0F 12:24AM 02:36AM 0.3F 12:42AM 04:06AM 1.6F 12:54AM 0.4F 01:00AM 04:30AM 1.1F 02:06AM 0.3F 02:18AM 06:00AM 1.9F -1.2E 01:48AM 05:24AM 1.3F -0.7E 09:54PM 12:54AM 04:36AM 1.7F 1.3F 09:36PM 12:54AM 04:42AM 1.1F -0 ● ○06:06AM ● ○ 09:36PM 08:06AM 11:42AM 1.7F 03:30AM 06:36AM -1.1E 04:00AM 06:54AM 05:06AM 07:48AM 08:48AM 11:42AM 04:30AM 07:24AM 06:12AM 09:12AM 09:30AM 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 04:42AM 08:06AM 1.0F 06:00AM 09:30AM 0.9F 09:54PM 2.8 85 06:16 AM 2.7 82 8AM 06:36AM -0.6E 04:30AM 07:42AM -0.6E 04:54AM 07:48AM -0.5E 07:48AM 10:24AM 03:24AM -1.0E 06:24AM -0.6E 08:54AM 11:12AM 04:42AM -0.6E 07:30AM -0.4E 09:42AM 12:24PM -1.2E 09:24AM 12:18PM -0.9E 08:30AM 11:06AM -1.1E 08:48AM 11:42AM -0.8E 03:12PM 06:12PM 09:54AM 12:30PM 1.0F 09:48AM 12:54PM AM 1.3F ThE 10:48AM 01:06PM 0.6F WE 02:36PM 05:54PM -1.5E Th 10:42AM 12:54PM 0 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.6E W 01:00PM 04:00PM -0.7E Th 01:42PM 04:42PM -0.6E 11:36AM -1.1E 02:36PM -0.9E 01:00PM AM 04:12PM Su M W W Th E -0.7E AM 0.6F AM AM 0.5F A 0.1 3 12:29 PM 07:18PM 0.2 60.3F 0AM 01:18PM 1.0F 10:24AM 02:12PM 1.2F 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 01:30PM 04:12PM 09:12AM 0.9F 01:00PM 1.0F 02:36PM 04:36PM 10:06AM 0.4F 02:00PM 0.8F 04:06PM 06:36PM 0.7F 03:48PM 06:06PM 02:54PM 05:30PM 0.6F 03:24PM 05:30PM 12:30AM 02:30AM 01:00AM 12:30AM 03:00AM 02:30AM 0.3F 01:42AM 01:00AM 04:06AM 12:30AM 03:00AM 02:30AM 0.3F 0.3F 01:42AM 01:42AM 04:06AM 01:00AM 04:06AM 03:00AM 02:36AM 0.5F 06:12AM 0.3F 12:24AM 01:42AM 2.1F 02:54AM 01:42AM 04:06AM 04:06AM 02:36AM 0.5F 02:36AM 06:06AM 0.5F 01:06AM 06:12AM 12:24AM 1.3F 03:42AM 01:42AM 2.1F 02:54AM 04:06AM 0.6F 02:36AM 01:06AM 0.5F 02:36AM 06:06AM 01:06AM -1.5E 06:12AM 12:24AM 1.3F 03:42AM 02:54AM 0.5F 12:48AM 0.6F 02:36AM 01:06AM 06:06A 01:06 -1 03:48PM 06:42PM -0.9E 04:00PM 07:18PM -1.4E 03:48PM 07:30PM -0.9E 09:00PM 03:24PM 06:54PM -0 06:12PM 09:06PM 0.6F 09:48PM 0.5F 08:06PM 10:30PM 06:00PM 08:36PM 0.6F 07:42PM 10:12PM 0.4F 03:36AM 06:06AM 03:36AM 06:00AM 0.5F 12:48AM -1.0E 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.9F 12:06AM -0.9E M 0.6F Tu 10 F 0.3F M09:36PM Sa 0.5F Tu M 0.5F Tu 0.6F M 0.5F Tu 2.1F 14 29 14 14 AM AM AM AM AM AM AM -1.2E A 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 10 25 25 1 2.4 73 -0.8E Th 06:37 PM 29 2.5 76-0.7E 0PM 05:54PM 09:12PM -1.0E 05:54PM 09:12PM -0.9E 07:06PM 10:30PM 04:36PM -1.5E 07:54PM -0.9E 07:24PM 10:48PM 05:30PM -0.9E 08:48PM -0.8E 09:00PM 08:54PM 07:54PM 11:00PM -1.2E 08:24PM 11:30PM -0.7E 04:36AM 07:48AM 05:18AM 04:36AM 08:18AM 07:48AM -0.5E -0.7E 06:42AM 05:18AM 09:36AM 04:36AM 08:18AM -0.7E 07:48AM -0.5E -0.7E 06:42AM 06:42AM 09:36AM 05:18AM 09:36AM -0.6E 08:18AM 09:54AM -0.5E 12:36PM 05:42AM 06:42AM -1.3E 08:36AM 06:42AM 09:36AM -0.7E 09:36AM 10:12AM 09:54AM -0.7E 01:00PM 06:30AM 12:36PM 05:42AM -0.9E 09:30AM 06:42AM -1.3E 08:36AM -0.6E 09:36AM 04:18AM 10:12AM -0.6E 07:48AM 09:54AM 01:00PM 06:30AM 2.0F 12:36PM 05:42AM -0.9E 09:30AM -1.3E 08:36AM 03:42AM -0.6E 04:18AM -0.7E 07:06AM 10:12AM 07:48AM 1.6F 01:00P 06:30 2 14 08:12PM 14 14 29 09:42PM 10:24PM 09:48PM 11:18PM 08:48AM 11:36AM -0.6E 08:36AM 11:24AM -0.6E 04:12AM 07:06AM 0.8F 10:06AM 01:00PM -0.8E 03:06AM 06:24AM 1.0F PM PM E -0.7E PM PM E -0.6E PM PM E -0.7E PM -1.2E P Th F10:30PM Su Su 10:36AM 02:30PM 1.3F 10:54AM 10:36AM 02:48PM 02:30PM 1.1F 1.3F 12:24PM 10:54AM 04:06PM 10:36AM 02:48PM 1.2F 02:30PM 1.1F 1.3F 12:18PM 12:24PM 03:54PM 10:54AM 04:06PM 1.1F 02:48PM 04:06PM 1.2F 06:30PM 1.1F 11:24AM 12:18PM 0.8F 03:00PM 12:24PM 03:54PM 1.0F 04:06PM 04:24PM 1.1F 04:06PM 06:36PM 1.2F 12:12PM 06:30PM 11:24AM 0.6F 03:42PM 12:18PM 0.8F 03:00PM 0.9F 03:54PM 11:24AM 1.0F 04:24PM 02:06PM 1.1F 04:06PM 06:36PM 12:12PM -1.3E 06:30PM 11:24AM 0.6F 03:42PM 0.8F 03:00PM 10:48AM 0.9F 11:24AM 01:36PM 1.0F 04:24PM 02:06PM 06:36P 12:12 -1W 11:36PM Su M Su W M Su Th W M Su W Th W M Su Th W Th W M Su Th W Th W M Th 02:12PM 05:54PM 1.2F 02:06PM 05:42PM 1.1F 10:18AM 01:06PM -0.7E 04:12PM 07:12PM 0.8F 09:36AM 12:42PM -1.0E PM PM PM PM PM PM PM 1.0F P Th F 09:30PM -1.1E Su Su M 06:12PM 06:30PM 06:12PM 09:48PM 09:30PM -1.0E -1.1E 07:30PM 10:48PM 06:12PM 09:48PM -1.1E 09:30PM -1.0E -1.1E 07:24PM 07:30PM 10:36PM 06:30PM 10:48PM -1.0E 09:48PM 09:00PM -1.1E -1.0E 06:24PM 07:24PM 09:36PM 07:30PM 10:36PM -1.0E 10:48PM 09:18PM -1.0E 09:00PM -1.1E 07:06PM 06:24PM 10:18PM 07:24PM 09:36PM -0.9E 10:36PM 05:24PM -1.0E 09:18PM -1.0E 08:06PM 09:00PM 07:06PM 1.0F 06:24PM 10:18PM 09:36PM 04:54PM -0.9E 05:24PM -1.0E 07:30PM 09:18PM 08:06PM 07:06 1 09:18PM 09:12PM 04:00PM 07:12PM 0.8F 06:30PM 10:06PM 04:00PM 06:48PM 0.8F 10:48PM 10:24PM 10:48PM 12:12AM 1.0F 12:48AM 1.1F 01:36AM 1.6F 01:42AM 1.1F 12:18AM 1.8F AM 12:06AM 03:24AM 12:41 -0.8E AM 12:24AM 03:42AM -0.8E 01:00AM 04:18AM -0.6E 02:24AM -0.8E 12:48AM 03:48AM -0.5E 0.1 -3 0.0 0 10:12PM 0.4F 09:48PM 6AM 02:06AM 0.3F07:08 03:12AM 03:24AM 01:42AM 05:06AM 1.8F 02:00AM 0.5F 01:54AM 05:24AM 12:36AM 1.2F 03:00AM 0.4F 0.9F 12:12AM -1.4E 12:00AM -0.9E -0.6E 02:06AM 05:48AM 1.7F -1.2E 02:06AM 05:42AM 1.2F 02:54AM 06:00AM -1.1E 04:36AM 07:30AM -0.9E 05:12AM 08:00AM -1.1E 06:06AM 08:42AM 03:54AM 06:42AM AM AM 06:48AM 10:00AM 0.8F 01:00AM 10:24AM 07:12AM 10:54AM 0.9F 05:24AM 09:00AM 1.1F 06:36AM 10:18AM 2.8 85 AM 06:48AM 2.8 850.4F 1.0F 01:06AM AM AM E -0.7E AM AM E 0.6F AM AM E 0.7F AM -1.4E 8AM 07:30AM -0.5E 05:36AM 08:42AM -0.6E 05:48AM 08:48AM -0.5E 08:54AM 11:30AM 04:36AM -1.1E 07:36AM -0.6E 09:36AM 12:12PM 05:42AM -0.7E 08:30AM -0.5E 03:18AM 07:00AM 2.0F 02:48AM 06:18AM 1.4F 09:30AM 12:12PM -1.1E 09:36AM 12:30PM -0.9E 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F -0.8E 01:48AM 01:24AM 03:54AM 03:30AM 0.3F 0.4F 02:24AM 01:48AM 04:54AM 01:24AM 03:54AM 0.6F 03:30AM 0.3F 0.4F 02:24AM 04:42AM 01:48AM 04:54AM 0.6F 03:54AM 0.6F 12:24AM 0.3F 01:00AM 02:12AM -1.6E 03:42AM 02:24AM 04:42AM 04:54AM 12:30AM 0.6F 01:42AM 12:24AM 01:00AM -1.0E 04:24AM 02:12AM -1.6E 03:42AM 04:42AM 02:00AM 0.6F 12:30AM 01:42AM -1.6E 12:24AM 01:00AM -1.0E 04:24AM 03:42AM 0.6F 01:30AM 0.7F 12:30A 01:42 -1A 09:00AM 12:24PM 1.6F 10:42AM 01:06PM 0.8F 10:54AM 01:42PM 1.0F 0.7F 11:42AM 01:54PM 0.5F 0.6F 09:54AM 12:36PM 1 -1.6E AM 02:00AM PM 01:30PM 04:18PM -0.6E Th 05:06PM 02:36PM 05:42PM -0.7E 12:30PM 03:36PM -0.9E 01:54PM 05:06PM 0.0 0 F12:36AM 01:16 PM 02:00PM 0.0 0-0.7E M Tu Th F Th F04:30AM F06:12AM Th F02:12AM 15 30 15 15 11 26 11 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 26 1 -1.1E 12:24AM -1.0E 01:24AM -0.9E 01:18AM -0.8E 12:48AM -0.9E 05:42AM 08:48AM 05:42AM 09:06AM 08:48AM -0.5E -0.7E 07:42AM 06:12AM 10:36AM 05:42AM 09:06AM -0.7E 08:48AM -0.5E -0.7E 07:30AM 07:42AM 10:24AM 06:12AM 10:36AM -0.7E 09:06AM 03:24AM -0.7E -0.5E 07:06AM 06:36AM 07:30AM 2.2F 09:36AM 07:42AM 10:24AM -0.7E 10:36AM 03:18AM -0.7E 03:24AM -0.7E 06:54AM 07:18AM 07:06AM 06:36AM 1.5F 10:18AM 07:30AM 2.2F 09:36AM -0.7E 10:24AM 05:12AM -0.7E 03:18AM -0.7E 08:36AM 03:24AM 06:54AM 07:18AM 1.9F 07:06AM 06:36AM 1.5F 10:18AM 2.2F 09:36AM -0.7E 05:12AM -0.7E 07:48AM 03:18AM 08:36AM 06:54A 07:18 1 AM AM AM AM AM AM AM 1.7F A 2AM 02:06PM 1.0F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.2F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.0F 02:54PM 05:18PM 10:18AM 0.8F 02:00PM 1.0F 03:36PM 05:42PM 11:12AM 0.4F 02:54PM 0.9F 10:36AM 01:18PM -1.3E 10:06AM 01:00PM -1.1E 03:42PM 06:36PM 0.8F 04:00PM 06:24PM 0.7F 03:54PM 07:00PM -1.2E 04:18PM 07:30PM -0.9E 04:48PM 08:18PM -1.4E 04:30PM 08:18PM -0.8E PM PM E PM PM 07:18PM 10:00PM 0.5F 08:36PM 10:54PM 0.4F 09:24PM 11:30PM 0.3F 07:12PM 09:30PM 0.5F 08:48PM 11:06PM 0.3F Tu W Sa Tu Su W Tu W Tu W 2.5 76 07:280.7F PM 30 2.7 821.3F 15 09:06PM 15 15 30 11:30AM 03:24PM 11:36AM 11:30AM 03:36PM 03:24PM 1.1F 1.3F 01:18PM 11:36AM 04:54PM 11:30AM 03:36PM 1.1F 03:24PM 1.1F 1.3F 01:12PM 01:18PM 04:42PM 11:36AM 04:54PM 1.0F 03:36PM 10:48AM 1.1F 01:30PM 1.1F 12:30PM 01:12PM -1.4E 03:54PM 01:18PM 04:42PM 1.0F 04:54PM 10:48AM 1.0F 10:48AM 01:36PM 1.1F 01:12PM 01:30PM 12:30PM -1.1E 04:30PM 01:12PM -1.4E 03:54PM 0.9F 04:42PM 12:06PM 1.0F 10:48AM 02:42PM 1.0F 10:48AM 01:36PM 01:12PM -1.2E 01:30PM 12:30PM -1.1E 04:30PM -1.4E 03:54PM 11:24AM 0.9F 12:06PM 02:12PM 1.0F 10:48AM 02:42PM -1.3E 01:36P 01:12 -1P 04:18AM 06:54AM 04:06AM 06:36AM 0.6F 04:42AM 07:48AM 0.8F 04:24AM 07:30AM 0.9F 03:42AM 07:06AM PM PM E PM PM E PM PM E PM M Tu M Th Tu M F Th Tu M Th F Th Tu M F Th F Th Tu M F Th F Th Tu F T 8PM -0.9E 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.1E 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.0E 08:00PM 11:24PM 05:30PM -1.5E 08:48PM -0.9E 08:24PM 11:42PM 06:18PM -0.9E 09:36PM -0.8E 04:48PM 07:24PM 0.8F 04:24PM 06:48PM 0.8F 09:00PM 09:24PM ◑ ◐ ◑ ◐ F Sa M M 10:18PM 10:30PM 11:18PM 11:06PM PM 07:18PM PM 08:42PM 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E 07:12PM 07:00PM 10:30PM 10:18PM -1.0E -1.1E 08:12PM 07:12PM 11:30PM 07:00PM 10:30PM -1.1E 10:18PM -1.0E -1.1E 08:00PM 08:12PM 11:12PM 07:12PM 11:30PM -1.0E 10:30PM 05:00PM -1.1E -1.0E 07:24PM 07:06PM 08:00PM 0.8F 10:18PM 08:12PM 11:12PM -1.0E 11:30PM 05:06PM -1.0E 05:00PM -1.1E 07:18PM 07:48PM 07:24PM 07:06PM 0.7F 10:54PM 08:00PM 0.8F 10:18PM -0.9E 11:12PM 05:54PM -1.0E 05:06PM -1.0E 08:42PM 05:00PM 07:48PM 1.1F 07:24PM 07:06PM 0.7F 10:54PM 0.8F 10:18PM 05:24PM -0.9E 05:54PM -1.0E 08:12PM 05:06PM 1.2F 07:18P 07:48 1 09:42AM 12:30PM -0.6E 09:24AM 12:12PM -0.6E 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E 10:48AM 01:48PM -0.8E 10:24AM 01:36PM -1.0E PM PM PM PM PM PM PM P F Sa M M Tu 09:54PM 09:36PM ● ● ● ● ●11:06PM 09:54PM 10:00PM 09:54PM 11:36PM 10:00PM 09:54PM 11:36PM 10:00PM 0.1 -3 01:33 AM -0.2 -6
25
February10
10 10 JanuaryMarch
25
25 February10
25
March 10
16
16 11
1
1 26
16 11 16 11
1 26
26
16 11
1 26
16 11
2 27
17 12
2
2 27
17 12 17 12
2 27
27
17 12
2 27
17 12
28
18 13
17 18
21
S a 18 on 13 DPredictions cb0102 ee 3 NOAA 3 Tidal 18 28 Current 13 Dep h 322 28 Sou ce NOAA NOS CO OPS S a on Type Ha mon c Baltimore Harbor Approach (offLST Sandy T me Zone LDT Point), Latitude: W 4 29 19 14 4 439.0130° N Longitude: 19 14 1976.3683° 14 Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) 18 13
29
19 14
5 30
30
February 20 15
5
March 20 15
31
21 16
6 1
21 16
7 2
22 17
7 2
22 17
23 18 23 18
8 3
23 18
8 3
23 18
24 19 24 19
9 4
24 19
9 4
24 19
1 6 31
21 16
6 1 6 1
21 16 21 16
1 6 31
7 2
22 17
7 2 7 2
22 17 22 17
3 25 8
23 18
8 3 8 3
26
24 19
9 4 9 4
5
La ude 436 9594° N Long ude1976140182° W Mean F ood D 297° T Mean Ebb D 112° T
T mes and speeds o max mum and m n mum cu en n kno
January 20 15 March 20 15
February 20 15
5
NOAA c ons 3 T 18 13 28da Curren Pred
2021 Chesapeake Bay Ent 2 0 n mi N of Cape Henry L
Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, in knots
5 30
22 23 24
27
9 4
03:12PM 06:42PM
1.1F
02:54PM 06:24PM
1.0F
05:00PM 07:54PM
0.7F
F E B R u A Ry 2021 C u R R E N T S
1 26
ACT499619 Depth: 3 Unknown 28 OAA/NOS/CO-OPS pe: Harmonic : LST/LDT20 4 29
y
25
05:00PM 07:48PM
0.7F
05:00PM 07:36PM
0.7F
10:00PM 10:54PM 10:48PM 10:24PM AM 03:12AM -0.7E AM AM AM AM AM 12:48AM 04:12AM 07:55 -0.8E AM 01:12AM 04:36AM -0.7E 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.5E 12:06AM 01:36AM 04:36AM -0.5E 2.8 85 3.009:48PM 91 04:24AM 0.4F 02:12AM 04:42AM 04:24AM 0.4F 0.4F 03:00AM 02:30AM 05:42AM 02:12AM 04:42AM 04:24AM 0.4F 0.4F 02:36AM 03:00AM 05:24AM 02:30AM 05:42AM 04:42AM 0.7F 0.4F 01:42AM 02:36AM -1.7E 04:30AM 03:00AM 05:24AM 0.8F 05:42AM 0.7F 01:12AM 0.7F 02:06AM 01:42AM -1.1E 05:06AM 02:36AM -1.7E 04:30AM 0.8F 05:24AM 0.8F 02:48AM 0.7F 02:06AM -1.7E 01:12AM 01:42AM -1.1E 05:06AM 04:30AM 0.8F 02:12AM 0.8F 01:12A 02:06 -1 0AM 03:00AM 0.3F02:01 01:42AM 04:06AM 0.5F 1.1F 02:30AM 01:42AM 04:06AM 0.5F 02:36AM 12:24AM 2.1F 02:54AM 0.6F 02:36AM 01:06AM 1.3F 03:42AM 0.5F 01:06AM -1.5E 12:48AM -1.2E 12:06AM -1.3E 12:24AM -1.0E AM 12 AM E 0.7F AM 27 AM E 0.7F AM 12 AM AM 01:12AM AM AM 01:12AM AM AM 02:48AM AM 07:24AM 10:48AM 0.9F 02:12AM 11:18AM 07:54AM 11:42AM 0.9F 06:12AM 06:12AM 09:54AM 1.1F 06:06AM 07:18AM 11:06AM 0.8F 01:12AM AM AM E -0.7E 0.0 0 Sa PM 07:36AM -0.2 -6-0.7E 12 27 12 12 27 27 12 12 12 27 27E-0.8E 12 27 12 27 12E-0.8E 27 12 27 12 27E-1.7E 12 27 27-1.6E 06:42AM 09:42AM 07:00AM 06:42AM 09:54AM 09:42AM -0.5E -0.7E 08:36AM 11:30AM 06:42AM 09:54AM -0.7E 09:42AM -0.5E -0.7E 08:12AM 11:12AM 07:00AM 11:30AM -0.7E 09:54AM 04:18AM -0.7E 07:54AM 07:30AM 08:12AM 2.3F 10:30AM 08:36AM 11:12AM 11:30AM 04:00AM 04:18AM -0.7E 07:36AM 08:06AM 07:30AM 1.7F 11:06AM 08:12AM 2.3F 10:30AM 11:12AM 06:06AM -0.8E 04:00AM -0.7E 09:18AM 04:18AM 08:06AM 1.7F 07:54AM 07:30AM 1.7F 11:06AM 2.3F 10:30AM 05:18AM -0.8E 06:06AM -0.8E 08:30AM 04:00AM 1.8F 07:36A 08:06 11 8AM 08:18AM -0.5E08:16 06:42AM 09:36AM 06:42AM 09:36AM -0.6E 09:54AM 12:36PM 05:42AM -1.3E 08:36AM -0.7E 10:12AM 01:00PM 06:30AM -0.9E 09:30AM -0.6E 04:18AM 07:48AM 2.0F 03:42AM 07:06AM 1.6F 03:18AM 06:54AM 1.7F 03:18AM 06:42AM 1.4F 31 -0.5E AM 07:00AM PM AM 08:36AM PM PM AM PM PM 07:54AM PM AM 07:36AM PM PM 09:18AM PM 02:30PM 05:24PM -0.6E F 06:12PM -0.8E -1.0E 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 01:30PM 04:42PM -0.9E 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E AM 01:00AM 01:24AM -0.8E 2.6 79 PM 03:06PM 3.0 91-0.7E Tu W F11:42AM Sa F12:48PM Sa Sa F02:18PM Sa 12:24PM 04:12PM 1.3F 12:24PM 12:24PM 04:18PM 04:12PM 1.1F 1.3F 12:24PM 05:42PM 12:24PM 04:18PM 1.0F 04:12PM 1.1F 1.3F 02:06PM 02:18PM 05:24PM 12:24PM 05:42PM 1.0F 04:18PM 1.0F 02:18PM 1.1F 01:24PM 02:06PM -1.4E 04:36PM 02:18PM 05:24PM 0.9F 05:42PM 11:24AM 1.0F 11:42AM 02:12PM 1.0F 02:12PM 02:18PM 01:24PM -1.2E 05:18PM 02:06PM -1.4E 04:36PM 0.9F 05:24PM 0.9F 11:24AM 03:18PM 1.0F 11:42AM 02:12PM 02:12PM -1.1E 02:18PM 01:24PM -1.2E 05:18PM -1.4E 04:36PM 12:00PM 0.9F 12:48PM 02:48PM 0.9F 11:24AM 03:18PM -1.4E 02:12P 02:12 -1F Tu W Tu F W Tu Sa F W Tu F Sa F W Tu Sa F Sa F W Tu Sa F Sa F W Sa 4AM 02:48PM 1.1F 12:24PM 04:06PM 1.2F 12:18PM 03:54PM 1.1F 04:06PM 06:30PM 11:24AM 0.8F 03:00PM 1.0F 04:24PM 06:36PM 12:12PM 0.6F 03:42PM 0.9F 11:24AM 02:06PM -1.3E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.2E 10:18AM 01:00PM -1.1E 10:24AM 01:18PM -1.1E 31 31 PM E -1.0E 04:30AM-1.2E 07:18AM 04:18AM 07:48AM 1.2F PM 07:54PM PM PM 08:54PM PM PM PM PM PM 08:12PM PM PM 08:00PM PM PM 09:24PM PM 08:36PM 11:06PM 0.4F 09:54PM 10:36PM 08:24PM 10:36PM 0.4F 09:54PM W 07:48PM Th 0.7F Su -1.0E -1.2E W 08:54PM M E 11:06PM Th -1.2E W E-1.0E ThE-0.9E W E-0.9E ThE 0.9F 11:06PM 07:54PM 07:48PM 11:12PM 11:06PM 07:48PM 11:12PM -1.0E 08:42PM 11:48PM 07:54PM 11:12PM 05:48PM -1.0E 08:12PM 07:48PM 08:42PM 0.9F 11:00PM 08:54PM 11:48PM 05:36PM 05:48PM 08:00PM 08:24PM 07:48PM 0.8F 11:30PM 08:42PM 0.9F 11:00PM 11:48PM 06:18PM -0.9E 05:36PM -1.0E 09:24PM 05:48PM 08:24PM 1.2F 08:12PM 07:48PM 0.8F 11:30PM 11:00PM 05:54PM -0.9E 06:18PM -0.9E 08:54PM 05:36PM 1.4F 08:00P 08:24 1 Su 0PM 09:48PM -1.0E 07:30PM 10:48PM 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.0E 09:00PM 06:24PM 09:36PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -0.9E 05:24PM 08:06PM 04:54PM 07:30PM 04:18PM 07:18PM 1.0F ○ 04:36PM 07:18PM 1.0F ◐09:18PM PM 1.0F PM 02:24PM ○ ○ 10:18AM-1.1E 01:06PM -0.6E 11:12AM -1.0E PM PM PM ○ 1.0F PM PM 10:48PM 10:42PM 10:48PM 10:42PM 10:48PM 11:54PM 10:42PM W 0.2 -6 28 02:24 AM Su -0.303:54PM -9 07:12PM 0.9F 10:48PM 10:24PM 0.6F 10:00PM 10:18PM 05:54PM 08:30PM 2.8 85 08:42 02:54AM AM 3.0 910.5F 10:24PM 11:06PM 05:12AM 03:06AM 02:54AM 05:18AM 05:12AM 0.4F 0.5F 03:06AM 12:12AM 02:54AM 05:18AM -1.0E 05:12AM 0.4F 0.5F 03:06AM 06:00AM 03:06AM 12:12AM 0.8F 05:18AM -1.0E 02:06AM 0.4F 02:12AM 03:06AM -1.7E 05:12AM 06:00AM 0.8F 12:12AM 0.8F -1.0E 01:54AM 02:36AM 02:06AM 02:12AM -1.3E 05:42AM 03:06AM -1.7E 05:12AM 0.9F 06:00AM 12:24AM 0.8F 03:30AM 0.8F 01:54AM 02:36AM -1.6E 02:06AM 02:12AM -1.3E 05:42AM -1.7E 05:12AM 0.9F 12:24AM 02:54AM 0.8F 03:30AM -1.6E 01:54A 02:36 -1 AM AM AM 13 AM AM AM AM 01:36AM 0 05:00AM -0.7E 12:00AM 0.3F 07:48AM 12:42AM 0.3F 28 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F -0.5E 0.0 Su 02:45 PM -0.3 -9-0.7E 28 13 07:48AM 13 13 28 -0.7E 13 28 13 13 28 28 -0.8E 13 28 13 28 13 -0.9E 28 13 28 13 28 2.2F 13 28 28-1.2E 10:36AM 07:48AM 10:42AM 10:36AM -0.5E 03:36AM 07:48AM 06:24AM 07:48AM 10:42AM 0.8F 10:36AM -0.5E 09:00AM 03:36AM 12:00PM 07:48AM 06:24AM -0.8E 10:42AM 05:12AM 0.8F 08:42AM 08:18AM 09:00AM 2.2F 11:18AM 03:36AM 12:00PM 06:24AM 04:42AM -0.8E 05:12AM 08:12AM 0.8F 08:48AM 08:42AM 08:18AM 1.8F 11:54AM 09:00AM 2.2F 11:18AM 12:00PM 06:54AM -0.8E 04:42AM -0.8E 10:00AM 05:12AM 08:12AM 08:48AM 1.4F 08:42AM 08:18AM 1.8F 11:54AM 11:18AM 06:00AM -0.9E 06:54AM -0.8E 09:18AM 04:42AM 10:00AM 1.7F 08:12A 08:48 11 8AM 03:54AM 0.3F09:03 02:24AM 04:54AM 0.6F -0.7E 13 02:12AM 04:42AM 0.6F -0.7E 12:24AM 01:00AM -1.6E 03:42AM 0.7F 01:42AM -1.0E 04:24AM 0.6F 02:00AM -1.6E 01:30AM -1.4E 01:06AM -1.5E 01:18AM AM 01:12PM AM E-0.7E AM 09:24AM AM E 0.9F AM 03:00PM AM E 12:18PM AM 03:00PM AM E 06:12PM AM 02:48PM AM E 05:24PM AM 03:54PM AM 08:06AM 11:42AM 0.9F 01:18PM 05:36AM 02:48AM 06:00AM 07:06AM 10:54AM 1.1F 12:30AM 02:30AM 05:30AM -0.4E 03:00PM 2.7 82 PM 02:12AM 3.2 981.3F 05:00PM 01:12PM 01:18PM 05:00PM 05:00PM 1.1F -0.5E 1.3F 09:24AM 12:18PM 01:18PM 05:00PM 05:00PM 1.1F 1.3F 03:00PM 06:12PM 01:12PM 12:18PM 05:00PM 12:30PM -0.7E 1.1F 02:18PM -1.4E 05:24PM 09:24AM 06:12PM 12:00PM 0.9F 12:30PM -0.7E 02:48PM 03:06PM 02:18PM -1.2E 06:06PM 03:00PM -1.4E 05:24PM 01:24PM 0.9F 12:00PM 03:54PM 0.9F 12:30PM 03:06PM -1.0E 03:00PM 02:18PM -1.2E 06:06PM 12:36PM 0.8F 01:24PM 03:30PM 0.9F 12:00PM 02:48P 03:06 -1S ○ W Sa 07:06AM Su 06:54AM Sa W -0.7E Sa 08:36AM Su Th 0.9F W Su Sa Su Sa 0.8F Th W Su Sa Su -1.4E Sa Th Su -1.5E 2AM 09:06AM -0.5E 07:42AM 10:36AM -0.7E Th 07:30AM 10:24AM -0.7E 03:24AM 06:36AM 2.2F 09:36AM -0.7E 03:18AM 07:18AM 1.5F 10:18AM 05:12AM 1.9F 04:30AM 07:48AM 1.7F 04:18AM 07:42AM 1.6F 04:18AM 07:36AM 1.5F AM W PM PM Th PM PM Sa PM PM 09:00PM PM PM 08:36PM PM PM 10:00PM PM 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F W 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F Th 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F -1.1E 08:36PM 11:54PM -1.2E 08:30PM 08:36PM 11:48PM 11:54PM -1.1E -1.2E 03:06PM 08:30PM 06:24PM 08:36PM 11:48PM 0.9F 11:54PM -1.1E -1.2E 09:18PM 03:06PM 08:30PM 06:24PM 11:48PM 06:30PM 0.9F 09:00PM 08:30PM 09:18PM 0.9F 11:36PM 03:06PM-0.9E 06:24PM 06:12PM 06:30PM 08:36PM 0.9F 09:06PM 08:30PM 0.9F 09:18PM 0.9F 11:36PM 06:48PM -0.9E 06:12PM 10:00PM 06:30PM 09:06PM 1.3F 09:00PM 08:30PM 0.9F 0.9F 11:36PM 06:36PM 06:48PM -0.9E 09:42PM 06:12PM 1.6F 08:36P 09:06 1 W Th Sa Su Sa Su Sa Su Sa Su D a me The e da a a e ba ed upon he a e n o ma on a a ab e a o he da e o ou eque and ma d e om he pub hed ○ ○ ● 02:42PM ○ ○11:36PM ●PM ●11:24PM ○ ○ 02:00PM 6AM 03:36PM 1.1F ● 04:54PM 1.1F -0.9E 04:42PM 10:48AM 12:30PM -1.4E 03:54PM 10:48AM 01:12PM -1.1E 04:30PM 12:06PM -1.2E 11:24AM 02:12PM -1.3E 01:42PM 09:36PM 09:36PM 11:36PM 09:36PM 11:36PM 11:24PM PM ● PM 11:48PM PM ○ PM ● PM PM PM ThE ○11:06AM PM ● -1.1E PM F E 11:06AM PM ○ -1.3E PM ● 09:48PM 04:06PM 07:18PM 04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 09:36PM 0.3F 03:42PM 07:00PM -0.7E Th 01:18PM F ●01:12PM M 1.0F Th 01:30PM TuE 1.0F F 01:36PM ThE 0.9F F E ●11:24PM 0.1 -3 29 03:14 AM -0.4 -12 Disclaimer: These data08:12PM are based upon the latest information available-1.0E of the 07:24PM date request, and may differ11:00PM from the published tidal current 1.1F tables. 2PM 10:30PM -1.0E 11:30PM -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM 05:00PM 0.8F 10:18PM -1.0E 05:06PM 07:18PM 0.7F 10:54PM -0.9E 05:54PM 08:42PM 05:24PM 08:12PM 1.2F 1.2F 1.3F ◑as ◑04:48PM 07:54PM ◐05:06PM 08:00PM ◑07:06PM ◐07:48PM PM of your PM PM 11:06PM 11:36PM Gene a ed on F Nov 22 1902:54AM 09 38 UTC 20190.9F 2.7 82 09:27 AM 3.0 91 ●Secondary ● 09:54PM 10:00PM 11:36PM 11:06PM 10:48PM 11:06PM 03:36AM 06:06AM 0.6F 03:36AM 03:36AM 06:00AM 06:06AM 0.5F 0.6F 03:36AM 12:48AM 03:36AM 06:00AM -1.0E 06:06AM 0.5F 0.6F 03:36AM 12:48AM 06:00AM -1.0E 0.5F 03:48AM -1.7E 06:54AM 12:48AM -1.0E 02:30AM 02:54AM 03:48AM -1.4E 12:06AM -1.7E 06:54AM -0.9E 01:18AM 0.9F 04:24AM 02:30AM -1.4E 02:54AM 03:48AM -1.4E 12:06AM -1.7E 06:54AM -0.9E 01:18AM 0.9F 04:24AM 02:30A -1 Stations Time Differences Speed Ratios Secondary Stations Differences Speed Ratios 14 14 29 14 14 29 14 14 -0.6E 14 2.1F 29Page 14 14 14 1.0F 29 14 29 14 14 29 29 09:00A Fri Nov 19:07:36 UTC 29 201914 229 ofTime 5 08:48AM 11:36AM 08:36AM 08:48AM 11:24AM 11:36AM -0.6E -0.6E 04:12AM 08:36AM 07:06AM 08:48AM 11:24AM 0.8F 11:36AM -0.6E -0.6E 04:12AM 08:36AM 07:06AM 11:24AM 06:06AM 0.8F 09:30AM 10:06AM 01:00PM 04:12AM -0.8E 07:06AM 05:30AM 06:06AM 09:00AM 0.8F 03:06AM 09:30AM 10:06AM 1.8F 06:24AM 2.1F 01:00PM 07:48AM -0.8E 05:30AM 10:36AM 06:06AM 09:00AM 03:06AM 1.2F 09:30AM 10:06AM 1.8F 06:24AM 2.1F 01:00PM 1.0F 07:48AM -0.8E 05:30AM 10:36AM 03:06 11 0.0Generated 0 Mon:03:30 PM22-0.4 -12-0.6E AM AM F AM AM Su -1.2E AM AM 03:48PM AM -1.2E AM AM 12:06AM 09:50 0.3F 02:12PM 01:06AM 0.3F Th 01:36AM 0.3F 02:06AM 05:18AM -0.6E 01:06AM 0.3F 03:48PM 05:54PM 02:06PM 02:12PM 05:42PM 05:54PM 1.1F 1.2F 10:18AM 02:06PM 01:06PM 02:12PM 05:42PM -0.7E 05:54PM 1.1F 1.2F 10:18AM 02:06PM 01:06PM 05:42PM 01:12PM -0.7E 1.1F 04:12PM 07:12PM 10:18AM 0.8F 01:06PM 12:36PM 01:12PM -0.7E 03:24PM 09:36AM 04:12PM -1.2E 12:42PM 07:12PM -1.0E 0.8F 12:36PM 04:30PM 01:12PM 03:24PM 09:36AM -1.0E 03:48PM 04:12PM -1.2E 12:42PM -1.2E 07:12PM -1.0E 0.8F 12:36PM 04:30PM 03:24P 09:36 -1S Min. Min. Min. Min. 2.7 82 PM 3.4 1041.2F Th F Su F Th Su Th Su F Th M Su Su F01:54PM Th M Su Su F01:54PM M -1.5E Baltimore Harbor Bay 0AM 04:42AM 0.4F -0.6E 03:00AM 05:42AM 0.7F -0.6E 02:36AM 05:24AM 0.7F -0.5E 01:12AM 01:42AM -1.7E 04:30AM 0.8F 1.1F 01:12AM 02:06AM -1.1E 05:06AM 0.8F 02:48AM -1.7E 02:12AM -1.6E 01:54AM -1.6E 02:12AM 09:18PM 09:12PM 09:18PM 04:00PM 07:12PM 09:18PM 09:12PM 07:12PM 07:06PM 0.8F 09:42PM 10:06PM 0.9F 04:00PM 06:42PM 07:06PM 09:24PM 0.8F 04:00PM 10:06PM 1.0F 06:48PM 07:24PM 06:42PM 10:48PM 07:06PM 04:00PM 1.3F 09:42PM 10:06PM 1.0F 06:48PM 07:24PM 06:42PM 09:24P 04:00 1 AM 09:12PM AM E 0.8F AM 04:00PM AM E Chesapeake AM AM E 07:12PM AM 09:42PM AM 0.9FE 0.8F AM 09:24PM AM E 0.9F 0.8F AM 10:48PM AM 02:24AM 05:48AM 03:18AM 06:36AM 03:54AM 07:00AM 08:06AM 11:54AM 03:36AM 06:30AM -0.4E 10:12PM 10:12PM 05:18AM 09:48PM 09:48 0AM 09:54AM -0.5E 0.9F 08:36AM 11:30AM -0.7E 1.2F 08:12AM 11:12AM -0.7E 04:18AM 07:54AM 07:30AM 2.3F 10:30AM -0.8E 08:06AM 1.7F 11:06AM -0.8E 06:06AM 09:18AM 1.7F 1.8F 05:12AM 08:24AM 1.5F 05:12AM 08:18AM 1.6F before before PM 03:36PM PM 06:54PM PM 10:12PM PM 01:00PM PM PM PM PM before PM 09:48PM PM PM PM 08:48AM 12:30PM 09:24AM 01:18PM 09:36AM 01:30PM 1.0F -0.9E 07:36AM 09:06AM 0.8F Th F04:00AM Su Mbefore 08:30AM Su M Su Su M Entrance 0.1 -3 AMApproach -0.4 -121.0F -0.9E M 4PM 04:18PM 1.1F04:05 02:18PM 05:42PM 05:24PM 1.0F 11:42AM 02:18PM 01:24PM -1.4E 04:36PM 11:24AM 02:12PM 02:12PM -1.2E 05:18PM 12:48PM -1.1E 02:48PM -1.4E 02:12PM -1.1E 11:42AM 02:36PM -1.5E 30 PM 10:42PM PM W Flood E 0.9F PM 04:36PM PM 08:00PM PM PM SaE 12:00PM PM PM FEbb E 11:42AM PM Flood PM SaEEbb PM PM 04:12PM 07:18PM -0.7E 05:00PM 08:18PM 05:12PM 08:30PM -0.8E -0.8E 03:18PM F Sa 02:06PM Tu -1.0E F Ebb Sa -1.1E F E 0.9F Flood Flood Ebb Ebb Flood Flood Ebb 2.6 79 10:14 AM 3.0 91 12:36AM -1.1E 12:24AM 12:36AM -1.1E 01:24AM 12:24AM -0.9E 12:36AM -1.0E 01:24AM 12:24AM 12:30AM -0.9E -1.0E 03:42AM -1.6E 01:18AM -0.8E 01:24AM 12:06AM 12:30AM -0.9E 03:12AM 03:42AM -1.4E 12:48AM -1.6E 01:18AM -0.9E 02:12AM -0.8E 12:06AM 05:12AM 12:30AM 03:12AM -1.2E 03:42AM -1.4E 12:48AM -1.6E 01:18AM -0.9E 02:12AM -0.8E 12:06AM 05:12AM 03:12A -1 4PM 11:12PM -1.0E 08:54PM 08:42PM 11:48PM 05:48PM 08:12PM 07:48PM 0.9F 11:00PM 05:36PM 08:00PM 08:24PM 0.8F 11:30PM -0.9E 06:18PM 09:24PM 1.2F 05:54PM 08:54PM 1.4F 05:12PM 08:24PM 1.3F 05:42PM 08:48PM 1.6F 11:00PM 11:48PM 15 04:18AM 15 30 15 15 30 15 06:36AM 15 10:18AM 15 1.8F 30 15 30 15 15 1.1F 30 15 30 15 15 30 30 09:42A 06:54AM 04:06AM 04:18AM 06:36AM 06:54AM 0.6F 0.7F 04:42AM 04:06AM 07:48AM 04:18AM 06:36AM 0.8F 06:54AM 0.6F 0.7F 04:42AM 04:06AM 07:48AM 07:00AM 0.8F 0.6F 04:24AM 07:30AM 04:42AM 07:48AM 06:12AM 07:00AM 09:42AM 0.8F 03:42AM 10:18AM 04:24AM 1.8F 07:06AM 1.8F 07:30AM 08:36AM 0.9F 06:12AM 11:18AM 07:00AM 09:42AM 03:42AM 1.0F 10:18AM 04:24AM 1.8F 07:06AM 1.8F 07:30AM 1.1F 08:36AM 0.9F 06:12AM 11:18AM 03:42 11 ○ 15 ○ 0.9F 0.0 0 Tu 04:16 PM -0.4 -120.7F 30 10:48PM 10:42PM 11:54PM 11:36PM 11:54PM 09:42AM 12:30PM -0.6E 09:24AM 09:42AM 12:12PM 12:30PM -0.6E -0.6E 11:06AM 09:24AM 02:00PM 09:42AM 12:12PM -0.7E 12:30PM -0.6E -0.6E 11:06AM 09:24AM 02:00PM 12:12PM 02:00PM -0.7E -0.6E 04:30PM 10:48AM 01:48PM 11:06AM 02:00PM 01:18PM 02:00PM -0.7E 04:06PM 10:24AM 04:30PM 10:48AM -1.2E 01:36PM -1.0E 01:48PM -1.0E 02:18PM -0.8E 05:12PM 02:00PM 04:06PM 10:24AM -0.9E 04:30PM 10:48AM -1.2E 01:36PM -1.0E 01:48PM -1.0E 02:18PM -0.8E 01:18PM 05:12PM 10:24 -0M F F M-4:08 Sa F M Sa F MBeach, M -1.0E Sa -0.8E F Tu M M Sa F01:18PM Tu M M Sa Tu 04:06P 2.7 82 10:39 PM 3.9 3.4 104 n.mi. 02:18AM East1.1F Sa -3:29 -3:36 -3:44 0.4 0.6 Chesapeake North +0:29 +0:06 +0:00 1.0 0.7 03:12PM 06:42PM 03:12PM 06:24PM 06:42PM 1.0F 1.1F 07:54PM 03:12PM 06:24PM 0.7F 06:42PM 1.0F 02:54PM 07:54PM 06:24PM 07:42PM 0.7F 1.0F 05:00PM 1.0F 07:48PM 05:00PM 0.7F 07:54PM 07:18PM 07:42PM 10:12PM 0.7F 05:00PM 10:30PM 05:00PM 1.1F 07:36PM 07:48PM 0.7F 08:06PM 0.7F 07:18PM 11:30PM 07:42PM 05:00PM 1.3F 10:30PM 05:00PM 1.1F 07:36PM 1.0F 07:48PM 0.7F 08:06PM 0.7F 07:18PM 10:12P 05:00 1 AM 02:54PM AM AM 05:00PM AM AM1.5 miles AM AM+0:48 AM 1.0F AM 10:12PM AM AM 11:30PM AM 01:06AM Cove 0.3F Point, 12:12AM 0.3F 02:54PM 12:24AM 02:36AM 0.3F 05:00PM 12:54AM 0.4F 1.1F 02:06AM 0.3F 10:30PM 10:00PM 10:54PM 10:00PM 09:48PM 10:48PM 10:54PM 10:24PM 10:48PM 10:24 6AM 05:18AM 0.4F -0.6E 10:00PM 12:12AM -1.0E -0.6E 09:48PM 03:06AM 06:00AM 0.8F -0.5E 02:06AM 02:12AM -1.7E 05:12AM 02:36AM -1.3E 05:42AM 12:24AM -1.6E 02:54AM -1.6E 02:36AM -1.6E 02:54AM -1.6E AM 09:48PM AM E 0.8F -0.6E 01:54AM AM 10:54PM AM E 0.9F AM PM E AM 10:48PM PM E AM 10:24PM AM E AM AM 03:18AM 06:36AM 04:30AM 07:42AM 04:54AM 07:48AM 03:24AM 06:24AM 04:42AM 07:30AM -0.4E 03:30AM AM 10:24AM -0.4 -120.8F 8AM 10:42AM -0.5E04:57 03:36AM 09:00AM 12:00PM -0.8E 08:42AM 08:18AM 2.2F 11:18AM -0.8E 04:42AM 08:48AM 1.8F 11:54AM -0.9E 06:54AM 10:00AM 1.4F 06:00AM 06:00AM 09:00AM 1.3F 06:00AM 09:00AM 1.6F 31 Sharp Island Lt.,06:24AM 3.4 n.mi. West1.2F Tu -1:39 -1:41 -1:57 -1:43 0.4 0.5 Channel, +0:05 09:18AM +0:19 2.2 1.2 PM 09:12AM PM 01:00PM PM 10:06AM PM Chesapeake PM (bridge PMtunnel) Tu PM+0:38 1.7F PM +0:32M PM PM PM PM 09:30AM 01:18PM 1.0F M 02:12PM 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 1.0F 08:12AM 02:00PM 0.8F F05:12AM Sa M Tu M Tu 01:00AM -1.0E 01:00AM -1.0E 02:48PM 01:00AM -1.0E 12:54AM 04:00AM -1.4E 01:24AM -0.8E 12:54AM 04:00AM -1.4E 01:24AM -0.8E 03:18PM 12:54AM -1.6E 04:00A 11:01 AM 2.8 85 2PM 05:00PM 1.1F 09:24AM 12:18PM -0.7E 03:00PM 06:12PM 0.9F 12:30PM 03:00PM 02:18PM -1.4E 05:24PM 0.9F 12:00PM 03:06PM -1.2E 06:06PM 0.8F 01:24PM 03:54PM -1.0E 12:36PM 03:30PM -1.5E 12:12PM 02:42PM -1.1E 12:18PM PM 04:30AM PM 07:18AM PM PM PM PM 10:30AM PM 1.7F PM 31 10:30A PM 05:00PM 08:12PM -0.8E 09:12PM -1.0E 05:54PM 09:12PM 04:36PM 07:54PM -0.9E 05:30PM 08:48PM -0.8E 0.7F Sa PM 05:54PM Su 04:30AM W 0.7F -0.9E Sa 31 ThE Su PM 31 SaE 07:18AM Su 07:06AM Sa 1.2F SuE 31 31 31 10:30AM 31 31 31 09:36PM 07:18AM 0.7F 04:30AM 04:18AM 1.7F 07:48AM 07:06AM 04:18AM 07:48AM 1.2F 07:06AM 04:18 W 05:04 -0.4 0PM 11:48PM -1.1E 03:06PM 06:24PM 09:18PM 06:30PM 09:00PM 08:30PM 0.9F 11:36PM -0.9E 06:12PM 08:36PM 09:06PM 0.9F 06:48PM 10:00PM 1.3F 06:36PM 09:42PM 1.6F +2:09 05:42PM 09:00PM 1.4F -1.3E 06:18PM 1.9F 11:36PM Thomas Pt. Shoal Lt., -12 2.0 0.9F n.mi. Su East 10:18AM -1:05 01:06PM -0:14 -0:20 Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East +2:18 +3:00-1.3E +2:36 1.2 01:06PM -0.6E 01:06PM -0.6E 11:12AM 02:24PM 11:12AM 02:24PM 11:12 Su 10:18AM Su 01:54PM W 04:48PM Su 01:54PM W 04:48PM Su 01:54PM W 04:48P ● -0.6E ●-0:22 ○ 0.6 ○ 0.6 Su 10:18AM ● -1.0E ○ 0.6 -1.0E 11:29 09:36PM PM 3.4 104 11:36PM 11:24PM 03:54PM 07:12PM 0.9F 03:54PM 07:12PM 0.9F 03:54PM 07:12PM 0.9F 08:00PM 11:00PM 05:54PM 1.2F 08:30PM 0.6F 08:00PM 11:00PM 05:54PM 1.2F 08:30PM 0.6F 08:00PM 11:00P 05:54
10 5
25 20
10 5 10 5
25 20 25 20
10 5
25 20
10 5
25 20
11 6
26 21
11 6 11 6
6 21 26 21 26 21 11 Speed Current Differences and Ratios 26
11 6
26 21
12 7
27 22
12 7 12 7
27 22 27 22
12 7
27 22
12 7
27 22
13 8
28 23
13 8 13 8
28 23 28 23
13 8
28 23
13 8
28 23
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BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS
To advertise in the Brokerage and Classified sections, contact Lucy Iliff at lucy@fishtalkmag.com
ikiland@annapolisyachtsales.com
donations
DONATE YOUR BOAT Help a Wounded Veteran
240-750-9899
(Quick Fish) 28’ Mako ‘11 $89,000 Anthony Sayo (757) 427 4042 anthony@ curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net
BOATs4HEROEs.ORg
28’ Bertram 28 Flybridge ‘90 $44,500 Expansive cockpit & fishing platform, Overnight accommodations below with enclosed head, berth, and dinette. Chris Beardsley (315) 447-1251 or chris@northpointyachtsales.com
33’ Bertram ‘80 - $57,000 David Robinson 410 310 8855 d a v i d @ c u r t i s s t o k e s . n e t www.curtisstokes.net
power
28’ Protector 28 Targa ‘06 $129,900 Twin Yamaha 150s with 129 hrs, new Garmin electronics, wing (Parker Rose) 29’ C-Hawk ‘95 $42,500 tubes (2018) Jack McGuire - Jason Hinsch - (410) 507-1259 - jason@ (401) 290-7066 or curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net jack@northpointyachtsales.com 27’ Blackfin ‘86 $45,000 With 210-hp Volvo Penta diesels, new strata glass enclosure, new Vetus electric head, turn-key ready. Jack McGuire (401) 290-7066 or Jack@northpointyachtsales.com
The only Bluewater Sportfishing Boats dealer in the Mid-Atlantic
2021 Bluewater 2150 with Yamaha 200 and Trailer
$86,900
• Fresh Water System • Garmin VHF • Fusion Stereo and Speakers • Lenco Trim Tabs and More!
Carlislesmarine.com | 302.389.0100 49 Artisan Drive, Smyrna, DE 19977
(Duck Blind) 36’ Trojan ‘78 $30,000 Jason Hinsch - (410) 507-1259 j a s o n @ c u r t i s s t o k e s . n e t www.curtisstokes.net
29’ Stamas ‘00 - $39,999 - Curtis 40’ Custom EBL Chesapeake Deadrise Stokes (410) 919-4900 ‘06 $59,500 CAT 3126 power, enclosed c u r t i s s t o k e s @ c u r t i s s t o k e s . n e t pilothouse, Rocket launchers & rod www.curtisstokes.net racks, Garmin electronics & more. Chris Beardsley (315) 447-1251 or chris@northpointyachtsales.com
29’ Tiara ‘00 $65,000 - Curtis Stokes (410) 919-4900 m b e h o t @ c u r t i s s t o k e s . n e t 43’ Mainship 430 Trawler ‘04 www.curtisstokes.net $234,500 New price reduction. Perfect Great Loop boat with 2 large staterooms, Kohler generator, Raymarine electronics suite, and more. Chris Beardsley (315) 447-1251 or chris@northpointyachtsales.com
30’ Pursuit ‘99 $57,000 David Robinson (410) 310 8855 d a v i d @ c u r t i s s t o k e s . n e t www.curtisstokes.net Grady White 330 Express ‘17 45’ Hatteras 45 Convertible ‘71 $99,000 Excellent cond.! Lift kept, rarely used. Price just reduced. Powered by Cummins Great Rockfish boat w/ many upgrades. diesels with new hull paint & updated Dual 300 Yamahas w/ waranty still in electronics. Rick Casali (410) 279-5309 place. Near Gloucester, VA. $360,000. or rick@northpointyachtsales.com Ing Kiland 234-380-2296
56 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
MARKETPLACE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS
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ACCESSORIES | ART | ATTORNEYS | BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES | CAPTAINS | CHARTERS | CREW | DELIVERIES | ELECTRONICS EQUIPMENT | FINANCE | HELP WANTED | INSURANCE | LURES | MARINE ENGINES | MARINE SERVICES | PRODUCTS | REAL ESTATE RENTALS | RODS & reels | SCHOOLS | SLIPS & Storage | SURVEYORS | Tackle Shops | TRAILERS | WANTED | WOODWORKING
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MARINE SERVICES
These Businesses Make Fishtalk Possible. Shop With Them and Let Them Know Their Ad is Working!
Got a New Boat? Find the BEST people to take care of her at PortBook.com
PortBook is the resource boaters use to find service providers they can trust.
Boaters’ Marine Directory
AllTackle.com...................................... 9 Anglers............................................. 35 Annapolis Yacht Sales....................... 11 Apex Predators................................ 39 Bay Shore Marine............................. 24 BOE Marine...................................... 18 Carlisle’s Marine............................... 56 Curtis Stokes.................................... 60 Formula X2....................................... 32 Geico/BoatU.S.................................... 5 Grady White....................................... 7 Intrinsic............................................... 4 Legendary Trailers............................ 50 Minn Kota ........................................ 14 North Point Yacht Sales/Caymas...... 13 PortBook.......................................... 35 Progressive Insurance....................... 15 Riverside Marine......................... 2,3,51 Suzuki................................................. 6 Tideline Boats................................... 32 Total Marine...................................... 17 Tradewinds - Sea Pro........................ 10 Virginia Saltwater Sportsman Assn... 18 Waterfront Marine............................ 51
For AnnApolis & EAstErn shorE
FishTalkMag.com February 2021 57
Biz Buzz
New Travelift
Bluewater Yacht Companies is now one step closer to bringing yacht service to customers in the thriving boating community of Annapolis. Just weeks after expanding the company’s sales operations into the newly developed South Annapolis Yacht Centre, Bluewater brought in a 75-metric-ton Travelift to set the tone for its service operation. The new lift is one of the largest in the region and can raise and move yachts up to approximately 80 feet in length or 165,000 pounds. Bluewater made the decision to bring service to Maryland in an effort to compliment the constant growth of its sales operations. Bluewater Yacht Sales has been built on the backbone of service, and with eight Mid-Atlantic locations, seven new boat lines, and hundreds of brokerage listings, they know that quality service is critical to customer satisfaction and continued growth. According to general manager Wyatt Lane, “This is a huge step forward for Bluewater in the Annapolis market. We are excited to finally bring world class service to our Maryland customers.” The Bluewater service facilities are set to officially begin operation in the Winter of 2021 and will initially provide concierge support for sales customers. Their office and service bays will be located on the first floor of the South Annapolis Yacht Centre facility. bluewateryachtsales.com
Brand Merge
S2 Yachts announces the consolidation of their Tiara brands (Tiara Yachts and Tiara Sport) under the Tiara Yachts banner. While this shift brings an outward and visible change to the Tiara Yachts brand, the form and functionality of every product built by S2 Yachts is ultimately, and will continue to be, Tiara. “The definitions of Yacht and Sport have evolved since the inception of Tiara Sport in 2017. Sport has shifted and blended from vessels meant to be enjoyed for the day to vessels that can be enjoyed for longer trips and with more people, similar to what we see in our Yacht products. Our outboard products continued to grow in length and scope, which was not necessarily something we envisioned when we started Tiara Sport,” states CEO and president Tom Slikkers. “Ultimately, our brand families were more alike than they were different. Those shifts, paired with our desires to streamline resources and focus, led us to this change.” The Tiara Yachts branding transition kicks off with the launch of the 48 LS, the first outboard-powered model under the Tiara Yachts name. Social zones, a key area of focus in every LS model, allow for guests to choose their preferred relaxation zone. Below deck you’ll find accommodations for four as well as a private head. The 48 LS will make its debut at Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo, Florida at a Customer VIP Event in February. tiarayachts.com
Anniversary and New Hires
Yacht and brokerage authority, Intrinsic Yacht & Ship, celebrated 20 years in business on January 23. Since its founding in 2001 in Annapolis, Intrinsic has grown to four locations in Maryland and Florida and has become a full-service yacht dealer representing the most prestigious yachts on the market. “It is exciting to see the consistent growth year after year,” says Chris Ruggieri, owner of Intrinsic Yacht & Ship. “We listen to our clients, and we evolve to meet their needs. We want to be their one-stop-shop for all things boating.” Chris began Intrinsic Yacht & Ship to offer better service and yacht management to customers in the Annapolis area. Through the relationships he built, he began selling brokerage boats for his clients, and in 2005 Intrinsic Yacht & Ship became the dealer for San Juan Yachts and Ocean Yachts. Opening and operating a successful office in Ocean City, MD is one of the high points of Intrinsic Yacht & Ships’ storied history. “We have been fortunate to reach so many customers in the Ocean City market and be a part of the fishing community there,” says Ruggieri. “One of the highlights of our year, as a company, is being part of the White Marlin Open and reconnecting with so many customers.” Intrinsic Yacht & Ship is based out of Port Annapolis, in Annapolis, MD, and is the exclusive Mid-Atlantic dealer for Hatteras Yachts, Contender Offshore, Bonadeo Boatworks, Invincible Boats, Cabo Yachts, and Uniesse Yachts. In addition to these impressive brands, Intrinsic Yacht & Ship is an authorized dealer of Yamaha, Mercury, Garmin, and more. In addition to their anniversary news, Intrinsic also welcomes two new employees to its growing staff: Blake Stephenson and Nicole Esterson. Blake, a native of North Carolina grew up on the water, boating, and fishing where he quickly found his passion for yachts. After three years as a yacht designer, Blake decided to move into a Yacht Broker role. He says he “wanted to spend more time with customers and manufacturers throughout the boat-buying process, and Intrinsic provides the opportunity to sell boats that are very customizable.” Nicole Esterson joins the crew in the new role of marketing manager and oversees marketing at all four Intrinsic locations in Florida and Maryland. She brings many years of experience in marketing, sales, and customer service and looks forward to helping Intrinsic grow. “I want to help Intrinsic reach the next level,” says Nicole. “They represent amazing brands and have a great sales and service team in place, I am thrilled to be part of this team.” Blake will work at the office located in Port Annapolis, and can be reached directly at (919) 520-7665 or Blake@IntrinisicYacht.com. Nicole will also work at the office located in Port Annapolis and can be reached at (410) 263-9288 or Nicole@IntrinisicYacht.com.
Send your Chesapeake Bay business news and high-resolution photos to kaylie@fishtalkmag.com 58 February 2021 FishTalkMag.com
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Worldwide Yacht Sales | Yacht Charters | New Yacht Construction
1978 36’ Trojan - $30,000 Jason Hinsch - 410.507.1259
2016 34’ SeaVee - $315,000 Brad Peterson - 305.481.1512
1980 33’ Bertram - $57,000 David Robinson - 410.310.8855
1999 30’ Pursuit - $57,000 David Robinson - 410.310.8855
1999 29’ Stamas - $39,999 Curtis Stokes - 410.919.4900
1995 29’ C-Hawk - $42,500 Jason Hinsch - 410.507.1259
2000 29’ Tiara Yachts - $65,000 Curtis Stokes - 410.919.4900
2011 28’ Mako - $89,000 Anthony Sayo - 757.427.4042
1973 24’ Stamas - $50,000 Wayne Smith - 516.445.1932
To see more details about these an d all oth er yach ts
around
the globe
, please visit our website below.
Annapolis, MD • St. Michaels, MD • Delaware City, DE • Deltaville, VA • Woodbridge, VA Telephone: 410.919.4900 • Email: info@curtisstokes.net
www.curtisstokes.net