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THANK YOU! We’re grateful for the generous support of our captains, anglers, volunteers, and community partners for making the 2020 Fish For A Cure Tournament, Paul C. Dettor Captain’s Challenge, and virtual Shore Party a success! Thanks to you, we raised more than $375,000 to support the Cancer Survivorship Program at Luminis Health Anne Arundel Medical Center’s Geaton and JoAnn DeCesaris Cancer Institute.
2020 TOURNAMENT SPONSORS The Chesapeake Bayhawks • Major League Lacrosse • Koons Toyota Annapolis Koons Toyota Easton • Koons Toyota Westminster CAPTAIN SPONSORS | AllTackle • Comcast • FishTalk • Kanga Coolers • Peninsula Lacrosse Club • PropTalk ANGLER SPONSORS | Coastal Conservation Association Maryland • Heller Electric Company, Inc. Liquified Creative • MaxSent • PEAKE, LLC • Westfield Annapolis FIRST MATE SPONSORS | CAM Wealth Management • Capital Gazette • Citizen Pride Continental Contractors, Inc • Doldon W. Moore and Associates, LLC • Eagle Title, LLC The Kahan Center for Pain Management • Ledo Pizza • Liff, Walsh & Simmons MacKenzie Commercial Real Estate • NUTANIX • What’s Up? Media • WNAV • WRNR • Yorktel DECKHAND SPONSORS | Allstate, Valcich & Riggins Agency • Blackwater Distillery • Garry’s Grill Guaranteed Rate • Ken’s Creative Kitchen • Maurice Electrical Supply, Inc. • NautiLife Wine Plan B Technologies • Pusser’s Caribbean Grille • PYY Marine • Sheehy Lexus of Annapolis • Sims & Campbell, LLC
JOIN US IN 2021 AS WE CELEBRATE F4AC’S 15TH ANNIVERSARY AND CONTINUED COMMITMENT TO MAKING A SPLASH IN CANCER CARE FOR OUR COMMUNITY.
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Get a GEICO quote for your boat and, in just 15 minutes, you’ll know how much you could be saving. If you like what you hear, you can buy your policy right on the spot. Then let us do the rest while you enjoy your free time with peace of mind. geico.com/boat | 1-800-865-4846 Some discounts, coverages, payment plans, and features are not available in all states, in all GEICO companies, or in all situations. Boat and PWC coverages are underwritten by GEICO Marine Insurance Company. In the state of CA, program provided through Boat Association Insurance Services, license #0H87086. GEICO is a registered service mark of Government Employees Insurance Company, Washington, DC 20076; a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. subsidiary. Š 2021 GEICO
IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 1
29
Features 29
Five Hot Winter Tidal Tribs
These Chesapeake hotspots shine during the winter months.
By Lenny Rudow
32
Carp in the Cold
These freshwater monsters will bite all winter long.
By Jim Gronaw
32
34
Running the Rocks
Rocks + Chesapeake Bay = Rockfish
By Wayne Young
38
A Fine Line
There are many brands and types of fishing line, and most anglers have their favorites. Here are a few tips and tidbits to keep in mind the next time you spool a reel.
40
By John Veil
40
Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Expansion
Expanding your fishing opportunities (we hope)!
By Chuck Harrison
42
Falling in Love
Fishing at a classic Upper Chesapeake Bay hotspot: Love Point.
By Lenny Rudow
on the cover 6 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
The AIC enjoys a little Chesapeake tributary winter magic.
All The Right Gear To
Departments 9 10 12 14 17 20
Letters
37 45 47 48 50 52 53 53 54 55
FishTalk Monthly Subscription Form
Notes From the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow
CATCh MoRe Fish!
Fishing News By Staff Hot New Gear By Staff Calendar Reader Photos
presented by Bay Shore Marine
Fishing Reports By Mollie Rudow Tips & Tricks By Staff Paddler’s Edge By Eric Packard Tides & Currents Brokerage: Used Boats for Sale
winter StriperS
Marketplace: Services, Supplies, and Much More
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Index to Advertisers Biz Buzz What’s New at FishTalkMag.com?
Plan Of Attack: Angling Tactics 16 Midwinter Micro-Trolling and Fishing the Snafu By Staff
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow 26 Viking 54C: 75,000 Pounds of YES 26 Pursuit C238: Highbrow Highliner 28 Seair Flying Boat: The Sky’s the Limit
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Letters Back in the Black
Dear FishTalk, recently moved to Salisbury, MD, from Long Island. This fall I kept reading in the Coastal fishing reports about the great black sea bass fishing “on the wrecks and reefs” out of Indian River, Ocean City, and Virginia Beach. I tried fishing for them several times (using squid and clam on topand-bottom rigs) but never had too much luck. Am I doing something wrong, or are those reports just all made up? - Sammy T., via email
I
Dear Sammy – The reports come from several sources (including head boat captains, tackle shops, and FishTalk readers), many are photo-verified, and we can confirm that there was some great sea bass action this fall – without a doubt. It’s hard to say what you might be doing wrong without more details as to exactly how and where you fished, but for a newcomer to the area we can give you one very solid piece of advice: join the Ocean City Reef Foundation, and get their chartbook. It includes both maps and GPS coordinates for the countless reefs off Ocean City that they’ve created through the years, and your donation will go towards building even more. As a general rule of thumb, running to the sites farther out is often a good move since the ones close to home can get picked over. Visit ocreefs.org to check it out. If you want to go out of Indian River you can also get coordinates to a few sites in Delaware waters at the DNREC artificial reef website page (dnrec.alpha.delaware.gov), and out of the Virginia inlets, the Virginia Saltwater Sportfishing Association (joinvssa.org) has a book of coordinates available that has mostly Bay sites but also a few off the coast.
Cuda Been
Dear FishTalk, his summer we were about 12 miles off of Assateague Island when we spotted a board with some small mahi-mahi under it. My son hooked a fish, brought it up to the boat, and I snapped off this picture just before it shook its head and broke the line. He thinks it was a barracuda but I say no way, not this far north. Can you settle the argument for us? - Fred P., via email
T
Dear Fred: It’s not 100-percent definitive from the picture, but we think there’s a very, very good chance your son’s correct. It certainly does look like one and although rather rare, it’s not at all unheard of to catch barracuda in Mid-Atlantic waters. Last year one was caught, photographed, and verified about the same distance out off of northern New Jersey.
Cease and Desist
Dear FishTalk, omeone told me you were going to stop printing my most excellent fish puns. Is that true, or is this just a fishcious rumor? - Anonymous
S
Dear Anonymous: Yes, it’s ofishial.
Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com FishTalkMag.com January 2021 9
from Notes the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow
F
inally — 2021 is here. We can put that no good, very bad, awful year of 2020 into the rearview as we hope for, work for, and dream for better years ahead. Honestly, it won’t be very hard to top last year in most respects. One which could prove challenging, however, is the Chesapeake Bay striped bass fishery. The state of the rockfish is, of course, not exactly a new topic. But it is one that consistently comes up again and again among the anglers I speak with. In fact, I don’t believe a single week has gone by over the past year without someone asking me for my opinion on it, or giving me theirs. Here’s the thing: opinions are pretty much meaningless without facts to back them up. And despite the fact that striped bass are perpetually ranked at or near the top in popularity for recreational saltwater gamefish; that a shocking 97 percent of the fishery’s economic value comes from recreational angling; and that striped bass angling supports over 10,000 jobs and contributed 802 million to GDP in the state of Maryland alone (2016 figures), we’re using decades-old science that was never designed to figure out catchand-release mortality to estimate said mortality. Yes, we’re once again bringing up the dreaded Marine Recreational Information Program, MRIP, and its nine-percent release mortality rate. We’ve been begging the state and federal governments to do some modern science and figure out how many released fish really do die, but to no avail. I said long ago in this column that if I really thought a fish died for (about) every 10 I threw back, I wouldn’t be able to live with myself. But it also occurred to me that I’d never really kept track of just how many fish I deep-hooked, or released in a state likely to result in the fish’s death. So
this October I took a headcount. I fished 14 days (almost all partial and often just a couple of hours after work in the evening, with an average time per trip of 2.75 hours), all with jigs, and released a hair under 200 fish. Out of those, two fish were deep hooked fish that I’m sure didn’t survive. I’m no mathematician, but I think that works out to approximately
##Until we get better science, we can only guess how many released rockfish really don’t make it.
one percent. Let’s say just for the sake of argument that I killed twice or even three times as many as I think — still a far cry from the nine-percent figure MRIP uses. On the flip side of the coin, observations of the folks I had aboard included one angler who persistently grabbed fish around the belly and squeezed, another used a dry towel to grab the fish (but stopped doing so when informed that it harms the fish by wiping away its protective coat of slime), and a third who often ripped the hook free as quickly as possible without any apparent care or
forethought. I’d guess that their release mortality figures would be higher. I’d also guess that some anglers would have lower release mortality than I would. No, I’m not taking the myriad of other factors affecting catch and release mortality into account: water and air temperature, salinity, fishing style, etc. My aim is not to argue that my observations were scientific, nor that they’re even relevant to real-world release mortality figures. It’s simply to illustrate that we really don’t know how many of the fish we release will survive — all we can do is guess. Yet with a rather minimal investment, we could be managing this fishery with knowledge rather than guesswork. The technology now exists to get accurate catch and release mortality figures, which has been proven by modern acoustic telemetry tagging studies. We could do the same with rockfish for a paltry half-million dollars or so. Chesapeake Bay striper expert USM Regents Professor David Secor has confirmed this, saying “We have the right technology, it just hasn’t been a high enough priority.” In a column early last year, we asked you anglers to help make this a priority by reaching out to Bruce Vogt, Ecosystems Manager at the NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office (bruce.vogt@noaa.gov, 200 Harry S. Truman Parkway, Suite 460, Annapolis, MD 21401, (410) 267-5660) and Max Appelman, Fishery Management Plan Coordinator ASMFC (mappelman@asmfc.org, 1050 N. Highland St, Suite 200 A-N, Arlington, VA 22201, (703) 842-0740). We’re renewing that call now, in the first month of 2021. Let’s all demand this action and make 2021 a better year not just for us, but for the striped bass, too.
Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 10 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Explore.
251 Coastal Explorer Uniquely Grady-White. gradywhite.com
Fish News By Lenny Rudow
Cleared, But Not Clear
A
fter the oil spill hit Delaware beaches this fall, cleanup is complete but it’s still not clear what exactly happened. The tar balls and oily contamination, which eventually made its way as far down the coast as Assateague Island, resulted in over 85 tons of oiled debris being removed from the coastline. We’re certainly glad that the month-long effort was successful. However, according to U.S. Coast Guard Incident Commander Frederick Pugh, the source of the spill “is still unknown and is under investigation.”
##Cobia are a hot top
T
ic of discussion among
VA anglers right now .
VA Cobe Conundrum
he results of Virginia’s cobia survey are in, and there are few surprises. A whopping 87.1 percent of the respondents were private anglers, and the second major stakeholder responding at 10.8 percent were charter captains. Almost half of those participating opted for a June 15 through September 15 season with a two fish per boat limit. The next most popular option was for maintaining the longer June 1 to September 30 season and cutting the limit back to one fish per boat, which received 25.7 percent of the responses. By the time this edition goes to print the commission will have met to discuss the survey results; how much weight they give them when determining the final rules remains to be seen.
Angling Education
W
nift y 50 is aided by ##The search for this tical Angling ), as Tac (of tz nar Erik Len sin muskie to con Wis ch the guys cat off their list. 17 ber check sta te num
12 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
hat happens when Covid-19 throws a curveball at life? People handle it differently, but one interesting tactic embraced by 18-year-olds Luke Konson and Daniel Balserak was to take a gap year off school and go fishing—everywhere. These two Virginia natives decided to make it their mission to catch the state fish in every state of the union. As the nation shut down last spring they turned to fishing as their main recreational outlet (definitely a smart move, guys), and came up with the idea for this endeavor. Then the two of them (who had planned on rooming together at Clemson before the pandemic hit) discovered that no one had ever tried it before. They set up a GoFundMe page, packed a Honda Odyssey minivan, and hit the road. Their first stop was the state of Maryland, where they checked off box number-one by catching striped bass (again, we say smart move). At the time of this writing they had Wisconsin in the bag (three muskies in one outing) and were heading for Minnesota with walleye in the crosshairs. The plan is to hit each and every state by September of 2021, by which time the world will hopefully have returned to normal and they can begin their freshman year. You can follow their nationwide fishing adventures on Instagram, Facebook, and on Fishbrain. Look for ‘em at @fishallfifty.
T o u rna m ent
N e w s
Fish For a Cure Tournament Wrap-Up
F
ish For a Cure 2020 is a wrap, and despite a few Covid-created road bumps it went off without a hitch. Team FishTalk/PropTalk is delighted to report winning both the Slam and the new Invasive Species categories, stacking up over 800 inches of blue catfish on the deck and adding a channel cat and a largemouth bass into the mix. More importantly, the team raised over $10,000 for the cause. Team Laxfish took top honors in the money-raising department, amassing an amazing $64,845 to help cancer patients. There were more than 220 participating captains and anglers participating with 65 boats registered, 57 of which competed in the Captain’s Challenge with bucks on boats. More than 2000 donations were made ranging from $5 to $15,000, and in total, more than $375,000 was raised to support the Cancer Survivorship Program at Luminis Health Anne Arundel Snakehead
Catfish
Rockfish
Medical Center’s Geaton and JoAnn DeCesaris Cancer Institute. Cathy Copertino, vice president of cancer services, Luminis Health, said: “On behalf of all of us, we thank you for the incredible impact that F4AC will have on more than 2000 patients and their families who will experience a cancer diagnosis and receive care at AAMC this year. We are so grateful.” In the rockfish competition, PYY Trolling Team took third (114.75 inches), team Counsel - Liff, Walsh, & Simmons/Eagle Title got second place with just a quarter of an inch more, and Sonar Kings took first with 117.5 inches. In the perch division, team Sassy Bluz with captain Roger Kouhi took the win. Side-note to anyone who failed to participate this year: you missed goodies like “Painkiller” drink kits, lobster medallions, and jumbo steamed shrimp in the swagbucket and party-packs. We seriously recommend you join in the fun in 2021! Visit fishforacure.org to learn more.
##Matt Rambo and Dan Dirks with the 34-inch first place striper.
EVAN Foundation Tournament Wrap-Up
D
an Dirks took top honors in the EVAN Foundation fishing tournament, catching a 34-inch fish that dwarfed his father Dale’s 22.5-inch minnow even as they fished side by side on the same boat. WTG, Dan! Andrew Trostle’s second place 33.5-incher was just a hair shorter, followed by third-place winner Travis Long with a 32-inch rockfish. More importantly, the tournament likely broke the $10,000 mark raising funds for the effort to defeat neuroblastoma, a deadly form of pediatric cancer. Learn more about supporting the Foundation at theevanfoundation.org.
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FishTalkMag.com January 2021 13
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.
Bloody the Deck
W
hat’s so special about the Bloody Point Baits four-inch Shad? In truth it’s not so different from most of the other plastic shad out there, though we do love the fact that it’s available through Alltackle, a longtime friend and supporter of FishTalk. We used these paddle-tail lures while jigging for stripers in the Chester this fall, and the rockfish didn’t hesitate to snap them up. In fact, Captain Tom Weaver (of Fish With Weaver) told us it was his go-to lure every day of the week. But it’s a different factor that pushed us over the edge, and made us decide to put the Bloody Point Baits Shad on the pages of New Gear — you simply can’t beat the deal! Price: $14.99/25-pack. Can you best that? Heck no. Visit alltackle.com for more info.
H
Reach the Apex
umminbird fans: stop the presses, hold the phone, and drop whatever you’re doing — they’ve just announced a completely new line of MFD displays. Apex is the name, and these fully networkable, NMEA2000 compatible, CZone digital switching-capable units are Humminbird’s new top-shelf offering. With both touchscreen and tactile button interfaces (they call it CrossTouch) you can access the menu in a myriad of different ways, on 13-, 16-, and 19-inch LCDs. And that menu has just about everything you could desire: side- and downscanning out to 250 feet via MEGA Imaging+ on top of down-looking CHIRP to 1200 feet (5000 if you opt for a transducer upgrade); radar, autopilot, and Fusion entertainment system integration; the One Boat Network incorporating Minn Kota iPilot Link motors, Talon shallow water anchors, and Cannon downriggers; and more. Apex units also come with CoastMaster and LakeMaster chartography, offer real-time bathymetric mapping, and are Bluetooth and WiFi equipped. Price: $3699 to $4999. Visit humminbird.com to learn more.
J
Ugly by Design
ust about every angler has fished with Ugly Stik rods and reels at one time or another through the years, and most of us appreciate this gear for its inexpensive yet practically indestructible nature. That’s the same attitude behind Ugly Stik’s new line of Ugly tools. The range includes fish skinners, pliers, sheers, and knives. The “Tuff Grip” handles are rugged and ergonomic, and the knife blades go all the way through the handles for full structural support. Ugly Stik backs these tools up with a hefty seven-year warranty. Ugly or not, we think that’s pretty beautiful. Price: $19.99 to $29.99. Visit purefishing.com to learn more.
14 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Shell Game
I
By Eric Packard
f you hunt, fish, or do both, a Shell Bag from Heybo Outdoors is good to have in your bag of tricks. Of course, if you’re at the shooting range reaching into a shell bag to retrieve a few shells to reload, the Heybo shell bag is the perfect tool. But to use the same shell bag while out fishing? Why not? The Shell Bag has proven to be a useful tool specifically while I’m wadefishing. I strap it on with my wader belt, and drop in a few plastics. The bag is handy when I need to change my baits and it’s also the perfect place to park my reel while doing so. Rather than having to take my daypack off and dig through it while standing knee-deep in water I can simply reach in and grab what I need. Price: $19.99. Visit heybooutdoors.com to learn more.
S
Crying Foul
ick and tired of having your fishfinder transducer get scummed-up, barnacle-ridden, and fouled with growth? That can degrade its performance, so Propspeed has a new transducer coating called Foulfree which will keep surfaces free and clear of marine growth for at least a year after you brush it on. It’s a release coating not a biocide, which forms a surface so slick that those aggravating aquatic attachments can’t get a grip. Thus, it’s more environmentally friendly than the alternatives. Where it really stands apart from similar products, however, is that Propspeed worked with transducer-maker Airmar to have them certify that it results in absolutely zero impact on your transducer’s performance. Price: $39.99. Visit propspeed.com to learn more.
S
Proper Behavior
ick and tired of wasting all that energy cranking on a reel, and jiggling a rod tip? Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just make a cast, take a nap, and wake up to find a fish on the end of your line? Well that might just happen, if you tie on a Peche Auto Swimming Lure. This little devil has an internal electric motor you charge up via USB, and a propeller on the nose which keeps it swimming all on its own for up to two hours. On top of that, the manufacturer claims that you can control the depth the Auto Swimming Lure swims at, merely by placing a bobber above the lure at the desired depth — WOW! They also say that this lure allows you to say goodbye to traditional fishing (yippee?) and its problems like “flexible strong hand pull, sun exposure, and unable to rest.” Ready to go fishing, Guangdong style? Visit Alibaba.com. Price: If you really care, it’s time to give up fishing.
F o r m o re g ear reviews , visit : fishtal k mag . c o m / gear FishTalkMag.com January 2021 15
Plan Of Attack
Midwinter Micro-Trolling
A
s long as the fresher headwaters of tidal creeks and tributaries doesn’t freeze solid, a mixed bag of crappie, perch, pickerel, and bass awaits. One under-utilized method of prospecting for winter panfish is trolling. But in order for it to be effective you have to think on the micro-level. Micro-level lures, that is. • Choose two- to three-inch lures, which have some action on their own as they move through the water. Twister tails, paddle tails, Roadrunners, and lures that similarly swim on their own will all do the trick. This is a tactic where tubes and straight tails, however, usually just won’t have enough action. • Use ultralight gear with six-pound braid, to maximize sensitivity. For perch and crappie a trace leader of four-
or six-pound mono is all you need, but if pickerel are in the area, going to eight-pound mono will result in fewer bite-offs.
• Use heads of a mere 1/16th of an ounce. • Troll so incredibly slow that you can detect and bounce bottom, even with this tiny bit of weight. (Note: this will only work down to 12 or 15 feet). • Work channel edges and drop-offs. Areas where four or five feet of water drops down to 10 or more feet are ideal. Micro-trolling like this will allow you to work your way up or down a creek until you locate some fish. Crappie and perch move around a lot less in the
##Go on the micro -troll for mid-winter crappie.
winter months than they do when the water’s warm, so once you do locate a school, you’ll often be able to stop trolling and shift to either vertical jigging or casting and retrieving. Then you can really bang on ‘em. When you wear the school out or they do decide to move, get back on the troll to locate another bunch.
##The two- hook snafu rig is a winn
ty. ##Mmmmm... tas
W
Fishing the Snafu
ant to take home some tautog for a fresh winter fish dinner? We don’t blame you — these fish are awesome on the plate. And a great way to target them is with the Snafu rig. This simple rig has two hooks on leaders of equal length, which join at the weight. Tog like to grab a crab sideways, crush it, and suck out all the meat, so the idea here is that whichever side the fish grabs it’ll also get a hook. To best utilize the Snafu, put the hook in each side of 16 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
er for winter tog.
the crab through the knuckle where a pincer claw joins the body, rotate it aft, and pop it back out through a lower leg joint. Once you drop this rig down, do your best to leave it sitting still. Your instincts may tell you to jig it now and again, but tog sharpies agree that a bait sitting dead is far more likely to be eaten than one swinging around next to a weight bouncing on bottom. In fact, watch experienced toggers and you’ll notice that they use long rods they can swing up
and down to maintain tension without accidentally lifting the lead off bottom as the boat rocks and rolls in the waves. Tip: Before lowering away, use the weight to smack the crab’s back-shell. That gets the juices flowing a bit, so the tog can smell ‘em better. Double-Tip: When the tog are on the small side, you’ll often catch more via the Snafu if you crack the crab in half and let each side swing free from its own hook.
C he s apea k e C a l endar Brought to you by
For Chesapeake Bay boating news, visit proptalk.com
January Island Fishermen through Jan 1 6 Kent Monthly Meeting Lights on the Bay at Sandy Point State Park Don’t miss this spectacular drive-
through holiday lights show beside the Chesapeake Bay. The event features more than 60 animated and stationary displays, including traditional Marylandthemed favorites, holiday, and children’s displays. Proceeds benefit the SPCA of Anne Arundel County. Admission: $15, car; $50, bus. From 5 – 10 p.m. nightly, weather permitting.
1
First Day Hikes
First Day Hikes are part of a nationwide initiative led by America’s State Parks to encourage people to get outdoors. On New Year’s Day, hundreds of free, guided hikes will be organized in all 50 states. Find a hike near you at americanhiking.org/first-day-hikes or strike out on your own adventure!
2
FSFF Club Sponsored Fly Tying
Virtual presentation at 10 a.m. via Zoom. See Contact information to request the patterns when decided and the Zoom link prior to the event: FSFF Coordinator, Ryan Harvey, rybeer@gmail. com, (360) 808-3295. Presented by the Free State Fly Fishers.
6
FSFF Monthly Meeting
7 p.m. virtual club meeting via Zoom. Free State Fly Fishers. Speaker: John McMinn, Fly Fishing for Great Lakes-Run Trout and Salmon. Contact Ryan Harvey for the Zoom link prior to the event: rybeer@gmail.com, (360) 808-3295.
##Learn more about iconic Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse on January 7 during the virtual lecture with Dave Gendell hosted by Annapolis Maritime Musuem.
The Kent Island Fishermen meet the first Wednesday of every month at 7:30 p.m. at the American Legion in Stevensville, MD. Contact Bert Olmstead at (302) 399-5408 with any questions.
7
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
The Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse: A Chesapeake Bay Icon in Annapolis. Speaker: Dave Gendell, author, sailor, and co-founder of SpinSheet and PropTalk Magazines. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM members.
14
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
Chesapeake Bay Waterfowling: Exploring Mysterious Species. Speaker: Dr. Matthew C. Perry, scientist emeritus at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM members.
16
FSFF Hands-On Session
Free State Fly Fishers: Improving Your Fishing Success by Doing Some Homework. A free, virtual handson session at 10 a.m. presented by John Veil, a kayak fishing author. Via Zoom, John Veil will share how to collect and evaluate relevant information that can increase the odds of finding fish and of being as comfortable as possible in your kayak or canoe. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@gmail.com for the Zoom link prior to the event.
16-17
Boat Maryland Safe Boating
Course Presented by America’s Boating
Club Rockville via Zoom from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. both days. 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. This is an instructor led course. Attendance at all online sessions is required. The online test can be taken at your convenience. Cost: $10. Registration deadline January 15: jmckinney2606@gmail.com
Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com FishTalkMag.com January 2021 17
Chesapeake Calendar
January (continued)
21
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
Traditional Wooden Shipbuilding on the Chesapeake Bay and the Maryland Dove. Speaker: Pete Lesher, chief curator at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM members.
22-24
Downtown Richmond Boat Show At
the Richmond Convention Center in Richmond, VA.
28
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
Oysters and Ecosystems: How the Eastern Oyster Shapes the Chesapeake Bay. Speaker: Jesse Iliff, Riverkeeper of South, West, and Rhode Rivers. 7 p.m. virtual lecture presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. $10, free for AMM members.
30-31
Kent Island Fishermen’s 11th Annual Fishing Flea Market
8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Kent Island American Legion in Stevensville, MD. $4 (ages 16 and under free). Face masks required. Fishing rods, reels, lures, and other fishing accessories, boating accessories, crabbing supplies, fishing charters, marine electronics, clothing, publications, door prizes, raffles, and food.
For links to the websites for these events and more, visit proptalk.com/calendar
February through Feb 28 CCA Pickerel Championship
Open in all Maryland waters. Prizes for the largest single fish, longest three-fish stringer, longest fly-caught pickerel, kayak/SUP division, youth division, and also largest perch and crappie of the tournament. This is a catch-photorelease tournament held on the iAngler platform. $50 for CCA members, $75 for non-members and includes membership.
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 members.
with Lenny
nner mmer
Follow us on Facebook and tune in on the second Thursday of the Month at 5 p.m. for new episodes of LIVE with Lenny! Find past episodes and more fishing-related videos on our Facebook page, Instagram, and YouTube channel.
Visit facebook.com/fishtalkmag and click “Like” to follow our page. Don’t have a facebook account? Sign up to get notified about upcoming LIVE video streams by clicking to fishtalkmag.com/email-signup 18 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
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.
##Compete with the angler in chief all winter long to catch the three biggest pickerel in the CCA Pickerel Championship.
11
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 members.
25
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 members.
KENT ISLAND FISHERMEN’S th
11
Ann
uAl
Fishing Flea Market
Saturday, Jan. 30th 8am - 3pm Sunday, Jan. 31st 8am - 3pm Kent Island American Legion Post #278 800 Romancoke Road StevenSville, md 21666 (1.5 miles south on Rt. 8 off of Rt. 50)
$4 admission (16 yrs & under FREE) * Appropriate Face Masks Required for Entry *
FooD | DRINKS | FREE PARKING GREAT DEALS oN:
Fishing Rods, Reels, Lures, Accessories, Charters, Boating Equipment, Crabbing Supplies, Clothing, Marine Electronics, and Rod & Reel Raffle
Get Ready for the 2021 Fishing Season! FishTalkMag.com January 2021 19
Reader Photos
presented by
Marine Engine Sales, Parts & Service 410-263-8370
www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com
##Tyler caught this big bass this fall in Elkton.
##Lin Hammond got her first triggerfish at the Jackspot reef.
##Kamrhen managed to hook up this snakehead at Calver Cliffs, despite a tough bite that kept nearby anglers frowning that day.
##BIZARRE-O-CATCH – Brian McCormick pulled this monster smooth puffer fish up at Belvidere Shoals while jigging this fall.
##Paul fished a public pond in Carroll County and discovered a rather large inhabitant in there!
Send your fishing pics to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 20 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Jack caught this surprise largemouth while fishing in the Magothy River this fall.
##Isaac and Wyatt discovered a nice mix of spot and croaker ready to come out and play.
##John Gray found the fat cats just below the dam.
##Daniel Einhaus tied into this big boy at Annapolis Waterworks on a white/chartreuse spinnerbait.
##Ken beat the odds catching this 24-inch rock on topwater during mid-day and a slack tide. You just never know! Photo courtesy of Mike Snyder
##Matthew and Nick hold up a fat Susky blue cat – nice catch, guys!
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 21
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##A honkin’ big flounder wasn’t good enough for Marianne, she had to go and catch a black drum, too!
##Now that’s what we call one awesome fishing family – go Van Dykes!!!
##Claire doesn’t just catch ‘em up, she fillets them and then cooks them herself, too. Way to rock it, Claire!
22 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Junior had some slammin’ action just north of the Bridge this fall – sweet catch!
##Will had a good time catching schoolies by the bridge early this fall.
##Luke got a double-header while casting a micro-umbrella in Lake Anna.
##Eric Olson, his daughter, and friends had a grand day on the Gambler this September.
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 23
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Rich, Carol, and Jon dropped down the bunker, and pulled up the blues!! Photo courtesy of Rich Gray
##The Aghions caught ‘em up in Baltimore Harbor, while casting jigs to all the structure.
##Tom and Tom got ‘em on Pop Pop’s Crews.
##Doug tied into this 47-inch cobia on Labor Day weekend. Nice one, Doug!
##Ben Grimm caught this MONSTER bass on a live cricket. Woohoo!
24 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Joshua Perez caught this black sea bass at the Bay Bridge – certainly was an interesting year for bass up there!
##Wyatt tossed a paddle tail out near Tilghman’s Island and reeled up this hoss.
##Scott Tyburski had a good morning on the Middle Bay.
##Brian found the pickerel biting in the Magothy, scoring this 19-incher on a Micro-Trap.
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 25
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow
Viking 54C 75,000 Pounds of YES
Y
ou want a new productionbuilt convertible offshore fishing machine that has all the latest and greatest in innovation and technology? Truth be told, your choices will be fairly limited because Viking Yachts has more or less cornered this market to a large degree. Fortunately, rather than resting on its laurels Viking constantly retires old models and introduces newly updated ones. And the latest to hit the water is the 54C, introduced last fall at the Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show. One of the key advancements Viking has made through the years is consistently producing large sportfishing boats that go fast, and the 54C is no different. With a pair of MAN V12 1400CRMs or 1550CRMs in the engineroom the boat’s designed to cruise in the mid-30knot range and top out above 40 knots, a self-imposed benchmark for new Viking models. All that speed comes courtesy of a tech-injection consisting of a bottom designed via computational fluid dynam-
Quick Facts ics software, and layup via vacuum-infusion with vinylester resin. Interior design gets a CAD-boost, too, and features a companionway that runs straight through the cabin, with three staterooms and two heads. Owners get some choice, here, as the forward guest stateroom can be arranged with either a single queen berth or with crossover berths that could prove a bit more useful if the crew gets tired during an overnighter at the canyons. Speaking of the canyons: it will surprise no one to learn that this boat’s 154-squarefoot cockpit is designed purely for bluewater action. The transom houses a dual-use livewell/kill box, there’s an in-deck fishbox in the cockpit sole, another in-deck box can be plumbed for a second livewell, and a bait freezer, coolers, and tackle stowage stations live in the mezzanine. Rod holder and rocket launcher placement will be left up to the owner, but you can have six flushmounts in the gunwale, three launchers on either side of the tower pipework, and eight more across the bridgedeck rail, should you so desire.
LOA: 54’6” Beam: 17’8” Displacement: 75,026 lbs. Draft (hull): 4’11” Transom Deadrise: 12 degrees Fuel Capacity: 1403 gal. Max. Power: 3100 hp
You’re looking for a new mid50-something production-built convertible? Like we said, your choices will be limited. Then again, after looking at the Viking 54C, that probably won’t bother you one bit.
Area Dealers
Bluewater Yacht Sales, Baltimore, MD, (410) 342-6600; Annapolis, MD, (410) 827-0873; Ocean City, MD, (410) 390-3043, Gloucester Point, VA, (804) 642-2150; Hampton, VA, (757) 723-0793, and Virginia Beach, VA, (757) 937-2570 or bluewateryachtsales.com
Pursuit C238: Highbrow Highliner
C
an a serious fishing boat also be a work of art? That’s a silly question, because most are — at least, they are to we hardcore anglers. But there are a few models out there which are so pleasing to the eye that one would be hard-pressed to argue against masterpiece status. One builder which regularly builds boats so visually fluid, so well fitted out, and so perfectly finished as to tread in these waters is Pursuit. And even when it comes to the compamny’s smallest offering, the C238, one glance is all you’ll need to realize that this boat is built with the same attention to detail and craftsmanship as their far more expensive boats. 26 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Beauty is, of course, in the eye of the beholder. But a close inspection of this model provides proof that beauty is also more than skin deep. Swing open the front-opening console head compartment, for an example. Not only is the door perfectly finished gel coat on both sides, it opens and closes smoothly and effortlessly on a gas-assist strut. Now look at the access to the back of the helm. On many boats it will be closed off by a snap-in canvas curtain, but here, quickrelease hand-screws secure a sturdy panel over the opening. And when you check out the opening port, note that it’s framed in beefy stainless-steel, not the cheaper
plastic seen on most small and mid-sized center consoles. Next, check out the leaning post and T-top powder-coated pipework. In both cases the feet meet a fiberglass base elevated well above the deck, eliminating a common tripping-point. Check out the seats, which have Dri-Fast foam with mesh backings so you never get the wet-butt syndrome so common to open boats. Look in the bilge and you’ll find that even down there, an area neglected by all but the most detail-conscious builders, it’s clean and gel-coated. Fit and finish is one thing, fishability is another. In this regard the C238 meets the
Quick Facts: LOA: 24’4” Beam: 8’6” Displacement: 4580 lbs. Draft (hull): 1’8” Transom Deadrise: 21 degrees Fuel Capacity: 105 gal. Max. Power: 300 hp
bar, with standard features including a 23-gallon insulated livewell (baby blue inside, of course), four flush gunwalemount rodholders, four hard top rocket launchers, under-gunwale rodracks, and a raw-water washdown with a quickdisconnect for the hose. If you’re willing to pony up for the option you can get four more flush-mount rodholders in the transom, which we’d say you’d be nuts to go without. This boat’s just small enough to offer spiffy performance with a single engine,
a characteristic that will make it attractive to a number of Bay and sometimes-oceanic anglers who like the simplified maintenance, lower expense, and higher efficiency of a single-screw rig. With an F300 on the transom cruising speed is in the mid-30s, top-end pushes up close to the 50-mph mark, and the boat gets between two and three mpg through the cruising range. Pursuit also rigs the boat with an F250, which drops speeds by just a couple of mph. To an angler, it’s rare to come across an ugly fishing boat. Heck, we’d say that any-
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thing which gets you out on the water with rods and reels aboard is a thing of beauty in its own way. But works of art are a bit less common, and the Pursuit C238 is a fiberglass sculpture one could gaze at for hours on end. If, that is, the fish weren’t biting.
Area Dealers
North Point Yacht Sales, Annapolis MD, (410) 280-2038; Gloucester Point, VA, (804) 885-4090; or northpointyachtsales.com.
Dealers Wanted! NC • VA • MD • DE
www.FormulaX2MidAtlantic.com
PortBook is the resource boaters use to find service providers they can trust.
Boaters’ Marine Directory For AnnApolis & EAstErn shorE
Formula X2 Mid-Atlantic Dan Lowery, Distributor Cell: 540-270-0567 Dan@FormulaX2MidAtlantic.com FishTalkMag.com January 2021 27
Hot New Fishboats
Seair Flying Boat: The Sky’s the Limit
Y
ou say you want to be one of the seagulls, rather than merely looking for them with binoculars? You want to go from the western shore to the eastern shore
without hitting so much as one wave? Or, perhaps you simply want the ultimate cure to seasickness (as for airsickness, we make no promises). Any way you cut it, casting from a Seair Flying Boat would be pretty dang cool. The builder Frankensteins together an aluminum-hulled RIB with a Northwing Mustang Trike
strutted wing, to take off and sail along at cruising speeds of 45 mph and a topend of 55 mph, up to 90 miles at a clip. Most amazing of all, this aerial angling contraption MSRPs at a very reasonable $23,000 (although we strongly — strongly — suggest springing for the optional $3000 BRS Aerospace emergency parachute). Ready to enjoy your own personal style of fly fishing? Visit seair.com to learn more.
Quick Facts LOA Surface Area: 206 sq. ft. | Beam Wingspan: 33’9” Draft Negative Draft Rate: 800’ to 1000’ per minute Transom Deadrise: 0 degrees | Fuel Capacity: 10 gal. Displacement: 249 lbs. | Max. Power: 65 hp
For more fishboat reviews, visit: FishTalkMag.com/fishboat-reviews
Buy or Sell with Confidence
Hire a Professional Meet a powerboat broker who will work for you.
p r o p ta l k . c o m / p o w e r b o at- ya c h t- b r o k e r s 28 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
5
##Intrepid FishTalk reports editor Mollie Rudow holds up a 14-inch perch that chomped on a tube jig.
Hot Winter Tidal Tribs
These Chesapeake hotspots shine during the winter months.
Pop Quiz: When does fishing season end in Chesapeake country? A. In November
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B. In December
I
f you answer anything other than “D,” we think you need to reassess your level of angling ardor. While less dedicated folks are sitting at home growing cozy but bored on the couch, there’s some excellent fishing to be done within a stone’s throw up and down the shores of the Bay no matter where exactly you live. Yes, you may need to bundle up and of course, the fish you catch will likely be smaller than ##While this may be the best known perch zone, don’t be afraid to explore anywhere you find deep water.
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C. In December or January, depending on the weather
what you may be used to targeting. But a sure-fire way to cure cabin fever is to hit one of these five hot tidal tributaries.
The Susquehanna
No river feeds more freshwater into the Chesapeake than the Susquehanna does, and few can match it for sheer numbers of winter fish caught when it comes to yellow perch. Perryville is the headline destination, as there are multiple boat ramps in the area and a public pier at Perryville Community Park plus pay-for pier access at Owens Landing, any of which can put you within reach of the hordes of perch. They usually show up here at the beginning of winter, and often remain until the spawning run begins in early March. Even during cold winters when the waters freeze, you can still catch fish from the Perryville piers. Just use a spud (a screwdriver or chisel duct-taped to the end of a broom stick works just fine) to poke some holes through the ice, and lower down minnow lip-hooked on shad darts, two-inch tube jigs, or tiny tandems with a jig on bottom and a streamer up top.
|
D. Never!
Bonus Tip: Fish right off bottom. While it may not be true 100 percent of the time, most days, you’ll make the best catches here by putting your bait between a few inches and a foot off bottom. Note: extended periods of heavy rain or melt-off can rile the waters here, turn them the color of chocolate milk, and shut down the bite.
The Magothy
The creeks and coves of the Magothy River hold plenty of yellow perch through the winter months, and you’ll also encounter pickerel plus a white perch now and again. Beechwood is the well-known shoreline access area, and you can catch fish here year-round by casting out minnow or grass shrimp. The water depth is only about four feet throughout the area, so suspending your bait three to three-and-a-half feet under a bobber rig works quite well. Kayak anglers willing to do a few hundred feet of portage can launch here and hit all areas of the cove or head upriver and fish around the bridge and in Nanny’s Creek; casting to the pier pilings often triggers a bite. Or head downriver and into Old Man FishTalkMag.com January 2021 29
Creek, another area that often produces perch and pickerel. Boat access on the Magothy is tough; Ferry Point Marina has a ramp but charges a hefty fee and access can be iffy during the winter months so calling ahead is a must. Many boat anglers launch at Sandy Point, and make the run (about 10 miles) up the river from there.
##The upper Magothy is a great cold-weather destination.
Bonus Tip: The perch here meander around the creeks and river in groups, so the bites often come in waves. When the action peters out in one spot be quick to move on and try another. But an hour or two later, don’t hesitate to hit that same hotspot again because often you’ll discover that the fish have returned.
The Pocomoke
The upper Pocomoke River is a veritable winter playground for fisherfolks, with pickerel, largemouth bass, catfish, and yellow perch all present through the never-ending fishing season. Minnow lip-hooked on a shad dart are tough to beat for all of the above when fishing the channel edges, though small jigs fished on bottom in the channel itself is a killer
tactic on low tides. Anglers fishing from shore often use simple top-and-bottom rigs with minnow or night crawlers for a mix of perch and catfish. Byrd Park (in Snow Hill) offers access for both types of anglers and kayakers as well. Note, however, that a very low drawbridge crosses the river at Snow Hill and you’ll have to call ahead and abide by time restrictions if you want to gain passage to the numerous good fishing spots upriver (visit snowhillmd. gov for the details). The good news: once you get past the bridge, you’ll see plenty of easy to ID hotspots. The big pier on the right, the little cut to the left — if it looks fishy, it probably is. Bonus Tip: Fish shorelines and shallows on flood tides; lip-hooking a minnow on a Road Runner and slowly working it along next to deadfall is a killer for bass and pickerel. On low tides stick with the main channel, where perch and catfish often ball up as water levels drop and will fall victim to a minnow sent down to the bottom. And during intermediate tides
30 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
anchoring up right on the channel edge and drifting a minnow suspended under a bobber right above the depth of the drop-off is a killer tactic for all of the above.
The Rappahannock
The upper Rappahannock around Fredericksburg may be better known for its late winter/early spring shad runs, but this zone also offers awesome mid-winter angling opportunity as well. And since Fredericksburg is quite close to the fall line, it can be surprisingly diverse. Upriver areas can produce good catches of both smallmouth and largemouth bass, mostly casting slow-moving swimbaits and bladebaits to deadfall, with smallmouth numbers rising the farther upriver you go. Downriver areas produce far more largemouth. Perch and a few pickerel will be caught on minnow, and perch and bream on night crawlers. The bulk of the catch from Fredericksburg down, however, will consist of catfish. The good news is that these waters are mostly filled with eating sized fish (a mix of channels and blues) and if you sink a chunk of cut gizzard shad down to the bottom, on a good day (or night) of fishing, you can often fill your cooler. The town park here offers access for shoreline anglers and has ramps for boat and kayak fishermen, as well. Shoreline anglers can also gain access upriver at Old Mill Park and kayak anglers can fish upriver areas via Motts Landing. Visit dwr.virginia.gov for details on access points.
Bonus Tip: Boat anglers can head downstream to the bends in the river, where the channel gets pinched and creates deep holes where yellow perch can stack up while they wait for the spring run; minnow fished on bottom will get ‘em. Also, note that this entire segment of the Rap is extremely sensitive to flow levels and can get washed out by heavy rains or snow melt; plan your trips here accordingly.
The James
The James River, particularly the Dutch Gap to Hopewell area, is the undisputed heavyweight champion of anglers in search of heavyweight blue catfish — and these monsters will keep biting right on through the winter months. Whether you choose to bait up with chunks of cut gizzard shad, strips of chicken breast, or live sunfish, you’d best be hauling heavy tackle (50- to 80-pound braid line is not excessive) and deploying large circle hooks (10/0 is not out of line).
##Enter: the mega-cat zone.
##Enter: the monster-mega-cat zone.
##Largemouth bass, crappie, yellow perch, catfish you name it, it lives in these waters.
There’s excellent access at Dutch Gap Conservation Area with boat ramps and multiple shoreline access points, however, as we go to press there’s been talk of shutting down the boat ramp to allow for easier removal of coal ash from Dominion’s nearby prop-
erty so we’d suggest checking chesterfield.gov before planning any trips this winter. Osborne Park, slightly upriver, is another option. Boat and kayak access can be found in Hopewell at Hopewell City Marina. There’s also a small fishing pier there, but shoreline anglers looking for more elbow room may want to head for Old City Point Waterfront Park. # Bonus Tip: Areas where oxbows meet the main-stem river are often excellent spots to try, but don’t overlook going into the oxbows themselves. Locate a hole with lots of snags and downed trees, and you’ll be in prime territory. In all of these tribs remember that although the tidal influence may be minor-league compared to downriver fishing grounds, it can still have a dramatic effect on the bite. As a rule of thumb look for holes and channels on low tides and check out flats and edges during high water. Also remember that the colder the water temps get, the slower the fish will be moving. Several warm, sunny days in a row can often trigger a more active bite. And while all of these areas can be temporarily shut down by excessive runoff (noted where it’s most commonly a problem), all will bounce right back into action after a couple-few days. Regardless of which one’s closest to you, one thing is for sure: whenever one might think the season “ends,” these five tidal tribs are just a sampling of the many places you can go to prove that fishing never really stops in Chesapeake country. #
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 31
Carp in the Cold!
##The author with a February giant from Lake Marburg, PA.
By Jim Gronaw
These freshwater monsters will bite all winter long.
A
bout 10 years ago I got hooked up with a bunch of low-life, bottom scroungers that had all the skills it took to bend a rod throughout the winter. No, these guys weren’t drug dealers or even politicians. Rather, they were serious, hard-core anglers who just ##Twenty-pounders aren’t rare in Mid-Atlantic waters... winter battles await!
liked the feel of a big, bottom-scrounging fish on the end of their rods all winter long. They taught me a lot and by the end of each mild winter I had several dozen 10 to 20 pound plus carp on my punch card. Maybe not earth shattering to offshore anglers seeking bigger saltwater gamesters, but to most freshwater enthusiasts a 10-pound-plus fish is pretty big any day of the week Not long after I got the basics down, I set out on my own to learn more and struggle at times. The company I kept was great while it lasted, and I indeed made new friends with some great guys. But other angling friends of mine just couldn’t “get it” as to what made winter carp fishing so special. So, here’s the scoop.
Winter Tactics
To begin with, carp are creatures of habit and where permitted they can be conditioned to feed on a variety of baits and chumming methods. This applies to all water temperature ranges. Some of my biggest carp have been caught from 32 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
January to March. However, in many places these fish just routinely cruise and bottom feed where water temperatures are warmer or flows are slower, such as many tidal rivers throughout the Chesapeake region. Anglers who employ European carp tactics will chum or bait specific areas to draw carp in. Simple mixes of corn, oats, pineapple chunks, bean varieties, and even bird seeds can coax these heavyweights in the winter. Many local carp experts have their own special mixes that they toss with a baiting shovel or even just throw to an area to attract fish. Others simply fish areas known to hold carp throughout the year. Baiting an area is good, but not always necessary. For the sake of comfort, mild, warmer days are easy on the body and frequently yield the highest carp activity in the winter. Late afternoon sunlight can draw fish shallow, as can calm tidal eddies with minimal current that have a variety of food items funneled to the spots. Although we employ seven- and eight-foot carp rods from European
companies, it’s not necessary to do so. Any medium heavy spinning rods (Ugly Sticks are great) that team well with 15 to 20-pound mono or braid will work in most situations. Bait-runner style reels are preferred as we like to let the fish run before setting the hooks in the tough, rubbery mouths of these overgrown goldfish. In-line weights from a half ounce to two ounces will work in most situations and when rigged in a Carolina style (line can run through the weight sitting on the bottom) it’s easy to lift the rod out of a holder and tighten the drag, setting the hook. Carp are sensitive, spooky feeders all year long and during the winter even more so. We have used bite alarms teamed on rod pods or bank sticks, items that keep line direction low and aimed at the feeding carp. Simple forked sticks can work with an open bail so that the fish do not feel any weight during the initial bite. Once they take off, simply close the bail and set the hook.
Hooks
Many hook styles work for carp and we like those used by the Euro-crowd made specifically for heavyweight carp, which are of a heavier gauge than most American-made bait hooks. Ideally, a #2 or #4 bait-holder style hook does well when covered with any dough, corn, or pack bait that can stay on the hook for 30-minutes or longer. (Winter carpers don’t usually have the aggravation of sunfish and crayfish stripping baits during the cold-water periods). We have had good success with the time-honored Eagle Claw baitholder hooks in sizes #1 and #2 when tied directly to our main line with a slip sinker or “no roll” sinker placed above it and secured with a splitshot to prevent the sinker from running down the line and impeding the bait. Often, we will utilize a hair rig where a small length of line (traditionally 20-pound braid) is extending past the bend of the hook and used to anchor several kernels of flavored corn or “boilies.” The line has a loop at the tag end and a small piece of plastic or string is inserted
Editor’s Note
##Matt Gronaw with a winter carp catch from a southern Pennsylvania lake.
through the loop to secure the baits. The hook remains un-baited, and when the carp take the corn in their mouths the hook just follows. When the fish feel the prick of the hook point, they “spook” or “bolt,” thus setting off your bite alarm or peeling line from an open bail.
Lines
The jury is still out among seasoned carpers as to which type of line is best for these fish. Many still favor quality monofilament in the 14- to 20-pound strengths and tie hooks and thread weights directly to the main line, minimizing knots or other terminal connections. Yet for those seeking long-distance fish from the shore that can exceed 75-yards, they are looking for a better hookset with the low-stretch braids. Often, a 20- to 30-pound braid
is secured with a 15- to 20-pound class mono leader of clear, softer qualities. Sensitive feeders, carp may shun baits on stiffer fluorocarbon rigs. Here again, the choice is often personalized and many European tackle companies produce leader material specifically for these and other situations. Yes, winter carp fishing can be a great endeavor during mild winter days when you’re just hankerin’ for a fight with a big fish. Check out Whacker Baits and Big Carp Tackle the next time you get on the web and you’ll be amazed at what is out there for the modern-day carp angler. Baits, flavorings, lines, weight, hooks, hair-rigs, and specialized gear for sure. But you don’t need all of that to get started in some big-fish action this winter. And as long as there is no ice you can catch a carp all winter long. #
We’d like to remind everyone that carp are primarily a catch-and-release species. While we’d never deter anyone from trying a new type of fish for dinner, very few people find carp to their liking. We’d recommend handling the fish gently and releasing them while following best catch-and-release practices.
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 33
R u nn i ng
t h e
R o c k s
Rocks + Chesapeake Bay = Rockfish
R
ocks ahead! You don’t want to hear that lookout report — unless it’s a fishing destination or “rocks” as in rockfish. Speaking of rocks, both sides of Point Lookout abound with rocks, oyster rock, and sometimes rockfish, too. Rocky bottom west of the point at the southern end of Cornfield Harbor is charted and well known (location “A”). One spot, shown as Jobs Rock on old charts, historically has been good flounder ground although the chance of catching keepers increases down the Bay. Who knows where the place name came from — the origin seems lost to history. Look for stripers on the west side during spring and fall. The short run from the Point Lookout State Park boat ramp is a definite plus, as is the shelter provided from northeasterly winds. Westerlies are another matter, however. The ramp is well inside the harbor and open all year. There’s also a nice covered fish-cleaning station, but I’ve found it locked down during the off season. The east side of the point also offers fine fishing grounds. What appears as mounds on a nautical chart is instead hard, rugged, irregular bottom that suggests rock formations. The presence of numerous anomalies not worn flat by oyster dredges again suggests some rock is present rather than oyster rock composed entirely of shell. My go-to put in for these natural reefs and other spots north and east of Point Lookout and eastern side spots across the main stem is Buzz’s Marina, located on the southern prong of St. Jerome Creek. The very narrow hairpin turn from the southern prong around the inlet sand spit is a bit exciting. Yet, the inlet is very well positioned for making a circuit to the north, east, and southeast — so let’s go running and gunning.
34 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
By Wayne Young
Say Bye to Buzz’s
Just outside the inlet is the Point No Point fish haven. A huge quantity of artificial materials provides habitat and fishing opportunities, discussed later (see also “Bridges Under Troubled Waters”). Point No Point Lighthouse is at the northeastern corner of the fish haven (location “B”). It’s a caisson “fireplug” style light structure. The underwater structure is fouled by marine organisms. It and the mound around it are certainly worth a few casts. Trolling around the lighthouse and through the fish haven for stripers and Spanish mackerel can produce when fish are present but scattered. Immediately east of the lighthouse are some debris. The Coast Survey’s Automated Wreck and Obstruction Information System (AWOIS) reports that this material is possibly the remains of an old lighthouse. Metal sheathing was
lost during construction of the light several times due to storm conditions. So, the somewhat circular bottom anomaly could be this material (see “Lost Beacons of the Chesapeake,” FishTalk Magazine, September 2019). Charted rocks lie 1.5 nautical miles 334 degrees true from the lighthouse (location “C”). Rather than a single rock, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Bathymetric Data Viewer (BDV) side-scan sonar image shows a highly irregular outcropping. Sounding data indicate vertical height in the range of five to eight feet. The structure visibly resembles other bottom formations from there south to Point Lookout, suggesting the presence of rock even though it’s not charted as such. The BDV also shows a broad, irregular, rugged ledge that more or less follows the
##Wreck just southeast of Buoy “72A” (location “G”).
shoreline that extends northwest for about four miles. Sounding data indicate drop-offs on the order of five to six feet across the ledge. Five nautical miles due north of the light “Summit Bridge” artificial reef (location “D”) is hidden under an obstruction circle. Five miles further north (location “E”) are the Cedar Point Lighthouse ruins and displaced riprap shore protection. Running southeast from there about 6.5 miles is Hoopers Island Light (location “F”), another “sparkplug” style caisson lighthouse. Six miles east southeast of the lighthouse, or running east across from St. Jerome inlet, is Buoy 72A (location “G”). A wreck is nearby near the edge of the shelf on which it sits. The wreck is about 225 feet long. From the NOAA BDV
side-scan sonar image and my downlooking sonar scan, what remains are the vessel’s sides and a keel or keelson. AWOIS wreck data records the wreckage, but is unrevealing about its history. The structure rises a few feet off the bottom, although from the down-looking scan, portions of the
sides, perhaps remains of bulwarks, rise up a few feet more. The bottom is relatively flat where the wreckage lies. Depths were between about 45 and 54 feet, so it’s deep. But, it’s a spot to try jigging when oxygen levels improve at depth and the fishfinder is showing feeding activity down there. About 3.5 miles to the south of 72A is Buoy 72 (location “H”). A prominent mound projects westward from the channel edge into the deep channel. This underwater feature obstructs free current flow and probably creates upwelling and subsurface turbulence we can’t see, contributing to favorable foraging conditions for predators. So, the bottom bathymetry makes areas around both buoys trolling and jigging destinations. Try for stripers, redfish, and Spanish mackerel. The occasional cobia is also encountered in season when a surgical tube is in the trolling spread. The Dorchester Power Dredge Oyster Sanctuary (location “I”) is two miles east of the buoy. Twentyfive “bay balls” (modestly sized reef balls) were placed there as a field trial to assess the potential
##Solomons Lump Light (location “N”).
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 35
R u nn i ng t h e R o c k s c o ntinued
for natural spat sets. Redfish have been caught there. Nine miles to the north northeast of the sanctuary (location “J”) is Hooper Straight Light. A submerged rockpile on the north side is always worth a cast or two, but it’s a hook-grabber. The screwpile lighthouse, now located at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, MD, stood here marking the site. It was removed and replaced by a skeleton steel tower. The first screwpile lighthouse, which replaced a lightship, was carried away by ice. Histories of the light don’t mention a rock pile. Best guess is that rocks were piled underneath the structure to strengthen it for heavy ice years, similar to the rock protection at Thomas Point Lighthouse. Holland Island ruins (location “K”) are about 4.75 miles to the east northeast of the oyster sanctuary. The extensive submerged obstructions are very hazardous, but sometimes draw stripers. Be very careful going in there (see “Bridges Under Troubled Waters” for a layout drawing and pictures). About 2.25 miles to the northeast of the Holland Island ruins is a charted submerged barge wreck off Cove Point on Bloodsworth Island (location “L”). The wreck is broken into three pieces, and the bottom it covers is larger than the wreck symbol. Be careful when exploring the area as there are dangerous obstructions on the west side of the island including submerged Army tanks that must be avoided. Not too long ago, a boat with a load of students out on an environmental education trip hit one and sank. They were all rescued off the cabin.
36 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Heading Back West
Back at Buoy 72, it’s a six-mile troll or run down to the Target Ships (location “M”) and the nearby Middle Grounds, and to the southwest, the Southwest Middle Grounds, another hotspot. The Target Ships are still used by the Navy for live fire training. From the Target Ships, it’s about a 7.75 mile run east to Solomons Lump Light (location “N”). Try casting jigs to the light. Eight miles west northwest of the Target Ships is the fishing ground east of Point Lookout and a host of natural reefs. Spots to check on the east side of the point include: • Location “O” - St. Mary’s Power Dredge Oyster Sanctuary • Location “P” - Hotel Rock • Location “Q” - Butler Rock • Location “R” - obstruction that may be vessel wreckage
##Very rugged bottom at “Sanctuary Rock” (Location “O”) where there is as much as a five- to six-foot rise.
The sanctuary off Point Lookout is one of the original reef ball field trial locations, where 25 bay balls were rapidly colonized. A natural reef at the southeast corner of the sanctuary is the sanctuary’s most impressive structural feature. The bottom configuration shown in the BDV image, my down-looking sonar scan, and the fact that this feature was not worn smooth by oyster dredges, suggest a natural oyster reef with hard rock. There’s as much as five feet of vertical relief. The fish shown in the down-looking sonar scan are likely schoolie striped bass, as we jigged one right after the scan screenshot was recorded in August of 2019. Two prominent natural reefs are about 2.5 miles northeast of the point. A spot known locally as Hotel Rock (location “P”) forms a narrow ridge oriented north-south which
rises as much as six feet above the surrounding bottom. Butlers Rock (location “Q”) is another old place name of uncertain origin that used to show on charts. Union General Benjamin Butler was involved in the Confederate prisoner of war camp at Point Lookout — maybe he fished there? The feature consists of a large mound with multiple high points. It is very rugged, juts up about six feet, then drops off sharply on the southeast side. East northeast of Point Lookout about 4.5 miles is an obstruction (location “R”) with two very rugged objects. The BDV sides-scan image suggests two scows with spilled cargo.
From the Point Lookout area, it’s a five-mile run north to the center of the Point No Point Fish Haven, and two miles back to the St. Jerome inlet hairpin turn. Look for individual artificial structures in the lower portion of the fish haven. Towards the center (location “S”), look for a massive deposit of bridge rubble between two steel barges and the remains of the Felicia. The sunken vessels have been there a long time, and attract both bait and predators. In between the two barges is a near-continuous large, rugged, and hard-to-fish mass of randomly placed Wilson Bridge demolition materials. Jigging over top the sunken barges is
an option, as is fishing the frame of the Felicia. Everything about this vessel has been lost to history but its name. Some of the rubble landed on top of one of the barges, which complicates jigging it. A drop-shot style rig with a sacrificial weight on a tagline below the bait or lure can sometimes help reduce hang-ups. The run and gun circuit described here is 65 miles, give or take, not including side trips or forays to more eastside island hotspots for stripers and speckled trout. It’s definitely a good day’s fishing workout to run that much — but well worth it to find fish. #
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
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Five Fall ke Chesapea Hotspots
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FishTalkMag.com January 2021 37
##We feel sorry for whoever had to spool all those reels!
A Fine Line I
By John Veil
’m a light tackle fisherman, and I only line on a cast. I find that very annoying, fish with spinning reels. The reels I as any angler will. use are 1000, 2500, or 3000 sizes. My alternative is to fill the entire When I started fishing decades ago spool with braid, after attaching a strip I spooled up with inexpensive monofilaof masking tape onto the spool. The first ment line, but over the years have tried few wraps of braid can dig into the tape several brands of braid line and now have and this keeps the bundle of line from all of my spinning reels spooled with rotating on the smooth metal. A few the same brand of 10-pound test braid. years ago, I was away from home and I like the consistency and not having to had to respool a reel but didn’t have any buy many different types of line. Spoolmasking tape with me. I took two Banding with braid, however, can be problematic. The spools on most spinning reels are made of smooth There are many brands and types of fishing metal. Shortly after I tried braid line on my first reel, I snagged something on the bottom, and line, and most anglers have their favorites. was winding a lot but could not gain line. I looked at the reel and Here are a few tips and tidbits to keep in realized that the entire bundle of line was rotating around the mind the next time you spool a reel. smooth spool. There are several ways to deal with this. Some anglers are reluctant to fill their entire spool with braid Aids from my travel kit and used them to (as it’s more costly than mono). They fill cover the metal surface on the spool — a some portion of the spool with less expentrick which worked great. sive mono backing, then fill the rest of the Braid line holds up well over time and spool with braid. I tried that in the past is not weakened by exposure to sunlight and while it does prevent the line from to the extent that mono line is. Wind sliding on the spool, on occasion the knot knots, snags, or frequent retying of lures linking the two types of line can work its will, however, eventually shorten the toway into a spot that grabs the outgoing tal line length. One of the nicknames for
38 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
the State of Maryland is the “Old Line State.” As a Marylander, I like my old line and I leave the braid on my spools until the total length of line is insufficient to make a long cast. When my reels reach that point, one way of dealing with it is to tie on an extra length of braid. But that creates the same knot problem I described earlier, so I prefer to remove the old, too-short section of braid and tie a fresh batch of braid directly to the tape-coated spool. With a little forethought, however, you can put that old line to new use. Recently two of my reels, a 1000 size and a 2500 size, reached the point where the line was not long enough. Rather than stripping the remaining line off of both reels and replacing it with new, I removed the line from the 1000 size reel and discarded it. I then tied the end of the line from the 2500 reel onto the empty spool of the 1000 reel, and wound the line on. I left both reels in place on the rods, ran the line through all the guides, and applied some tension to the incoming line to get it packed tightly on the reel. Although the line was too short for the 2500 spool, it filled up the 1000 spool nicely. And with that, this article has reached the end of the line.
Line Spooling Tips
##You can use a larger reel that’s short on line to respool a smaller one by winding directly from one to the other.
By Staff
As you choose and spool up with braid line, always remember: • When you’re spooling up, more pressure is more better. If the line goes onto the spool loose, taunt line will dig into the loose line when you have a heavy fish on. Massive tangles are the usual result. • BUT… wear gloves if you’re going to apply that pressure by hand, because reeling braid line quickly between your tightly pinched fingers can actually create enough friction to burn you.
• If you’re spooling a number of rods and often fish with a lot of people, consider using a high-vis line color. That makes it much easier to keep tabs on everyone else’s lines, and see when they get crossed. • You’ll want the spool completely filled to maximize casting distance, but remember that loops of line will spill off of over-filled reels. If you do over-fill and have loops sliding over the spool consider clipping off 10 or 15 yards, or more as necessary.
• Which brand of braid is best? We could argue about that all day but note that all of them are made of either Spectra (a Honeywell product) or Dyneema (made by DSM in the Netherlands), and both of these are gel-spun polyethylene with virtually identical properties. The way the lines are braided does influence how they feel and some brands braid together higher numbers of thinner fibers (smoother but more subject to abrasion damage) versus lower numbers of thicker fibers (more rope-like). But when all is said and done, most braid brands are amazingly similar to one another.
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It’s just that easy! FishTalkMag.com January 2021 39
##Significant construction is underway at the south island of the HRBT.
H Bridge-Tunnel Expansion s ampton Road
Expanding your fishing opportunities (we hope!) By Chuck Harrison
A
s a resident of the Hampton Roads area for most of my life, I should have nothing but happy thoughts about the doubling of the size of the Hampton Roads Bridge-
##John Erickson holds up a slot puppy caught at the north island.
40 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Tunnel (HRBT). Heck, when I was in college I even worked on the construction of the southbound tunnel tube one summer. Before you get impressed with that, it was a “general construction” job, mostly working with a jack hammer or a broom inside the almost completed tunnel. And as a local, I have waited in traffic at the HRBT way too many times to count…. so this expansion should come only as good news. But I also spend a lot time fishing under the bridges and over the tubes of the HRBT. It is, in fact, one of my two favorite places to fish. The other place is the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel (CBBT) which is also under a similar construction project. You may have seen my article on that project in the August 2020 issue. Briefly, the existing tunnels are “immersion-tube” tunnels, while the new ones are “bored” tunnels. I would point you to that article for a discussion of the “boring” type of tunnel construction.
Here’s a quote from the official HRBT Expansion website: “The I-64 Hampton Roads BridgeTunnel in southeastern Virginia has long been one of the region’s most congested corridors. The existing 3.5-mile facility consists of two two-lane immersed-tube tunnels on artificial islands, with trestle bridges to shore. These tunnels opened in 1957 (current westbound lanes) and 1976 (eastbound lanes) and are approximately 7500 feet long. Traffic on these four lanes exceeds 100,000 vehicles per day during peak summer traffic. The Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Expansion Project will ease this congestion with the addition of twin two-lane bored tunnels just west of the existing eastbound tunnel. Also, the four-lane segments of the I-64 corridor in the cities of Hampton and Norfolk will be widened.” As I mentioned in the previous article, the advantage of “bored” tunnels is that they are built in a hole bored below the
bottom of the channel. In this way, they have much less impact on fishing once completed. It is that “once completed” part I want to emphasize. While they are being constructed, there is a lot of impact on fishing. Added to this is the fact that at the HRBT they are also adding new bridges and roadways to feed into the new tunnels (including replacement of existing bridges and roadways). At the CBBT, the new bridges were built years ago. The good news is that several years from now, traffic flowing into and out of our region should be greatly improved. This project is slated to be completed in 2025 and cost $3.8 billion dollars. As with the CBBT tunnel project, work at the HRBT will progress from south to north. Preliminary work has begun on the South Island (closest to Norfolk). This preliminary work involves preparing the existing island to receive the Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) sometime late next year. Boring is set to begin in 2022. “What about the seagulls?” you may ask. The South Island has long been a nesting site for thousands of sea birds. They are employing a high-tech answer for this: basically, the plan involves border collies scaring the birds over to nearby Fort Wool.
Impact on Fishing
What FishTalk readers are most interested in, of course, is the project’s impact on the fishing here. As with the CBBT project, the biggest impact during construction will be on the sides of the islands. In the case of the HRBT, the new
Where Are The Tog? Angler in Chief Lenny and I got into a conversation recently about possible tautog fishing at the HRBT. These fish are commonly caught at the CBBT and on reefs and wrecks in our area, but I’ve never known many to be caught around the HRBT. So. The last time I went out I took some crabs and looked for togs over the tubes. I didn’t find any — not that it doesn’t mean they aren’t there.
roadways and tunnels will be placed to the west of the existing structure. For those who are directionally challenged, this is the side inside the harbor, closest to the traffic heading to Norfolk. That means this project will highly impact one of my own favorite fishing locations. As I write this, three days ago I caught nice speckled trout and puppy drum along the side of the North Island (closest to Hampton). I work this area just about every time I fish the HRBT. So far this island has not changed, but chances are it won’t remain so for long. My other favorite places to fish the HRBT are the two ends of this island (under the bridge and over the tube). These are the other areas that will be severely impacted. Ironically, the area of the island that will be affected the least (the east side) has never been as productive for me. Fortunately, the area along the western side of the South Island (closest to Norfolk) is not a very productive fishing location, and this is the area that will be affected the most by the project. In fact, it doesn’t appear that fishing the Norfolk end of the HRBT will be affected that much. Of course, I may be wrong about that! My favorite species to target at the HRBT are flounder, puppy (red) drum, and speckled trout. Fortunately, each of these species may be caught in various places in our region. Here is a brief rundown of fishing for each of these species at the HRBT. Flounder have not been plentiful around the HRBT in recent years. However, this summer I caught flounder up to 22 inches around this structure. I look for them under the bridges near the islands, and over the tubes near the north island. Puppy drum, mostly in “the slot” (between 18 and 26 inches) may be found in various areas around the HRBT. My go-to places to find them are over the tube, along the side of the north island, and under the bridge near the south island. They may be caught in summer or fall with small live bait (like spot or croakers) or with jigs. Speckled trout are mainly a late summer and fall fish in this area, however they may be found just about any time. My personal best was caught at the HRBT several years ago in early June. Large specks have been more common in the past couple of years (after several years of mostly smaller fish). I have done well in the same places that I fish for flounder and puppy drum along with a couple of “secret” holes.
##Flounder enjoy these waters, too.
Other species which may be affected by the project include stripers, gray trout, bluefish, and to a lesser extent, spot and croaker. Stripers usually show up in the fall as the water temperatures drop. Though not many cows are caught around the HRBT, there is a decent fishery for smaller rockfish. We will have to see how this project affects them. It has been a few years since I caught a gray trout big enough for me to keep, but smaller fish around 12 inches do frequent these waters throughout the summer and into fall. Lots of small blues may also be found around both islands throughout the season. Spot and croaker are much less structure oriented, so I don’t expect a lot of change in that fishery. With this bridge tunnel project, a lot of favorite HRBT fishing locations will be impacted. I have already started scoping out a large “flat” nearby for fall speck fishing, should the impact prove to be adverse. My hope is that the fish that typically populate the affected areas will simply move to other locations close to the bridge tunnel (like that flat) as construction takes place. That remains to be seen, but whether or not this happens, people who fish the HRBT will have to be open to finding some new fishing holes over the next several years. And hopefully, we will speed along through the new tunnels as we travel between Norfolk and Hampton in the near future. # FishTalkMag.com January 2021 41
F allin g
in
The Love Point mud flats are a traditional spot for spring bait-fishers to target trophies.
By Lenny Rudow
Fishing at a classic Upper Chesapeake Bay hotspot: Love Point
S
pring may be the season for amore, but spring, summer and fall are all seasons for love — fishing at Love Point, that is. Take a poll of anglers who ply the Upper Bay waters and ask them about their favorite hotspots, and Love Point will come up again and again. Why is this stretch of water so popular? First off, because there are lots of fish in this zone. Clearer water with higher salinity than the western shore enjoys works its way up along Kent Island, and from the tip of land called Love to the old Susquehanna riverbed there’s a tremendous depth range, so this area has something to offer both shallow water light-tackle angers and deep-water trollers. Chumming, trolling, working birds — you name it, and it can happen for you here. Yet when one refers to Love Point without a more specific description, there are many square miles of territory that could be interpreted as the area. To one angler fishing “at Love Point” may mean trolling up and down along the drop-off in 40 feet of water west of the northernmost part of Kent Island. But to another, it could mean chasing schools of stripers within the southern section of the mouth of the Chester River. So when you hear Love calling, how will you know where to go? Figuring it out requires an in-depth look.
42 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Bottom of Your Heart
The bottom along the deep Love Point mud flats (A) is the first area to note; it runs parallel along Love Point about a mile and a half from land, and continues up along the mouth of the Chester and down towards the bridge. Depths range from the mid-30s on the western slope to 45’ on the eastern side, before the flats slide down into the depths of the deepwater channel. These flats are used by some bait anglers as spring trophy striper chumming grounds, and at times trollers will zigzag across the mud flats to locate either spring trophies or fall schools of schoolies chasing bunker. Jigging or live baiting usually won’t be as effective in this zone, because the fish aren’t commonly schooled tightly or focused on a specific item of structure; you’ll need to either draw them in or stay on the move.
Edge of Love
The next area anglers need to know about is the edge of the drop-off from the shallow water extending off Kent island, down into the depths of the old Susquehanna riverbed (B). This edge is a major-league feature, and may be holding fish through any portion of the spring, summer, or fall. Anchoring along the edge and live-lining or chumming is effective here in the summer and fall, but trollers working back and forth along the drop will take their share of fish at all times of the year. When it comes to scoring big here, however, savvy anglers will look for the “Love Handles,” a pair of outcroppings in the 20- to 30-foot section of the drop (C), which come up to 15’, to the northwest of the point. You’ll be right in the middle of the outcropping at 39’03.00 x 76’19.25. The hard-shell bottom here is erratic and changes abruptly, and often, fish will hang close to this structure. Any method can work here, but thanks to the significant structure this is a favored spot of jiggers and light tackle anglers. Trollers will also find that during the fall season this can be a killer spot to try traditional bottom-bouncing tactics with three- or four-inch bucktails trimmed with a twister tail or a large
bull minnow. Keep the rod working with long sweeps towards the bow followed by drop-backs and letting out or retrieving line, as necessary, to keep that bucktail right on bottom as you go over the edges. Anglers should also file away this spot as somewhere to check when bottom fishing, because spot, croaker, and perch are all possibilities here.
Your Shoal Desire
Up closer to the land that we call Love, there’s an excellent chance of finding breaking stripers during the fall. The relatively shallow, 12- to 15-foot flat running between the Love Handles and land, up to the red #2 marker to the north (D), is for some reason a favorite spot for surfacefeeding fish. You’ll catch them with any of the usual methods used when fishing under birds, but beware: some seasons, 99 out of 100 of these fish will be throwbacks. There does seem to be a direct correlation between water depth and fish size when catching them on the surface here, and if the fish are out a bit deeper in 18 or 20 feet of water there is a much greater chance of putting a striper or two in the box. Generally speaking, if you hit a school of birds working in this zone
and catch a handful of 12-inch fish, it’s wise to move on and look for bigger, better quarry instead of hoping to eventually weed out a fish for the cooler. There’s also good visible structure here, at the light pole rocks and riprap (E). Tossing jigs is usually the best bet for stripers here, though in the midsummer months anglers will send live spot flying through the air and into the target zone. Often overlooked, however, is the excellent perch fishing potential. Bottom rigs baited with bloodworm or grass shrimp will certainly take plenty of fish but get too close to the rocks and you risk snagging, so flinging small Perch Pounders, Beetle Spins, and Mepps can be a better option. The northern edge of this shoal, about two and a half miles up from Love Point where the water drops from 15 to 35 feet, is another good spot to keep in mind for live baiting, chumming, and trolling. Breaking fish will appear here from time to time as well. It’s clearly marked by the #2 nun buoy, so this spot (F) is a piece of cake to find. It’s particularly good on an outgoing tide, when the moving water smacks into the edge and curls around it to exit the Chester. When that water’s rushing out make sure you set up on the eastern side of the edge, to take full advantage of the conditions. FishTalkMag.com January 2021 43
orite alk?
Love the River
Although it would more accurately be described as in the Chester river than as off Love Point, the hump sticking out at the green #3 can, east of the point, is another excellent feature (G) that Love-lovers should check out. This hump comes up to 15 feet and is bordered by drops to 20 feet to 30’ on three sides, and is an excellent spot to drop the hook and chum or liveline for stripers on days when a strong south wind prevents you from running out into the main-stem Bay. Again, you’re going to locate the bulk of the active fish here on the up-current side of the structure. If it’s an outgoing fish on the southern side of the hump, and on an incoming, try the northern side. Running west from here, the entire 18- to 25-foot zone from the north-side light tower clear down to Castle Haven is an annual producer for fall jiggers and trollers (H). Pods of fish will link up and form schools starting in September or October and chase bait throughout the area, often under patches of fast-moving birds that constantly group up, break apart, and reform. Bouncing a four- to six-inch soft plastic along bottom when you see fish on the meter within a few hundred feet of birds is often a solid bet for fish that many seasons will get up into the 30-plus-inch range. Check out these waters and there’s a good chance that before you know it, you’ll fall head over heels. Just remember to grab a bouquet of flowers on the way home, so your spouse doesn’t get jealous every time you head for Love Point. #
Ever Have Trouble Finding Your Copy Of FishTalk?
Not to worry, you can read every issue online!
##Fall schoolies are a common feature of the Love zone, as Jack McGuire of North Point Yacht Sales discovered while fish-testing a Caymas 34 CC.
ruDow’s e-guiDes
This book is a collection of how-to and where-to striped bass fishing articles by noted outdoors writer Lenny Rudow. In it, he covers detailed tackle, tactics, and locations for targeting rockfish while angling in the waters of the Chesapeake Bay, and off the Delmarva coast. (Price: $6.99)
Scan QR code using your phone’s camera or visit: fishtalkmag.com/read-fishtalk-online 44 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
To DownloaD This e-guiDe anD more, visiT:
fishTalkmag.com/e-guiDes
chesapea k e
&
M id - atla n tic
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
Presented by:
With 2020 now in the rearview, coastal anglers willing to bundle up will have their attentions dominated by the tautog bite. The wrecks and reefs off the coasts of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia will all hold these fish through the winter so grab some crab, tie up a snafu rig or two, and drop ‘em down to the bottom. A quick tog refresher:
• Once your bait hits bottom, leave it there. Tog don’t prefer to go after something that’s bouncing up and down with a lead weight attached, but rather like crab chunks that are sitting dead in place.
• Fish directly in the heaviest cover. Yes, you will snag and lose some rigs — this is simply part of the game when it comes to tog fishing. If you’re not snagging now and again, you’re probably not putting your baits where these fish like to dwell. • The moment you feel a nibble swing for the stars. Tog allow you about 0.0001 of a second to set the hook before they spit out the crab shell, along with your hook, after sucking out the meat.
One other possibility: the past few years early January has seen a decent striper bite along the coastline. It’s highly unpredictable but keep your eyes on the reports, because when the rock school up
##Trout like this hoss caught by Capt. Jeff Minderlein won’t hesitate to feed right through the winter.
a mile or three off the beach it can be a crazy-good bite with bird shows.
Freshwater
It’s tough (read: impossible) to predict where freshwater anglers will be heading this month because it all depends on just how cold it gets. Will the western and northern lakes freeze up, and provide a
shot at ice fishing this year? Will the Eastern Shore millponds stay warm enough to remain ice-free? Will the tributary boat ramps get blocked off by frozen water? You’ll have to take this one day by day. However, there are a couple of options that should remain good picks all winter long. First, targeting pickerel. Whether you’re up a Chesapeake trib or fishing a lake or pond, if there are pickerel swimming FishTalkMag.com January 2021 45
Fishing Reports in its waters, they’ll be on the feed all winter long. Second, don’t sell mid-winter trout fishing short. Trout don’t mind the chill either, and although most of the fall stockers have probably been harvested at this point, the wild trout population will be fooled by wooly buggers and midges. Third, though the bite may be a bit more lethargic, largemouth bass will give you a nice surprise when winter fishing freshwater in the Mid-Atlantic. Slow down the retrieves and plan to hunt deep, and you’ll still find ‘em.
Way North
It’s perch time, people! Hopefully we’ll see a better run in the deep waters of the Susquehanna this year, with some larger specimens than last winter provided. Expect that go-to areas like Perryville will sustain a regular population of winter perch anglers, and as long as we don’t have to battle ice floes or rushing waters, boats fishing off the piers should have plenty of action on small jigs tipped with minnow. Also note that the big blue cats feed through the chill. Get within sight of the Rt. 95 bridge, anchor up in a deep hole, and send cut fish or chicken livers down to the bottom.
Upper Bay Presented by:
The open waters of the Bay will be pretty quiet at this time of year, but anglers heading up the tribs should have a decent pick on pickerel and perch. While the Magothy has shown a resounding pickerel population the past couple of winters, note that several of the more northern creeks like Bodkin and Rock have been producing fish as well. And if this year is a repeat of last season, we’ll be hearing about catfish, perch, and carp turning up in Back and Middle Rivers, as well as Dundee. The Chester is often a good option this time of year, too.
##Kelly tied into this beaut of a bass as the weather turned, and fish like this will be prowling the Eastern Shore tribs through this month.
Middle Bay Presented by:
Tangier and Lower Shore
See above, rinse, and repeat. Although the open Chesapeake can’t be expected to provide much action (deepwater white perch being a possible exception; some years they can be found at the Bay Bridge rockpiles into the middle of winter), the tributary rivers will hold a smattering of pickerel, perch, and catfish. Expect Eastern Shore spots like the Tuckahoe and upper Choptank to offer more reliable action but remember that last year, decent numbers of yellow perch could be found schooled up over deep structure in the Severn for several weeks in January.
Lower Bay
We’ll say it one more time: head up the tribs to find your fish. The Lower Bay tributaries on the west side, however, have the edge over the rest of the region in one department: big blue catfish. If you need
Visit our current fishing reports to get the latest intel in a blink via this cell phone camera QR code link. 46 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
the drug of the tug, at this time of year there’s no better way to put a heavy-duty bend in your rod than to go up the James, the Rap, or the Potomac, put some cut fish chunks on the bottom in a deep hole, and hold on tight.
If you want to target a mixed bag, there’s no better place right now than the shore. Up the Pocomoke, Nanticoke, and Wicomico, winter anglers will encounter bass, crappie, catfish, yellow perch, white perch, and pickerel. That’s quite a long list — get your bucket of bull minnow, asap.
Way South
The attention of most anglers in this neck of the woods will be on tautog as long as the water temps at the CBBT don’t drop below the mid-40s. Another possibility for bending a rod will hinge on where the stripers go this winter, but as we go to press we’re certainly not going to make any predictions. Of course, if we get lucky and it remains warm we could see the possibility of catching specks in the inlets as well. Last year in mid-January we were still hearing from a few die-hards who were creeping four-inch soft plastics along bottom both in the inlets and in the lower Elizabeth, and even had a few reports of dozen-fish days. Again, it’s too early to predict if this will happen or not at this point in time, so keep your eyes on those current reports.
Tips & Tricks
Ice Fishing Tips Will it be cold enough for ice fishing in our region as
this edition goes to print? There’s no way to know, but hopefully, this season won’t be the ice-free bust that would-be ice anglers experienced last winter. If the water does turn hard and create an opportunity, these five tips will help make your trip more productive. When yellow perch are your target, reach for the biggest minnow in the bucket. It’s amazing just how huge a minnow a yellow perch can slurp up and they like those big wintertime meals, so don’t think for a moment that the mammoth minnow in your bucket are too big for them to handle.
See all those snowmobile tracks? When you’re in a heavily trafficked area like this one, set a bucket, tacklebox, or other highly visible item next to distant tip-ups. Otherwise, an unwary snowmobiler may well run down your gear. The day this photo was taken, one of the tip-ups about 50 yards from the anglers was crushed and mangled.
Toss your fish on the ice and you’ll be taking home frozen fish sticks rather than fresh dinner. Instead, cut a large hole part way through the ice but leave an inch or two at the bottom. Then use a pick or spud to chop a tiny hole through the remainder. Water will well up through the piercing and fill the hole, forming a livewell of sorts that the fish will live in for hours.
If bluegill are your quarry, try a tiny jig tipped with a maggot or mealworm. Give it microscopic jiggles to get the fish biting.
When you’re fishing a lake with heavy snow cover, remember that a thick layer of snow blocks out sunlight and makes for very dark conditions down below. Glow-in-the-dark jigs are a good choice in this situation, especially if the water is deep.
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 47
Paddler’s Edge
I
Four Knots By Eric Packard
fish with a lot of friends who are sometimes surprised that I catch more fish than they do. My secret isn’t that I’m a better angler than they are, it’s simply that I make more casts per hour than they do. I like to say a cast not taken is a fish not caught. Don’t stop casting. However, as we all know, we may get hung up on underwater structures now and then, and… snap! So, you will need to retie your bait or replace your leader on occasion. When I do, I prefer to use one of four basic knots that are quick and easy to tie.
Improved Clinch
I’ve been tying this first knot since I was 10 years old. Most of us call it a Fisherman’s knot, but it is actually called the Improved Clinch knot. It’s very strong and is good for connecting terminal tackle or lures to the monofilament.
Knotty Quick Tips By Kevin McMenamin • Braided Dacron that is waxed makes an excellent line to use while teaching or practicing knot tying. It’s a very soft and pliable line that coils up easily and can be used to master tying complex knots like the Bimini Twist. • A great go-to reference is “Practical Fishing Knots II,” by Mark Sosin and Lefty Kreh (available on Amazon). It was published back in 1991 and is still a valuable reference today. • Mono line of 50-pound test or more is difficult to knot and you may want to crimp instead; line over 80-pound test should always be crimped. 48 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
Palomar
The second knot, and the one I use most to tie my baits on, is the Palomar knot. This is in my opinion the fastest knot there is to tie a lure onto your line or leader and it works very well with braid. I often watch other anglers struggle with their knot tying and wonder what the heck is going on. Use this knot and you’re back to casting in no time.
Rapala Knot
If I need a loop knot to give a jig more action, I will use a Rapala knot. What you are essentially doing is simply moving the eyelet of your hook or lures up the line a half-inch or so, then you’re tying an improved clinch knot.
Double Uni
When I need to attach my leader to my braid I prefer to use a Double Uni knot (also called a Uni-to-Uni). This consists of tying two Uni knots, and pulling them together. Yeah, I know there’s the FG knot and the Blood knot etc., but I find this one faster and easier to tie.
There are plenty of other knots to use out there. I guess I could learn them all, but these four knots they are tried and true. I’ve found that there are no faster knots to use when I’m out kayaking, getting me back to casting and catching quickly. # FishTalkMag.com January 2021 49
Tides&&Currents Currents presented by Tides RUDOW’S
F I S H TA L K M A G . C O M
WEEKLY FISHING REPORTS
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StationId: 8574680 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Primary Time Zone: LST_LDT Datum: MLLW
Time
h m 03:04 07:50 01:41 08:27
ft AM 0.0 AM 0.6 PM -0.3 PM 1.3
cm 0 18 -9 40
2
03:42 08:36 Sa 02:30 09:11
AM -0.1 AM 0.6 PM -0.3 PM 1.3
-3 18 -9 40
AM 17 04:20 09:29 AM
3
AM -0.1 AM 0.7 PM -0.2 PM 1.2
-3 21 -6 37
AM 18 04:56 10:22 AM
4
AM -0.1 AM 0.7 PM -0.2 PM 1.1
-3 21 -6 34
AM 19 05:30 11:18 AM
AM -0.2 AM 0.8 PM -0.1 PM 1.0
-6 24 -3 30
AM 20 06:03 12:16 PM
06:21 AM -0.3 12:19 PM 0.9 W 06:53 PM 0.0
-9 27 0
AM 0.9 AM -0.3 PM 1.1 PM 0.0
01:19 07:49 02:27 09:33
02:15 08:38 Sa 03:29 10:44
1
Time Zone: LST_LDT Datum: MLLW
Time Zone: LST_LDT Datum: MLLW
February January AnnApOLIs Height
h m
ft -0.1 0.7 Sa 02:50 PM -0.4 09:26 PM 1.1
cm -3 21 -12 34
h m h m ft cm ft 03:38 AM -0.2 -6 AM 0.0 1 12:58 09:0506:00 AM 0.8 24 AM 0.5 M 03:24 PM -0.3 -9 F 12:19 PM -0.4 09:3507:10 PM 1.1 34 PM 1.1
cm h m h
cm m ft ft -3 -0.1 27 07:04 AM 0.6 PM 0.0 0 01:19 PM -0.4 PM 27 08:040.9 PM 0.9
-3 21 -9 30
2
02:19-0.1 AM 17004:21 17 AM 10:36 AM 0.9
2
-3 21 -3 27
3
-304:54 02:59-0.1 AM 18 18 AM 11:26 AM 1.0
3
-0.1 0.8 0.0 0.8
-3 24 0 24
4
-305:31 03:41-0.2 AM 19 19 AM 12:19 PM 1.0
4
-0.2 0.8 0.1
-6 24 3
5
AM 21 12:08 06:38 AM
0.7 -0.2 0.8 0.1
21 -6 24 3
6
27 -9 34 0
AM 22 12:52 07:17 AM
0.6 -0.3 0.9 0.2
18 -9 27 6
7
22 -902:01 05:560.6 AM 22 AM 08:05 AM -0.1
AM 0.8 AM -0.4 PM 1.2 PM 0.0
24 -12 37 0
AM 23 01:41 07:59 AM
0.6 -0.3 1.0 0.1
18 -9 30 3
8
12:100.6 AM 23 AM 23 -1203:00 06:45-0.1 AM 09:05 AM
AM 0.7 AM -0.5 PM 1.3 PM 0.0
21 -15 40 0
AM 24 02:34 08:44 AM
0.5 -0.3 1.0 0.1
15 -9 30 3
9
1803:54 12:590.7 AM 24 24 AM -1510:02 AM 07:34-0.2 AM
03:14 AM 10 09:29 AM
18 -15 43 -3
AM 25 03:28 09:32 AM
0.5 -0.3 M 04:41 PM 1.1 11:52 PM 0.0
15 -9 34 0
04:13 AM 11 10:23 AM
18 -15 43
AM 26 04:21 10:22 AM
15 -9 34
AM 12 12:41 05:11 AM
-3 18 -15 43
12:34 AM 27 05:11 AM
0 15 -12 37
01:4503:37 AM 0.0 12 06:41 AM 12 AM 0.8
AM 13 01:31 06:06 AM
-3 18 -15 43
01:12 AM 28 05:58 AM
0 18 -12 37
02:2204:30 AM 0.0 13 07:28 AM 13 AM 0.8
AM 14 02:17 06:58 AM
-3 18 -15 40
AM 29 01:49 06:42 AM
-3 18 -12 37
02:55 AM 0.0 14 08:14 AM 14 12:12 AM 0.9
AM 15 03:00 07:49 AM
-3 21 -12 37
AM 30 02:26 07:27 AM
-3 21 -12 37
AM 31 03:02 08:15 AM
-3 24 -12 37
05:00 10:19 M 04:24 10:44
5
05:40 11:17 Tu 05:34 11:33
6
◑
7
12:25 07:04 Th 01:23 08:15
8 F
9
0.6 -0.5 Su 04:28 PM 1.4 11:46 PM -0.1 0.6 -0.5 M 05:24 PM 1.4 -0.1 0.6 Tu 11:18 AM -0.5 06:18 PM 1.4
-0.1 0.6 W 12:13 PM -0.5 ● 07:09 PM 1.4 -0.1 0.6 Th 01:07 PM -0.5 07:57 PM 1.3
F
-0.1 0.7 01:59 PM -0.4 08:43 PM 1.2
-0.1 0.7 Su 03:42 PM -0.3 10:08 PM 1.0 -0.1 0.7 M 04:36 PM -0.1 10:48 PM 0.9
Tu 05:36 PM 11:27 PM
W 06:43 PM
◐
Th 01:16 PM 07:57 PM
F
02:14 PM 09:09 PM
Sa 03:08 PM 10:12 PM
Su 03:57 PM 11:06 PM
0.5 -0.3 Tu 05:23 PM 1.1
0.0 0.5 W 11:11 AM -0.4 06:04 PM 1.2 0.0 0.6 Th 11:59 AM -0.4 ○ 06:45 PM 1.2
F
-0.1 0.6 12:47 PM -0.4 07:27 PM 1.2
-0.1 0.7 Sa 01:36 PM -0.4 08:08 PM 1.2 -0.1 0.8 Su 02:28 PM -0.4 08:51 PM 1.2
dIFFEREnCEs
High Sharps Island Light –3:47 Havre de Grace +3:11 Sevenfoot Knoll Light –0:06 St Michaels, Miles River –2:14
Low –3:50 +3:30 –0:10 –1:58
H. Ht *1.18 *1.59 *0.82 *1.08
04:15 AM -0.2 -6 AM 0.0 2 01:41 09:5906:49 AM 0.9 27 AM 0.5 Tu 04:26 PM -0.2 -6 Sa 01:04 PM -0.4 10:2007:50 PM 1.0 30 PM 1.1 04:5402:24 AM -0.3 -9 AM -0.1 3 07:43 10:57 AM 1.0 30 AM 0.5 W 05:38 PM -0.1 -3 Su 01:54 PM -0.3 11:0808:32 PM 0.9 27 PM 1.0
05:3703:08 AM -0.3 -9 AM -0.1 4 08:43 11:59 AM 1.1 34 AM 0.6 Th 06:57 PM 0.0 M 02:51 PM -0.20 ◑ 09:16 PM 0.9
F
12:01 AM 0.8 24 AM -0.2 5 03:53 06:2409:48 AM -0.4 -12 AM 0.6 01:03 PM 1.2 37 Tu 03:54 PM -0.1 08:1610:03 PM 0.0 PM 0.80
12:58 AM 0.7 21 AM -0.3 6 04:40 07:1710:56 AM -0.4 -12 AM 0.7 Sa 02:10 PM 1.2 37 W 05:04 PM -0.1 09:30 PM 0.0 PM 0.70 ◑ 10:54 02:0005:30 AM 0.6 18 AM -0.3 7 12:05 08:16 AM -0.4 -12 PM 0.8 Su 03:15 PM 1.3 40 Th 06:15 PM 0.0 10:3511:49 PM 0.0 PM 0.60 03:0306:22 AM 0.6 18 AM -0.4 8 01:12 09:19 AM -0.4 -12 PM 0.9 M 04:18 PM 1.3 40 F 07:27 PM 0.0 11:30 PM 0.0 0 04:04 AM 0.6 18 AM 0.6 9 12:46 10:2107:16 AM -0.4 -12 AM -0.5 Tu 05:17 PM 1.3 40 Sa 02:16 PM 1.0 08:34 PM 0.0
-3 -0.1 27 15 07:57 AM 0.6 W 3 -1205:07 Su PM 02:100.1 PM -0.3 24 3410:41 PM 08:430.8 PM 0.8
15 Th -906:11 M 3011:22
-3 -0.1 30 08:52 AM 0.6 PM 6 03:020.2 PM -0.2 PM 21 09:210.7 PM 0.7
-6 -0.2 30 18 09:50 AM 0.6 F -607:20 6 Tu PM 03:580.2 PM -0.1 ◐27 09:59 PM 0.6
Time
cmh m -302:15 1 1807:54 M-1202:28 M 2708:27
1
15 Tu -1204:12 Sa 3410:05
Time Time Height Height TimeHeight
h mfth m cm ft AM -3 03:00 AM 01:47 AM -0.2 1 -0.1 AM 1.1 34 09:30 07:33 AM AM 0.7 PM -0.2 -6 F 03:49 PM 01:47 PM -0.3 PM 1.2 37 09:51 08:04 PM PM 0.9
18 10:50 AM Sa -301:14 W PM 04:551.0 PM 10:400.2 PM 2408:29 ◐ PM
24 12:50 PM M 003:06 F PM 06:551.1 PM 1810:23 PM 0.2
21 -0.2 -6 0.7 30 0.0 0.66
18 -0.3 -3 0.8 34 0.1 6
0.5 18 -0.3 -3 27 Sa PM 01:461.1 PM 0.8 Tu003:59 34 11:08 PM 07:520.1 PM 0.13
W 3004:48 Su PM 02:381.2 PM 011:49 PM 08:450.1 PM
Times and Heights of High and
21 0.5 -6 -0.4 37 0.9 0.13
Height Time Height Height Time
m h mfth mcm ftcm ftcmh cm ft -0.3-3 2.821 85 08:1810:29 AM AM 0.8 2.724 Tu 04:10 PM 0.1 3 -0.2-9 Tu -6 02:36 Sa 04:50 PM -0.2-3 PM -0.1 09:52 1.0 2.127 64PM 10:53 PM 08:35 PM 30 0.7 2.221
-3 01:08 AM AM -0.1 2 05:15 276 07:2011:24 AM AM 1.1
04:20 3 -0.1-9 -3AM 05:43 AM 03:31 AM -0.1 18 180.1 18 10:53 AM 1.3 40
2.724 82 10:0211:51 AM AM 0.8 Th -3 05:48 9 -0.2 -6PM M 0.3 06:12 Th 04:19 PM PM 0.1 11:05 0.9PM 27 2.221 67PM 09:50 0.6
0.1-3 2.324 0.0 3 18
AM 3 12:00 AM -0.2 3703 01:53 06:14 AM 08:16 AM 1.1
12:24 AM -6 19 04:55 3 190.1 05:28 AM -0.1-9 -3AM -604:10 04:06 AM -0.3 04:17 AM -0.1 4 -0.2 4 AM 19 06:35 AM 1.4 43 2.527 11:36 1.3 11:43 76AM 1810:36 AM 10:39 AM AM 0.9 10:59 AM 40 0.9 Tu0.3 12:34 PM Th-305:43 0 -0.2 F 06:44 9 M 0.0 06:07 Th PM 04:55 PM PM 0.0 0 F-6PM 05:15 PM 0.2 06:53 24 PM 0.9 27 11:49 0.8 10:28 PM 0.6 18 10:33 PM 0.6 1810:49 ◑ PM ◐ PM
2.2 0.2-3 2.127 0.1 6 18
67 4 12:57 AM AM -0.2 4 6 02:42 07:18 AM 09:16 AM 1.1
2.2 0.3-6 1.927 0.1 6 18
67 5 02:01 AM AM -0.2 5 9 03:36 10:2108:27 AM AM 1.1
2.2 0.4-6 1.827 0.2 6
67 04:36 AM 6 03:10 AM -0.2 612 11:3009:39 AM AM 1.1
2.218 0.0 0 06:5609:27 AM 0.4-6 -12 AM -0.2 M 30 02:12 2.1 64PM F 1.2 03:07 PM M 01:55 PM 37 0.9 1.727 09:40 PM 0.4 12 -0.3 3 -9 08:0609:15 PM PM 0.2 0.2 6
67 7 04:21 AM AM -0.1 712 05:40 10:48 AM 12:42 PM 1.1
-303:29 3 1809:39 W -604:32 W 09:58 21
AM -6 04:34 AM 03:16 AM -0.3 3 -0.2 AM 1.3 40 10:55 09:33 AM AM 0.8 PM 0 Su 0.0 05:18 PM 03:47 PM -0.1 PM 1.0 30 11:26 09:36 PM PM 0.7
5
-604:58 5 2111:37 F 006:57 F 1811:46
02:23 12:30 AM AM 0.5 24 7 0.8 7 AM -912:48 08:42 AM 06:58 AM -0.4 -0.1 -3 2406:59 AM Th 1.3 02:36 Su PM 02:05 PM PM 1.0 Su 301:52 40 08:54 08:23 PM PM 0.1 09:15 PM 0.1 3
7
2.3 05:37 70AM 01:13 AM 3 200.1 20 05:08 AM -0.2 0.0-9 0PM 07:30 AM 20 12:23 1.3 40
27 73 11:59 AM PM 0.9 2.4 01:20 Sa 07:44 PMW 0.4 PM 12 0.2 PM -0.2 0 Sa -6 06:13 ◐ 07:37 18 11:23 PM 0.6 12:40 AM 0.8 24 2.4 73 21 02:05 AM 210.1 -12 06:02 AM -0.2 06:28 3 0.0 0AM 21 08:28 AM 12:59 PM 37 0.9 Su30 01:15 2.3 70PM Th1.2 02:11 PM 3 Su 07:11 PM 12 0.2 0.4 ◐ 08:44 -0.3 -9PM 08:24 PM 01:36 2.515 76AM 03:00 AM 22 12:19 AM 24 0.6 220.8 22 07:28 AM 0.1 3
02:35 03:28 2.715 82AM 03:56 AM 01:34 AM AM 0.5 01:15 AM 24 0.6 01:54 24 23 8 0.8 230.8 8 AM 23 8 15 08:35 0.2 6 09:52 AM 0AM 10:23 AM -908:11 AM 07:57 AM -0.4 -12 07:50 AM -0.2 -0.1 -3 0.0 Tu34 03:14 F 1.3 03:43 64PM Sa1.2 04:06 PM M PM 03:07 PM PM 1.1 Tu 02:46 PM 37 1.0 M2403:02 40 2.1 0.3 9 09:54 10:06 0.1 3 -0.4 10:31 310:13 PM 09:23 PM PM 0.1 3 -12PM 08:56 PM PM 0.2
03:33 04:33 2.815 85AM 04:49 AM 24 24 1502:58 02:35 AM AM 0.5 02:11 AM 27 0.6 9 0.8 240.9 9-12 9 AM 24 09:42 0.1 3 10:58 AM -3AM 11:14 AM 09:22 AM -0.1 -3 -0.1 08:55 AM -0.5 -15 08:41 AM -0.3 W 34 04:14 Sa 1.3 04:51 64PM Su1.3 05:02 PM Tu2704:08 40 2.1 Tu PM 04:03 PM PM 1.1 W 03:32 PM 40 1.0 0.3 9 10:53 10:56 0.1 3 -0.4 11:17 311:04 PM 10:16 PM PM 0.0 0 -12PM 09:42 PM PM 0.1
01:04 AM 0.0 11 05:53 AM 11 02:42 AM 0.7
12:28 AM 0.1 26 1505:32 02:380.8 AM 26 AM
05:17 34 06:32 3.118 94AM 06:25 30 26 1504:50 04:23 AM AM 0.6 03:55 AM AM 0.8 111.0 261.1 11 11AM 26 0 12:54 PM -9AM 0.0 12:43 PM 11:22 AM -0.2 -6 -0.3 11:44
F
0.50 24 09:57 AM -0.6 01:04 PM -0.4 -12 Tu 05:05 PM 1.2 07:3911:25 PM 1.2 37 PM 0.0
0.50 24 10:49 AM -0.6 Sa 01:51 PM -0.3 -9 W 05:54 PM 1.1 08:18 PM 1.1 34
●
0 0.0 27 AM 0.5 Su 02:3705:21 PM -0.3 -9 Th 11:40 AM -0.5 08:54 PM 1.1 34 06:40 PM 1.1 03:25 AM 0.0 0 15 09:00 AM 0.0 15 12:56 AM 0.9 27 AM 0.5 M 03:2306:12 PM -0.2 -6 F 12:29 PM -0.5 09:29 PM 1.0 30 07:23 PM 1.0
Spring L. Ht Range *1.17 1.5 *1.59 1.9 *0.83 1.1 *1.08 1.4
3 0.5 24 -1811:50 AM 09:08-0.3 AM -0.4 F -9 3406:19 Tu PM 04:081.3 PM 1.0 40 0 10:20 PM 0.0
0 15 -15 30
AM 29 05:00 11:21 AM F
0.6 -0.5 06:05 PM 1.0
AM 30 12:25 05:48 AM
-0.1 0.6 Sa 12:06 PM -0.4 06:44 PM 1.0
AM 31 01:06 06:39 AM
dIFFEREnCEs
Th34 05:09 Su 1.3 05:55 64PM M 1.3 05:53 PM W2705:06 40 2.1 W PM 04:52 PM PM 1.1 Th 04:15 PM 40 1.1 PM 0.3 9 11:51 0.1 3 -0.5 11:58 311:49 PM 11:02 PM PM 0.0 0 -15 10:2511:44 PM PM 0.1
-12 10:40 AM -0.5 M 1.3 06:53 Th3005:54 40 Th PM 05:36 PM PM 1.1 0 ● 11:43 PM 0.0 12:46 AM 01:04 AM 0.0 0 12:29 AM 0.2 6 12 07:25 27 12 1506:18 03:260.9 AM 0.5 1505:39 05:11 AM AM 0.7 27 AM 12AM 27 1.1 34 -1812:41 PM 09:53-0.3 AM -0.5 11:29 AM -0.4 Tu-0.2 01:47 PM Sa -9 F-1512:13 PM -6 37 W 04:481.3 PM 1.0 3006:36 F PM 06:16 PM PM 1.0 07:46 1.2 37 40 ○ 007:02 PM 11:03 PM 0.0 0 01:39 AM 01:04 AM 0.2 6 13 01:40 AM 0.0 0 12:21 AM 0.0 28 15 28 04:13 AM 0.5 13 1506:24 13AM 08:15 1.1 34 30 05:58 AM AM 0.7 -1807:05 AM 10:361.0 AM -0.5 -1512:59 PM W -0.2 02:36 PM Sa -6 Su 01:33 PM -0.3 -9 Sa 12:16 PM -0.4 34 Th 05:27 PM 1.0 30 08:36 ● 1.2 37 07:44 PM 1.2 37 ● 007:12 PM 06:53 PM PM 1.0 ○ 11:45 PM 0.0 0 15 -15 34
High Mtn Pt, Magothy River +1:24 Chesapeake Beach –1:14 Cedar Point –3:16 Point Lookout –3:48
-0.1 0.7 Su 12:55 PM -0.4 07:23 PM 1.0
Low +1:40 –1:15 –3:13 –3:47
H. Ht *0.88 *1.12 *1.33 *1.37
f -0 2. -6 12:48 M 04:53 PM -0 M PM -0.2 67 06:5511:07 PM PM 1.0 2.
-0.1-3 2.724 82 09:0811:10 AM AM 0.8 2.524 W -6 04:57 6 -0.2 -6PM Su0.2 05:31 -0.1 0 W 03:26 PM PM 0.0 10:27 1.0 2.224 67PM 11:38 PM 09:11 PM 30 0.7 2.221
04:26 05:34 3.018 91AM 05:39 AM 27 25 1503:57 03:31 AM AM 0.6 03:04 AM 30 0.7 100.9 251.0 10 10AM 25 10:46 0.1 3 11:58 AM -6AM 12:00 PM -0.2 -6 -0.2 -1210:26 AM 09:49 AM -0.5 -15 09:30 AM -0.3
0 0.5 21 AM -0.6 Th 12:1409:04 PM -0.4 -12 M 04:12 PM 1.1 PM 1.2 37 ● 06:5710:33 PM 0.0
m ft
03:50 3 -0.2-6 -6AM 04:55 AM 02:49 AM -0.1 17 170.1 17 10:11 AM 1.3 40
-3 03:45 AM -302:51 02:30 AM -0.2 2 -0.1 2 AM 1.2 37 10:11 1808:45 AM 08:31 AM AM 0.8 Tu-903:27 -3 Sa-0.1 04:32 PM Tu PM 02:45 PM -0.2 1.1 34 10:36 2409:11 PM 08:48 PM PM 0.8
1504:44 01:490.7 AM 25 25 AM -1510:57 AM 08:22-0.2 AM
21 0.5 -6 -0.4 Th 37 3405:35 M PM 03:251.2 PM 0.9 0 09:34 PM 0.1
mh
-9 12:27 AM AM -0.1 1 04:22 182 06:2710:37 AM AM 1.0
12:2001:45 AM 0.0 10 05:01 AM 10 AM 0.7
0.50 21 08:10 AM -0.5 W 11:20 AM -0.4 -12 Su 03:16 PM 1.1 06:09 PM 1.3 40 09:37 PM 0.0
cm h
M
Time Time Heigh
03:25 3 -0.2-6 -6AM 04:07 AM 02:10 AM -0.1 16 160.1 16 09:30 AM 1.2 37
12:20 AM AM -6 5 -0.2 05:00 AM -0.3 06:28 AM AM 1.4 43 11:48 AM PM 0.9 Tu 0.1 12:35 PM 3 06:05 PM 0.0 06:59 PM PM 0.8 24 11:27 PM 0.6 01:19 AM -6 6 -0.2 18 6 -605:54 AM -901:03 21 05:090.6 AM -0.2 AM -0.4 07:33 AM 21 AM 6 05:58 1.4 43 -3 2107:08 AM 11:50-0.1 AM 0.7 2112:42 PM 12:58 PM PM 1.0 W 0.1 01:32 3 Su 30 Sa 308:09 -302:10 Th PM 05:551.0 PM 0.1 Sa PM 07:16 PM 0.1 07:55 PM ◑ 2109:31 PM 11:230.2 PM 0.56 ◑ 15
-612:09 04:240.7 AM 20 20 AM 06:16 AM -0.2
NOAA Tide Predictio
Annapolis, MD,20
March January February ChEsApEAkE BAy BRIdgE TunnEL
Time TimeHeight Height
01:38-0.1 AM 16003:52 16 AM 09:47 AM 0.9
04:21 09:25 Su 03:23 09:57
AM 16 03:42 08:39 AM
Time Time HeightHeight
1
F
J a n u a Ry 2021 T I d e S
Height
StationId: 8638863 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS
Times and Heights of High and Low Waters
January BALTIMORE Time
StationId: 8575512 NOAA Tide Predictions Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS
F I S H TA L K M A Station G.C OM /FISHING-REPORTS Station Type: Primary Type: Primary Baltimore, Fort McHenry, Patapsco River, MD,2021
10:19 AM -0.3 F -15 05:59 40 2.2 67PM Tu1.3 06:40 34 F 04:55 PM PM 1.1 0 11:06 PM 0.0 0.2 6 -0.5 12:36 -15AM 12:30 AM 27 271.2 04:45 AM 37 0.9 06:06 3.121 94AM 07:08 AM 27 11:07 AM -0.3 Sa 12:41 0 -12 -0.4 -12PM W 0.0 01:24 PM Sa 05:34 PM 40 1.1 06:46 1.3 2.330 70PM 07:24 PM ○ 11:46 PM 0.0 AM 0.2 6 -0.5 01:13 01:15 AM 28 281.4 0 -15AM 06:55 AM 43 0.9 3.121 94 05:36 07:50 AM 28 Su 01:36 -3 11:57 AM -0.3 -0.4 -12PM Th-0.1 02:04 PM -12 1.3PM 40 ○ 07:31 SuPM 06:14 1.0 2.3 30 70 ○ 08:06 PM
Low H. Ht +4 :15 *0.70 +2 :29 *0.48 +6 :04 *0.66 +1 :08 *0.77
2. 0. 58 F 02:16 PM 2. F 3 04:46 PM 0.1 10:1208:31 PM PM 0.7 -0
2. 0. 55 05:54 Sa 03:29 Sa PM PM 0.2 2. 6 09:37 PM -0 ◑ 11:17 PM 0.7
2. 0. 52 Su 04:43 PM 2. Su 07:02 PM 0.2 6 10:42 PM -0
AM AM 0.7 9 06:26 9709 01:32 PM 07:4912:44 AM -0.2
2.521 0.2-9 1.934 0.0 3 2.624 0.0-9 2.034 0 -0.2 2.727 -0.1-9 2.134 0 -0.3 2.827 -0.2-9 2.230
-0.4 2.9 18 07:31 AM 0.8 Tu24 03:30 0 F 0.0 04:07 PM -9PMSa0.0 03:26 PM -0.4 M-1203:26 0 -0.3-6 M PM 01:49 PM -0.2 09:01 PM 1.2 37 10:08 09:33 PM 2.4 1.1 34 2.324 70 3009:19 PM 08:01 PM PM 0.8 03:04 AM 0.0 0 31 09:25 03:32 AM -0.4 311.7 -3 AM 09:53 52 AM 2.8 21 W 04:31 PMSu0.1 3 04:08 PM -0.4 -12 09:48 PM 1.1 34 10:19 PM 2.5 30
High +3 :52 +2 :01 +5 :52 +0 :47
2. 0. PM 2. 0.1 PM -0 0.8
2.318 0.3-9 1.830 0.1 3
02:25 0 03:19 AM -0.4-3 -12AM 02:45 AM 03:00 AM 3 30 150.1 300.0 01:34 AM -0.1 15-308:49 15AM 09:47 AM 88AM 1.6 09:11 49 AM 1.2 37 2.9 08:34
Onancock Creek Stingray Point Hooper Strait Light Lynnhaven Inlet
64 Th 01:12 Th PM 3 03:41 ◑ 07:29 09:15 PM
70 12:25 AM AM 0.7 8 05:28 812 AM 06:4611:50 AM -0.1
-0.3 2.9 06:44 AM 0.8 M 24 02:32 0 -1502:43 PM Th-0.1 03:22 PM -12PMF 0.0 02:45 PM -0.3 Su -3 -0.4-9 Su 01:02 PM -0.3 08:15 PM 1.3 40 3008:46 PM 1.2 09:23 PM 2.3 70 08:49 PM 2.3 37 07:28 PM 0.9 27
dIFFEREnCEs
2. -0 W 12:15 PM 2. W0 02:4006:32 PM PM 0.0 -0 08:24 PM 0.8
2.318 0.4-6 1.730 0.1 6
AM 0.1 3 02:30 -0.5 01:49 02:00 AM 01:34 AM 3 29 140.1 291.5 12:58 AM AM 0.0 0 -15AM 14 14AM 1808:07 09:02 AM 91 08:31 46 AM 1.2 37 3.0 07:44
Spring L. Ht Range *0.88 1.0 *1.14 1.1 *1.33 1.4 *1.33 1.4
-0 2. -3 01:42 Tu 05:41 PM -0 Tu PM -0.1 67 07:38 PM 0.9
2. -0 52 01:51 M 05:50 M PM PM 1.1 2. 3 08:0511:44 PM PM 0.2 -0
55 02:52 Tu 06:47 Tu PM PM 1.1 3 09:01 PM 0.2 12:40 AM 10 AM AM 76 02:33 0.8 10 6 08:4807:18 AM -0.2 W 01:33 PM 58 03:45 W PM PM 1.1 07:36 0 09:48 PM 0.2 01:31 AM 11 AM AM 79 03:27 0.9 11 0 09:4208:04 AM -0.2 Th 02:18 PM 61 04:30 Th PM 1.1 08:21 PM ● 10:28 PM 0.2 -6 12 02:18 AM AM AM 0.9 82 04:1608:46 12 AM -0.2 -3 10:32 F 02:58 PM F PM PM 1.1 64 05:0909:02 11:05 PM 0.1 -9 13 03:02 AM AM AM 1.0 85 05:0009:24 13 AM -0.1 -6 11:18 Sa 03:36 PM Sa PM PM 1.0 67 05:4509:42 ● 11:40 PM 0.1
2. -0 2.
-0 2. -0 2.
-0 2. -0 2.
-0 2. -0 2.
-0 2. -0 2.
-9 14 03:45 AM AM AM 1.1 88 06:4210:00 14 01:03 PM -0.1
-0 2. -9 Su 04:12 PM -0 Su PM PM 1.0 2. 70 07:1810:20
-12 01:14 15 04:26 AM AM 0.1 15 88 07:2310:36 AM AM 1.1 -12 M 04:46 M 01:46 PM PM 0.0 73 07:5010:58 PM PM 0.9
-0 2. 0. 2.
-12 85 -12 76
Spring L. Ht Range *0.83 2.2 *0.83 1.4 *0.67 2.0 *0.83 2.4
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
Disclaimer: These data are based upon the latest information available as of the date of your request, and may differ from theDisclaimer: published tide tables. based upon the information available a 50 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com Disclaimer: These data are based upon the latest information available asThese of the data date are of your request, andlatest may differ from the publishe Generated On: Fri Nov 22 19:19:21 UTC 2019
Generated On: Fri Nov 22 19:13:45 UTC 2019
Page 2 ofUTC 5 Generated On: Fri Nov 22 19:18:03 2019
.7 .0-3 .034 0.26
.821 0.1-3 .134 0.36
.921 0.2-6 .234 6 0.3 .924 0.2-6 .334 6 0.4 27 .9 0.2-6 .434 6
0.4 .927 0.2-6 .534 3
0.3 .830 0.2-3 .530 3
0.2 .634 0.1-3 .530
0.13 .534 .0 0 .427
18
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
-0.8E 1.0F -0.8E F 0.4F
19
04:06PM 07:30PM 0.9F 10:42PM 12:06AM 0.3F
22
7
08:12AM 11:48AM 1.0F 02:24AM 05:48AM -0.6E 03:30PM 06:30PM -0.7E -1.0E 08:48AM 12:30PM 0.9F -1.0E 01:36AM 02:06AM F Su 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
210:06PM 05:24AM
03:54PM 07:36PM 10:54PM
0.9F
06:00PM 09:12PM
0.7F
05:06PM 08:18PM 11:24PM
12:18AM 0.4F
0.8F
01:06AM 0.3F
01:00AM 07:12AM 02:36PM 09:24PM
04:18AM 10:54AM 05:42PM M 11:30PM
3
-0.7E 01:54AM 0.9F 08:06AM -0.6E W 03:12PM 0.3F 09:36PM
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
-0.8E
12:00AM 03:06AM -0.6E 0.9F 04:00AM Th 12:30PM 1.0F W -0.7E 09:54AM 09:48AM 0.6F 07:42PM 10:12PM 0.4F 03:48PM 06:42PM -0.9E 04:00PM 09:42PM 10:30PM
1.1F 18 12:00AM 1.0F 06:00AM -1.1E 09:30AM 18 -0.9E 3 03:30AM 06:36AM 01:00PM 04:12PM
NOAA Tidal SCurrent a on -0.8E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h 22-0.5E ee -0.6E 02:24AM 12:48AM 03:48AM 4
19
12:12AM 1.0F 12:48AM 1.1F 0.9F 05:24AM -1.1E 09:00AM 06:36AM 10:18AM 02:54AM 06:00AM 04:36AM 07:30AM -0.9E 05:12AM 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 Th 12:24PM F 01:06PM 09:00AM 10:42AM 10:54AM Tu S a on Type Ha mon-0.9E c Th 0.3F 0.3F 07:12PM 09:30PM 0.5F 08:48PM 11:06PM 03:54PM 07:00PM -1.2E 04:18PM 07:30PM 04:48PM 10:18PM 10:30PM T me Zone LST LDT W ◑ 11:18PM Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683°
4
19
4
12:42AM 06:54AM 12:54PM 07:18PM
1 -1 1 -1
01:36AM 08:00AM 01:42PM 08:18PM
1 -1 1 -1
Mean Flood Dir. 25°and (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) National 20Times and Oceanic 5 maximum and 20 5 20 minimum 5 in knots speeds of current, F Sa Tu W F Atmospheric Administration ◐ February March
01:12AM 04:36AM -0.7E 07:36AM 11:18AM 1.1F 03:06PM 06:12PM -0.8E Sa 09:54PM
01:48AM 05:06AM -0.5E 07:54AM 11:42AM 0.9F 04:00AM 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 09:54AM 10:36PM 04:36PM 11:00PM
12:06AM 1.1F 03:12AM 01:00AM 06:12AM -1.1E 09:54AM 07:06AM 01:30PM 1.4F 04:42PM 01:12PM 08:24PM -1.3E 10:36PM 07:48PM
-0.7E 1.1F 05:48AM -0.9E 11:24AM 0.4F 04:42PM 11:18PM
01:36AM 1.1F 04:36AM -0.5E 01:36AM 07:18AM -0.7E 11:06AM 0.8F 08:30AM 06:24AM 02:42PM 0.6F 06:00PM -0.7E 01:42PM 12:12PM 09:54PM -0.9E 08:18PM 05:42PM
02:36AM 09:06AM 02:48PM 09:12PM
1 -1 0 -1
January U.S. Department of0.3F Commerce 12:42AM 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 1.2F 02:30AM 1.0F 12:12AM 03:42AM Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maxi1 21 02:48AM 6Slack02:00AM 06:00AM 07:06AM 10:54AM 1.1F 21 02:30AM 05:30AM 6h m-0.5E 21 6h m-0.4E 05:18AM 07:36AM h m knots 08:12AMh -1.0E m h m 07:00AM knots 09:24AMh -0.6E m knots 10:12AM -1
6
03:00PM 06:48PM 1.0F 10:12PM 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.7E
03:30AM 10:00AM 04:42PM Su 10:30PM
Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2021 Ch ◐
01:36AM 05:00AM -0.7E 12:00AM 0.3F Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 08:06AM 11:42AM 0.9F 02:12AM 05:36AM -0.7E h m h m h m h m 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E knots 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F knots Sa Su 01:18AM -1.1E 04:06PM 07:18PM 01:42AM 09:48PM -0.9E -1.0E 04:54AM 07:12AM 0.4F 16 04:54AM 07:42AM 0.7F 1 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.8F 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
12:12AM 06:36AM 01:42PM 08:06PM
For more information check www.noaa.gov 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F h m h out m 1.2F knots h m 0.5F knots h m h m0 Sa Suh m02:30PM 10:54AM 02:06PM 12:18PM 01:42PM 04:00PM 02:06AM -0.8E 12:24AM -0.9E 01:48AM -0.8E W Th Sa
04:54PM 08:00PM 0.8F 11:00PM 01:06AM 0.3F
04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 11:48PM 0.3F 03:42PM 07:00PM -0.7E 16 109:36PM 16 03:30AM -1.2E 04:36AM -1.4E 01:48AM 04:54A 08:42PM -1.3E 05:18PM 09:06PM -0.9E 10:12PM -1 05:18AM 08:30AM 0.8F 03:36AM 06:42AM 0.9F 04:54AM 08:12AM 0.9F ◑12:18AM ◐01:24AM 11:36PM 11:00PM 105:18PM 16 106:42PM
Tu
22
06:24AM 10:06AM 08:00AM 11:12AM 07:54AM 11:18A 11:54PM 11:54AM ◑ 02:48PM -0.7E 09:48AM 1.8F 12:48PM -0.8E 11:30AM 1.5F 02:30PM -0.8E M 04:42PM Tu 05:12PM 01:48PM 02:42PM 02:36PM 05:36P 05:54PM 08:42PM 0.6F 03:54PM-1.1E 06:54PM 05:48PM-0.9E 08:36PM F Sa 0.8F M 0.6F 10:36PM 0.7F -0.6E 08:18PM 11:18PM 1.0F 0.3F 08:48PM P 11:30PM 09:54PM 11:24PM 01:36AM 0.3F 08:12PM 02:06AM 05:18AM 01:06AM 03:00AM 1.4F 12:12AM 03:30AM 1.0F 01:12AM 04:48AM 1
7
7
22
22
7
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 -1 09:24AM 01:18PM 1.2F -0.9E 1.0F 03:36PM 1.0F 06:54PM -0.9E -0.9E 09:06AM 0.4F 01:00PM 0.8F 02:18AM 02:48AM -0.7E 01:06AM 02:30AM -0.7E 05:18PM 0 M 09:36AM 01:30PM Su 03:06PM M 03:30PM 12:06PM 03:00PM Th Su AM AM F E 01:24PM AM AM E -0.8E AM A 2 17 0.9F 17 05:54AM 09:18AM 0.8F 09:36PM 04:06AM 07:24AM 1.0F 09:54PM 05:24AM 08:48AM 0.9F 11:12PM 05:12PM 08:30PM -0.8E 10:42PM 04:36PM 08:00PM 06:12PM -1.4E 06:12PM -0.9E 07:54PM -1P 2 17 2 AM AM AM AM 12:12PM 03:18PM -0.8E AM 11:48PM Tu 12:06PM 02:54PM -0.7E W 12:48PM 03:42PM -0.6E Tu 10:42AM 01:42PM -0.9E W
205:00PM 05:36AM 08:42AM 08:18PM -0.9E 06:00PM 08:54PM 11:42PM
07:00PM 09:36PM Sa
0.6F
12:12AM 02:18AM 0.3F
12:24AM 02:36AM 0.3F
0.4F PM PM
PM 07:42PM E Su 04:54PM PM 10:36PM
12:54AM 0.4F
0.7F PM PM
PM 09:18PM E Tu 06:42PM
02:06AM 0.3F
0.5F PM PM
P
12:42AM 04:06AM 1.6F 01:00AM 1.1F 02:18AM 06:00AM 1 8 02:36AM Depth: 23 03:18AM 06:36AM 8Depth: 23 04:30AM 06:00AM -0.7E -0.6E 8 04:30AM 07:42AM -0.6E 23 Station 04:54AM ID: 07:48AM -0.5E 03:24AM 06:24AM -0.6E 04:42AM -0.6E 07:30AM -0.4E cb0102 22-1.0E feet23 803:30AM Station ID: ACT4996 Unknown 07:48AM 10:24AM 08:54AM 09:42AM 12:24PM -1 NOAA T0 02:18AM 02:48AM -0.9E 03:00AM 12:12AM -0.7E 01:42AM -0.8E 11:12AM 12:00AM 8 03:06AM -0.6E NOAA Tidal Current Predictions 12:42PM 1.1F -1.0E 09:30AM 01:18PM 1.0F 0.8F 10:24AM 02:12PM 1.2F -0.8E 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 09:12AM 01:00PM 10:06AM 02:00PM 0.8F AM AM E 1.0F AM 309:00AM 3 18 F Sa 18 M 3 Tu 18 M 04:12PM Tu 04:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 0.4F 04:06PM 05:54AM 08:36AM 0.6F 06:12AM 09:12AM 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.0F 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 04:42AM 08:06AM 1.0F 06:00AM 09:30AM 0.9F 06:36PM A F Sa M NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 301:30PM 18 3 04:30PM 07:36PM -0.9E -0.5E 05:00PM 08:12PM -0.8E -0.6E 05:54PM 09:12PM -1.0E -0.7E Source: 05:54PM 09:12PM -0.9E 04:36PM 07:54PM -0.9E 05:30PM 08:48PM -0.8E AM AM AM AM E AM A Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 11:36AM 02:18PM 12:36PM 03:18PM 01:00PM 04:00PM 01:42PM 04:42PM -0.6E 11:36AM 02:36PM -0.9E 01:00PM 04:12PM -0.7E NOAA Tide Predictions 07:06PM 10:30PM -1.5E 07:24PM 10:48PM -0.9E 09:00PM Su M W ACT4996 Th W Th Station ID: cb0102 Depth: Station 22 feet ID: cb0102 Depth: Station 22 feet ID: cb0102 Dep Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: Depth: Unknown PM PM E AM PM AM P 11:24PM 11:36PM NOAA T NOAA Tidal Current NOAA Predictions Tidal Current NOAA Predictions Tidal Current Prediction Su 0.3F M 0.6F W 0.4F 04:54PM 08:18PM 0.8F 06:12PM 09:06PM 0.6F 07:18PM 09:48PM 0.5F Station 08:06PM 10:30PM 06:00PM 08:36PM 07:42PM 10:12PM Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic PM Source: PM PM E NOAA/NOS/C PM P Source: Type: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: 11:36PM Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 11:18PM NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS PM PM Chesapeake Bay Ent., Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2021 Time Zone: LST/LDT Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, VA,2021 01:24AM 0.3F 12:06AM 02:06AM 0.3F 01:00AM 03:12AM 0.4F 01:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F 02:00AM 0.5F 12:36AM 03:00AM 0.4F Time Zone: LST/LDT Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic 01:42AM 05:06AM 1.8F 01:54AM 05:24AM 1.2F 12:12AM -1 9LST/LDT 24 04:18AM 9 Zone: 24N 9 11:30AM 24 03:00AM 12:06AM 03:24AM 12:24AM 03:42AM -0.8E 01:00AM -0.6E 02:24AM -0.8E 12:48AM 03:48AM -0.5E Ent., 06:54AM -0.7E -0.9E 07:30AM -0.5E -0.8E 05:36AM 08:42AM -0.6E 05:48AM 08:48AM -0.5E 04:36AM 07:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:30AM -0.5E Latitude: 36.9A22 904:18AM 24 Chesapeake Bay Ches Baltimore Harbor Baltimore Approach Harbor (off Sandy Baltimore Approach Point), Harbor (off 2020 Sandy Approach Point), (off 2020 Sand Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: 76.3683° W 08:54AM -1.1E 09:36AM 12:12PM -0.7E 03:18AM 07:00AM AMZone: AM 9 Time Zone: LST/LDT Time LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: Sa Time Zone: LST/LDT Time LST/LDT 403:36AM 19 4 19 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.7F 06:48AM 10:00AM 06:48AM 10:24AM 07:12AM 10:54AM 0.9F 05:24AM 09:00AM 1.1F 06:36AM 10:18AM 0.9F 09:42AM 01:42PM 1.2F 10:12AM 02:06PM 1.0F 0.8F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.2F 1.0F 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.0F 10:18AM 02:00PM 11:12AM 02:54PM 0.9F Times and Heights of High and Low Waters 402:54PM 19 410:36AM Su 19 Tu 4 W N Tu 05:18PM W39.0130° 0.8F 03:36PM 05:42PM 0.4F 01:18PM AM AM E 1.0F AM AM E Mean AM 36.9 Latitude: Sa Su Tu Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: Latitude: 76.3683° 39.0130° WN12:30PM Longitude: Latitude: 76.3683° W N Longitude: 76.3683 12:36PM 03:18PM 01:30PM 04:18PM 02:00PM 05:06PM -0.8E(T) 02:36PM 05:42PM -0.7E 03:36PM -0.9E 01:54PM 05:06PM -0.7E Flood Dir-1AP0 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 Flood Dir. Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) M Th F Th F AM PM AM PM AM 08:00PM 11:24PM -1.5E 08:24PM 11:42PM -0.9E 04:48PM 07:24PM M Tu Th
March Baltimore harbor Approach
Flood Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Mean Ebb Flood Dir. Dir. 189° 25° (T) PMMean Mean Flood Dir. Dir. 189° 25° (T) (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 18 PM (T) E Ebb PM PM E Mean PM ◑Mean ◐ Chesapeake Times and speeds ofDir mP Bay Entrance Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, inand knots ◑09:54PM PM PM PM of Timesinand and speeds m Times and speeds of maximum Times and andspeeds minimum of maximum current, Times inand knots speeds minimum of maximum current, knots minimum cu
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
02:30AM 0.3F Time01:00AM 03:00AM 0.3F 01:42AM 04:06AM 0.5F 01:42AM 04:06AM 0.5F 12:24AM 02:54AM 01:06AM 03:42AM 0.5F (2.0 n.mi. N -0.5E of Cape Henry Lt.)0.6F Height Time Height Height Time Time Height (Off12:30AM Sandy Point) 02:36AM 06:12AM 2.1F 02:36AM 1.3F 12:12AM 03:36AM -0.9E 12:48AM 04:12AM -0.8E 01:12AM 04:36AM -0.7E 01:48AM 05:06AM 12:06AM 03:12AM -0.7E 06:06AM 01:36AM 04:36AM -0.5E 01:06AM -1 AM AM A 07:48AM -0.7E 0.8F 20 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 20 504:36AM 5 20 07:00AM 10:06AM 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 -1.3E 10:12AM -0.9E 509:54AM 20 504:18AM January January February January FeA2 AM AM E 1.0F AM AM E 0.9F AM January February February March February March March 02:30PM 1.3Fh-0.6E 10:54AM 1.1FJanuary 04:06PM 1.2F -0.8E 12:18PM 03:54PM 1.1F 11:24AM 03:00PM 12:12PM 03:42PM ftcm cm January ft 02:48PM cm h mSu 10:36AM ft 01:36PM cm04:18PM cm h m h m ft 02:30PM 05:24PM -0.6E 03:06PM 06:12PM 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 01:30PM 04:42PM -0.9E 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E Mm W W F12:24PM Th Sa W 06:30PM Th 06:36PM 04:06PM 0.8F 04:24PM 0.6F 11:24AM 02:06PM -1P Tu F Sa AM PM AM PM PM Su M W Tu W FSlack 09:30PM -1.1E 06:30PM 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.0E 06:24PM 09:36PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -0.9E 10:48PM -1.1E Maximum -9 01:48 05:07 AM 0.1 3 3 1 03:19 AM06:12PM -0.5 -1510:12PM 04:58 AM 0.009:48PM 0 -1.0E 0.4F 07:30PM AM 0.1 07:18PM 0.5F 08:36PM 11:06PM 09:54PM 10:36PM 08:24PM 10:36PM 0.4F 09:54PM 16 16 09:00PM 09:18PM 05:24PM 08:06PM 1 16 Slack Slack Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maxim Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum PM PMMaximum E PMSlackSlack PMMaximum E PM P Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack MaximumSlack SlackSlack Maximum SlackMaximum MaximumSlack SlackSlack Maximum SlackMaximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Sla Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum ◐Slack 82 08:0311:12 AM 2.3 70 09:34Slack AMSlack 2.9 88 11:03 AM 2.5 Maximum 76 AM 1.1 34Maximum ◐h mh hmmhPM 10:48PM PM hh m m hh m h h mh knots hh hmmknots h mhhknots hm h mkn hh m m h-0.5 mh h m m h-15 mknots knotsTu knots m h mhh hm mmh m knots h3mknots knots knots h hmm hknots m h mmh knots mknots hh m m knots mmh knots mknots hm mknots h h mhknots mhhh m mknots h -12 Tu 05:21 PM M 03:42 h PM 05:03 PM 0.1 Tu 02:29 PM 0.1 mknots knots knots mknots hhm mhmhmmhknots knots m hknots m mknots knots m mmh mknots knots m0.1 3hh m m 3 knots knots h m hh m knots hh mm h m hhhmmmh m knots hm h hm hmhmh0.9F 12:36AM 0.9F 12:48AM 12:36AM 1.3F 01:30AM 12:48AM 1.0F 12:36AM 1.3F 0.9F 02:24AM 01:30AM 1.6F 12:48A 1 12:00AM 03:30AM 03:12AM 03:30AM -0.9E -0.9E 12:48AM 04:12AM 12:00AM 03:12AM -0.7E 03:30AM -0.9E 12:48AM 04:24AM 04:12AM -0.7E 03:12AM -0.7E -0.9E 12:12AM 03:24AM 12:48AM 04:24AM -0.6E 04:12AM -0.7E04:36AM -0.7E 12:12AM 05:00AM 01:06AM 03:24AM -0.6E 04:24AM -0.6E -0.7E 01:42AM 12:12AM 05:00AM 03:24AM -0.6E -0.6E 01: 79 08:2211:37 2.4 73 -0.9E 09:59 PM12:00AM 3.0 91 PM 2.703:54AM 82 PM 0.9 27 01:00AM 04:24AM -0.8E 01:36AM 05:00AM -0.7E 12:00AM 0.3F 12:42AM 0.3F 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F 03:30AM 0.4F 01:48AM 0.3F 04:54AM 0.6F 02:12AM 04:42AM 0.6F 01:00AM 03:42AM 0.7F 04:24AM 0.6F 12:18AM 03:30AM -1.2E 01:24AM -1.4E 01:48AM 04:54AM -1.4E 03:06AM 06:06AM -1.0E 1 16 103:54AM 1 16 16 106:18AM 16 1 01:00AM -1.1E 01:18AM -1.1E 01:42AM -1.0E 02:06AM -0.8E 12:24AM -0.9E 01:48AM -0.8E AM AM AM A 04:12AM -0.8E 07:12AM -1.3E -0.8E 05:24AM 03:54AM 08:18AM 04:12AM -0.6E 07:12AM -1.3E -0.8E 05:24AM 09:00AM 03:54AM 08:18AM -1.1E 06:54A -0 1 PM 1 11:21 16 121 16-0.9E 101:06AM 16 1 07:12AM 16 101:06AM 1606:54AM 101:54AM 16 1606:54AM 101:54AM 16 12:24AM -1.6E 12:30AM -1.0E 02:00AM -1 07:00AM 10:06AM 0.7F 16 1 06:30AM 07:00AM 09:42AM 10:06AM 0.9F 0.7F 07:18AM 06:30AM 10:48AM 07:00AM 09:42AM 10:06AM 0.8F 0.9F 0.7F 07:24AM 07:18AM 11:00AM 06:30AM 10:48AM 09:42AM 1.1F 0.8F 0.9F 06:24AM 07:24AM 10:00AM 07:18AM 11:00AM 10:48AM 0.8F04:12AM 1.1F 0.8F 07:48AM 06:24AM 11:30AM 07:24AM 10:00AM 11:00AM 1.0F1 0.8F 1.1F 07:48AM 06:24AM 11:30AM 10:00AM 1.0F 0.8F 07: 601:24AM 602:24AM 21 6 21 07:36AM 11:00AM 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 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.7E 0.9F 06:12AM 09:06AM -0.5E 07:42AM 10:36AM -0.7E 07:30AM 10:24AM -0.7E 06:36AM 09:36AM 07:18AM 10:18AM 6 21 6 06:24AM 10:06AM 1.8F 08:00AM 11:12AM 1.5F 07:54AM 11:18AM 1.6F 09:24AM 11:48AM 0.8F03: 10:12AM 12:48PM 0.9F 09:54AM 10:12AM 01:00PM 12:48PM 1.6F 0.9F 11:00AM 09:54AM 01:42PM 10:12AM 01:00PM 0.7F 12:48PM 1.6F 0.9F 12:18PM 11:00AM 02:48PM 09:54AM 01:42PM 0.7F 01:00P 0S AM AM E -0.7E AM AM E -0.7E AM A 04:54AM 04:00PM 07:12AM -0.4E 0.4F Th W 04:54AM 07:42AM 0.7F 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.8F 05:18AM 08:30AM 0.8F 03:36AM 06:42AM 0.9F 04:54AM 08:12AM 0.9F 01:24PM 01:06PM 01:24PM 03:54PM 04:00PM -0.7E -0.4E 02:24PM 01:06PM 05:24PM 01:24PM 03:54PM -0.6E 04:00PM -0.7E 02:42PM 02:24PM 05:48PM 01:06PM 05:24PM -0.8E 03:54PM -0.6E -0.7E 01:36PM 02:42PM 04:48PM 02:24PM 05:48PM -0.7E 05:24PM -0.8E -0.6E 03:06PM 01:36PM 06:24PM 02:42PM 04:48PM -0.9E 05:48PM -0.7E -0.8E 03:06PM 01:36PM 06:24PM 04:48PM -0.9E -0.7E W Th W Sa Th W Su Sa Th 03:24AM 07:06AM 2.2F 03:18AM 06:54AM 1.5F 05:12AM 08:36AM 1 W 0.1 Sa05:35 Th W Su -0.4E Sa Th Su 07:24PM Su Sa M 07:42PM Su Su M 07:42PM Su M-0.9E 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F -6 02:23 05:51 AM 0.2 3 6 -0.5E 04:10M AM06:42PM -0.4 -12 AM 0.203:36PM 6 1.1F 04:12PM -0.9E 04:30PM 04:12PM 07:24PM -1.4E -0.9E 04:30PM 04:30PM 08:06PM 04:12PM -0.9E 07:24PM -1.4E -0.9E 05:42PM 04:30PM 09:06PM 04:30PM 08:06PM 07:42P -0P AM 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F 11:36AM 01:18PM 04:54PM 1.1F 01:12PM 04:42PM 1.0F 12:30PM 03:54PM 1.0F 01:12PM 04:30PM 0.9F 01:48PM 04:42PM -1.1E 02:42PM 05:12PM -0.9E 02:36PM 05:36PM -1.3E 02:42PM 05:54PM W Th Sa Su Sa Su AM PM PM PM PM-1.2E 06:42PM 09:48PM 0.6F 07:00PM 09:48PM 09:48PM 0.6F 0.6F 08:42PM 07:00PM 11:06PM 06:42PM 09:48PM 09:48PM 0.3F 0.6F 0.6F 09:30PM 08:42PM 11:48PM 07:00PM 11:06PM 09:48PM 0.4F 0.3F 0.6F 08:24PM 09:30PM 10:42PM 08:42PM 11:48PM 11:06PM 0.3F 0.4F 0.3F 10:06PM 08:24PM 09:30PM 10:42PM 11:48PM 0.3F 0.4F 10:06PM 08:24PM 10:42PM 0.3F 10: 17 2 17 09:54AM 12:30PM 10:42AM 01:24PM -0.6E 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E 11:54AM 02:48PM -0.7E 09:48AM 12:48PM -0.8E 11:30AM 02:30PM -0.8E 17 Tu Th F Th F F Sa M Tu M W Th Sa 10:48AM 01:30PM -1.4E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.1E 12:06PM 02:42PM -1 F 1.2 Sa M 11:37 Tu M -0.9E Tu 08:42PM 11:12PM 0.4F AM 09:48PM 04:06PM 07:18PM 04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 09:36PM 11:48PM 0.3F 03:42PM 07:00PM -0.7E M Tu Th 10:30PM 10:54PM 10:30PM 11:00PM 10:54PM 10:30PM 11:00PM 10:54PM ◑ ◑ ◑ 79 08:4511:49 AM 2.1 64 1.0F 10:19 AM07:00PM 2.8 850.9F 2.410:30PM 73 -1.0E PM PM E PM PM E PM P AM 3706:48PM 10:18PM -1.1E 07:12PM 08:12PM 11:30PM -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.0E 07:48PM 10:54PM -0.9E 08:12PM 10:36PM 0.7F 08:18PM 11:18PM 1.0F 08:48PM 11:48PM 1.4F 08:54PM 03:00PM 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 05:00PM 07:24PM 0.8F 05:06PM 07:18PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:42PM 1 ◑ -0.4 -12 W 05:37 PM 0.2 ◑ ◐ 11:00PM 11:06PM 11:36PM ◑ ● PM -12 W 05:58 PM 0.2 6 Tu 04:28 PM 6 W 03:13 PM 0.1 3 10:12PM 10:42PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 09:54PM 0.9F 11:24PM ● 11:36PM 09:54PM 10:00PM 01:24AM 01:48AM 01:24AM 1.4F 0.9F 02:18AM 01:48AM 1.1F 01:24AM 1.4F 0.9F 12:06AM 03:36AM 02:18AM 1.6F 01:48A 1 PM12:42AM 3.0 91-0.9E-0.8E 11:57 PM 2.6 04:00AM 79 -0.9E -0.8E 12:42AM 04:12AM -0.8E 10:4812:42AM 04:00AM 04:12AM 01:30AM 12:42AM 04:54AM 12:42AM -0.6E 04:12AM 02:06AM 01:30AM 05:24AM 12:42AM -0.7E 04:00AM -0.6E -0.9E 01:00AM 02:06AM 04:12AM 01:30AM 05:24AM -0.5E 04:54AM -0.7E -0.6E 01:00AM 12:30AM 02:06AM 04:12AM 05:24AM 0.4F2 -0.5E -0.7E 01:00AM 12:30AM 04:12AM 0.4F -0.5E 08:55 PM 0.8 204:54AM 17 205:12AM 2 17 17 207:30AM 17 05:18AM -0.7E 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0.5F 703:54AM 22 7 7Tu 22 705:00AM 22 09:54AM 03:24AM 09:54AM 12:36PM 1.9F -0.9E 03:18AM 03:24AM 06:54AM 09:54AM 1.9F 12:36PM 1.9F -0.9E 03:18AM 08:18AM 03:24AM 06:54AM 07:06A 17 PM PM PM PM PM 1.5F P 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 12:18AM 03:30AM -1.2E 01:24AM 04:36AM -1.4E 01:48AM 04:54AM -1.4E 03:06AM 06:06AM -1 01:00AM 01:24AM -0.8E 02:00AM 1.2F 02:30AM 1.0F 12:12AM 03:42AM 1.7F 03:24AM 1.1F02: 01:00AM 08:06AM 04:24AM -0.8E -1.1E 01:36AM 05:00AM -0.7E 12:00AM 0.3F 12:42AM 0.3F 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F 7 AM 22 705:36AM 7 04:15 22 704:30AM 22-0.6E 702:00AM 22 7 12:36PM 22 707:24AM 2201:24PM 702:12AM 22 2207:06AM 702:12AM 22 12:54AM 04:00AM -1.4E 04:54AM -0.6E 08:36AM 08:06AM -0.6E 06:12AM 05:36AM 09:12AM 04:54AM 08:36AM -0.6E 08:06AM -0.6E 07:24AM 10:12AM 05:36AM 09:12AM -0.7E 08:36AM -0.6E -0.6E 06:00AM 09:00AM 06:12AM 10:12AM -0.6E 09:12AM -0.7E -0.6E 08:06AM 06:00AM 11:06AM 07:24AM 09:00AM -0.7E 10:12AM -0.6E -0.7E 08:06AM 06:00AM 11:06AM 09:00AM -0.7E -0.6E 08: 01:00AM 01:18AM -1.1E 01:42AM -1.0E 02:06AM -0.8E 12:24AM -0.9E 01:48AM -0.8E ● 04:00PM 06:06PM 0.6F 10:48AM 04:00PM 06:06PM -1.2E 0.6F 10:42AM 10:48AM 01:30PM 04:00PM 01:24PM -1.2E 06:06PM -1.2E 0.6F 10:42AM 02:12PM 10:48AM 01:30PM -1.0E 01:24P -1S ●06:12AM PM PM PM Tu W Tu F W Sa F11:42AM W 85 12:48 05:01 2.4 73 AM04:54AM 2.7 82-0.6E AM 2.407:18AM 73 06:24AM 10:06AM 1.8F 08:00AM 11:12AM 1.5F 07:54AM 11:18AM 1.6F 09:24AM 11:48AM 0 04:18AM 07:48AM 1.2F 05:18AM 08:12AM -1.0E 07:00AM 09:24AM -0.6E 07:36AM 10:12AM -1.0E 07:54AM 10:30AM -0.7E AM 0.8 24 07:36AM 11:00AM 0.9F 04:13 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 23 8 23 10:48AM 02:36PM 1.1F 11:18AM 10:48AM 03:12PM 02:36PM 1.2F 1.1F 11:54AM 11:18AM 03:42PM 10:48AM 03:12PM 02:36PM 1.2F 0.7F 1.2F 1.1F 01:00PM 11:54AM 04:30PM 11:18AM 03:42PM 03:12PM 1.0F 0.8F 1.2F 1.2F 11:42AM 01:00PM 03:18PM 11:54AM 04:30PM 03:42PM 1.0F0.9F 1.0F 1.2F 02:00PM 11:42AM 05:12PM 01:00PM 03:18PM 04:30PM 0.9FTu 1.0F 1.0F 02:00PM 05:12PM 03:18PM 0.9F 1.0F 02: 07:06AM 10:30AM 1.7F 23 08:36PM 05:00PM 08:36PM 07:36PM 0.7F 04:48PM 05:00PM 07:18PM 08:36PM 07:36PM 0.9F11:42AM 0.7F 05:18PM 04:48PM 08:24PM 05:00PM 07:18PM 1.1F 07:36P 0 04:54AM 07:12AM 0.4F 04:54AM 07:42AM 0.7F 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.8F 05:18AM 08:30AM 03:36AM 06:42AM 04:54AM 08:12AM 0.9F Tu W Tu F W Tu Sa F W Sa Sa F Su Sa Sa Su Sa Su -3 07:1911:21 AM 0.3 3 9 -0.9E 10:3606:48PM AM06:18PM 0.2 6 10:41 AM 0.601:06PM 18 -0.6E 01:48PM 04:42PM -1.1E 02:42PM 05:12PM -0.9E 02:36PM 05:36PM -1.3E 02:42PM -0S 10:18AM 11:12AM 02:24PM -1.0E 10:54AM 02:06PM 1.2F 12:18PM 02:30PM 0.5F 01:42PM 04:00PM 0.6F 02:06PM 04:00PM 0.3F08: 06:18PM 09:36PM 10:06PM 09:36PM -1.1E-0.9E 07:18PM 06:48PM 10:30PM 06:18PM 10:06PM -1.0E 09:36PM -1.1E -0.9E 07:54PM 07:18PM 11:06PM 06:48PM 10:30PM -1.0E 10:06PM -1.0E -1.1E 06:48PM 07:54PM 09:54PM 07:18PM 11:06PM -1.0E 10:30PM -1.0E -1.0E 08:24PM 06:48PM 11:30PM 07:54PM 09:54PM -0.9E 11:06PM -1.0E -1.0E04:48PM 08:24PM 06:48PM 11:30PM 09:54PM -0.9E -1.0E05:54PM AM 0.1 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E -0.5E 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E 08:24AM 12:18PM 1.1F 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F 09:54PM 09:54PM 09:54PM 11:24PM 09:54PM 09:54PM F Sa M Tu Su W W Th Sa Su 01:54PM -1.3E W Th Sa Su Sa Su 09:54AM 12:30PM 10:42AM 01:24PM -0.6E 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E 11:54AM 02:48PM -0.7E 09:48AM 12:48PM -0.8E 11:30AM 02:30PM -0.8E Su AM E 08:48PM AM E 0.6F A F08:42PM M Tu M Tu 11:18PM 64 02:06 Tu 05:18 PM 2.0 61 0.4F M 04:40Sa PM 2.102:12AM 6404:24AM Tu 04:39 PM 2.007:12PM 61 08:12PM 10:36PM 0.7F 0.3F 08:18PM 1.0F-0.7E 11:48PM 1.4F 08:54PM 03:54PM 0.9F 0.4F 05:54PM 08:30PM 05:18PM 08:42PM -1.3E 05:18PM 09:06PM -0.9E 06:42PM 10:12PM -1.3E 06:48PM 10:12PM -0.7E 0.4F 02:30AM 04:42AM 03:00AM-0.8E 05:42AM 0.7F 02:36AM 05:24AM 0.7F 01:42AM 04:30AM 0.8F 02:06AM 05:06AM 0.8F Tu PM 1.1 34 11:12PM 09:48PM 04:06PM 07:18PM -0.9E 04:18PM 07:42PM 09:36PM 11:48PM 03:42PM 07:00PM 08:00PM 11:00PM 1.2F 03:00PM 06:48PM 1.0F PM12 04:06PM 07:30PM 0.9F 04:54PM 0.8F -0.5E 12 05:54PM 08:42PM 0.6F -0.7E 27 03:54PM 06:54PM 05:48PM 08:36PM 0.6F 12 01:06AM 27 12 02:30AM AM AM AM AM AM A 27 12 27 ◑ 11:30AM -0.7E 07:00AM 09:54AM 08:36AM 08:12AM 11:12AM -0.7E 07:30AM -0.8E 01:06AM 08:06AM 11:06AM -0.8E 01:12AM -9 08:2411:15 PM 0.1 3 10:38 0.106:42AM 309:42AM 10:46 PM 0.408:00PM 12 10:24PM 11:06PM 11:54PM ◑ 0.4 ◑ ◐0.8F PM 12 11:06PM 11:36PM 11:00PM 12:06AM -1.2E 12:06AM -1.4E -1.2E 10:30AM 01:12AM -1.6E 12:06AM -1.4E -1.2E 01:06A -1◑ 10:12PM 10:42PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 09:54PM 11:24PM AM PM E 8 AM PM E 23 PM-1.4E P 12:24PM 04:12PM 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 01:30AM 03:30AM 0.3F 01:54AM 01:30AM 04:06AM 03:30AM 0.5F 0.3F 1.3F 02:18AM 01:54AM 04:36AM 01:30AM 04:06AM 03:30AM 0.5F 0.5F 0.3F 02:36AM 02:18AM 05:18AM 01:54AM 04:06AM 0.7F 0.5F06:36AM 0.5F 01:24AM 02:36AM 05:06AM 02:18AM 05:18AM 04:36AM 0.6FTu 0.7F07:54AM 0.5F 02:48AM 01:24AM 05:48AM 02:36AM 05:06AM 05:18AM 0.8F 0.6F 0.7F 02:48AM 01:24AM 05:48AM 05:06AM 0.8F 0.6F 02: 804:36AM 23 804:12AM 8 23 23 805:48AM W F 03:00AM 1.7F 03:00AM 06:36AM 1.9F 1.7F 04:12AM 04:12AM 07:42AM 03:00AM 07:54AM 2.0F 06:36AM 1.9F 1.7F 04:12AM 08:54AM 04:12AM 07:42AM 1.3F 07:54A 28
January10
25
February10
1
16 11
1 26
16 11
2
17 12
2 27
13 28 18 ID: 3 Unknown Station ACT4996 Depth: Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Harmonic Time19Zone: 14 LST/LDT 4 29
3 4
25
10 10 JanuaryMarch
25
1
1 26
16 11 16 11
1 26
26
16 11
1
17 12
2
2 27
17 12 17 12
2 27
27
17 12
2
18 13
3
3 28
18
3
28
18 13
NOA3
18 13
25 February10
Station ID: feet 13 cb0102 Depth: 22 28 NOAA Tidal Current Predictions Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Harmonic
J a n u a Ry 2021 C u R R e n T S
.7-6 .134 .0 6 0.2 21
03:00AM -0.8E 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.0F 01:00PM 04:00PM -0.7E Th 07:18PM 09:48PM 0.5F
4
Time Zone: LST/LDT
6
Th
3
19
01:00AM 04:24AM -0.8E Slack Maximum 07:36AM 11:00AM 0.9F h m h m 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E knots Th 01:00AM 0.4F -1.1E 108:42PM 11:12PM
7
02:48AM -0.9E 06:12AM 09:12AM 0.8F 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.6E W 06:12PM 09:06PM 0.6F
Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown
12:12AM 07:00AM 01:36PM 07:18PM
◑
Height ht
.6-6 .134 .0 3 0.2 21
18
5
W
February March
.6 .0-6 .234 0.33 24
03:00AM -0.9E 03:24AM -0.8E 12:24AM Source: 12:06AM NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.7F 06:48AM 10:00AM 0.8F 06:48AM 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.5E 01:30PMHarmonic 04:18PM -0.6E Th 02:00PM Station Tu Type: 06:00PM 09:12PM 0.7F 07:18PM 10:00PM 0.5F 08:36PM
Tu
021
.6 0.1-6 .434 0.30 24
4
M
d Low Waters
0.2-3 .634 0.4-3 27
02:18AM -1.0E 05:54AM 08:36AM 0.6F 11:36AM 02:18PM -0.5E M 04:54PM 08:18PM 0.8F 11:36PM
Su
ons
ftcm 0.3-3 .730 0.4-6 .630
3
Chesapeake Bay En Time Zone: Baltimore Harbor Approach (off19LST/LDT Sandy Point), 14 29 4 19 14 4 29 2021 19 14 19 14 4 Latitude:4 Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683° W Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T)
Mean Flood
Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, in knots
Times and speeds o
20 15 January
5 30
20 15 February
6 1
21 16
6 31 1
21 16
8
Tu F Sa F PM PM PM PM 23 806:36AM 8 -1.2E 23 8W 23-0.5E 808:12AM 23 8 -0.6E 23 808:12AM 23-1.0E 808:48AM 23 23Sa 808:48AM 23 05:48AM 09:36AM 08:48AM -0.6E -0.5E 07:06AM 06:36AM 10:06AM 05:48AM 09:36AM -0.6E 08:48AM -0.6E 07:06AM 11:06AM 06:36AM 10:06AM -0.7E 09:36AM -0.6E 07:48AM 10:54AM 07:06AM 11:06AM -0.8E 10:06AM -0.7E -0.6E 07:48AM 11:48AM 08:12AM 10:54AM -0.8E 11:06AM -0.8E -0.7E 07:48AM 11:48AM 10:54AM -0.8E -0.8EPM 07:48PM 11:06PM 07:54PM 11:12PM -1.0E 08:54PM 08:42PM 11:48PM 07:48PM 11:00PM -0.9E 08:24PM 11:30PM -0.9E
5
5
5
20 15 20 15 January March
5 30
30
20 15 February
21 16 21 16
1 6 31
31
21 16
6 1 6 1
5
6
08:P
10:36AM 01:24PM -1.1E Th W 11:30AM 10:36AM 02:06PM 01:24PM -1.2E -1.1E 11:24AM 11:30AM 02:12PM 10:36AM 02:06PM -1.4E 01:24PM -1.2E -1.1E 12:12PM 11:24AM 02:42PM 11:30AM 02:12PM -1.0E 02:06P -1S 88 01:50 AM 2.6 79 -0.7E 05:2012:12PM AM 2.7 820.3F 05:19 AM 2.5 04:00PM 76 W Sa Th W Su05:54PM Sa Th 01:00AM 04:12AM -1.2E 02:24AM 05:36AM -1.3E 02:48AM 05:48AM -1.3E 12:12AM 03:00AM 1.4F 12:12AM 03:30AM 1.0F 04:48AM 1.8F 12:48AM 04:24AM 1.1F02: AM 0.8 24 24 05:54 9 11:37 24 PM PM ○Sa 01:48AM 05:06AM 12:06AM 01:06AM 0.3F 01:36AM 0.3F 02:06AM 05:18AM -0.6E 01:06AM 0.3F 11:24AM 03:24PM 1.2F 04:00PM 03:24PM 1.2F 1.2F 12:42PM 12:12PM 04:30PM 11:24AM 03:24PM 1.2F 1.2F 01:54PM 12:42PM 05:18PM 12:12PM 04:30PM 1.0F-0.7E 1.2F 01:42PM 01:54PM 05:06PM 12:42PM 05:18PM 04:30PM 1.1F 1.0F 1.2F 02:48PM 01:42PM 05:54PM 01:54PM 05:18PM 0.8F 1.1F 1.0F 02:48PM 01:42PM 05:06PM 0.8F 1.1F 24 04:48PM 0.6F 05:36PM 04:48PM 07:00PM 0.8F 0.6F 05:24PM 05:36PM 08:00PM 04:48PM 1.2F 07:00PM 0.8F 05:48PM 05:24PM 08:54PM 05:36PM 08:00PM 08:12P 11 W PM Th WAM11:24AM Th W Su 1.2F Sa Th Su 07:00PM Su M 08:12PM Su Su M 08:12PM Su M 1.2F 01:36AM 02:06AM -1.0E 02:48AM 01:06AM -0.9E 02:30AM -0.7E -6 08:1812:08 0.2 3 6 -1.0E -1.0E 0.2 6-1.1E-1.0E AM 0.402:18AM 12 -0.9E 204:00PM 17 201:12AM 17 711:12PM 22 705:06PM 22 0.6F 07:12AM 10:54AM 1.7F 09:00AM 11:54AM 1.2F 08:54AM 1.5F 04:06AM -07 06:30AM 09:18AM -1.0E 08:06AM 10:18AM -0.5E 08:42AM 11:18AM -1.1E 08:42AM 11:30AM -0.8E09: 7 0.1 22 07:30PM 7Sa11:38 22 71.2F 22 AM ● 07:00PM 10:18PM 07:00PM 10:48PM 10:18PM 08:00PM 07:30PM 11:12PM 07:00PM 10:48PM -1.1E 10:18PM -1.1E -1.0E 08:30PM 08:00PM 11:48PM 07:30PM -1.0E 10:48PM -1.1E -1.1E 08:30PM 08:30PM 11:36PM 08:00PM 11:48PM -1.0E 11:12PM -1.0E -1.1E 09:00PM 08:30PM 08:30PM 11:36PM 11:48PM -1.0E -1.0E12:06PM 09:00PM 08:30PM 11:36PM -1.0E07:00AM
05:48AM 08:48AM -0.5E
11:48AM 1.0F 0.5F 17 02:24AM 05:48AM -0.6E 0.8F 2 03:18AM 06:36AM -0.6E 208:12AM 05:24AM 07:54AM 08:24AM 05:36AM 67 03:00 W 06:09 PM 2.2 67 Tu 05:4408:48AM PM05:30AM 2.3 PM 2.208:42AM 67 W PM 1.1 3406:30PM 03:30PM -0.7E 12:30PM700.9FW 05:41 09:24AM 01:18PM 1.2F
09:24PM 10:42PM 09:24PM 10:48PM 10:42PM 09:24PM 03:54AM 07:00AM -0.5E 11:54AM 1.1F 03:36AM 06:30AM -0.4E 17 208:06AM 17 06:00PM 05:54AM 09:18AM 0.8F 04:06AM 07:24AM 1.0F 05:24AM 08:48AM 0.9F ● 05:30PM ● 01:00PM 02:30PM 03:18PM 03:18PM 06:24PM 12:06PM 03:06PM 1.0F -1.1E 01:24PM 03:30PM 0.4F -0.9E 03:00PM 05:18PM 0.6F -1.3E 09:36AM 01:30PM 1.0F 03:36PM 06:54PM -0.9E 09:06AM 0.8F
10:48PM 10:42PM
0.9F ● 12:24PM 0 03:06PM 05:12PM AM E -0.8E AM E 10:06AM AM 0.4F A Tu These data are based upon the latest available as ofSa the-0.6E date of your10:42AM request, may differ0.8F the data published tidal current tables. Th F andSu Su M W 02:54AM 05:12AM 0.5F 03:06AM 05:18AM 12:12AM -1.0E 03:06AM 06:00AM 02:12AM 05:12AM 0.8F 02:36AM 05:42AM 0.9F as Th Sa 10:42AM F SuDisclaimer: Su M 0.4F Su M 01:18PM -0.5E 11:36AM 02:24PM -0.6E 12:06PM 02:54PM -0.7E 12:48PM 03:42PM 01:42PM -0.9E 12:12PM 03:18PM Disclaimer: These are-0.8E based upon the latest information available the-1-0dAS 11:40 PM13 0.0 0 11:46 PM 0.2 6information Tu W Tu Wfrom 08:54PM 11:24PM 0.8F 09:00PM 09:36PM 03:12PM 06:42PM 13 28 13 06:12PM 09:36PM -1.4E 06:12PM 09:54PM -0.9E 07:54PM 11:12PM -1.3E 08:00PM 11:06PM -0.8E 09:14 PM 0.3 9 12:48AM -1.3E 01:54AM 12:48AM -1.5E -1.3E 02:00AM 01:54AM -1.7E 12:48AM -1.5E 12:12AM 03:06AM 02:00AM -1.4E 01:54A AM AM AM AM -1.3E AMof 10:06PM 04:12PM 07:18PM -0.7E 05:00PM 08:18PM -0.9E 05:12PM 08:30PM -0.8E 10:42PM 04:36PM 08:00PM 28 13 28 13 28 07:48AM 10:36AM 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 03:54PM 07:36PM 05:06PM 08:18PM 0.8F -0.7E 06:00PM 08:54PM 07:00PM 04:54PM 07:42PM 06:42PM 09:18PM 0.5F 909:36PM 24 905:06AM 9 24 24 906:30AM 02:18AM 04:24AM 0.3F 0.9F 02:36AM 02:18AM 05:00AM 04:24AM 0.5F 0.3F 02:48AM 02:36AM 05:24AM 02:18AM 05:00AM 04:24AM 0.6F 0.6F 0.5F 0.3F 03:06AM 02:48AM 05:54AM 02:36AM 05:24AM 05:00AM 0.7F 0.4F 0.6F07:18AM 0.5F 02:54AM 03:06AM 05:48AM 02:48AM 05:54AM 05:24AM 0.8F0.7F 0.7F08:30AM 0.6F07:18AM 02:54AM 12:06AM 03:06AM 05:48AM -0.9E 05:54AM 0.8F 0.7F 02:54AM 12:06AM 05:48AM -0.9E 0.8F 03:42AM 1.9F 03:42AM 1.8F 1.9F 05:06AM 05:06AM 08:30AM 03:42AM 08:30AM 07:18AM 1.8F 1.9F 05:06AM 09:18AM 05:06AM 08:30AM 08:30A 29 09:42PM PM PM E 9 PM 2.1F PM E 24 PM 1.2F P 11:00PM 11:48PM 01:18PM 05:00PM 1.3F 01:12PM 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 19:07:36 UTC 2019 Page 2 of 5 W Th Sa -9 25 12:06 AM -0.1 -3 9 06:36AM 24 907:36AM 9 06:16 24 9Th 24-0.5E 909:00AM 24 9 02:00PM 24 909:00AM 2402:42PM 903:18AM 24 24 903:18AM 24 10:54PM 11:24PM 11:42PM 10:36PM W Sa Su Sa Su 09:36AM -0.5E 06:17 10:24AM 09:36AM -0.5E 08:00AM 07:36AM 10:54AM 06:36AM -0.7E 09:36AM -0.6E 08:00AM 11:48AM 07:36AM 10:54AM -0.7E 10:24AM -0.7E -0.6E 08:42AM 11:42AM 08:00AM -0.9E 10:54AM -0.7E -0.7E 08:42AM 06:24AM 09:00AM 11:42AM 11:48AM 0.8F -0.9E -0.7E 08:42AM 06:24AM 11:42AM 0.8F -0.9E 03: Generated on: Fri Nov 22 19:09:38 UTC 2019 11:12AM -1.2E 12:12PM 11:12AM 02:00PM -1.1E -1.2E 12:12PM 02:54PM 11:12AM 02:42PM -1.5E 02:00PM -1.1E -1.2E 12:36PM 03:18PM 12:12PM 02:54PM -1.0E 02:42P -1M PM PM PM PM PM P AM06:36AM 2.8 85-0.6E AM 2.7 10:24AM 82 Th F11:48AM Th Su F12:06PM Th M Su F12:06PM AM 0.9 27 08:36PM 11:54PM -1.2E 08:30PM 11:48PM -1.1E 03:06PM 06:24PM 0.9F 09:18PM 08:30PM 11:36PM -0.9E 09:06PM 10 12:28 25 25 12:06PM 04:00PM 01:06PM 12:06PM 04:48PM 04:00PM 1.2F 1.2F 05:12PM 12:06PM 04:00PM 1.1F 1.2F 02:42PM 05:54PM 01:06PM 05:12PM 04:48PM 0.9F 1.1F 1.2F 02:42PM 02:42PM 06:00PM 01:42PM 05:54PM 05:12PM 1.0F● 0.9F 1.1F 09:30AM 02:42PM 12:30PM 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.8E 05:54PM 1.0F 0.9F 09:30AM 02:42PM 12:30PM 06:00PM -0.8E 1.0F 09: 88 02:5006:41 AM 2.8 85 1.2F 05:24PM 0.8F 06:06PM 05:24PM 07:42PM 0.9F 0.8F 06:06PM 06:06PM 08:54PM 05:24PM 1.3F 07:42PM 0.9F 0.8F 06:18PM 06:06PM 09:30PM 06:06PM 08:54PM 08:42P 1 ○ Th 0.0 F Th Su12:29 F01:42PM Th M 1.2F Su F01:42PM M 07:42PM M Su Tu08:42PM M M Tu08:42PM M Tu1.3F PM PM PM07:42PM 3-1.1E PM 0.2 04:48PM 6 -1.1E ● 0.1 ○01:06PM ● ○ 09:36PM AM ● 0.4F ○ ●11:42PM ○01:48AM ●11:42PM 01:54AM 05:06AM -1.2E 12:00AM 1.1F 0.3F 12:42AM 1.5F 12:54AM 1 12:42AM 04:06AM 1.6F 01:00AM 04:30AM 1.1F 02:18AM 06:00AM 1.9F 05:24AM 1.3F03:○ 07:42PM 11:00PM 08:12PM 11:36PM 11:00PM -1.1E 08:36PM 08:12PM 11:54PM 07:42PM 11:36PM -1.1E 11:00PM -1.1E 09:06PM 08:36PM 08:12PM 11:54PM 11:36PM -1.1E -1.1E 09:12PM 09:06PM 08:36PM 11:54PM -1.1E 03:36PM 09:12PM 06:36PM 09:06PM 0.8F11:24PM 03:36PM 09:12PM 06:36PM 0.8F 10:06PM 11:24PM 10:06PM 10:06PM 11:24PM 12:18AM 0.4F 01:06AM 12:12AM 0.3F 02:36AM 0.3F 12:54AM 02:06AM -6 09:15 Th 12:52 PM 0.0 0 0 -1.1E 02:18AM 02:48AM -0.9E 12:12AM 03:30AM -0.7E 01:42AM -0.8E 12:00AM 03:06AM -0.6E W -1.0E 06:36 PM 2.4 730.3FTh PM 02:18AM 2.503:00AM 76 -0.8E 12:24AM ● ○ 06:37 ● ○ ● ○ 10:24AM ○ -1.0E ● 11:12AM ○09:36PM ● 06:54AM ○09:36PM ● -0.9E09: Th PM 1.2 3706:00AM 08:06AM 11:42AM 1.7F 03:30AM 06:36AM -1.1E 04:00AM 05:06AM 07:48AM -0 07:48AM 08:54AM -0.6E 09:42AM 12:24PM -1.2E -1.2E 09:24AM 12:18PM 02:36AM -0.7E 03:18AM 06:36AM -0.6E 04:30AM 07:42AM -0.6E 04:54AM 07:48AM -0.5E 03:24AM 06:24AM -0.6E 04:42AM 07:30AM -0.4E 70 03:4806:57 PM 2.4 73 05:54AM 08:36AM 0.6F 06:12AM 09:12AM 0.8F 0.6F 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.0F 0.5F 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 04:42AM 08:06AM 1.0F 06:00AM 09:30AM AM E 0.9F AM E 10:48AM AM-1.3E 09:59 PM 0.3 912:42PM 03:36AM 06:06AM 03:36AM 06:00AM 12:48AM -1.0E 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.9F 02:36AM 12:06AM -0.9E 01:30AM -1.5E 02:36AM 01:30AM -1.5E -1.5E 02:48AM -1.8E 01:30AM -1.5E 12:54AM 03:48AM 02:48AM 02:36A 03:12PM 06:12PM 09:54AM 12:30PM 1.0F 09:48AM 12:54PM 1.3F 01:06PM 0M 01:30PM 04:12PM 0.9F -1.1E 02:36PM 04:36PM 0.4F 04:06PM 06:36PM 0.7F-1.5E 03:48PM 06:06PM 0.6F-1A 09:00AM 1.1F -0.5E 09:30AM 01:18PM 1.0F 10:24AM 02:12PM 1.2F 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 09:12AM 01:00PM 1.0F 10:06AM 02:00PM 0.8F Su M W Th F Sa M Tu 14 29 14 AM AM AM AM AM A F 03:00AM Sa M Tu M Tu 11:36AM 02:18PM 12:36PM 03:18PM -0.6E 01:00PM 04:00PM -0.7E 01:42PM 04:42PM -0.6E 11:36AM 02:36PM -0.9E 01:00PM 04:12PM -0.7E 10 25 10 10 25 10 25 10 25 1 14 29 14 14 29 05:06AM 0.4F 03:18AM 03:00AM 05:48AM 05:06AM 0.6F 0.4F -0.6E 03:24AM 03:18AM 06:00AM 03:00AM 05:48AM 05:06AM 0.7F 0.6F -0.6E 0.4F 03:24AM 12:18AM 03:18AM 06:00AM -0.9E 05:48AM 0.7F 0.6F 12:18AM 03:24AM 12:18AM -1.0E 06:00AM -0.9E 0.7F08:06AM 12:42AM 12:18AM -0.8E 12:18AM -1.0E -0.9E 12:42AM 12:18AM -0.8E -1.0E 04:24AM 2.1F 05:54AM 04:24AM 1.7F 2.1F 05:54AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 04:24AM 2.0F 08:06AM 1.7F 2.1F 07:06AM 05:54AM 09:54AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 1.1F 09:12A 2 08:48AM 11:36AM 08:36AM 11:24AM 04:12AM 07:06AM 0.8F 10:06AM 01:00PM -0.8E 03:06AM 06:24AM 1.0F Su M W Th W Th 09:36PM 03:48PM 06:42PM -0.9E 04:00PM 07:18PM -1.4E 03:48PM 07:30PM -0 07:06PM 10:30PM -1.5E 07:24PM 10:48PM -0.9E 09:00PM 08:54PM 04:30PM 07:36PM -0.9E 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 -12 26 12:55 AM -0.3 -9 -0.6E 12:33 AM07:30AM -0.1 -3 12:41 AM 0.009:48PM 0 -0.6E PM PM E 0.4F PM PM E Su PM P 10 1.0 25 10 10 25 10 25-0.6E 10 25 1008:06AM 25 10 2509:12AM 10 25 2509:12AM 10 25 04:54PM 08:18PM 0.8F 06:12PM 09:06PM 0.6F 07:18PM 0.5F 08:06PM 10:30PM 0.3F 06:00PM 08:36PM 07:42PM 10:12PM 11:54AM 02:42PM -1.3E 12:48PM 11:54AM 03:18PM 02:42PM -1.0E -1.3E 12:48PM 12:48PM 03:36PM 11:54AM 03:18PM -1.5E 02:42PM -1.0E -1.3E 01:06PM 12:48PM 03:54PM 12:48PM 03:36PM -1.0E 03:18P -1T 06:36AM 0.8F-0.8E 06:36AM 0.8F 06:36AM 0.8F 07:30AM 10:24AM 08:30AM 11:18AM 10:24AM -0.6E -0.6E 08:54AM 08:30AM 11:48AM 07:30AM 11:18AM -0.8E 10:24AM 03:42AM 08:54AM 08:30AM 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12 06:06AM 09:42AM 2.1F 07:24AM 06:06AM 10:30AM 1.3F 2.1F 07:48AM 07:24AM 11:00AM 06:06AM 10:30AM 1.8F 09:42AM 1.3F 2.1F 08:24AM 07:48AM 11:12AM 07:24AM 11:00AM 0.9F 10:30A 11 12:12AM 03:36AM 12:48AM 04:12AM 01:12AM 04:36AM -0.7E 01:48AM 05:06AM -0.5E 12:06AM 03:12AM -0.7E 01:36AM 04:36AM -0.5E 12:24AM -1.1E -0.9E 12:54AM 12:24AM -1.0E-1.1E 01:12AM 12:54AM -1.0E 12:24AM -1.0E -1.1E 01:30AM 01:12AM -0.8E 12:54AM -1.0E -1.0E 07:06AM 01:42AM 01:30AM -1.0E 01:12AM -0.8E -1.0E09:42AM 01:54AM 01:42AM -0.7E 01:30AM -1.0E -0.8E 01:54AM 01:42AM -0.7E -1.0E 01:00AM -1.0E 01:24AM -0.8E 04:00AM -1.1E 05:48AM 08:30AM -0.7E 06:24AM 09:06AM -1.0E 07:00AM 09:36AM -0 09:54AM 12:36PM -1.3E 10:12AM 01:00PM -0.9E 04:18AM 07:48AM 2.0F-0.9E 03:42AM 07:06AM 1.6F-1 02:03 AM -0.2 -6 02:24 AM -0.3 -9 31 -9 28 02:30 AM -0.4 -12 04:36AM 07:48AM -0.7E 05:18AM 08:18AM -0.5E 06:42AM 09:36AM -0.7E 06:42AM 09:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:36AM -0.7E 06:30AM 09:30AM -0.6E AM AM 13 28 12 27 12 12 27 12 27 12 27 12 27 12 27 12 27 27 12 27 01:18PM 04:06PM -1.4E 01:48PM 01:18PM 04:30PM 04:06PM -0.9E -1.4E 02:18PM 01:48PM 05:18PM 01:18PM 04:30PM -1.5E 04:06PM -1.4E 02:06PM 02:18PM 05:12PM 01:48PM 05:18PM -1.0E 04:30P 04:12AM 06:30AM 0.5F 0.8F 04:30AM 04:12AM 07:12AM 06:30AM 0.7F 0.5F 04:30AM 04:30AM 07:30AM 04:12AM 07:12AM 06:30AM 0.9F 1.1F 0.7F 0.5F 04:42AM 04:30AM 07:54AM 04:30AM 07:30AM 07:12AM 0.8F 0.9F 0.9F 0.7F 04:42AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 04:30AM 07:54AM 07:30AM 1.1F1.1F 0.8F 0.9F 04:48AM 04:42AM 08:12AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 07:54AM 0.9FSu 1.1F 0.8F 31 04:48AM 04:42AM 08:12AM 07:54AM 0.9F1.2F 1.1F 04: 07:00AM 10:06AM 07:24AM 10:48AM 0.9F 07:36AM 11:18AM 07:54AM 11:42AM 06:12AM 09:54AM 07:18AM 11:06AM 0.8F 31 Su M Su W M Th W M12:48PM T 04:30AM 07:18AM 0.7F 04:18AM 07:48AM 05:30 AM 1.3 40 09:54AM 01:12PM 1.4F 11:24AM 01:42PM 0.6F 12:12PM 02:48PM 0.8F 02:48PM 04:06PM 06:30PM 0.8F 04:24PM 06:36PM 0.6F 11:24AM 02:06PM -1.3E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.2E 08:23 AM 2.8 85 08:42 AM 3.0 91 28 PM PM E 08:36PM 85 08:50 AM 3.0 91 10:36AM 02:30PM 1.3F -0.6E 10:54AM 02:48PM 1.1F -0.6E 12:24PM 04:06PM 1.2F 12:18PM 03:54PM 1.1F 11:24AM 03:00PM 1.0F 12:12PM 03:42PM 0.9F 07:30PM 10:06PM 1.1F 07:30PM 07:30PM 10:36PM 10:06PM 1.1F 1.1F 08:36PM 07:30PM 11:36PM 07:30PM 10:36PM 1.6F 10:06PM 1.1F 1.1F 08:12PM 11:30PM 07:30PM 11:36PM 1.2F 10:36P 10 Tu W F-0.8E Sa Su M02:06PM W02:24PM Th02:42PM W 09:12AM 12:00PM -0.6E 10:12AM 09:12AM 12:54PM 12:00PM -0.6E 10:42AM 10:12AM 01:36PM 09:12AM 12:54PM -0.8E 12:00PM -0.6E -0.6E 11:12AM 10:42AM 02:06PM 10:12AM 01:36PM -0.7E 12:54PM -0.8E -0.6E 11:18AM 11:12AM 02:24PM 10:42AM -1.0E 01:36PM -0.7E -0.8E 11:30AM 11:18AM 02:42PM 11:12AM 02:06PM -1.0E -0.7E 11:30AM 11:18AM 02:24PM -0.8E -1.0E 11: Su Su 0.0 M W Th W Th 01:36PM 04:18PM 02:30PM 05:24PM -0.6E 03:06PM 06:12PM -0.8E 03:30PM 06:42PM -0.7E 01:30PM 04:42PM -0.9E 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E Su M Su W M Su Th W M Th Th W F Th Th F Th F 10:18AM 01:06PM -0.6E 11:12AM 02:24PM -1.0E 11:56 AM 0 Tu W F Sa F Sa 04:36PM 07:48PM -1.3E 04:42PM 08:18PM -0.9E -1.3E 05:30PM -0 Su W 09:00PM 09:18PM 05:24PM 1.0F 04:54PM 07:30PM 1.0F06: Sa 02:2703:36PM PM02:36PM 0.0 0 02:45 PM -0.307:00PM -9 0.9F 1.1F PM PM 02:36PM 06:18PM 1.1F 07:00PM 06:18PM 0.9FSu 1.1F 04:36PM 03:36PM 07:42PM 02:36PM 06:18PM 0.9F 05:12PM 04:36PM 08:00PM 03:36PM 07:42PM 07:00PM 0.6F 0.9F 0.9F 05:36PM 05:12PM 08:24PM 04:36PM 08:00PM 07:42PM 0.8F0.4F 0.6F 07:06PM 0.9F 06:06PM 05:36PM 08:42PM 05:12PM 08:24PM 08:00PM 0.5F 05:42PM 0.8F08:06PM 0.6F09:12PM 06:06PM 05:36PM 08:42PM 08:24PM 0.5F 0.8F09:12PM -6 Su 02:59 PM -0.4 -12 06:12PM 09:30PM -1.1E 06:30PM 09:48PM -1.0E 07:30PM 10:48PM -1.1E 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.0E 06:24PM 09:36PM -1.0E 10:18PM -0.9E 07:18PM 10:12PM 0.5F 10:12PM 08:36PM 09:54PM 10:36PM 08:24PM 10:36PM 09:54PM 03:54PM 07:12PM 0.9F 05:54PM 0.6F Su PM 1.1 34 11:00PM 11:18PM 11:54PM 10:24PM 09:42PM 10:42PM 10:12PM 09:42PM 10:54PM 10:42PM 10:12PM 11:18PM 10:54PM 10:42PM ◐ 11:30PM 11:18PM 10:54PM 10:48PM 11:30PM 11:18PM08:30PM 11: PM09:42PM 2.7 11:06PM 82 ○0.4F 09:03 PM 3.2 98 76 05:5909:12 PM 2.9 88 ● 08:38◐
8 3
23 18
8 3
23 18
8 3 8 3
23 18 23 18
8 3
23 18
9 4
24 19
9 4
24 19
9 4 9 4
24 19 24 19
9 4
24 19
9
10 5
25 20
10 5
25 20
10 5 10 5
25 20 25 20
10 5
25 20
1
10:24PM
○
13
12:42AM 03:54AM -1.6E 06:54AM 10:30AM 2.0F
01:54AM 12:42AM 04:54AM 03:54AM -1.1E -1.6E
8
11:06PM
02:42AM 01:54AM 05:42AM 12:42AM 04:54AM -1.5E 03:54AM -1.1E -1.6E 03:00AM 02:42AM 06:00AM 01:54AM 05:42AM -0.8E 04:54A -1
28 13 13 28 13 28 2.0F 13 28 08:12AM 06:54AM 11:06AM 10:30AM 1.1F 2.0F 08:48AM 08:12AM 11:54AM 06:54AM 11:06AM 1.6F 10:30AM 1.1F 09:06AM 08:48AM 11:48AM 08:12AM 11:54AM 0.9F 11:06A 11
01:06AM -1.1E 03:43 AM -0.1 01:30AM 01:06AM -1.1E 01:54AM -1.0E 01:06AM -1.0E -1.1E 02:06AM 01:54AM -0.7E 01:30AM -1.0E12:24AM -1.0E 02:00AM 02:24AM 02:06AM -0.9E 01:54AM -0.7E12:30AM -1.0E02:30AM 02:24AM 02:24AM -0.6E 02:06AM -0.9E -0.7E03:42AM 02:24AM 02:24AM -0.6E -0.9E03:24AM 1.2F 1.0F 12:12AM 1.7F 1 -1.6E -1.0E 02:00AM -1.6E 01:30AM -1.4E -6 -3-1.0E 03:14 AM -0.401:30AM -12 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F -0.8E 01:48AM 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 02:06PM -1.4E 02:18PM 02:06PM 05:00PM -0.9E -1.4E 03:06PM 02:18PM 06:12PM 02:06PM -1.5E 05:00PM -0.9E -1.4E 02:36PM 03:06PM 05:48PM 02:18PM 06:12PM -0.9E 05:12P -1F 14 29 13 0.0 28 13 13 28 13 28 0.6F 13 28 1305:00PM 28 13 2805:12PM 13 28 2805:12PM 13 28 04:42AM 07:18AM 0.6F 05:00AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 07:18AM 0.7F 0.6F 05:06AM 05:00AM 08:18AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 07:18AM 1.0F 0.3F 0.7F 05:12AM 05:06AM 08:30AM 05:00AM 08:18AM 0.8F 0.3F 1.0F 0.7F 05:24AM 05:12AM 08:48AM 05:06AM 08:30AM 08:18AM 1.1F 0.8F 1.0F 05:18AM 05:24AM 08:48AM 05:12AM 08:48AM 08:30AM 0.9FM 1.1F 0.8F 05:18AM 05:24AM 08:48AM 08:48AM 0.9F 1.1F 05: M Tu M Th Tu F26 Th Tu 01:00AM 04:24AM 01:36AM 05:00AM -0.7E 12:42AM 01:00AM 04:12AM -0.6E 12:06AM 0.3F 0 607:54AM 21 605:12AM 21 11 26 11 05:18AM 08:12AM -1.0E 07:00AM 09:24AM -0.6E 07:36AM 10:12AM -1.0E 07:54AM -01 03:24AM 07:06AM 2.2F 03:18AM 06:54AM 1.5F 08:36AM 1.9F 04:30AM 07:48AM 1.7F12: 79 12:04 AM AM10:06AM 2.7 82 09:27 AM 3.012:00AM 91 11 10:06AM 26 21 11 26 11 26 08:18PM 11:00PM 1.2F 08:12PM 08:18PM 11:18PM 11:00PM 1.1F 1.2F 09:24PM 08:12PM 08:18PM 11:18PM 11:00PM 1.1F 1.2F 08:48PM 09:24PM 08:12PM 11:18P 29 Current Differences and Speed Ratios 08:48AM -0.7E 09:58 06:12AM 09:06AM -0.5E 10:36AM -0.7E 07:30AM 10:24AM -0.7E 09:36AM -0.7E 07:18AM 10:18AM -0.7E 12:54PM -0.6E 11:00AM 01:42PM 12:54PM -0.5E-0.6E 11:36AM 11:00AM 02:36PM 10:06AM 01:42PM -0.8E 12:54PM -0.5E 11:54AM 11:36AM 02:54PM 11:00AM 02:36PM -0.6E 01:42PM -0.8E 11:54AM 03:18PM 11:36AM 02:54PM -1.0E 02:36PM -0.6E -0.8E 03:24PM 11:54AM 03:18PM -0.8E 02:54PM -1.0E -0.6E 12:18PM 12:12PM 03:24PM 03:18PM -0.8E -1.0E10:30AM 605:42AM 607:42AM 21 606:36AM 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 M 1.4 Tu M Th Tu M F -0.6E Th Tu F -0.5E F12:12PM Th Sa Fa12:18PM F12:12PM 06:21 AM 43 D 21 me02:30AM The e05:30AM da a a e-0.4E ba ed Sa uponF he a e n o ma on a a abSa ea o
-3 M 76 12:49 06:42 -3 76 12:47 30 0 07:12 Tu 73 01:42 07:26
01:31 31 08:05 W 02:37 08:13
10:54AM 02:06PM 1.2F 02:30PM 0.5F 04:00PM 0.6F 02:06PM 10:48AM -1.4E 10:48AM 01:36PM -1.1E 12:06PM 02:42PM -1.2E 11:24AM 02:12PM -1.3E07:0T Su 04:00 PM03:30PM 0.0 0These 03:30 -0.4 -12 03:30PM 07:06PM 1.0F 04:24PM 07:42PM 07:06PM 0.8FM1.0F 05:42PM 04:24PM 08:36PM 03:30PM 07:42PM 07:06PM 0.7F 1.0F 06:06PM 05:42PM 08:48PM 04:24PM 08:36PM 07:42PM 0.5F 0.7F 0.8F 06:42PM 06:06PM 09:18PM 05:42PM 08:48PM 08:36PM 0.7F 0.5F 0.7F 07:00PM 06:42PM 09:30PM 06:06PM 09:18PM 08:48PM 0.4F 01:42PM 0.7F 0.5F 07:00PM 06:42PM 09:18PM 0.4F 0.7F04:00PM 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 M Tu Th F 09:30PM Disclaimer: data arePM based upon the latest available as ofTh the 01:30PM date of your request, and may differ from the published tidal current tables. M 0.0 Tu Th Th F0.8Finformation F12:18PM 02:36PM 05:30PM -0.6E 03:24PM 06:18PM -0.6E 08:24AM 1.1F 08:42AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:36PM 05:48PM -0.9E 08:06AM 12:00PM 0.8F PM W Sa Sa Su 10:24PM 10:48PM 11:24PM 10:48PM 10:24PM 11:36PM 11:24PM 10:48PM 11:36PM 11:24PM 11:36PM 05:18PM 08:42PM -1.3E 05:18PM 09:06PM -0.9E 06:42PM 10:12PM 06:48PM 10:12PM 05:00PM 07:24PM 0.8F 05:06PM 07:18PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:42PM 1.1F -1.3E 05:24PM 08:12PM 1.2F -0 PM10:24PM 2.7 09:50 PM 3.412:18PM 104 07:00PM 010:18PM -1.1E 10:12 10:30PM82 -1.0E 08:12PM 11:30PM -1.1E -0.9E Su 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.0E 07:48PM 10:54PM -0.9E 11:12PM 0.4F 07:12PM 09:48PM 07:18PM 04:18PM 07:42PM -0.8E 09:36PM 0.3F 03:42PM -0.7E Gene a ed-1.0E on -1.5E F07:00PM 22 1912:30AM 09 05:48AM 38 UTC 2019 01:42AM 04:48AM -1.5E 11:48PM 02:42AM 01:42AM 05:48AM 04:48AM 02:42AM 01:42AM 1.6F 04:48AM -1.0E -1.5E 12:30AM 1.2F 05:48A 1 ◑09:54PM PMSecondary 1.1 08:42PM 34 Stations ● Nov 11:54PM 10:00PM 11:36PM 11:06PM ● Nov 2204:06PM Generated on:-1.1E Fri 19:07:36 UTC 2019 Page 2 of 12:06AM 502:42AM Time Differences Speed Ratios Secondary Stations Time Differences Speed Ratios ◑ ◑12:06AM ◐ 12:06AM 14 29 14 14 29 14 29 14 29 11:06PM 11:36PM 11:00PM 07:54AM 11:24AM 1.9F 08:54AM 07:54AM 11:42AM 11:24AM 1.0F 1.9F 03:48AM 08:54AM 06:42AM 07:54AM 11:42AM -1.3E 11:24AM 1.0F 1.9F 03:48AM 03:48AM 06:48AM 08:54AM 06:42AM -0.8E 11:42A -11 01:48AM -1.1E 04:21 AM -0.1 02:12AM 01:48AM -0.9E 02:36AM 02:12AM -0.9E 01:48AM -0.9E -1.1E 02:48AM 02:36AM -0.6E 02:12AM -0.9E -0.9E 03:12AM 02:48AM -0.8E 02:36AM -0.6E -0.9E 12:06AM 03:06AM 03:12AM -0.5E 02:48AM -0.8E -0.6E 12:06AM 12:06AM 03:06AM 03:12AM -0.5E -0.8E 12: -3 30 04:05 AM -0.4 -12 29 14 29 02:54PM 05:48PM -1.4E 02:54PM 02:54PM 05:54PM 05:48PM -0.9E -1.4E 09:54AM 02:54PM 12:42PM 02:54PM 05:54PM 1.3F 05:48PM -0.9E -1.4E 09:54AM 09:54AM 12:30PM 02:54PM 12:42PM 0.7F 05:54P 1S 15 14 29 14 14 29 14 14 29 14 29 14 29 29 14 29 05:18AM 0 08:06AM 0.7F 05:36AM 05:18AM 08:36AM 08:06AM 0.7F 0.7F 05:48AM 05:36AM 09:06AM 05:18AM 08:36AM 08:06AM 1.0F 0.7F 0.7F 05:48AM 05:48AM 09:12AM 05:36AM 09:06AM 08:36AM 0.8F 1.0F 0.7F 06:06AM 05:48AM 09:36AM 05:48AM 09:06AM 1.1F 0.8F 1.0F 05:54AM 06:06AM 09:30AM 05:48AM 09:36AM 0.9FTu 1.1F 0.8F 05:54AM 06:06AM 05: Tu W09:12AM Tu FMin. W09:12AM Sa09:30AM F 09:36AM W0.9F 1.1F Min. Min. Min. AM Baltimore 0.0 Harbor Chesapeake Bay 10:30 AM 2.6 79 10:14 AM 3.0 91 09:12PM 11:54PM 1.2F 09:00PM 09:12PM 11:54PM 1.2F 04:00PM 09:00PM 07:12PM 09:12PM -1.4E 11:54PM 1.2F 03:12PM 04:00PM 06:30PM 09:00PM 07:12PM -0.8E -1 03:00AM 1.4F 12:12AM 03:30AM 1.0F 01:12AM 04:48AM 1.8F 12:48AM 04:24AM 01:12AM -1.7E 01:12AM -1.1E 02:48AM -1.7E 02:12AM -1.6E 02:12AM 04:24AM 0.4F -0.7E 02:30AM 04:42AM 0.4F -0.6E 03:00AM 05:42AM 0.7F 02:36AM 05:24AM 0.7F 01:42AM 04:30AM 0.8F 02:06AM 05:06AM 0.8F 11:06AM 01:48PM -0.6E 11:48AM 11:06AM 02:30PM 01:48PM -0.5E 12:36PM 11:48AM 03:36PM 11:06AM 02:30PM -0.8E 01:48PM -0.5E 12:36PM 03:48PM 11:48AM 03:36PM -0.6E 02:30PM -0.8E 01:06PM 04:12PM 12:36PM 03:48PM -0.9E 03:36PM -0.6E 01:00PM 01:06PM 04:18PM 12:48PM 04:12PM -0.8E 03:48PM -0.9E -0.6E 01:00PM 01:06PM 04:18PM 04:12PM -0.8E -0.9E Su 01:1 Tu 1.5 W Tu F 04:16 W Tu Sa -0.6E F12:48PM W Sa -0.5E Sa F12:48PM Su -0.8E Sa Sa Su Sa 01:48AM 05:06AM 12:06AM 0.3F 0.3F 01:36AM 0.3F 02:06AM 05:18AM -0.6E 01:06AM 0.3F AM 46 10:18PM 09:24PM 10:18PM M 04:32 PM04:36PM 0.0 0 PM -0.401:06AM -12 06:30AM 09:18AM -1.0E 10:18AM -0.5E -1.1E 08:42AM -0 04:18AM 07:54AM 2.3F 04:00AM 1.7F 06:06AM 1.7F 05:18AM 08:30AM 1.8F08: before before before before 04:36PM 08:00PM 0.9F 05:18PM 08:24PM 08:00PM 0.7FTu 0.9F 06:54PM 05:18PM 09:30PM 04:36PM 08:24PM 08:00PM 0.6F 0.7F 0.9F 07:12PM 06:54PM 09:42PM 05:18PM 09:30PM 08:24PM 0.4F 0.6F 0.7F 07:48PM 07:12PM 10:18PM 06:54PM 09:42PM 09:30PM 0.5F 08:06AM 0.4F07:36AM 0.6F 08:00PM 07:48PM 10:18PM 07:12PM 10:18PM 09:42PM 0.3F 08:42AM 0.5F09:18AM 0.4F11:18AM 08:00PM 07:48PM 10:18PM 10:18PM 0.3F 0.5F11:30AM 06:42AM 09:42AM -0.7E 07:00AM 09:54AM -0.5E 08:36AM 11:30AM -0.7E 08:12AM 11:12AM -0.7E 07:30AM 10:30AM -0.8E 08:06AM 11:06AM -0.8E 08:12AM 11:48AM 1.0F 02:24AM 05:48AM -0.6E 03:18AM 06:36AM -0.6E 03:54AM 07:00AM -0.5E 08:06AM 11:54AM 1.1F 03:36AM 06:30AM -0.4E approach entrance PM 0.1 3 10:4611:24PM PM11:12PM 2.7 821.1F 10:39 PM 3.4 104 11:12PM 11:24PM 11:12PM 11:24PM 1.0F 12:06PM 03:06PM 1.0F 01:24PM 03:30PM 0.4F 03:00PM 05:18PM 03:06PM 05:12PM 11:42AM 02:18PM -1.4E 02:12PM -1.2E 12:48PM 03:18PM -1.1E 0.6F 12:00PM 02:48PM -1.4E 0F 12:24PM 04:12PM 1.3F -0.7E 04:18PM 05:42PM 1.0F 1.2F 02:06PM 05:24PM 01:24PM 04:36PM 02:12PM 05:18PM 0.9F Th F11:24AM Su M Tu 02:48AM W 0.9F Febb Sa ebb Tu 1.0 W F12:24PM Febb02:18PM Sa ebb F Sa 03:30PM 06:30PM 08:48AM 12:30PM 0.9F 09:24AM 01:18PM 09:36AM 01:30PM 1.0F 03:36PM 06:54PM -0.9E 09:06AM 01:00PM 0.8F Flood Flood ebb Flood Flood ebb Flood 05:54AM -1.4E 02:48AM 12:00AM 05:54AM 1.1F 01:24AM 02:48AM 12:00AM 1.6F 05:54AM 1.1F -1.4E 01:24AM 12:00A 1 PM 3011:06PM Th M Su MFlood 06:12PM 09:36PM 06:12PM 09:54PM -0.9E 07:54PM 11:12PM 08:00PM 11:06PM 05:48PM 08:12PM 0.9F -1.4E 05:36PM 08:00PM 0.8F-1.4E 06:18PM 09:24PM 1.2F -1.3E 05:54PM 08:54PM 1.4F -0 07:48PM -1.2E 07:54PM 11:12PM -1.0E -0.7E Su 08:54PM 08:42PM 11:48PM -1.0E 07:48PM 11:00PM 08:24PM 11:30PM -0.9E 15 30 -0.9E 15 15 30 15 15 30 08:54AM 1.8F 08:54AM 06:36AM 12:12PM -0.8E 1.8F 05:00AM 03:36AM 07:54AM 08:54AM 06:36AM -1.2E 12:12PM -0.8E 1.8F 05:00AM 07:54AM 06:36A -11 10:06PM 04:12PM 07:18PM 05:00PM -0.9E -0.8E 10:42PM 04:36PM 08:00PM -0.8E 02:30AM -1.0E 02:48AM 02:30AM -0.8E-1.0E 12:12AM 03:30AM 02:48AM -0.8E 02:30AM -0.8E -1.0E 05:12PM 12:12AM 08:30PM 03:30AM 02:48AM -0.8E12:12PM -0.8E 12:54AM 04:00AM 12:12AM 03:36AM -0.7E 03:30AM -0.8E 12:48AM 12:54AM 03:48AM 04:00AM -0.5E -0.7E 12:48AM 12:54AM 04:00AM -0.5E03:36AM -0.7E 12: ○03:48AM 10:48PM 10:42PM 11:54PM ○ 04:57 AM -0.408:18PM -12 31 03:42PM 06:48PM -1.4E 09:30AM 03:42PM 12:18PM 06:48PM 0.9F -1.4E 11:00AM 09:30AM 01:42PM 03:42PM 12:18PM 1.0F 06:48PM 0.9F -1.4E 11:00AM 09:30AM 01:42PM 12:18P 1S 15 30 15 15 30 15 15 30 15 15 30 15 30 15 30 11:00PM 11:48PM W Th W Sa Th W Sa Th 05:54AM 0 08:54AM 0.8F 06:12AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 08:54AM 0.7F 0.8F 06:30AM 06:12AM 10:06AM 05:54AM 09:18AM 08:54AM 1.1F 0.7F 0.8F 06:30AM 06:12AM 10:06AM 09:18AM 1.1F 0.7F 06:54AM 10:30AM 06:30AM 10:06AM 1.1F 1.1F 06:30AM 06:54AM 10:18AM 10:30AM 0.9F 1.1F 06:30AM 06:54AM 10:18AM 10:30AM 0.9F 1.1F 06: AM 11:01 AM 2.8 85 10:06PM 03:24PM 10:06PM 06:36PM -0.9E 04:48PM 03:24PM 08:06PM 10:06PM 06:36PM -1.3E -0.9E 04:48PM 03:24PM 08:06PM 06:36P -1 Cove0.0 Point, 3.9 n.mi. East -3:29 -3:36 -4:08 -3:44 0.4 0.6 Chesapeake Beach, 1.5 miles North +0:29 +0:48 +0:06 +0:00 1.0 0.7 12:06PM46 02:54PM -0.7E Th W 12:42PM 12:06PM 03:24PM 02:54PM -0.5E-0.7E 01:36PM 12:42PM 04:42PM 12:06PM 03:24PM -0.8E 02:54PM -0.5E -0.7E 01:36PM 12:42PM 04:42PM 03:24PM -0.8E 02:06PM 01:36PM -0.9E 04:42PM 01:54PM 02:06PM 05:12PM 05:18PM -0.7E-0.9E M 01:54PM 02:06PM 05:12PM -0.7E -0.9E M 01: W 1.5 Sa05:04 Th W Sa Th Su -0.5E Sa 05:18PM M -0.8E Su Su ◑ ◑ 05:18PM AM 09:42PM 11:12PM 11:12PM 09:42PM PM -0.409:12PM -12 12:42AM 04:06AM 1.6F 0.8F 04:30AM 1.1F 02:18AM 06:00AM 1.9F 01:48AM 05:42PM 08:54PM 0.8F 06:18PM 05:42PM 09:12PM 08:54PM 0.5FW 0.8F 08:12PM 06:18PM 10:36PM 05:42PM 08:54PM 0.5F 0.5F 0.8F 08:12PM 06:18PM 10:36PM 09:12PM 0.5F 0.5F 08:54PM 11:18PM 08:12PM 10:36PM 0.5F 01:00AM 0.5F 09:06PM 08:54PM 11:18PM 11:18PM 0.3F09:42PM 0.5F03:30AM 09:06PM 08:54PM 11:18PM 11:18PM 0.3F 0.5F05:24AM 02:06AM -1.7E 01:54AM -1.3E 12:24AM -1.6E 02:54AM -1.6E09:1 02:54AM 3 05:12AM 0.5F 03:06AM 05:18AM 0.4F 12:12AM -1.0E 03:06AM 06:00AM 0.8F 02:12AM 05:12AM 02:36AM 05:42AM 0.9F PM 0.1 12:18AM 0.4F 01:06AM 0.3F 12:12AM 0.3F ◑ 12:24AM 02:36AM 0.3F 12:54AM 0.4F 02:06AM 0.3F ◑-1:57 ◑ 11:18AM 11:29 PM 3.402:18AM 104 11:54PM 11:54PM 11:54PM 07:48AM 10:24AM -1.0E 08:54AM 11:12AM 09:42AM 12:24PM 09:24AM 12:18PM 05:12AM 08:42AM 2.2F 04:42AM 08:12AM 1.8F -0.6E 06:54AM 10:00AM 1.4F -1.2E 1.2 06:00AM 09:18AM 1.7F -0 Sharp1.0 Island Lt., 3.4 n.mi. West-0.7E 07:48AM -1:39 -1:41 -1:43 0.4 Chesapeake Channel, (bridge tunnel) +0:05 +0:38 +0:32 +0:19 2.2 07:48AM -0.7E 10:42AM -0.5E -0.6E 03:36AM 06:24AM 0.8F -0.6E 0.5 09:00AM 12:00PM -0.8E 08:18AM -0.8E 08:48AM 11:54AM -0.9E PM 3010:36AM 02:36AM 06:00AM 03:18AM 06:36AM 04:30AM 07:42AM 04:54AM 07:48AM -0.5E 03:24AM 06:24AM -0.6E 04:42AM 07:30AM -0.4E 12:42AM 1.1F 12:42AM 1.1F 12:42A 01:30PM 04:12PM 0.9F 02:36PM 04:36PM 0.4F 04:06PM 06:36PM 0.7F 03:48PM 06:06PM 0S 12:30PM 03:00PM -1.4E 12:00PM 02:48PM -1.2E 01:24PM 03:54PM -1.0E-0.7E 12:36PM 03:30PM -1.5E 05:00PM 1.3F 1.1F 01:12PM 05:00PM 1.1F Sa 09:24AM 12:18PM -0.7E 1.2F 03:00PM 06:12PM 02:18PM 05:24PM 03:06PM 06:06PM 31 31 31 F Sa M Tu W 0.9F Th 0.9F Sa 0.8F Su04:42AM 04:30AM 07:24AM -0.7E 04:30AM 07:24AM 04:30AM 07:24A W F01:18PM Th Sa Su Tu Sa Su 09:00AM 12:42PM 09:30AM 01:18PM 10:24AM 10:30AM 02:18PM 1.0F 09:12AM 01:00PM 1.0F 10:06AM 02:00PM 12:06AM 03:30AM -0.8E 1.0F 12:06AM 02:12PM 03:30AM -0.8E 12:06AM 03:30AM -0.8E 04:42AM -0.4E0.8F 01:42AM -0.4E M M Tu01:42AM 07:06PM 10:30PM 07:24PM 10:48PM -0.9E 09:00PM 08:54PM 06:30PM 09:00PM 0.9F -1.5E 06:12PM 08:36PM 0.9F 06:48PM 10:00PM 1.3F 0.8F 06:36PM 09:42PM 1.6F01: 08:36PM 11:54PM 08:30PM 11:48PM -1.1E 03:06PM 06:24PM 0.9F 09:18PM 08:30PM 11:36PM -0.9E 09:06PM 10:12AM 12:54PM 0.8F 10:12AM 12:54PM 10:12AM 12:54P Thomas Pt. 04:30PM Shoal Lt.,07:36PM 2.0 -1.2E n.mi.-0.9E East -1:05 -0:14 -0:22 -0:20 0.6 0.6 Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East +2:18 +3:00 +2:09 +2:36 1.2 0.6 31 31 31 31 31 31 F F F 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 06:42AM 10:00AM 0.8F 06:42AM 10:00AM 0.8F 06:42AM 10:00AM 0.8F 07:18AM 11:06AM 0.8F 07:18AM 11:06AM 0.8F 07: ● ○ 11:36PM 11:24PM ● ○ ● ○ 04:00PM 07:24PM -0.9E 04:00PM 07:24PM -0.9E 04:00PM 07:24P● 09:36PM 01:36PM 04:24PM -0.5E 01:36PM 04:24PM -0.5E 01:36PM 04:24PM -0.5E 11:36PM 11:24PM F F F Tu 02:48PM 06:06PM -0.7E10:24PM Tu 02:48PM 06:06PM -0.7E10:24PM Tu 02: 10:24PM
12 7
27 22
12 7
27 22
12 7 12 7
27 22 27 22
12 7
27 22
1
13 8
28 23
13 8
28 23
13 8 13 8
28 23 28 23
13 8
28 23
1
Pooles Island, 4 miles Southwest
07:30PM +0:59 10:06PM +0:48 0.4F
+0:56
07:30PM +1:12 10:06PM 0.6
0.4F
0.8
07:30PM 10:06PM Smith Point Light, 0.4F 6.7 n.mi.
East
+2:29
01:42AM 05:06AM 1.8F 0.9F 02:54AM -1.7E 03:48AM 06:54AM
10:06PM +2:57
+2:45
+1:59
10:06PM 0.5
01:54AM 05:24AM 1.2F-0.9E 12:12AM 02:30AM -1.4E 01:18AM 04:24AM -1.4E -1.4E 12:06AM
0.3
10:
12:00AM -0
01:24AM 0.3F 12:06AM 02:06AM 0.3F 01:00AM 03:12AM 0.4F 01:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F 02:00AM 0.5F 12:36AM 03:00AM 0.4F 24 907:48AM 24 02:48AM 06:18AM 11 14no906:06AM 29-0.8E 14 08:54AM 11:30AM 09:36AM 12:12PM 03:18AM 07:00AM 09:30AM 2.1F -1.1E 05:30AM 09:00AM 1.8F -0.7E 10:36AM 1.2F 2.0F 0.2 14 908:48AM 29 24 14 14 29 -0.6E -0.7E 08:36AM 11:24AM -0.6E -0.5E 07:06AM 0.8F -0.6E 24 01:00PM 03:06AM 06:24AM 1.0F 904:12AM 910:06AM 24+5:33 Turkey Point,03:36AM 1.211:36AM n.mi.06:54AM Southwest +2:39 +1:30 +0:58 +1:00 0.6 0.8 05:48AMPoint Point, 4.3 n.mi. East +4:49 +6:04 +5:45 0.4 04:18AM 07:30AM 05:36AM 08:42AM 08:48AM -0.5E 04:36AM 07:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:30AM -0.5E 02:54PM 05:18PM 0.8F 05:42PM 10:36AM -1.3E 10:06AM 01:00PM -1 01:12PM 03:48PM -1.2E 12:36PM 03:24PM -1.2E 01:54PM 04:30PM -1.0E 02:06PM 05:42PM 1.1F Su 10:18AM 01:06PM -0.7E 04:12PM 07:12PM 09:36AM 12:42PM Sa Su Tu W Th F 0.8F Su Disclaimer: These data are based Disclaimer: upon the latest These information data0.4F are-1.0E available based Disclaimer: upon as the of 01:18PM the latest These dateinformation ofdata your are request, available based and upon as may the of the differ lates dS Th 02:12PM 05:54PM 1.2F F Su M03:36PM 03:36AM 06:06AM 0.6F
03:36AM 06:00AM 0.5F
12:48AM -1.0E
09:42AM 01:42PM 1.2F Su 10:12AM 02:06PM 1.0F Tu 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.2F W 11:24AM 03:12PM 1.0F 10:18AM 02:00PM 1.0F 11:12AM 02:54PM 0.9F Sa Tu W 11:42PM 08:00PM 11:24PM 08:24PM 04:48PM 07:24PM 04:24PM 06:48PM 0 07:06PM 09:42PM 0.9F -1.5E 06:42PM 09:24PM 1.0F -0.9E 07:24PM 10:48PM 1.3F 0.8F 09:18PM 04:00PM 07:12PM 0.8F 10:06PM 04:00PM 06:48PM 0.8F 05:24PM 05:48PM 09:06PM -0.9E 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.1E 06:42PM 10:00PM -1.0E 05:30PM 08:48PM -0.9E 06:18PM 09:36PM -0.8E Disclaimer: These08:36PM data are-1.0E based09:12PM Disclaimer: upon the latest These information data are available Disclaimer: upon as the of the latest These date information of data your are request, based available and upon as may the of the differ latest date from information of your the published request, available and tidal as may current of the differ date tables. from ofApplied your the request, and tidal may current differ tables. from tidal current tabl2 Corrections Applied tobased Batlimore Harbor Approach Corrections to Bay Entrance 09:54PM Generated on: Fri Nov 22 19:09:30 Generated UTC 2019 on: Fri published Nov 22Chesapeake 19:09:30 Generated UTC 2019 on: the Fri published Nov 2209:36PM 19:09:30 UTC 10:12PM 09:48PM
Generated on: Fri Nov 22 19:07:27 Generated UTC 2019 on: Fri Nov 22 19:07:27 Generated UTC 2019 on: Fri Nov 22 19:07:27 UTC 2019
12:36AM -1.1E 0.3F 12:24AM -1.0E 0.3F 01:24AM -0.9E 0.5F 12:30AM 02:30AM 01:00AM 03:00AM 01:42AM 04:06AM 04:18AM 06:54AM 0.7F 04:06AM 06:36AM 0.6F -0.5E 04:42AM 07:48AM 0.8F -0.7E as the date of your request, and may differ from the05:18AM published tide tables. 04:36AM 07:48AM -0.7E 08:18AM 06:42AM 09:36AM ed of tide tables. 09:42AM 12:30PM -0.6E 1.3F 09:24AM 12:12PM -0.6E 1.1F 11:06AM 02:00PM -0.7E 1.2F F Su Sa M M W 10:36AM 02:30PM 10:54AM 02:48PM 12:24PM 04:06PM 03:12PM 06:42PM 1.1F -1.1E 02:54PM 06:24PM 1.0F -1.0E 05:00PM 07:54PM 0.7F -1.1E Th 06:12PM 09:30PM 06:30PM 09:48PM 07:30PM 10:48PM 10:00PM 09:48PM 10:54PM
15 10
30 25
15 10
Page 2 of 5 01:00AM -1.0E 0.3F 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F 01:48AM 03:54AM 07:18AM 0.7F -0.5E 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.7E 04:30AM 06:12AM 09:06AM
11
31 26
11
25
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26
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02:36AM 06:12AM 2.1F-0.8E 02:36AM 06:06AM 1.3F-0.9E 01:06AM 12:30AM 03:42AM -1.6E 12:06AM 03:12AM -1.4E 02:12AM 05:12AM -1.2E -1.5E 01:18AM 12:48AM 04:06AM 0.5F 12:24AM 02:54AM 0.6F 01:06AM 03:42AM 0.5F 09:54AM 12:36PM 10:12AM 01:00PM 04:18AM 07:48AM 03:42AM 07:00AM 10:18AM 1.8F -1.3E 06:12AM 09:42AM 1.8F -0.9E 08:36AM 11:18AM 1.0F 2.0F 04:24AM 07:30AM 0.9F 03:42AM 07:06AM 1.1F 09:36AM -0.6E 05:42AM 08:36AM -0.7E 06:30AM 09:30AM -0.6E FishTalkMag.com January 2021Th 5110:48AM 04:24PM 06:36PM 0.6F 04:06PM 06:30PM 0.8F 11:24AM 02:06PM 02:00PM 04:30PM -1.0E 01:18PM 04:06PM -1.2E 02:18PM 05:12PM -0.9E -1.3E 10:48AM 01:48PM 10:24AM 01:36PM Su M W F Sa -0.8E M -1.0E M Tu 03:54PM 1.1F 11:24AM 03:00PM 1.0F 12:12PM 03:42PM 0.9F W Th 09:00PM 09:18PM 05:24PM 08:06PM 04:54PM 07:42PM 10:30PM 07:48PM 1.0F 07:18PM 10:12PM 1.1F 08:06PM 11:30PM 1.3F 1.0F 0.7F 07:36PM 0.7F 10:36PM -1.0E 05:00PM 06:24PM 09:36PM -1.0E 05:00PM 07:06PM 10:18PM -0.9E 10:48PM 10:24PM 10:48PM 10:24PM
15 10 15 10
30 25 30 25
15 10
12:24AM -1.6E 12:54AM 04:00AM 12:30AM -1.0E-0.8E 02:00AM -1.6E -1.4E 01:24AM 02:12AM 04:42AM 0.6F 01:00AM 2.2F 03:42AM 0.7F 01:42AM 04:24AM 0.6F 03:24AM 07:06AM 03:18AM 06:54AM 05:12AM 08:36AM 1.9F 07:06AM 10:30AM 1.7F 1.5F 07:48AM 1.2F -0.7E 07:30AM 10:24AM -0.7E 06:36AM 09:36AM -0.7E 04:18AM 07:18AM 10:18AM
11
11
31 26 31 26
11
25 26
12:48AM 07:06AM 01:36PM 07:30PM
-1 1 -1M 1
1
01:30AM -1 04:30AM 07:48AM 1
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BOE Marine...................................... 13 Carlisle Marine.................................. 52 Curtis Stokes.................................... 56 Fish For a Cure................................... 4 Formula X2....................................... 27 Geico/BoatU.S.................................... 5 Grady White..................................... 11 Kent Island Fisherman...................... 19 Legendary Trailer Repairs................. 45 PortBook.......................................... 27 Riverside Marine............................ 3,46 Suzuki ................................................ 2 Tradewinds - Sea Pro.......................... 8
Boaters’ Marine Directory For AnnApolis & EAstErn shorE
Waterfront Marine............................ 46
FishTalkMag.com January 2021 53
Biz Buzz Appointed
Susan Zellers, the executive director for the Marine Trades Association of Maryland (MTAM), was recently appointed to the Tidal and Coastal Recreational Fisheries Committee in Maryland. With a $767 million dollar impact to the State of Maryland, the Maryland angler is a significant part of our economy. Zellers says, “For me, being asked to serve on the committee is an opportunity to connect recreational fishing to boats and to stress the impact that shutting down portions of the rockfish season has on boating. The majority of the 744,000 licensed anglers (in Maryland) are fishing from boats. We need to keep in the spotlight the importance of recreational fishing and the economic impact to the state.” Zellers also serves on Annapolis’s City Dock Action Committee, Small Business Recovery Task Force for Covid, and the Maritime Task Force for the City. Learn more about MTAM at mtam.org.
Newest Flagship Model
Formula Boats announces the debut of their newest flagship: the 500 Super Sport Crossover. At 53’ 4” length overall, 50’ LOA to transom, and a 14’ 6” beam, the 500 attains Formula SSC flagship status as it is introduced in February 2021. With over 40 linear feet of cockpit space flowing uninterrupted on one continuous level, the 500 expands the SmartZone concept, fully optimizing the space with a signature side console helm, creating separate areas that foster a variety of activities and boating preferences. Add to that cabin accommodations—unconstrained by deck walkways or walkarounds—which offer surprising amenities previously encountered only in closed bow vessels, including a convertible dinette/sleeping berth, aft stateroom with queen-size bed and lounge divan, private stand-up head compartment, full galley, and premium AV entertainment. Quintuple Mercury 400 Verado Outboard motors, with option to upgrade to Quint Mercury Racing 400R’s or 450R’s, respond instantly to your control with electronic shift and throttle and Mercury Joystick Piloting. The ride is fast-paced, yet solid and secure. Wraparound seating offers multiple views and keeps your guests engaged. Learn more about this model at formulaboats.com.
Restructuring
Executing a comprehensive plan to build a strong foundation for the future, Suzuki Motor of America, Inc. has announced it will restructure its operations in the United States. This new direction will reorganize the Suzuki Motorcycle/ATV and Marine Divisions into two separate companies set to begin operations on April 1, 2021. This new organization is designed to give both new companies the best opportunity to optimize their success in their respective industries. Suzuki Motor USA, LLC will be headquartered in Brea, CA, Suzuki’s corporate home in the United States since 1981. Suzuki Marine USA, LLC will be based in Tampa, FL, in the heart of the marine business in North America. Satoshi Uchida will serve as chairman and Masami Haga will serve as president of the new motorcycle/ATV company. Masahiro Yamamoto will serve as president of the new marine company. “Both the Motorcycle/ATV and Marine Divisions are enjoying solid success in their respective businesses,” said Uchida. “As we proceed in reorganizing into two separate companies, we look forward to the Suzuki brand continuing to thrive in the United States.” The primary goal of this reorganization is to strengthen each business. Key objectives are to achieve greater efficiencies, speed up decision-making, and position each company for increased sales and growth in the United States. The location of Suzuki Marine USA LLC in Tampa was strategically chosen to expand Suzuki’s business, improve collaboration within the marine industry, and strengthen its relationships with boat builders, dealers, and vendors. The Gulf Coast location also provides convenient access to Suzuki’s new Marine Technical Center opened in Panama City, FL, in June 2020. suzuki.com
New Owners
Keith and Stephanie Rhodes are the new owners of Tri-State Marine in Deale, MD. The entire Rhodes family is thrilled to join Tri-State Marine and to become part of the enduring legacy that began over 50 years ago. Tom and Mary Beth Magenau started the company in the late 1960s and instilled their integrity and high-quality service delivery to build what is widely considered to be the hallmark of leading boat dealerships in the area. Through perseverance and an unmatched dedication to customer service, Tri-State Marine today is emblematic of its early days where hard work and doing the right thing was how brands were built—with long-term success as a direct result of this enduring formula. This, combined with decades long personal and professional relationships with industry-leading boat manufacturers Grady-White and Parker Boats, provides a unique quality not often found at other dealerships and services centers. “After getting to know Tom and Mary Beth and Tri-State Marine’s leadership over the past six months, it is clear to me that the most important part of my new job is to ensure the long-term success and well-being of a company that so many have held so dear for so long,” says Keith. “We know that this all begins and ends with you, our customers, and that Tri-State Marine’s future success requires the same basic formula that has driven our past success—to always do the right thing. We will always do the right thing.” You can reach Keith at keith@tristatemarine.com and learn more at tristatemarine.com.
Send your Chesapeake Bay business news and high-resolution photos to kaylie@fishtalkmag.com 54 January 2021 FishTalkMag.com
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Worldwide Yacht Sales | Yacht Charters | New Yacht Construction
1998 37’ Tiara - $119,500 Mary Catherine Ciszewski - 804.815.8238
1978 36’ Trojan - $30,000 Jason Hinsch - 410.507.1259
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
1995 29’ C-Hawk - $42,500
Michael Behot - 301.788.3576
Jason Hinsch - 410.507.1259
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