FishTalk Magazine July 2019

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RUDOW’S

C H E S A P E A K E

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M I D - AT L A N T I C F

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Bottom Fishing Tips Yellowfin Summer Tactics Part III Chumming J u ly 2 0 1 9

f i s h ta l k m a g . c o m


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2019

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IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 3 | ISSUE 6

32

Features 32

Yellowfin Tactics Part Three: Jigging for Tuna

Jigging may not be the first tactic that comes to mind when you want to catch yellowfin tuna, but its effectiveness shouldn’t be understated.

By John Unkart

34

Top 10 Tips for Bottom Fishing If you want fast action and lots of it, bottom fishing is tough to beat. By Lenny Rudow

38

36

Dynamite Fishing

Fishing the target ships and reefs nearby can be a blast. By Wayne Young

38

Summer Chumming

The heat is on in the Chesapeake Bay.

By Lenny Rudow

41

41

Stream Smallmouth Must-Haves If catching smallmouth bass in creeks, rivers, and streams is in your plans, don’t leave home without these must-have lures. By Jim Gronaw

43

Good Science Step Aside Do bad statistics own the process?

By Captain Monty Hawkins

45

Hope Floats

Any time you encounter commercial fishing pot floats in the open ocean during the summer, opportunity knocks. By Lenny Rudow

on the cover

Deep dropping off the Atlantic coast can yield a variety of species including black sea bass, like this knothead landed by FishTalk production manager Zach Ditmars. Turn to page 34 for Bottom Fishing Tips.

8 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


All The Right Gear To

Departments 12 13 14 17 21 23

Notes from the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow

47 49 49 50 52 54 55 57 58 59 59

Fishing Reports By Mollie Rudow

Letters

Get JiGGy With it!

Fishing News By Staff Hot New Gear By Staff Calendar Reader Photos

sponsored by Bay Shore Marine

Tips & Tricks By Staff FishTalk Monthly Subscription Form Paddler’s Edge: Hobie Outback By Zach Ditmars Tides & Currents Charters, Guides, and Headboats Brokerage: Used Boats for Sale Marketplace: Services, Supplies, and Much More Biz Buzz: Chesapeake Business News What’s New at FishTalkMag.com? Index to Advertisers

Plan Of Attack: Angling Tactics 20 Chunking for… Billfish?! By Holly Innes 20 Breakless Birds By Holly Innes

Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow 29 Evinrude E-TEC G2 In-Line-Six: Acceleration Sensation

Saltwater | FreShwater | rodS reelS | tackle | acceSSorieS Marine SupplieS | apparel

30 Key West 219FS: Sling Shot 30 Outside the Ordinary: Cabo 41, Yamaha 210FSH, Starcraft 231

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612 Third Street, Suite 3C, Annapolis, MD 21403 (410) 216-9309 FishTalkMag.com Angler In CHIEF Lenny Rudow, lenny@fishtalkmag.com PUBLISHER Mary Iliff Ewenson, mary@fishtalkmag.com Associate PUBLISHER Chris Charbonneau, chris@fishtalkmag.com MANAGING EDITOR Molly Winans, molly@fishtalkmag.com SENIOR EDITORS Beth Crabtree, beth@fishtalkmag.com Kaylie Jasinski, kaylie@fishtalkmag.com Fishing Reports Editor Mollie Rudow ADVERTISING SALES Holly Foster, holly@fishtalkmag.com Eric Richardson, eric@fishtalkmag.com Customer Service Manager Brooke King, brooke@fishtalkmag.com ART DIRECTOR / PRODUCTION MANAGER Zach Ditmars, zach@fishtalkmag.com Graphic Designer / Production Assistant Heather Capezio, heather@fishtalkmag.com marketing coordinator Lauren Mahoney, lauren@fishtalkmag.com COPY EDITOR / CLASSIFIEDS / DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Lucy Iliff, lucy@fishtalkmag.com

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Tactician Craig Ligibel Coastal Correspondent John Unkart CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Alan Battista, Jim Gronaw, Chuck Harrison, Capt. Monty Hawkins, Holly Innes, Eric Packard, Mollie Rudow DISTRIBUTION Martin Casey, Paul Clagett, Bob and Cindy Daley, Dave Harlock, Ed and Elaine Henn, John O’Donnell, Ron Ogden, Norm Thompson Rudow’s FishTalk is a monthly magazine for and about Chesapeake and Mid-Atlantic anglers. Reproduction of any part of this publication is strictly prohibited without prior consent of the officers of Rudow’s FishTalk LLC. Rudow’s FishTalk LLC accepts no responsibility for discrepancies in advertisements. Rudow’s FishTalk is available by first class subscription for $35 a year, and back issues are available for $4 each. Mail payment to Rudow’s FishTalk Subscriptions, 612 Third Street, Suite 3C, Annapolis, MD, 21403. Rudow’s FishTalk is distributed free of charge at more than 500 establishments along the shores of the Chesapeake and the DelMarVa Peninsula. Businesses or organizations wishing to distribute Rudow’s FishTalk should contact Lucy Iliff at the Rudow’s FishTalk office, (410) 216-9309 or lucy@fishtalkmag.com.

Member Of:

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Rudow’s FishTalk Recycles

© 2019 Rudow’s FishTalk LLC

10 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


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from Notes the Cockpit

M

y mind has officially been boggled. With all the furor over the state of the striped bass fishery and the regulation changes in store for us, one would think that the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) would at least attempt to keep up a pretense of science based in reality. No such luck. By now, most of us have been exposed to some of the ludicrous numbers published by the ASMFC as “best available science,” which are derived from the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP). One rather famous example: In one year, recreational Maryland anglers fishing from shore caught more sea bass than three years’ catches from party- and charter-boats running out of Maryland ports combined. Errr… if you’ve ever caught a keeper sea bass from land in Maryland, raise your hand. Please let the record show that exactly no one had to put this magazine down to raise their hand. There are plenty of other MRIP absurdities listed out in Captain Monty’s latest article, Good Science Step Aside (p. 43). Okay, fine. So the MRIP numbers don’t even come close to reflecting reality. We got that. But, what about this nine-percent release mortality rate we keep hearing about for stripers? This is the figure that the ASMFC uses to determine how many stripers die after being caught and released by we recreational anglers. And it’s why we’re now being told that almost half of the overall mortality among striped bass results from catch and release fishing. I had often wondered if, when calculating this nine-percent release mortality figure, MRIP took the following factors into account: • Varying water temperatures both geographically and seasonally, since it has a huge effect on release mortality. • Gear and technique used, since it has a huge effect on release mortality. • Salinity, since it has a huge effect on release mortality.

• Size of the fish being caught and released, since it has a huge effect on release mortality. 12 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

By Lenny Rudow

• Skill level of the anglers catching the fish (note the old saying “10 percent of the anglers catch 90 percent of the fish,” because there’s some truth to that), since it has a huge effect on release mortality.

Recently I found out the answer to that question: no. None of this is taken into account. Buried in a PDF from ASMFC’s stock assessments, I found the following: “The overall nine-percent hooking mortality rate estimated by Diodati and Richards (1996) was used.” It’s a little worrisome that the “best available science” we’re using is a study that’s more than 20 years old. But then I found the study itself. Want to guess where it was performed? In a saltwater pond. Yes, a pond. During the study surface water temperature rose as high as 82.4 degrees at times. Anglers used gear with an average 11-pound-test line. This study found that fish caught with single hooks died more than four times as often than those caught with treble hooks (wow!). And it found that handling techniques and the time from hook-up

to release were “not significantly related to mortality.” In and of itself, one would think that any of these factors, much less all of them combined, are enough to disqualify this study for use in something as important and impactful as the MRIP calculations that form the basis of ASMFC policy. But I saved the worst for last. In the final paragraph of the study, 18 lines down, it says “Our present model would not be sufficient for estimating coastwide hooking mortality of striped bass,” and then goes on to explain all the reasons why (note the bulleted list at left). So the very study MRIP is using as its basis for release mortality of striped bass caught up and down the coast specifically states that it shouldn’t be used for that purpose. Well. The next time someone points a finger at you and claims you kill a striper for every 10 you release, be sure to refer them to line 18 of the final graph, in the Diodati and Richards study.


D

Letters

The Case of the Mysterious Disappearing Claw

D

ear FishTalk: I wonder if anyone else noticed that the crab on the cover of the May edition mysteriously lost a claw, when you flipped to page 38? Steve R, via email Dear Steve: Nice eye for detail. We’re thinking Caroline just couldn’t wait until it was steamed to dig in.

D

Boiling Mad

Land-Bound

ear FishTalk: I’m boat-less (at least for now) and while I still like reading about fishing techniques used on boats and kayaks, I really liked “Shoreline Sharpies” last month. Please keep some articles for us shoreline anglers in the mix in the future! Steve M. ##Want to learn more about wade fishing in the region? Then keep your eyes peeled for the August edition.

D

Dear Steve: You bet we will; check out this month’s article on stream smallmouth fishing. And stay tuned – in the August edition we have a feature on wadefishing coming up from contributor Eric Packard.

Catch More, Bigger Fish!

ear Fishtalk: I am infuriated! I can’t believe you made a fish pun with a limerick last month when I told you I was taking a pun-break. I’m so angry I could krill someone! Anonymous

ear FishTalk: Combined with wetting lines whenever I can, for more than two years the info in Fishtalk has helped me catch more fish! For my fishing magazines I tear out the good articles and info, save them in a binder, and discard the rest. But for Fishtalk Magazine, ever since I read the Premier issue in spring of 2017 I realized that each month I had to save the ENTIRE issue. I am going to need a bigger boat… errr, I mean bookcase! Walt T.

Dear Anonymous: It was no big deal, you really should clam down a bit.

Dear Walt: We were overjoyed to read your letter. Helping folks catch more, bigger fish is our reason for existence. Well, evidently that and keeping Ikea in business!

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FishTalkMag.com July 2019 13


Take a Kid Fishing

D ##Alicia Nelson, VMRC artificial reef coordinator, inspects potential reef materials prior to approving them for use.

Chincoteague-Wachapreague Reef Project Rejuvenated

T

hanks to members of the Virginia Saltwater Sportfishing Association (VSSA), the Chincoteague Island Charterboat Association (CICA), and volunteer angler/diver Kyle Krabill, the Blackfish Banks reef – and hopefully others along the Eastern Shore in the future – may be in for a serious facelift. The site hasn’t been added to since 2008, and some of the structures (mostly military APCs and subway cars) initially placed there have deteriorated or silted over. This new effort, coming together under the banner of the Chincoteague Wachapreague Reef Project, has secured approximately 70 tons of new reef building material. “We hope that someday this project will be as big as the Ocean City Reef Foundation, through the efforts of our volunteers,” says CICA treasurer Charlie Koski, captain of the Island Queen. “We’ve put together a Reef Guide with the GPS coordinates for artificial reefs in Virginia waters, including the APCs and subway cars currently on Blackfish Banks, and our members are selling them to help raise funds.” Print and digital versions of the Reef Guide can be purchased via the Reef Project website, where you can also get more information on volunteering, the goals of the program, and the impact it could have on fishing in the area. Visit shorereefs.org to learn more.

R

elaware’s Division of Fish & Wildlife has two July opportunities for interested adults to take kids fishing: 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 13, at Redden State Forest in Georgetown, and the same hours on Saturday, July 20, at Lums Pond State Park near Bear. These events are targeted at kids age six through 15, are free of charge, and fishing equipment is provided. To ensure that enough supplies are on hand for these events, pre-registration is required. To pre-register for a “Take a Kid Fishing!” event, or for more information about the program or about volunteering as an instructor, please email Mary Rivera at mary.rivera@delaware.gov.

One for the (PA) Record Books

A

ngler Jeff Bonawitz was fishing in the Susquehanna near Lower Bear Island, in 22 feet of water, when a catfish inhaled the live bluegill he had baited up with. A very, very, large catfish. Twenty-five minutes later, he pulled a 50-pound, seven-ounce flathead into the boat and set a new Pennsylvania state record. That’s pretty cool. But what’s even cooler is that Bonawitz kept the fish alive, and after having it weighed and inspected by Waterways Conservation Officer Jeffrey Schmidt, he released the monster fish back into the Susquehanna.

Feeling Crabby

esults for the Bay-wide 2019 Winter Crab Survey performed in cooperation between the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and the Maryland DNR are in, and they do look promising. Total crab population is estimated at 594 million, up significantly from last year’s 371 million and the 455 million estimated one year earlier. In fact, it’s the highest number seen since the 2012 survey estimated 765 million crabs were in the Bay. The survey also places spawning-age female abundance well above the 70-million minimum threshold (though a hair short of the 215-million target). The harvestable crab population sits at 271 million, with the big boost in overall numbers coming thanks to a 93-percent increase in juvenile (under 2.4 inch) crabs. Scientists credit the boom in babies to favorable ocean currents, which bring them from the ocean into the Bay, as well as favorable winter conditions. 14 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##Get your trot lines and snap-trap out folks, this should be a great summer for crabbing!


Construction Job: Volunteers Needed

O

By Eric Packard

pening day of rockfish season, I’m dusting off my old work boots and grabbing a pair of chore gloves. Not to catch that trophy fish, but to meet a group of dedicated volunteers who in rural southern Maryland to build reef balls. I arrive at nine in the morning, driving down a long and winding dirt drive and coming upon an eclectic group of people busily assembling the fiberglass molds. Yeah, I am five minutes late. The reef ball build I attended is part of the Living Reef Action Campaign, the flagship habitat and education program of the Coastal Conservation Association of Maryland. It was in partnership with St Mary’s River Watershed Association, Cal-

A

vert County and St Mary’s County Public Schools, and the Patuxent Environmental and Aquatic Research Laboratory. The molds form what will become reef balls. Before the forms can be filled with concrete they need to have a thin layer of sand placed in the bottom, and inflatable bladders are installed to keep them hollow. The reef balls sit a day or two to allow the concrete to dry, and then the forms are removed. Once the reef balls are complete they will be set with oyster spat, and installed in tributaries of the Lower Potomac and Patuxent rivers to create living reefs which help restore the Bay by improving water quality and providing structure for fish habitat.

##Volunteers prep reef ball molds before baking a batch of reef balls.

Let’s all get involved – programs like this allow anglers to do our part to restore our Bay, so we can continue to enjoy the Chesapeake Bay fishery. For further information and volunteer opportunities visit ccamd.org or chesapeakeoysteralliance.org/ partners.

Two for the (MD) Record Books

16.71-pound hake is a really big hake – and apparently, sufficient to set a new Maryland state record. Angler Brian Gay cranked up the huge white hake while fishing near Poor Man’s Canyon in 280 feet of water. Previously, there was no state record for white hake. Meanwhile in Baltimore County, kayak angler Nick Palese was casting for largemouth bass when he caught a bullhead catfish in the Gunpowder River. Weighing in at 4.9 pounds, it thoroughly eclipsed the former record of 3.6 pounds.

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 15


Fish News

T ournam e nt

N e ws

W

ell folks, this is an uber-busy month for tournaments in Ocean City, MD! July 5, 6, and 7 is the OC Marlin Club Canyon Kickoff, with boats fishing two of the three days. You don’t have to be a club member to join in the fun, but if you are a member, entry is free. Visit ocmarlinclub.com for more info. On July 6, the Chesapeake Bay Sport Fishing Association will be holding the Flounder Sounder, which will also take place in Ocean City. Email jthorpe@cbsfa.club for more info. The Ocean City Tuna Tournament is one of the biggest events of the year in this town, and it takes place July 12 through 14. Last year’s event paid out a whopping $857,600 (Playmate scored almost $329K and Goin’ In Deep won over a quarter mil). Boats fish two of three days, and this is a trolling-only tournament. Visit octunatournament.com to get all the details. It’s back to the OC Marlin Club July 20 and 21 for the Kid’s Classic. This event is open to anglers 19 and younger, with proceeds benefitting the Wish-A-Fish Foundation. Multiple divisions including species like flounder and sea bass and a points system for billfish, so inshore and offshore anglers can both get in on the action, and you can even enter when headboat fishing. Another big-money event, the HUK Big Fish Classic, will be happening July 26 through July 28. Last year’s record purse paid out close to a half-million bucks, with the biggest fish, a 404-pound blue marlin, raking in close to a cool quarter-mil. This tournament features a unique format, with teams fishing in 32-hour nonstop blocks under the leastrestrictive set of rules you’ll see when tournament fishing. Check out bigfishclassic.com to get the complete scoop.

F O R M O R E N E W S , V I S I T fishtal k mag . com / n e ws

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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.

Optical Conclusion

O

kay, I admit it: I’m a bit of a freak when it comes to sunglasses. They have to fit perfectly, be lightweight, and cut the sun while providing the ultimate in optics. I also tend to hold onto a pair for years on end when I find one I like, so when my latest pair of polycarbs got scratched just eight months in I decided to go back to glass lenses – and discovered the Smith Reddings, with their “ChromaPop” glass. Yeah, the name’s a bit gimmicky, but set that aside and consider that ChromaPop lenses filter two specific wavelengths of light that cause “color confusion” (overlaps between blue and green and red and green that can confuse the retina) in the eye. This is supposed to reduce eye fatigue while increasing vividness and definition. And after wearing the Reddings (with Italian-made, injection-molded frames) for extended periods of time on the water, I give them a thumbs-up. Price: $219. Visit smithoptics.com to give your eyes a break.

I

Safety Margin

n this day and age we have a wide range of options when it comes to safety gear, and the latest to hit the water is ACR’s next-gen ResQLink personal locator beacons. The PLB VIEW model has a digital display so you can view GPS coordinates, operating instructions, transmissions, and battery power. These new units also have a new antenna release that’s easier to use and an infra-red strobe has been added in addition to the existing strobe, so SAR personnel wearing night-vision goggles have an easier time spotting you. The units float, attach to life jackets and belts in numerous ways, and are just a hair over four inches tall. Signals include 406MHz and 121.5MHz and unlike some other SOS devices, no monthly subscription is required. Price: $299 to $349. Visit acrartex.com to give your safety margin a serious boost.

T

Close Shave

he Fish Razr Flapz Dredge is rather unusual in the world of offshore dredges, as it looks like a bunch of fish silhouettes chopped right out of a truck’s mud flaps. Then you glance at the pictures of what this thing looks like underwater, and suddenly making faux fish out of an automobile accessory makes a lot of sense. A single dredge has a dozen 14-inch flapping fish (double dredges and multiple versions are available), and is based on a 36-inch bar rigged with 400-pound test monofilament and swivels. Fish Razrs are also available in combined dredges with a mix of flaps and squid, and these bill collectors collapse easily and stow in an (included) mesh-back carry bag. Price: $279; visit alltackle.com to see the full selection.

F or mor e g e ar r e vi e ws , visit : fishtalkmag . com / gear FishTalkMag.com July 2019 17


Hot New Gear

Y Lithium Treatment

E

lectric fillet knives can make short work of a big pile of fish, but you can’t use them on docks or fish cleaning stations that don’t have 110 volts. Plus, in our experience the blades on an electric fillet knife are inexplicably attracted to – and also make short work of – the cords that power them. That’s not a problem if you’re swinging one of Bubba Blades’ new lithium-ion battery powered electric fillet knives. This latest version is much like Bubba Blades’ 110V knife, with a nonslip grip; a selection of seven-, nine-, and 12-inch high-carbon, stainless-steel, titanium-nitride coated blades in both flex and stiff versions; a safety lock; and trigger guard. The knife also comes with a carrying case. Price: $189. Visit bubbablade.com for more info.

G. Wiz

ou want a rod designed specifically for slamming hefty stripers while casting lures? Us too, so when G. Loomis offered to send us one of their new IMX-PRO Blue rods to test we jumped at the chance – and shortly thereafter, watched the rockfish jump on our topwater plugs. Our test rod was the 844S MF, a seven-foot, moderate-fast-action spinning rod with medium-heavy power, rated for 20- to 65-pound braid. For a moderate-fast rod we felt it was thoroughly stiff up top, but did have just enough give to walk-the-dog with a five-inch Super Spook. Better yet, when that Spook got slammed the IMP-PRO Blue provided a jaw-jarring hook-set and gobs of backbone. So much backbone, in fact, that it’s our intention to sling this stick in offshore chunk slicks for mahimahi this summer, a task at which we’re guessing it will excel. These rods have cork grips and butts with top-notch Fuji seats, Fuji’s new Fazlite K-frame corrosionresistant guides which are designed for use specifically with braid, and gimbal-butt models are available as are both spinning and casting versions. Lengths run from seven to seven and a half feet. Price: $350 to $385. Visit gloomis.com for more info.

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Y Tapplock One+

Cost-Kind Kayak

ou want a fishing kayak that doesn’t cost an arm and a leg? The new Pelican Sentinel 100XR Angler is a simple, small, inexpensive option hitting the water this summer. At just 10 feet long, 30.5 inches wide, and weighing 50 pounds, the list price is a very reasonable $519. It may not be as fancy nor as roomy as some of the larger and more expensive models out there, but it does come with two flush-mount rodholders plus one on a swivel-mount, an adjustable seat, a molded in cup holder and ruler, carry handles, bungee cargo netting, and adjustable footrests. The hull bottom is a flat, multi-chine design and carrying capacity is 325 pounds. Price: Not an arm and a leg (see above). For more info visit pelicansport.com.

M

ade from 7mm stainless steel, you’ll immediately notice when you pick up the Tapplock One+ that this is a sturdy padlock. Instead of a key, it uses a smart fingerprint sensor to unlock the device. The IP67 waterproof rating makes this suitable for outdoor applications such as securing a canoe/kayak, or locking your dock box. Not having to reach for your keys when you are loading up your fishing gear is pretty convenient. The Tapplock can be opened one of three ways. The first and easiest method is to program your fingerprints using the mobile app. In testing we used our index finger and thumbprints on both of our hands. Secondly, you can simply tap ‘unlock button’ in the smartphone app. The third way to open the Tapplock is with the Morse code program setting, enabling you to create a sequence of long and short depressions of the button. After two months of securing a steel cable on our fishing kayak to an outdoor rack, the Tapplock showed no signs of corrosion. After that duration of usage, the battery level was at 80 percent, indicating that this will probably only require an annual charge to remain functional. The manufacturer boasts that this will unlock 3500 times on a single two-hour charge. Overall, we liked this device, but did encounter a few shortcomings. Every so often, the lock would not disengage on the first fingerprint scan, even though the indicator light turned green. However, the lock would always open on the second attempt. We also found that with wet hands, our fingerprints could not be read by the Tapplock. Having the Morse code setting is a good option for when you’re on or near the water. Price: $99. For more info, visit tapplock.com.

F or mor e g e ar r e vi e ws , visit : fishtalkmag . com / gear

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FishTalkMag.com July 2019 19


Plan Of Attack

Chunking for… Billfish?! By Holly Innes

N

ah, no one really chunks for billfish, do they? Not around here – but if you spend enough time chunking for tuna in the Mid-Atlantic region, sooner or later you’ll look over the transom to see a marlin streaking through the chunk slick. They often don’t touch the chunks, though, since they prefer to eat much livelier-looking baits. Instead they’ll swim through the slick looking at the falling chunks as though they’re trying to figure out what’s going on. The question at this point becomes, will you know what’s going on? And more importantly, how to capitalize on the opportunity?

##A whole squid rigged on a chunk line tempted this white marlin more than he could resist.

• Grab a whole squid – you do always carry squid when you run offshore regardless of the day’s tactical plans, right? Their uses are countless, and you’ve heard us recommend this more than once before. For this particular use, start by clipping the tip of the mantle off.

• Push a leader down through the hole in the mantle until it pops out near the squid’s tentacles, slide a one-ounce egg sinker on the line, and then crimp a 10/0 circle hook on the end.

• With an angler holding the rod, the reel in freespool, and the squid sitting on

the deck, swing the rod tip out over the water. Have a crewmember pull 30 or so feet of line out from the rod tip, and pile it on the water.

• Then the crewmember can pick up the squid, and throw it towards the marlin. He or she should aim for 10 to 15 feet in front of the fish. (Casting is fine too, if you have cast-able gear that can handle a marlin). • The angler should then allow the squid to free-fall. Unlike a chunk of cut butterfish, the squid has all those lovely tentacles – which will wave and ripple as the squid sinks, giving it quite a lifelike appearance.

• If the marlin inhales the bait give it a five-count then slowly advance the lever drag, allowing the fish to apply all tension until the fight is on.

S

Breakless Birds

o: There’s a flock of birds over open water which appears to be active, but no fish breaking water and no bits on your jigs. Frustrating? Youbetcha – but don’t run for greener pasture just yet.

1. Ascertain the direction of the current. 2. Circle about 50 yards up-current from the birds. 3. Start a zig-zag search pattern with the Zs as wide as the flock is, constantly heading up-current, while you watch the meter. 4. When you spot a pod of fish that looks promising, immediately alter course so you’re heading into the current and go another 10 or 20 yards. 5. Toss out your offerings from the down-current side of the boat, let them sink to the approximate depth of the fish, and start jigging. 6. After seeing the fish go by (on the meter) as you drift back over them heading down-current, switch sides and cast back up-current from the other side of the boat, to get in a last lick or two before you have to reposition.

20 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


C hesapeake C alendar Brought to you by

For Chesapeake Bay boating news, visit proptalk.com

July

3

Chesapeake Beach Fireworks Over the Bay In Chesapeake Beach, MD. Rain date July 5.

3

Earth, Wind & Fire at CMM At the Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons, MD.

3

Fireworks in Oxford Fireworks beginning at dusk (9-9:30 p.m.) at the Strand in Oxford, MD.

3

Rock Hall Fireworks Fireworks in Rock Hall, MD, at the Bulkhead on Bayside Avenue beginning at 9 p.m. Annual parade July 4 at 10 a.m. featuring floats, bands, fire trucks, marchers, horseback riders, and more.

3

Salute to Cecil County Veterans 5 to 9 p.m. at the North East Town Park in North East, MD. The park will be filled with military equipment and personnel, family-oriented activities such has a rubber ducky race and horse rides, live music, and awards presentation to veterans. Patriotic-themed music and fireworks.

4

Annapolis Fourth of July Parade and Fireworks Parade from 6:30 to 8 p.m., with marching bands, fire engines, cars, service clubs, and scouts beginning at Amos Garrett and ending in front of the Market House. Fireworks launched from a barge in Annapolis Harbor around 9:15 p.m.

4

Baltimore’s Fourth of July Celebration 7 p.m. live music by the U.S. Navy Jazz Band Commodores at the Inner Harbor Amphitheater at Pratt and Light streets. Fireworks begin at 9:30 p.m. over Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. Presented by Ports America Chesapeake.

4

Great American Picnic 5 to 10 p.m. at Town Point Park along the downtown Norfolk, VA, waterfront. Free and open to the public. Traditional all-American fare with all the fixin’s available for purchase, live music, and fireworks at 9:30 p.m. Norfolk Festevents.

4

Fourth of July Stars in the Sky 7 p.m. at Victory Landing Park in Newport News, VA, with children’s activities, food vendors, live music, and fireworks over the James River at 9:30 p.m. Free.

4

Frederick’s Fourth Celebration Noon to dusk at Baker Park in Frederick, MD. Two stages of entertainment, family-friendly rides, activities, food, and fireworks.

4

OC July 4th Concert and Fireworks Two locations in Ocean City, MD: downtown on the beach at North Division Street or uptown at Northside Park. Free concerts at 8 p.m. followed by fireworks.

4

Solomons Fourth of July Fireworks Fireworks between 9:15 and 9:30 p.m. in Solomons, MD. Presented by the Solomons Business Association.

4

Stars and Stripes Explosion On the beach at 24th Street, at 17th Street Park, and 31st Street Park in Virginia Beach, VA. Multiple live performances on oceanfront stages followed by fireworks. Free and open to the public.

4

Tides and Tunes Summer Concert Series 7 p.m. at the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Free; donations accepted. Food and spirits are available for purchase. Live music by Kings of Crownsville.

4

Yorktown Independence Day Celebration A free family-friendly celebration, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. in Historic Yorktown, VA. Fireworks over the York River.

4-7

37th Annual Canyon Kick Off Presented by the OC Marlin Club; free entry for members. Non-members can also fish. Fish two of the four days. Weigh-ins at Sunset Marina.

5

Fireworks at Fort Monroe 6 to 10 p.m. at Fort Monroe in Fort Monroe, VA. Family-friendly activities, food vendors, music, and fireworks display beginning at 9:15 p.m.

6

Big Band Night and Fireworks 7 to 10 p.m. on the Tolchester Beach Bandstand at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, MD. Music, dancing, and fireworks along the Miles River. $10 non-members; $2 after 8:45 p.m.

6

Crisfield Freedom Fest 5 to 9 p.m. at Somers Cove Marina in Crisfield, MD. Celebrate our nation’s birthday with food, live music, arts and crafts, military appreciation, and fireworks beginning at 9:15 p.m.

6

Havre de Grace Independence Day Celebration The parade will begin at 2 p.m., traveling from Union Avenue to Tydings Memorial Park. 7 p.m. concert at Hutchins Park, followed by fireworks around 9:30 p.m.

6

MTABC Community Fireworks on Middle River Fireworks at dusk off Wilson Point on Middle River in Middle River, MD. Raffle tickets are available at local marinas to support the community fireworks.

Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com FishTalkMag.com July 2019 21


Chesapeake Calendar

July

(continued)

10

Frederick Saltwater Anglers Monthly Meeting 6 to 10 p.m., held at the Frederick Moose Lodge 371 (828 E. Patrick St.) in Frederick, MD. Open to the public. Speaker, vendors, 50/50, and monthly prize raffles.

11

Tides and Tunes Summer Concert Series 7 p.m. at the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Free; however, donations accepted. Live music by Dublin 5.

12-14

Potomac Jazz and Seafood Festival Relax riverside on the St. Clement’s Island Museum lawn and enjoy live jazz artists, lots of delicious seafood delicacies, and gorgeous views. Coltons Point, MD.

12-14

Ocean City Tuna Tournament Fish two of the three days. Trolling-only. Over $857,600 paid out in 2018!

13-14

Maryland Safe Boater Course 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Bowleys Quarters, MD, firehouse. Presented by the Bowleys Quarters Vol. Fire Company. Cost is $40, includes instructional materials and certification card. Advance registration required: (410) 800-8420.

18

Tides and Tunes Summer Concert Series 7 p.m. at the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Concerts are free; however, donations are gratefully accepted. Food and spirits are available for purchase. Live music by Mike McHenry Tribe.

19

Beyond BOW Rockfishing 101 Come learn the basics of catching Striped Bass on the Chesapeake Bay with Captain Charlie and Captain Doug aboard the Backdraft in Tracys Landing, MD. Lunch provided on the boat. $125 per person. MD DNR Becoming an Outdoorswoman workshop.

19-21

15th Annual Kid’s Classic Tournament Presented by the OC Marlin Club, Open to anglers 19 and younger. Benefits the Wish-a-Fish Foundation. Weigh-ins at Sunset Marina.

22 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

20

Boating Safety Class Presented by U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 25-08. 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Washington Farm United Methodist Church in Alexandria, VA. Register: jdburt@verizon.net or (703) 307-6482.

20

EYC Accelerated Safe Powerboat Handling 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Eastport Yacht Club in Annapolis. This 8 hour hands-on, on-the-water course is for anyone who has taken a classroom boating course but needs experience to safely operate a small motorboat. Prerequisites: state boating education certificate recommended.

20

Music on the Nanticoke Summer Concert Series Free concert on Vienna’s waterfront, 4 to 7 p.m. Parking, boat ramp, and overnight dockage are all free. Lawn seating. Food will be available.

22

CAPCA Monthly Meeting/ Speaker Series Environmental Restoration of Poplar Island. Speaker: Rachel Taylor. Social hour begins at 6:30 p.m., meeting starts at 7:15 at the Annapolis Elks Lodge in Edgewater, MD. Open to the public.

26-28

6th Annual Huk Big Fish Classic Talbot Street Pier, Ocean City, MD. Register before July 15: $600; after July 15: $800.

August

1

Tides and Tunes Summer Concert Series 7 p.m. at the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Free; donations accepted. Food and spirits are available for purchase. Live music by Eastport Oyster Boys.

2

Gavin DeGraw Live at CMM At the Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons, MD. Tickets go on sale May 17 to the general public: $35-$69.

5-9

46th Annual White Marlin Open The world’s largest and richest billfish tournament. Ocean City, MD.

7

KIF Club Monthly Meeting 7:30 p.m. at Kent Island American Legion Post 278 in Stevensville, MD. Speaker Bobby Hudson of Hudson Marine: preparing boats for fall/winter.

10

5th Annual Hunters Bash 12 to 4:30 p.m. at Calvert County Fairgrounds in Prince Frederick, MD. Presented by Prince Frederick Volunteer Fire Department and Calvert County Ducks Unlimited. Admission $50: includes food, drink, entry into main raffle drawings.

10

Youth Fishing Derby 8 a.m. registration at the Romancoke Pier on Kent Island. Fishing 9 to 11 a.m. followed by prizes and refreshments at Kent Island American Legion 278. Age groups: 3-5, 6-10, and 11-16 years old. Bring your own rods; must be accompanied by a parent or adult. Sponsored by the Kent Island Fishermen, Inc. and the Kent Island Estates Community Association.

12

Pasadena Sportfishing Group Monthly Meeting Doors open at 6 p.m., meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. at Earleigh Heights Volunteer Fire Company, Severna Park, MD. Free, open to the public. Speaker: Kyle Johnson, Cobia and Redfish fishing tips and techniques.

14

Frederick Saltwater Anglers Monthly Meeting 6 to 10 p.m., held at the Frederick Moose Lodge 371 (828 E. Patrick St.) in Frederick, MD. Open to the public. Speaker, vendors, 50/50, and monthly prize raffles.

17

Dream Fields Spanish Mackeral Fishing Tournament Weigh-ins at Chesapeake Boat Basin, awards dinner at Dream Fields. First prize $2500. $25,000 prize if state record is broken! Entry fee $150; after July 1 $175. 804.436.5932

24-25

EYC Safe Powerboat Handling 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Eastport Yacht Club in Annapolis. This 16-hour hands-on, on-thewater course is for anyone who wants to learn how to safely operate a small motorboat and improve their boathandling skills.

29

Charter Captain’s Course 100 Ton Masters, OPUV, towing, sailing. Classes start August 29 at the Kent Island Fire Department and September 2 at the Milford, DE, Fire Department. (410) 228-0674.


Reader Photos presented by

Marine Engine Sales, Parts & Service 410-263-8370

www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com

##On a trip to Costa Rica, Charlie Puccio tied into some MONSTER jacks!

##Tom Kessler starts his flounder season off right for 2019.

##Davy Dickinson from Virginia Beach landed these two hawgs this spring.

##James encountered some big bass earlier this year on the Eastern Shore.

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 23


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Aaron Claxton landed this gorgeous fish on a nine-inch shad this spring. That’s one beautiful striper!

##Dave, Frank, and Chip were fishing the last two hours of outgoing tide in the coastal waters off Wachapreague. Jigging a double bucktail rig in pink or white worked best tipped with squid and shiner. Photo courtesy of Frank Ditmars

##Dawson got a nice one this spring!

##Apex Predators, bangin’ on the snakes non-stop this summer.

24 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##Tim Riley got in on the decent striper fishing this spring near the West Norfolk Bridge.


Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Mark Handley and Junior Jiminez caught the first two Mahi of the year all the way back in late April in Washington Canyon.

##Shahn Donaldson caught this Dorchester County snakehead while fishing a live minnow under a bobber.

##Matt Baden (from jigthebay. com) enjoyed a spring bite on both specks and reds along the islands of the Eastern Shore late this spring.

##Mike Van Camp, Rich Myers, Brad Mills, and Greg Rice tore ‘em up on a trip to Tampa with Captain Jarred.

##Steve Schad jumped on Mike Killelea and Rich Vigue’s boat, with the much-desired results.

##Leonard Polacheck encountered this nice trophy early in the season near Solomons.

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 25


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##The Sporting Wood had a good day this spring trolling off the Radar Towers.

##Coastal Correspondent John Unkart stuck through tough conditions to haul this 32-incher out of the surf.

##Tim Riley picked up this nice flounder in Lynnhaven early this season.

##When the snakehead bite got tough this spring, largemouth bass bent the rod for FishTalk team member Zach Ditmars.

##Frederick Saltwater Anglers members Caleb Masser and Chris Linetty caught this cobia out of Oregon inlet, while sight fishing.

26 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Kevin Thomas dropped some baits this spring in the Middle Bay and… well, you know.

##Eric Packard went bait fishing in the Lower Bay and… well, you know.

##A fun time was had by all trolling aboard the Wound Tight.

##Marty Abel sent us this pic after a day of chunking for stripers near Baltimore Light produced a dozen... well, you know.

##On a recent trip to Myrtle Beach, David A. Gaestel caught this hog snapper with a Crazy Horse Fishing Rod that he built. Wow, that’s one huge hogfish, David!

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 27


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Cathy Linetty tugged up this beautiful fish in the Middle Bay while trolling this spring.

##Bob strikes again! This time it was a 29-incher just off Bloody Point.

##Oliver Estrada caught this Northern Snakehead on a topwater frog at Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge

##Brady tied into this monster 175-pound bigeye, on the Haphazard, fishing out of Manteo this spring.

28 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow

Y

Acceleration Sensation

ou want a boat so fast off the mark that when you nail the throttle, you put Einstein’s Theory of Relativity to the test? The uber-torque delivered by Evinrude’s new E-TEC G2 in-line-three 1.9-liter outboard might just make it happen. I’m not 1000 percent sure (because no matter how much I watch Dr. Who I can’t quite wrap my head around the link between time and speed), but I do know that when we dropped the hammer on a Blazer Bay 19 powered by a 115 HO, my stomach got left in one time zone as my brain blasted off into another. Torque and acceleration, of course, have always been one area where twostrokes held an advantage over fourstrokes. But this new platform, which hits the water this summer in 115 HO, 140-hp, and 150-hp models, also shares the previous G2 model’s efficiency advantage. As a general rule of thumb, we’ve noted a 10 to 15 percent fuel economy advantage at cruising speeds as compared to the average four-stroke of the same size. Yes, that may be a bit surprising at first considering what we’ve all been hearing through the years, but remember that direct-injection tech has come a long way. Thanks to a more even distribution and atomization of fuel entering directly into the combustion chamber, it quite literally gets you

more bang for the buck. In fact, do a little digging into DI and you’ll find it’s now utilized by virtually all of the major automobile manufactures – including the likes of Porsche, BMW, and Ferrari. The other G2 perks also carry through to this new platform: digital shift and ##Angler in Chief Lenny Rudow feels for vibration levels in the motor throttle (even with and motor mount, during one of the 115 HO and the test-runs with a new G2. 140 tiller-steer models); integrated G2s weren’t quite as silent as the best of power steering; cleaner rigging; a fivethe four-strokes out there, but they came year/500-hour period between regular shockingly close and were certainly as maintenance; and a five-year warranty. quiet or quieter than some of the louder On top of that, these new G2s also have four-strokes out on the market today. an integral oil tank that holds enough for Yes, we know that’s hard to believe, so 60 hours of operation between fill-ups. we suggest you take a run with one and For some anglers, that’ll mean going an hear the difference with your own ears. entire season without having to add oil. Or at the very least, visit the FishTalk Still, despite all the advancements in YouTube channel and watch the video modern two-strokes, one issue remains – we shot of the 115 HO. You’ll see – and who wants to listen to them chatter and hear – us starting the engine while sitting clank all day long? Well, turn the key on right next to it, and you absolutely posione of these new motors and that “who” tively have the FishTalk guarantee that might just be you. We noticed with the no one messed with any volume levels last new G2 introduction that Evinrude during the recording nor the editing of had managed to the video. turn down the volWe’re big fans of modern outboards, ume a fair amount. regardless of manufacturer and whether But this new they’re a two-stroke or a four. Truth be platform squelches told, whether you’re talking about relithe noise even ability, efficiency, environmental impact, more. In fact, the longevity, or just about any other factor, difference in sound today’s engines are light-years ahead of levels between an those built a decade or two ago – and average four-stroke we’re pretty dang sure Einstein would and these twoagree. strokes has now Visit evinrude.com to learn more, and been reduced to the click on the “Area Dealers” tab to find difference between the closest source for a G2 in your a pitter and a patter. neck of the woods. To my ears the new

For more fishboat reviews, visit: FishTalkMag.com/fishboat-reviews FishTalkMag.com July 2019 29


Hot New Fishboats

Key West 219FS

Sling Shot

Quick Facts

I

f you enjoy a boat with copious lighttackle casting deck space, a surprisingly smooth ride for a 21-footer, and neck-snapping acceleration and performance, then you’ll enjoy fishing from a Key West 219FS. Wait a sec – this model isn’t exactly brand new, so why are we talking about it in Hot New Fishboats? Because we’ve now had the chance to give this model long-term testing over a three-year period, thanks to friend and fishing buddy Vadim, who bought one. We’ve had it out on the Bay for dozens of fishing trips in all sorts of weather. We’ve caught everything from spot to stripers aboard the 219FS. We’ve dodged storms, blasted across the Bay with the sun sinking low on the horizon, and cruised it as far north as the Bridges and as far south as Chesapeake Beach. The bottom line: this boat offers pleasant surprises on just about every trip. The most significant take-away after all this fishing is that the hull performs and rides a lot better than you’d expect for a 21-footer. A 175 on the transom will propel the 219FS along at a cruise in the upper 30s and to a top-end in the mid-40s (real-world, fully-loaded numbers), and from a stand-still it takes off like a bat outta you-know-where. Is it possible to launch and slam in big seas? Sure, especially considering how much juice this rig has. But if you use the throttle judiciously

LOA: 21’9” | Beam: 8’6” | Displacement: 2250 lbs. Draft (hull): 1’2” | Transom Deadrise: 19/24 degrees Fuel Capacity: 80 gal. | Max HP: 250 Area Dealers: Anchor Boats, North East, MD (410) 287-8280 or anchorboat.com

enough to keep the boat in the water, the uber-aggressive entry and stepped 19/24-degree transom deadrise proves shockingly smooth (and dry as well) in a stiff Bay chop. This is one of the few 21-foot boats around which an aching old back doesn’t mind zinging around on. So far as fishing goes, the boat’s laid out as one would expect: there are plenty of rodholders, a livewell in transom seat, a cooler under the leaning post, and stowage compartments that can double as fishboxes under the forward console seat and bow seats. The bow seats do have the PITA removable backrests which you’ll want stowed and out of the way

when fishing, but Vadim assures me that the wife and kids really like having them when they’re tooling around on the water. There’s also a head compartment in the console, but Key West keeps the console itself relatively svelte, and there’s plenty of deck space to comfortably stand to either side of the console and lean against it while casting. You want a nice surprise? Take a ride on a Key West 219FS. Just make sure you hold on tight, when Vadim hits the throttle. See fishing action on the 219FS in our Late Fall Light Tackle Jigging for Stripers video on FishTalk’s YouTube channel.

Outside the Ordinary

W

e wish we had limitless pages to dedicate to bringing you the news of each and every cool fishing machine to hit the water, but the limits of reality force us to constrain ourselves. Dang it!! Still, along with those featured this month we wanted to make sure everyone out there at least heard about these noteworthy new fishboats.

Cabo 41 Express: Return of a Legend

Cabo is back! We haven’t seen a new boat launched under this banner in years (since 2013 when Hatteras took Cabo out of production, to be exact), but 2019 marks the return of Cabo to you canyon commandos. Highlights include 31,000 pounds of wave-crushing mass riding on a 15-degree hull bottom, 1450 Volvo horses in the engineroom providing a cruise in the 30knot range, and a cabin with a private stateroom and a dedicated rod locker belowdecks. When we saw the 41 at the Miami show, they had to mop our drool off the docks. Visit hatterasyachts.com to make your eyes bug out. 30 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Starcraft 231 MDXCC: Shooting Stars

We didn’t see many new deckboat models hit the water for 2019, but at the Bay Bridge Boat Show we stumbled across the Starcraft 231 MDXCC being displayed by Buras Marine. This one should be of particular interest to those of us with a place at the beach, since its spacious layout makes for oodles of seating; the 17-degree transom deadrise and fullbeam-forward design make for spectacular stability; and fish-centric equipping (including a livewell, a transom that converts between seating and a casting deck, and the option for a bow-mount trolling motor) makes for an ideal flounder-pounding platform. Visit starcraftmarine.com if the bays behind our barrier islands beckon, or reach out to Buras (410)-220-0504 or burasmarine.com to see the Starcraft 231 MDXCC in person.

This Is Only Half Of The Story...

Yamaha 210FSH: Join the Jet-Set

Yamaha watercraft entered the fishing world with a single-engine 19-foot jet-powered center console and they must have liked the results, because this year they’ve introduced a 21-footer with twin TR-1 jets. It has all the goods when it comes to fishability, ranging from a 26-gallon livewell to plenty of rodholders, and casting from the multi-level aft deck is a joy thanks to the absence of an outboard. We’re not sure what effect the jet drive’s bubble trail will have on the fish, so if you’re thinking about joining the jet-set, our advice would be to get the bow-mount electric trolling motor added on. Visit yamahaboats.com to go propless.

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P Y Y M A R I N E . C O M FishTalkMag.com July 2019 31


##Justin Poe, with a serious bend in his jigging rod.

Part Three: Jigging for Tuna By John Unkart

Jigging may not be the first tactic that comes to mind when you want to catch yellowfin tuna, but its effectiveness shouldn’t be understated.

J

igging is not some newfangled fad. I can recall diamond jigs in my father’s tackle box back in the 60s. But for

some reason, at least when it comes to offshore fishermen just got away from the technique of jigging. However, the tactic really got a shot in the arm when Shimano developed a line of butterfly jigs to reach deep bluefin. Now, the jig’s popularity is once again growing with its reintroduction to tuna anglers.

Cranking ‘N Jerking

##Having dedicated jigging gear is a must, to effectively employ this tactic.

32 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

Jigging can be performed with any type of outfit. However, the best results are obtained with a reel that’s capable of retrieving line at a high rate of speed and a lightweight rod that does not wear the arms out. Braided line is preferred with a 20-foot wind-on fluoro leader, since braided line allows the jig to sink quickly, does not cause line drag like

mono, and the absence of stretch allows immediate hookups. Working the jig through depths where tuna are suspended is the trick. When fish show up on the sonar, drop the jig below them and work it up through the water column. The process is repeated until hooking up. Blindly dropping to the bottom and working to the surface over and over will wear out any angler. This may work, but not for long! To maximize the return for your effort, mark your line at 50-, 100-, 150- and 200-foot intervals. Permanent markers work on braided line, but a piece of wax rigging line tied to the mainline lets the angler quickly see depth marks and easily runs in and out through the rod guides. If fish are being read at 120 feet on the sonar, the jig can be quickly dropped to


the 150 mark and worked up to 100. No strikes? The jig is already at 100 feet, so just drop back to 150. This way the jig spends the maximum amount of time in prime water, and you don’t wear yourself out with unnecessary cranking. A word of caution: hold the rod tightly. The savage attack that often comes on the moving jig can and will result in the rod being jerked out of your hand if you’re not careful. This was illustrated in great clarity one day while jigging. I heard a big splash behind me on the other side of the cockpit and turned around, only to see my brotherin-law underwater. His quick reaction and diving overboard saved one of my jigging outfits, after it was jerked out of his hand. I’m glad to report the rod and brother-in-law both survived the incident – although the tuna was lost! Jigging is an ideal tactic to employ while chunking for tuna. Chunk lines will be behind the boat, which allows a couple members of the crew to take turns jigging. Also keep those jigging outfits ready while trolling. You’re marking tuna deep, but they refuse to rise and take trolled baits? Wind in the spread and send some jigs down to their depth. It just could be the ticket to making an empty fish box look good. ##This tuna fell for the jig.

##Keith Fraser fooled this yellowfin with a pink Butterfly jig.

Technique for jigging consists of quickly sweeping the rod skyward and retrieving line as the rod is lowered before repeating the action. The method duplicates the erratic movement of baitfish fleeing towards the surface. But be prepared, often the jig is attacked as it falls due to the attractive flutter. There are several manufacturers producing jigging tackle. I use Shimano and Daiwa gear which I’ve owned for years. The Daiwa Saltist 30H is a decent reel with a 6.1:1 gear ratio taking in 36 inches of line per crank. I teamed this reel with Shimano’s Trevala TFC-58H rod, which makes a decent jigging outfit for the price. The Saltist reels have a very smooth star drag system which do not allow for a strike position. When purchasing any jigging outfit stay away from level-wind reels, because they just don’t work with the rapid, constant action.

The Shimano S y st e m

Shimano has taken the most desired jigging features and developed the Butterfly system, which consist of their own line of jigs, rods, and reels. I had the opportunity to spend a couple days on the Mid-Atlantic with Justin Poe (a product manager for Shimano at the time), testing out the Butterfly system. Jigging may have been growing in popularity at the time, however, up to that point I had not invested precious offshore trolling

or chunking time into jigging. At least, not until Justin demonstrated how jigs can catch just about everything with fins. It takes a few minutes to master the technique of swinging the rod upwards as one crank is taken on the reel. This results in about four feet of line recovered on each sweep and crank. For jigs, remember that in this application the hook should be rigged to hang from the top of the jigging spoon, not the bottom. As you rip the jig up through the water column, water pressure holds the hook down near the middle of the jig. Also, don’t think you have to use a huge jig for a tuna to strike. Four- or five-ounce jigs are plenty large to attract the tuna’s attention, and heavier jigs will tire you out much faster. I’ve used all types of manufacturer’s reels for offshore fishing, and the Shimanos are among the smoothest reels I’ve had in my hands. They do not come cheap, but you may find as I have that the outfits do more than just jig. Years ago, I matched the Torsa 20 with a Trevala TVC-58XH as my jigging outfit – but it’s also a pitch bait and deep drop rod. Spooled with 50-pound braid and a wind-on leader, it handles trolling duties as well and the light weight is ideal for children or small adults who have difficulty handling a big 30- or 50-class outfit. And when I discover where my wife hid the checkbook, I’m going to decorate the cockpit with more just like it! For additional information on tuna tactics, pick up copies of my books “Offshore Pursuit” and “Saltwater Tales.” Lenny’s book “Modern Jigging” is another great read to learn jigging techniques. P FishTalkMag.com July 2019 33


Top 10 Tips for B etter B ottom F ishing

W

hile bottom fishing isn’t exactly the most artful form of angling, it has one advantage over just about any other technique: the best chance for red-hot fast action. Anyone who has kids knows that trolling, jigging, or chumming can lead to boredom, while dropping baits on schools of croaker, white perch, or spot usually leads to instantly bent rods and howls of delight. Free Bonus: bottom fishing is a great way to fill the cooler for dinner. Double Added Bonus: bottom fishing also leads to a great mixed-species catch, and depending on where you’re fishing you may luck into numerous species like flounder, puffer fish, stripers, sea trout, kingfish, catfish, black sea bass, robin fish, and of

By Lenny Rudow course, oyster toads (Woo Hoo!). Triple Mega Bonus: Bottom fishing is really, really easy to master.

Bottom Fishing Basics

Start off by rigging 10- to 20-pound class spinning gear with a simple two-arm topand-bottom rig, and add enough weight to keep the rig on bottom. Depending on conditions and depth, one to six ounces should get the job done. Use number-six or number-four hooks when smaller fish are around and number-ones or twos for larger species, and bait up with bits of bloodworm, grass shrimp, clam snouts, peeler crab, squid strips, or Fishbites. Then locate some structure that holds fish, which can range from the pilings of a pier to a wreck,

If you want fast action and lots of it, bottom fishing is tough to beat.

reef, or oyster bar in open water. Drop the rig to the bottom, and when you feel a nibble set the hook and start reeling. This is KISS fishing at its finest. There are, however, a few finer points to bottom fishing. Here are 10 tips that will make you a more effective angler, the next time you start soaking baits:

1. Don’t over-bait your hook. Many bottom fish are relatively small or have small mouths, and if you put a big chunk of bait on a small hook, the fish will grab it and rip it free without ever taking the hook into their jaws. As a general rule of thumb, the bait you use shouldn’t be much bigger than the hook itself. 2. Don’t spend too much time jigging the bait or otherwise adding action. Occasionally this helps, but more often than not it does more harm than good to lift the bait off bottom for any amount of time.

3. If you have a boat with a side-finding fishfinder, when you arrive at a likely location like an oyster bar or a reef site with oyster balls, spend some time idling slowly through the area to identify the best structure. Create waypoints where you spot clusters of reef material or fish. Then, you’ll have a much better idea of where to focus your efforts.

##You want to keep a pack of kids happy and entertained? Take ‘em bottom fishing.

34 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

4. When fishing from shore, a pier, or a bridge, if you don’t have a particular hotspot you know of within casting range, toss out the bottom rig as far as possible. Then, very slowly reel in four or five feet of line to creep the rig along the bottom. Pause for a moment or two, and reel some more line. Using this tactic you can cover more territory, and you’ll sometimes discover a hole, bar, or patch of bottom where the fish are concentrated that’s within casting distance.


##Who knows what will bite when you put a bloodworm bit on the bottom of the Chesapeake Bay? This puffer fish was one of the more interesting catches made during an afternoon of bottom fishing in the Choptank.

5. When fishing from a pier or bridge, also try doing the opposite: drop your rig right next to the pilings. Sometimes the fish you’re after are hugging the structure and long casts aren’t only unnecessary, they result in fewer bites. 6. If you’re fishing over large reef or bar areas from a boat, unless it’s windy or there’s a very strong current, start by drift-fishing as opposed to sticking to one spot. This will let you cover a lot of territory until you find specific hot zones.

7. If you’re fishing over isolated structure like a wreck, or you’ve drift-fished until locating a specific hotspot within a larger area, stick to it like glue. This means anchoring over the structure, or better yet, hovering over it with a “virtual anchoring” system that incorporates GPS. Minn Kota’s Spot-Lock is the prime example; if you have it on your boat you can press a button and your boat will stay in place while you drop your baits right on top of the fish. When the bite slows up, you can press another button and immediately start probing new territory. If your boat

isn’t equipped with this functionality, however, you’ll need to work that anchor every time you want to stick to a spot. In either of these cases the bottom line is the same – try to spend as much time as possible in the exact spot you know there are good numbers of fish, until the bite slows and it’s time to move on. You’ll catch a heck of a lot more than if you sit around and wait for the fish to come to you, or drift around and hope to get lucky.

8. Break down and buy some bloodworms when spot or croaker are the target. Yes, we know they’re ridiculously expensive. But the fact is that virtually every finfish to swim in the Bay loves to eat bloodworms, and these two species just can’t resist ‘em. Generally speaking, ##Fish like this croaker bloodworms can’t be aren’t just beat for all-around fun to catch, they’re also bottom fishing bait. 9. If you’re not getting any bites, leave sooner rather than

later. Sure, the tide has an effect on how the fish will feed. But as a rule of thumb bottom fish are less tideoriented than most larger predators and if they’re present, will usually bite. If you spend 15 or 20 minutes in a spot and only get a bite or two, there probably just aren’t many fish there at the moment.

10. If you’re fishing over a snaggy bottom, do everything you can to prevent the rig from dragging along. In this case anchoring may be better than drifting, and virtual anchoring is yet again a superior option (because you don’t swing back and forth on an anchor line). This is especially true when fishing deepwater wreck and reef sites, where there are often snags a-plenty. P

excellent table fare.

BONUS TIP (because if you can’t tell yet, we just love bonuses): When you catch a small four- or five-inch spot while bottom fishing, always rig up a rod and reel that has a live-liner function with an 8/0 to 10/0 circle hook on the end of a 30-pound leader and toss that little guy right back out there. Then, set the rod in a holder with the liveliner set while you continue bottom fishing. That rig might never get hit, but when a strike does come on that line, it’ll usually result in the largest catch of the day.

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 35


Dynamite Fishing Fishing the target ships and nearby reefs can be a blast

D

rifting behind the stern of American Mariner during a charter, we watched a school of bay anchovies chased by Spanish mackerel scatter along the surface. Off to our left below the surface were the bombed out remains of Old Hannibal, the first target ship at the site. American Mariner, her replacement, is a shell of her former self, full of holes left by hits from strafing runs by Navy warplanes. The Code of Federal Regulations says the target circle, officially the “Hannibal Target,” is closed to navigation. Nevertheless, the wrecks provide structure that attract fish and are a longstanding fishing destination for striped bass, cobia, Spanish mackerel, and redfish. The Target Ships are at just one of the locations used by the military for testing and training with munitions throughout the Bay and tidal Potomac River. For example, there are prohibited and restricted areas off the Naval Research Laboratory at Chesapeake Beach, MD, due to a firing range. Before it washed away, the last six acres of Sharps Island were used as a bombardment and machine gun firing

Explosive Behavior

By Wayne Young

range by the Air Force, beginning in 1943 and continuing at least through 1956 when bombardment practice was observed. The San Marcos (previously the battleship Texas) is southwest of Tangier Island in the southernmost of two restricted area target sites. Shown as location A in the chart excerpt, it is another well-known fishing destination that was a firing and bombing range. Charts show a 1000-yard radius circle around her remains which now lie partially buried in a trench. The ship was the target for extensive naval gunfire and later aircraft bombing. She eventually sank on her own, and became a hazard to navigation. A number of vessels struck the hulk and were damaged or sank. The Navy used explosives to remove her as a hazard in 1958. When explosives were insufficient to demolish the remains they excavated a trench, and then used more explosives to propel the remains into it. Even so, parts of

Remember folks, some of these areas may contain unexploded ordnance and others have certain restrictions upon them. These can change, which is why we haven’t printed them here. It’s up to you as the captain of your boat to make sure you’re up to date on areas that may be restricted or off-limits. Check nautical chart notes, Notices to Mariners, and the Coast Pilot for restricted areas and applicable rules. 36 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

the wreck lie six to seven feet above the bottom. There are plenty of other spots to fish nearby. These include the Northern Neck Fish Haven (location B), the Asphalt Pile Fish Haven (location C), a natural outcropping old oyster reef east of the Asphalt Pile (location D), a rock pile obstruction (location E), and the Nandua-Pungoteague Fish Haven (location F). To the northeast off the chart is the Angler’s Artificial Reef. The Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC) artificial reefs in this region are well developed with a variety of materials of opportunity and designed reef units such as reef balls. The VMRC artificial reef website has pages for each reef including a latitude and longitude grid map showing


the type and position of reef materials, and for some reefs, sides-scan sonar images. Additionally, the NOAA Bathymetry Data Viewer contains side-scan images covering many of the VMRC reefs. The obstruction at location E is interesting. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Automated Wreck and Obstruction Information System (AWOIS) only lists rocks for this obstruction. However, the NOAA Bathymetry Data Viewer side-scan sonar image shows a formed object resembling a precast structure of some type. As a side note, AWOIS is still available, but NOAA has not been updating it since 2016. Down the Bay and in the tidal Potomac River, there are a number of firing ranges

that include water areas with prohibited access, restricted zones, and good fishing. In the Potomac, these include areas off the Naval Surface Warfare Centers (NSWC) at Dahlgren, VA, and Indian Head, MD; in the vicinity of the Quantico Marine Base; and, off Fort Belvoir in Pohick and Accotink Bays and Accotink Creek. Restrictions vary by site, and may only be in effect when range operations are in progress. Should you hook into something with your tackle or anchor and pull up something that looks suspicious or like a shell casing, projectile, bomb, or rocket, it might be unexploded ordnance and should be treated as such. Don’t bring it aboard, and don’t bang it on the side of the boat. Cut the gear and let it go. Anchors and fishing tackle are a whole lot cheaper than medical bills or worse. Finally, never drive an anchor pole down in an

area where there is a known presence of unexploded ordnance. Aside from that, have a dynamite day fishing! P

Author Wayne Young is a former manager of the Maryland artificial reef program for Bay waters and his book “Bridges Under Troubled Waters: Upper Chesapeake and Tidal Potomac Fishing Reefs” can be purchased at amazon.com. You can also visit his Facebook page, Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs.

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FishTalkMag.com July 2019 37


Summer

Chumming By Lenny Rudow

The heat is on in the Chesapeake Bay

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hen warm weather moves in and stripers school up, there’s no doubt that one of the most effective ways to catch fish in large numbers is often chumming. The tactic isn’t complex, and we’ve talked about spring and fall chumming here in the pages of FishTalk before. But altering the tactics a bit to match up with the fish’s behavior during the mid-summer months is necessary, if you want to put dinner in the cooler. Use these tactics to heat up your summer fishing.

Where To Summer Chum

While specific hot zones vary from season to season, there are some consistent factors you should take into account when choosing a specific chumming spot. Most importantly, you need to anchor over structure and boat positioning is paramount. The schoolie stripers will usually be holding tight to cover, and to effectively chum for them you’ll want to find a hump, ledge, trough, or bar and anchor on the up-current side. By anchoring up-current, the tide will sweep your chum line over and around the structure. ##Now that’s what we call an awesome result while summer chumming.

38 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

In some cases chumming for schoolies will put you in competition with a large number of boats, all putting out their own chum lines. Particularly at popular spots within shooting distance of major metropolitan areas, things can get a bit tight – you may see 100-plus boats all anchored up close together. There are a few ways to deal with this type of situation. First off, you can simply go somewhere else. If that’s not an acceptable option, you can leave the dock before sunrise. Few anglers will arrive before 7 a.m. and the bulk of the pack usually rolls in between 8 and 9 a.m. Most importantly, however, if you’re forced to join an already-present pack of chummers make sure you set up down-current of the pack. This will enable you to take advantage of the tail end of the packs’ chum as it drifts back and away from the fleet. Anchor up-current, and you set yourself up for a losing battle with 100 other boats’ chum slicks. One other consideration when choosing a summer chumming spot is the presence of the “dead zone.” This anoxic water usually sits in the deep areas of the Bay, from 30 or 35 feet down. Note that while the dead zone prevents fish from hanging deep, they naturally want to go deep to find cooler water. Thus, fish can often be found just a foot or two above the dead zone. Whenever you can locate structure that intersects with the water just above the dead zone, you have a good shot at finding fish.


##Other boats? What other boats? (West of Swan Point, 2018).

Last season, the ledges off Tolchester, Love Point, and Podickory were the hottest spots around, followed by the drop-offs in the Potomac from Tall Timbers to St. George’s Island. Hollicutts Noose in Eastern Bay and The Diamonds off the Choptank also had periods of decent action. Which spot will be the top choice, right now? We have to work on these articles ahead of time and I’ve always found that when it comes to fishing, making predictions is an excellent method of inserting my foot directly into my mouth. So I’ll do like usual, and recommend that everyone reading this right now check out our current fishing reports, updated every Friday by noon at FishTalkMag.com.

How To Summer Chum

This is how most people chum, and it does work: They hang a chum bag or

bucket at the surface, and set out a line with little or no weight 30- to 50-feet back. A second line goes out with a half-ounce of weight, and is set the same distance back just below surface. A third one gets an ounce and hangs at mid-depth, and a forth line is rigged with enough weight to stay at or near the bottom. All four rods are placed in holders, and the anglers sit while they wait for a strike. This is simple and somewhat effective, but also somewhat lazy fishing. If you want to boost your catch rate, use these two tricks: Trick number one: Do not set your surface line. Instead, put the reel in freespool, and dangle the bait right next to the chum bucket. Now give a few tugs on the buckets’ rope, so a nice cloud of chum flows out. At the same time, release all tension on your surface bait and allow it to drift back and sink naturally, in that cloud of

chum. Strip line from your reel and keep it slack, so the bait is not pulled out of the chum cloud by tension on the line. Watch the slack line as your bait moves back, and when you see the line jerk or suddenly change direction, s-l-o-w-l-y apply tension and allow the circle hook to do its thing. If nothing strikes after you’ve drifted the bait back 100 feet or so, reel in and start over. Trick number two: As you probably know already, larger fish will often come from baits set on bottom. You should also know that in order to effectively fish the bottom you’ll need weight, and if you set a rod untended in the holder, you won’t be able to feed fish line upon the initial bite. Fish that strike the bottom line are therefore likely to feel that weight and dump the bait. You can fix this problem, however, at least when the

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Summer

Chumming

continued

current is moving. Use an egg sinker or fishfinder rig, larger than necessary to hold bottom. I like to use at least three ounces for this purpose, and in a stiff current four is better. Set it on bottom, then sweep your rod tip forward as you let out line. Apply minimum tension on the line, and let your tip go back slowly. The current will pull on your bait, and take line out through the egg sinker. (This is why you want an oversized weight; smaller sinkers will get pushed back by the current.) Repeat the process two or three times until you have let 10 to 15 feet of line out through the egg sinker. This extra line out beyond the sinker allows the fish to swim for several seconds before feeling any unusual resistance.

Rigs & Baits

Rigging and baiting for summer chumming is an exercise in simplicity. Just use a four- to five-foot length of 30-pound test leader with an 10/0 or 12/0 circle hook, tied off on a ballbearing swivel. Spinning or conventional gear in the 10- to 20-pound class matches up well against these fish. One important detail (which some folks are sure to disagree with me on) is to use monofilament, not braid, when chumming. Superlines are great for some situations, but IMHO chumming is not one of them. Their greatly enhanced sensitivity means the fish feel something’s odd and by my calculations, spit the baits twice as often. That comes after an entire season of fishing mono on one half the boat and braid on the other, and recording a two-to-one catch rate – make of it what you will. Casting chum rigs is another mistake you see people make all the time. There’s no better way to quickly get your bait far away from the chum line (and the fish) than by casting. What about using razor clams, or other popular non-menhaden baits? This works sometimes, but a nice, fresh chunk of 40 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##FishTalk’s own Parker Martin holds up a summer-chummed schoolie striper caught near Hackett’s Bar.

Heat Kills

D

on’t forget that once water temperature exceeds 70 degrees, catchand-release mortality of striped bass increases significantly. If you’re encountering hordes of throw-backs while summer chumming, the right thing to do is pull the anchor and try a different spot. And once you’ve caught as many stripers as you plan on keeping, move on to targeting another species to avoid catch and release mortality. Also, note the hook size recommendation above; smaller circle hooks do tend to get swallowed all the way down and though a 12/0 seems outrageously large for schoolies, keepers-sized fish have zero problem grabbing them. If you’re not up to date on the best practices for releasing fish safely, hit FishTalkMag.com, plug “catch and release” into the search box, and read “Dos and Don’ts of Catch and Release Fishing” for a refresher.

menhaden is tough to beat in a menhaden chum line. Baits should be matchbook-size, check all baits to make sure they aren’t spinning before you lower them to the bottom, and remember that with circle hooks you want as much of the hook exposed as possible and the point absolutely, positively must be completely exposed. Also remember to wait for the fish to set the hook itself, and apply tension as slowly as possible. Truth be

told, the most effective way to use circle hooks is, for most anglers, to leave rods in the holders with live-liners set for minimal tension, and not to so much as touch anything until the rod bends all the way over. Now, put your head down next to the chum bucket, and inhale deeply. That’s the smell of summer chumming – ahhhhhh, yummy. And when you’re fishing for schoolie stripers in the Chesapeake, it’s also the smell of success. #


Stream Smallmouth

Must-Haves

By Jim Gronaw

If catching smallmouth bass in creeks, rivers, and streams is in your plans, don’t leave home without these must-have lures.

S

ince I was a child growing up one of my favorite ways to fish was hopping into a local stream in quest for swift-water smallmouth bass. Years later I would own a ##The Author with a nice river smallie.

car, and rivers such as the Potomac and Susquehanna were within my grasp. The fish would often be bigger and stronger than the creek fish, and over the years, certain lures and lure types emerge as must-haves for each and every smallmouth trip. Some of my old standbys are still producing to this day, while others seem to come and go. So, here is a rundown of what has consistently taken the most, and often the biggest, smallmouth bass in my favorite creeks and rivers.

Hair Jigs

If I had to pick a day-in, day-out family of lures that routinely catches both numbers and quality-sized smallies from moving water environs, it would have to be hair jigs. Most smallmouth experts tout hair jigs as a cold-water standard, but the truth is that hair jigs, small or large, will take riverine bass year-round. Odd that the early winter and colder periods are heralded as prime hair jig months, as these lures most often replicate crayfish – a prime

forage for river bass. However, during the coldest times when these lures are most successful, crayfish are literally a no-show in the streams due to hibernation. The jigs trigger strikes from lethargic fish, but even more so, they tempt smallies during the warmer months. Materials for these lures vary, but most are tied with either bucktail or craft fur. Both have their strong points. Bucktail is hollow and can make a lighter jig head, say 1/16th of an ounce, fall at a slower rate than if the same jig were tied with craft fur, which tends to show more movement in the water. Most hair jigs are tied by companies specializing in jig tying and there are professional tiers in the industry who key specifically on smallmouth jigs. The web is loaded with experts who can tie outstanding jigs to replicate both crayfish and minnow forage patterns that can smash stream and river smallmouths. Then again, some anglers tie their own, as I have done for over 30 years. It’s always a FishTalkMag.com July 2019 41


Stream Smallmouth

Must-Haves CONTINUED

kick to catch a good fish on one of your own creations. Alternatively, many anglers opt for the tube jigs and fish them rather than (the more expensive) hair varieties. Many companies make tube jigs that will accommodate jig heads from size 1/32 to a quarter ounce. Most smallmouth anglers fish an eight-ounce jig head and three-inch tube as a standard for river bass, with colors including black, brown, pumpkin, olive, and root beer patterns catching fish throughout the seasons. Often, tube jigs are infused with various scent options to attract bass, and others are made from a softer plastic to heighten their movement underwater. Again, any quick review of a tackle shop’s shelves will reveal a huge variety of tube sizes and color options appropriate for smallmouth bass.

Crankbaits

One need look no further than the classic minnow designs of Rapala to see a host of minnow-like crankbaits that will take river smallmouths. The floating gold and silver two-inch Rapalas have been standards for stream bass angler for many decades and they take their share of other gamesters as well. The countdown series is ideal for those long, deep pools that require a sinking lure, but not one that will plummet quickly to the bottom. Color patterns vary, but most of the blue-back and black-back designs will closely imitate fleeing baitfish and minnow forage in the flows. When you see minnows skipping across the surface in an attempt to evade capture, it’s time to tie on the floating Rapalas. Another time-honored crankbait is the Rebel Crayfish and Teeny Crayfish. When they first arrived on the scene more than 30 years ago, stream bass and sunfish went ape over these quivering duplicates of crayfish. Still today, they remain one of the most effective warmwater lures for river-dwelling gamefish of all species. Don’t be surprised if you get a smashing strike as soon as the lure lands on the water, so be ready to set the hook if your lure disappears in a swirling boil. 42 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##A crayfish-imitating crankbait fooled this river bass into biting.

Sometimes a round dynamic can give a better show of baitfish profiles. The Mini series of Bagley and Berkley crankbaits tune in nicely with stream sunfish species that are often the dominant forage of larger stream and river bass. They tend to run slightly deeper than the Rebel lures and can adapt well to larger river systems such as the Potomac or Susquehanna. One of my recent favorites has been the Nano Series of crank baits by Matzuo. Both the Nano Minnow and the Kinchou Minnow in 1/8th ounce travel at two to four feet at varying retrieves and can coax smallmouths, largemouths and big channel catfish from rivers and streams. Also, they can be very effective on stream trout once the PowerBait crowd has taken the summer off. We like to toss them on quality six-pound monofilament like Suffix or P-Line FlouroClear.

Soft Plastics

Although not a traditional topic with river bass men, there is a strong case to be made for plastic worms in the flows. Almost by accident, I discovered that smaller three- to 4.5-inch stick and ringworm options can be an absolute killer on smallies. Once, while fishing a section of the Monocacy River in central Maryland, I ran out of my favorite hair jigs as the rocky bottom just ate them up. In an effort to keep off the bottom yet still appeal to the bass, I put on a small, no-name

stick bait and fished it wacky-rigged on a 1/0 offset worm hook. Nothing special, no secret retrieve, but almost as soon as the light plastic worm began to disappear those river bass came alive and pounced on it. I was somewhat surprised as to the aggressiveness of the fish and they quickly tore the worm in half. Fortunately, I had a bag of them in my vest. Ten bass later, I was sold on the fact that stick worms can be a game-changer when other more traditional baits just aren’t doing it. We have had good success with the classic Yamamoto Senko, Stank X Stix, and the Creepy Hollow Mini Dead Sticks in various colors from black, brown, blue, auburn, and olive. Other plastic options such as the classic four-inch Fin-S-Fish or the Zoom Finesse four-inch Worm team nicely with either a 1/0 or a 2/0 offset Owner or Gamakatzu worm hook. We like to fish them on light spinning tackle with either six- or eight-pound quality monofilament lines. A lightweight six-foot spinning stick serves well for enjoying 10- to 14-inch smallmouths yet has enough spunk to handle the occasional threeto four-pound bass that might be the season’s best. For smaller tributary streams, standard ultra-light spinning gear and four-pound lines will handle 95 percent of the fish you hook, save for that raging, eight-pound channel catfish you might… might… might… hook when you least expect it! #


Good Science Step Aside Do bad statistics own the process?

I

By Captain Monty Hawkins

t’s high time we brought NOAA’s recreational catch estimates under control. MRIP (the Marine Recreational Information Program, the way NOAA counts recreational catch data) was no good right out of the gate. Now it has undergone two “recalibration” events that have increased the recreational catch by astronomical amounts. It has become paramount that we understand and repair MRIP’s wild overestimates. “Catch,” whether commercial, recreational, or both, is a truly important value for scientists assessing a fish population (“stock assessment” as they say in fisheries management). Commercial catch is sold by the pound and thus offers fairly solid catch data, save what small percentage is back-doored. Because recreational catch is estimated, it’s nowhere near as firm as commercial landings data. With MRIP’s sudden meteoric rise in recreational catch, fisheries scientists think the now-huge recreational catch for many species of fish must be supported by higher populations of those fish. I’m talking about millions and millions of pounds of recreational catch that never happened. Scientists’ previous stock assessments would not support recreational catches as shown in MRIP’s current recreational catch data.

Yet fisheries managers must (by law) accept MRIP’s catch estimates as “the best available science.” If our catch is no longer X, but now XX, then the live population we “took” those fish from at sea must also no longer be XX, but now XXX.

N u mb er s G a mes

How have these numbers risen? We’ve just witnessed our flounder stock assessment climb. That is, scientists say the flounder population must be much higher than previously thought, mostly owing MRIP’s recent recreational catch estimates. We could not possibly have taken as many flounder as MRIP claims, had the original population assessment been correct. And, because recreational fishers are already “catching more,” commercial fishers were given a 49-percent increase in flounder. Only a small percentage of MRIP’s asserted recreational landings are factual. However, any new quota given commercial fishers will – I promise – become fish sold across a dock. I wonder what happens to a fluke stock assessment when you back 11 million pounds of catch out? Probably makes that population appear a lot smaller. It’s very likely the sea bass catch from 2017 is over 10 million pounds

##How can fisheries managers be expected to effectively construct regulations without good science - which they need so our kids have fish to catch for years to come?

too high, and always at least five million pounds too high. Wonder what happens to a smaller-than-they-thought population when commercial catch is jackedup? Hmmm... I think we’ve been there before. It was in the 1980s. Fisheries science stock assessments are now so misled by poor MRIP data, we have no idea how much damage is being done by raising population estimates and increasing quotas, based on untrue recreational catch values.

A ma z in g M a t h

MRIP’s predecessor, the Marine Recreational Fishing Statistics Survey (MRFSS) estimated marine recreational catch in the early 1980s. Here are some striped bass catch numbers (including all throwbacks) to illustrate the rise in MRIP’s numbers. MRIP has had two recalibrations sending catch sky high. In 2004 we were first told the total was 10,048,000 rockfish by MRFSS. In 2012 MRIP replaced MRFSS. That same 2004 estimate rose to 11,055,000 at MRIP’s launch. Then during MRIP’s two recent recalibration events that catch has moon-shot to 24,766,000. That’s a 147-percent increase. MRIP recalibrations have our total recreational striper catch at 27 million both in 2016 and 2017, and 25 million in 2018. Now, because NOAA’s fishery scientists assign a nine percent “recreational discard mortality” (fish that die on release – a number I think too high), with MRFSS estimates the total discard mortality might have been pushing 800,000. But with current MRIP estimates those fish that died without ever swimming in hot oil are above two million. Everyone in management is wildly arm-waving: “Oh no!! The discard mortality!!” Gosh, I bet MRIP’s recent recalibrations have something to do with that… It is not true that 1.6 million pounds of cod crossed New York’s recreational docks from private boats in FishTalkMag.com July 2019 43


Good Science Step Aside CONTINUED

hearty winter weather, yet their party-boat fleet didn’t get in on it. There’s no chance that happened. It is not true that the average size of shore-caught stripers in Connecticut was 19.6 pounds, yet next door in Massachusetts it was 33.4 pounds, and the grand prize for “average” shore-caught stripers, in Rhode Island was an amazing 45.1 pounds! It is not true Maryland’s shore anglers caught more than three years’ worth of Maryland party- and charter-boat sea bass – and they averaged 1.4 pounds apiece. Impossible! It is not true that in Delaware last year sea bass caught from shore averaged 1.9 pounds. All in all? There’s virtually no truth at all in MRIP’s catch estimates. “Recalibration” indeed. I’ve asked for years and years to have “Bayesian Stops” put on MRIP’s values. A Bayesian stop is most simply where a statistical value cannot exceed a certain number. As it stands, there appears to be no catch considered impossible by MRIP.

##A quick glance at MRIP’s numbers exposes them as blatantly unreal.

There’s always a battle over recreational regulation. Always. And it’s a heck of a distraction. Good science step aside – bad statistics own the process. It’s high time we had clarity where recreational catch is concerned. There has to be a way to test MRIP. If NOAA’s going to call it “scientific information” then it must be testable. NOAA needs to fix MRIP or be done with it. #

Everywhere I look I see bad recreational catch estimates throwing up so much smoke, the truth of our many tasks in fisheries restorations cannot be seen. Seafloor habitat restoration/creation, means of manipulating spawning production for best result – shoot, we’ve yet to even officially figure out that the ocean has turned green.

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f i s h t a l k m a g . c o m / s t o r e 44 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Hope Floats By Lenny Rudow

Any time you encounter commercial fishing pot floats in the open ocean during the summer, opportunity knocks.

W

hether you’re a dozen miles from the inlet, 30 miles out, or at the edge of the Continental Shelf, any time you see the floats of commercial fishing pots you’re in luck. All too often people run right past those floats and balls without giving it a second thought – yet pulling back on the throttles for a moment might result in bent rods and a full fishbox. 10 Miles and Change Fields of bass pots 10-plus miles from the inlet present three distinct opportunities: sea bass, flounder, and possibly mahi-mahi. You know there’s good bottom below because those commercial guys don’t waste their time setting out bass pots where there aren’t any sea bass; dropping cut squid or clam baits on topand-bottom rigs is likely to be effective on the bottom fish. Another option is to rig up with four to eight-ounce jigs, add to their appeal by sliding a squid strip over the hook, and gently jig the offering just above bottom.

There’s also a good shot at finding flounder in these areas, where top-andbottom Fluke Killers dressed with fiveinch GULP! Swimming Mullet in white, chartreuse, and pink is often the best bet. Try to locate several chunks of structure or interesting-looking bottom on the meter, then drift alongside it. Flounder do tend to hang out in groups in the inshore reef sites so when you catch one, repeat the drift. Some seasons, mostly depending on water clarity and temperature, mahi-mahi can also be found swimming around the inshore bass pots. True, they’ll usually be smaller than those found farther from the inlet and most will be just a couple-few pounds, but on occasion a 10- or 15-pounder will show up to keep things interesting. Visit FishTalkMag.com and plug “Bass Pot Battlegrounds” into the search box, to see our feature on how to target mahi specifically when they visit these inshore waters.

It’s Getting Deeper When you see those floats in deeper waters, usually 200 to 350 feet, you’ve just discovered prime waters for mahi, sea bass, and also blueline tilefish. This far out the presence of dolphin grows likelier, and bailing the pots can be a reliable fishery through the summer months.

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 45


Hope Floats (CONTINUED)

Fishing bottom in this depth range you’ll often encounter a mix of bass and bluelines, plus an occasional four-spot flounder. In all of these cases using a meatrig baited with squid, cut fish, or clam is effective, though considering how long it takes to drop down and reel up the lines, it’s smart to stick with tough baits that don’t get stolen too often. Baited jigs are also an excellent option for targeting these fish. Again, we have a feature focusing on this fishery on our website; check out “Bass ‘N Blue” online for the specifics. Over the Edge At the edge of the Continental Shelf, usually in the 500- to 800-foot range, you’ll often encounter high-fliers and polyballs. Trollers looking for marlin, tuna, and mahi-mahi often utilize a flight plan of trolling in a general north or south direction while zig-zagging from pot to pot, which can prove effective at times. Simple enough. But if you want to create carnage aboard your boat, consider bailing for mahi. Light-tackle anglers often utilize this method, pot-hopping from one polyball to

the next, tossing chunks and baited circle hooks on spinning gear. Some years, this proves to be the most reliable offshore fishing available and most or all of the pots will be loaded up with schools of dolphinfish ranging from a half a dozen to fish numbering in the OMG range. The basic tactic is simple: approach a pot from the downwind or down-current side (whichever is prevailing, so you drift away from the commercial gear and not into it), shift your boat into neutral, and toss a handful of fish chunks over the side. Then, anglers fling out their bait chunks in the same vicinity. When fish are present in good numbers you’ll usually see them dart out and go into a frenzy – and quite regularly, multiple hook-ups and mahi-mahi mayhem ensue. Often you can keep the school of fish right next to your boat and hook one after the next, either by continuing to entice them with chunks or by keeping one hooked fish in the water next to the boat. On rare occasions, however, the fish will play hard to get. If you see them but can’t get them to bite, there are a couple of near-surefire ways to get them into

Some people have 2 boats, 1 for offshore and 1 for inshore. And some people just have a

Tideline 235

S i g n

u p

feeding mode. One is to throw handfuls of live bull minnow into the water. Obviously, you’ll need to plan ahead and leave the inlet with a full livewell, but if you do so and then start tossing minnow within eyesight of the mahi, it’s incredibly rare for them to not go into an utterly insane feeding frenzy. The second trick is to toss out a wiggling squid. No, you can’t easily procure live squid. What you can do is grab a couple of boxes of regular squid at the tackle shop, and let them thaw as you cruise out. Rig a rod with a five- to seven-foot 30-pound flouro leader, clip off the tip of a squid’s mantle, and run the leader down through the resulting hole and out by the squid’s tentacles. Then, run a half-ounce egg sinker up the leader prior to tying on a 10/0 circle hook. Gently cast it out towards the pot, and allow it to free-fall. As it sinks, the tentacles will ripple and wave with a mesmerizing, life-like action that mahi-mahi just can’t resist. So: are you ready to harness every opportunity that presents itself when you head out into the open Atlantic? Remember, hope springs eternal – and those floats mean fish. P

T o

r e c e i V e

o u r

FREE Weekly Fishing Reports

coastal | freshwater | Way North Upper Bay | middle Bay | lower Bay tangier & lower shore | Way south We’ll e-mail you our updated reports every friday afternoon, just in time for your weekend fishing adventures.

WWW.TIDELINEBOATS.COM 46 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

f i s h t a l k m a g . c o m


ch e sa p e a k e

&

M id - atlantic

fishing report 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. Those of you following the reports online have probably noticed a slight shift in the area coverage. This is in an effort to better reflect the Bay’s geography, area overlap, and where the anglers who fish in the Bay’s different zones tend to focus, and comes at reader requests and suggestions. We’re always happy to consider your input – and when you have an interesting day of fishing don’t forget to snap a quick pic on the cell phone and send it to lenny@fishtalkmag.com along with a general location and a bit of tackle or tactical info, to help us make these reports better and better!

Coastal

As we went to press coastal fishing had hit its stride for the season. Surf angling has been better than usual this year, with a good mix of panfish on bloodworm bits and larger predators on cut bait. Blues marauded at Indian River, while both Ocean City and the Virginia inlets have enjoyed better-than-average flounder fishing. Meanwhile, the inshore bass bite started off strong and while offshore waters may have been a bit slower to get started this season, are now in full swing. The big limiting factor? Wind. It seems like rough seas are the fate of those who can’t pick and choose their fishing days whenever they like. So here’s to hoping that the month of July brings calmer seas, so we can all get out and enjoy the action.

Freshwater Presented by:

DISTRICT ANGLING We just mentioned the wind factor in the Coastal section, but for freshwater anglers throughout the region the big issue has been rain. Rain, rain, and more rain. Please go away. We’re scared to guess if it’s ceased raining long enough for the rivers and streams to allow for

decent fishing in the western regions and Upper Bay tribs as you read this. That said, fishing in reservoirs has held up strong for bass, crappie, pickerel, and the like. With the heat of summer hitting expect those fish to move deeper; probing underwater points and drop-offs with jigs, spoons, and swimbaits should be a good method for this month. The one reliable river fishery continues to be blue and channel catfish, present in virtually all the Chesapeake tributaries. Meanwhile the snakehead explosion captivated countless anglers through the spring and by now the breeding slow-down should be past us, but you’ll still see fry balls (cast directly at them over and over to aggravate the parental units into attacking). While the Blackwater/Transquaking/Chickamacomico area gets top billing for numbers, the Potomac creeks have continued to produce the biggest fish.

expect good perch and catfish fishing to continue in the usual haunts, but whether or not stripers will keep biting far up the Bay is anyone’s guess. Our fingers are crossed!

Upper Bay Presented by:

Okay, you Upper Bay folks had it so good last summer you got spoiled. As we move into July it doesn’t look quite as one-sided ##Ashley took advantage of the catfish influx to enjoy bent rods while fishing in Worton creek. Photo courtesy of Brad Spittel

Way North Presented by:

Once again: please make it stop raining!! There’s been some good fishing at times up north in our region thus far this summer, but its on-again, off-again nature is a natural reflection of alternating between wash-outs and settled water. With the summer sun now burning in the sky FishTalkMag.com July 2019 47


Fishing Report this year, but solid bites had already developed in the Bay Bridges and Podickery Point areas. One big change from last season: chumming for stripers has been made tougher by the presence of all the catfish. At times they’ve been out-biting rockfish five to one, and carrying double the normal amount of bait has been a necessity. It’s caused a number of anglers to opt for trolling instead, and yes, we’ve even heard from several readers who caught catfish while on the troll in the Upper Bay.

Middle Bay Presented by:

We’re going to call schoolie striper season in the Middle Chesapeake fair-to-middlin’ thus far. Plenty of anglers have made limit catches, but plenty others have come home dejected. Eastern Bay and the zone around the Gas Docks were prime locations as we went to press. Those choosing to chum or fish bait need to keep in mind that just as with the Upper Bay, there’s an extraordinary number of catfish out there. Hackett’s and Thomas Point have been loaded with them, and even anglers fishing from the Point Lookout pier were catching blues and channels.

Lower Bay Presented by:

Like last season, Lower Bay anglers have had a wider range of options than those up the Bay. The lower Potomac once again looks like a good option (especially the Tall Timbers to St. George’s Island areas) for stripers. Croaker had moved in to the south, and though we hope it’s

##Man, do those Ditmars guys know how to hold out a fish for a photo. Zach swears his dad’s fish, caught on pink at Wachapreague, was maybe 14 inches.

changed by the time this reaches your hands, Maryland anglers had thus far been sorely disappointed. Fishermen on the Rap had been scratching out a few, those on the York had been doing a bit better, and it wasn’t until you got down to the James that the bite really became respectable. This should be/could be changing, but we’re worried the low salinity levels in the Bay will keep saltier species from trekking north in good numbers. Same goes for the cobia, which had already made their presence known in Virginia’s portions of the Bay but may prove a disappointment to the north this season. (We hope we’re dead wrong about that!) Meanwhile, most of the blues that have moved into the Lower Bay thus far have been small. Not true, however, for the redfish – this species has provided a bright spot with some beautiful reds showing up, especially on the Eastern side, and hopefully more to come.

Tangier Sound and Lower Eastern Shore

What did we just say about reds? Yes, reds provide the potential for some serious tugging in the Sound and down through the

lower Eastern Shore. Their numbers haven’t been exceptional to date but the quality has been, with some 40-inchplus fish being reported here and there. Meanwhile, the speck bite along the islands and marshes began about as one would expect after last year’s cold stun and the resulting slow season: it’s been better, but not spectacular. Many area anglers continue to choose snakehead fishing. The Blackwater/Transquaking/ Chickamacomico areas remains a top destination for a snake hunt.

Way South

Cobia. Cobia. Oh, and cobia? The mouth of the Bay has been a great place to be, and it should only get better. Cobia were present in good numbers right from the start of the season, the CBBT has held flounder to date, and just before we put this issue to bed the first reports of spadefish came in. Meanwhile, bottom fishermen were loading up on croaker plus some spot and kingfish. While we’d hate to disappoint the folks up north, the lowered salinity in much of the Bay may well bottle up good numbers of fish down here near the Atlantic – time will tell, but the potential for a banner year in these waters looks excellent.

F or mor e r e p orts , visit F ish T alk M ag . com / fishing - reports 48 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Tips & Tricks

Want to catch free bait for surf fishing?

Make a square with one-by-fours, line the bottom with quarter-inch galvanized garden wire mesh, tote a shovel down to the breakers, and you’ll soon have all the sand fleas you can handle.

Want more Tips & Tricks? visit fishtalkmag.com

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FishTalkMag.com July 2019 49


Paddler’s Edge

2019 Hobie Outback

The Legendary Kayak Gets An Upgrade ##The author takes a spin on the 2019 Hobie Outback at Backyard Boats on Spa Creek in Annapolis, MD.

Quick Facts

Fins to Win The Hobie MirageDrive pioneered the pedal-propelled kayak revolution when it was introduced over 20 years ago. Today, you’d be hard pressed to find a major kayak manufacturer that does not offer a pedalpowered model. In fact several companies are now offering kayaks fitted with clones of the original Hobie fin-style drives, although without the option for reverse. The 2019 Outback comes standard with the latest MD180 drive with ST Turbo Fins, which are stiffer than standard fins allowing for quicker acceleration. Pulling tabs on the front of the drive enable you to

flip the fins 180 degrees to engage either forward or reverse. When in shallow water, the MirageDrive fins can be held up flush against the hull by fully extending the cranks. A hook and bungee under the seat allow you to secure the drive in that position. The drive is fairly lightweight and can be installed or uninstalled on the kayak in seconds. Fish in Comfort The Vantage seat is made of a breathable fabric and allows four-way adjustability to keep you comfortable on the water. The front and rear seat height is quickly adjusted by pull tabs on the front of the seat and the back rest angle is quickly corrected by a lever on the seat back. It also has builtin legs which fold out to allow it to double as a beach chair. The new pedal ARC cranks are adjustable with the push of a button to adjust to all sizes of anglers, from children to adults. Fishing Features The Outback comes with four recessed rod holders. Many anglers customize their kay-

Length: 12’ 9” | Width: 34” | Capacity: 425 lbs. Vantage CTW Seat Capacity: 275 lbs. Fitted Hull Weight: 85 lbs. | Fully Rigged Weight: 103 lbs. MSRP: $2799 ($2949 - Camo) Area Dealers: Backyard Boats, (703) 491-3188, backyardboats.com Annapolis, MD | Shady Side, MD | Woodbridge, VA

50 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##Photo courtesy of Hobie

T

here is good reason that the Hobie Outback has always been one of the top choices for serious kayak anglers. A stable, yet speedy hull combined with the reliability of the MirageDrive make this boat ideal for fishing everything from lakes and ponds, tidal rivers, or coastal oceanic waters. With the release of the 2019 Outback, Hobie has taken this proven fishing platform and has given it some great upgrades.

By Zach Ditmars


aks by creating PVC rod holder extensions to fit these holes. Also, new for Hobie is the built-in H-track mounting system. A total of six track in front and behind the seat allow for plenty of options for add-ons like rod holders, electronics and camera mounts, flag poles, and more. Storage The front bow hatch offers plenty of storage inside the hull, and a center dry box in front of the seat allows adequate space for items that need to be readily accessible. The rear deck area is large enough to house a fishing crate while also leaving room for additional items such as a cooler or bait bucket. Built into the gear track are tool holders with retractable cords, rubber storage pockets, and bungees to secure your tackle boxes into place. Straps on the either side of the kayak allow you to secure your paddle out of the way but with the option to access it instantly if needed. Rudder Controls Another new feature on the Outback is a re-designed rudder and control system. The

BOAT

new Kick-Up rudder is similar to the design on the Pro Angler. It is deployed by releasing a cable from a cleat on the front starboard side of the cockpit. If the rudder makes contact with an object while moving forward, it will swing back up to avoid damage. This longer rudder drops deeper below the kayak enabling more responsive turning. Now that there are steering handles on both sides of the kayak, you can control the boat with either your right or left hand, whichever one is not holding your fishing rod.

##The MD180 pedal drive switches from forward to reverse by simply pulling the red or green tabs.

Additional Features Hobie Outbacks now come with the Guardian Transducer Shield which is a built-in retractable unit designed for tool-free installation of side scan electronics. Pre-installed thru-hull cable plugs enable you to run cables up to gear track area without the need for drilling. The Guardian is spring loaded and will recess up into the hull to protect your transducer if contact is made with the bottom.

The Outback has solid carrying handles for transport, including the new mid-boat handles inside the cockpit. The stern of the boat comes with power-pole threaded mounting inserts. This also makes for convenient installation of an electric motor. I hope this overview has given you some insight on the features of the newly redesigned Hobie Outback. If you are looking for a pedal-powered kayak that is loaded with cool fishing features, this might be one to consider. #

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P O R T B O O K .cO m

Woodbridge, VA | Annapolis, MD This how-to, where-to e-guide from Lenny Rudow covers Maryland's freshwater fishing possibilities. Reservoirs like Piney Run, lakes such as Deep Creek, specific eastern shore ponds, and tactics and techniques for bass, crappie, and other freshwater fish are covered in detail.Whether you're a bank angler, a reservoir runner, or a pond hopper, you'll find this one interesting. (Price: $2.99) To DownloaD This e-guiDe anD more, visiT:

fishTalkmag.com/e-guiDes FishTalkMag.com July 2019 51


Tides & Currents RUDOW’S

F I S H TA L K M A G . C O M

WEEKLY FISHING REPORTS

Sign Up Today! StationId: 8575512 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS

StationId: 8574680 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Primary Time Zone: LST_LDT Datum: MLLW

Datum: MLLW

BALTIMORE July Time h m 06:07 01:40 M 06:19 11:58

AM PM PM PM

ft 2.0 0.5 1.1 0.3

cm 61 15 34 9

06:53 AM 02:26 PM Tu 07:13 PM

2.1 0.4 1.1

64 12 34

AM AM PM PM

0.3 2.1 0.4 1.2

AM AM PM PM

02:46 09:19 04:39 09:55

03:50 10:11 Sa 05:23 10:52

ftcm 1.8 9 0.664 1.012 0.243

cm h mh m 55 01:36 AM 16 05:56 16 18 08:0812:29 AM 30 Tu 05:41 F 03:03 PM 6 08:25 PM ○ 11:37

01:43 AM 2 05:43 08:1312:22 AM Tu 05:25 03:22 PM ● 11:31 08:40 PM

AM 0.3 PM 2.1 PM 0.4 PM 1.5

1.8 9 0.564 1.012 0.246

55 02:19 AM AM 0.5 17 17 06:34 15 08:4001:07 AM PM 1.8

12 61 15 37

2

9 64 12 37

AM 18 01:45 08:31 AM

0.4 1.9 0.5 1.3

12 58 15 40

3

0.3 2.1 0.4 1.3

9 64 12 40

AM 19 02:30 09:08 AM

0.5 1.8 0.5 1.3

15 55 15 40

4

AM AM PM PM

0.4 2.0 0.4 1.4

12 61 12 43

AM 20 03:15 09:44 AM

0.5 1.8 0.5 1.4

15 55 15 43

AM AM PM PM

0.4 2.0 0.3 1.5

12 61 9 46

AM 21 04:02 10:20 AM

0.6 1.7 0.5 1.4

18 52 15 43

AM AM PM PM

0.5 1.8 0.3 1.6

15 55 9 49

AM 22 04:53 10:56 AM

0.7 1.6 0.5 1.5

21 49 15 46

06:11 AM 11:57 AM M 06:52 PM

0.5 1.7 0.3

15 52 9

AM 23 05:49 11:34 AM

0.8 1.5 0.4

24 46 12

AM AM PM PM

1.7 0.6 1.6 0.3

52 18 49 9

AM 24 12:38 06:54 AM

1.5 0.8 1.4 0.4

46 24 43 12

01:56 AM 10 08:45 AM

1.8 0.6 1.4 0.3

55 18 43 9

AM 25 01:27 08:07 AM

1.6 0.9 1.3 0.4

49 27 40 12

02:58 AM 11 10:00 AM

1.9 0.6 1.3 0.3

58 18 40 9

AM 26 02:18 09:23 AM

1.7 0.8 1.3 0.3

52 24 40 9

03:58 AM 12 11:08 AM

1.9 0.6 1.2 0.3

58 18 37 9

AM 27 03:08 10:32 AM

1.8 0.8 1.2 0.3

55 24 37 9

04:53 AM 13 12:09 PM

2.0 0.6 1.2 0.3

61 18 37 9

AM 28 03:58 11:33 AM

1.9 0.7 1.1 0.3

58 21 34 9

05:44 AM 14 01:03 PM

2.0 0.5 1.1 0.3

61 15 34 9

AM 29 04:49 12:26 PM

2.0 0.6 1.1 0.3

61 18 34 9

06:30 AM 15 01:51 PM

2.0 0.5 1.2

61 15 37

AM 30 05:41 01:13 PM

2.1 0.5 1.2 0.3

64 15 37 9

AM 31 06:32 01:58 PM W 06:50 PM

2.1 0.5 1.3

64 15 40

Low –3:50 +3:30 –0:10 –1:58

Spring L. Ht Range *1.17 1.5 *1.59 1.9 *0.83 1.1 *1.08 1.4

12:50 07:40 W 03:11 08:06

4

01:46 08:29 Th 03:55 09:00

5 F

6 7

04:58 11:03 Su 06:07 11:51

8 9

12:53 07:28 Tu 12:51 ◐ 07:38

W 01:47 PM 08:24 PM

Th 02:44 PM 09:10 PM

F

03:42 PM 09:56 PM

Sa 04:40 PM 10:42 PM

Su 05:36 PM 11:28 PM

M 06:29 PM

dIFFEREnCEs

High Sharps Island Light –3:47 Havre de Grace +3:11 Sevenfoot Knoll Light –0:06 St Michaels, Miles River –2:14

Tu 02:33 PM

○ 07:19 PM W 03:11 PM 08:05 PM

Th 03:45 PM 08:49 PM

F

04:15 PM 09:33 PM

Sa 04:43 PM 10:17 PM

Su 05:11 PM 11:02 PM

M 05:41 PM 11:49 PM

Tu 06:13 PM

W 12:15 PM 06:48 PM

Th 01:01 PM ◑ 07:26 PM

F

01:54 PM 08:08 PM

Sa 02:52 PM 08:55 PM

Su 03:54 PM 09:46 PM

M 04:55 PM 10:43 PM

Tu 05:54 PM 11:42 PM

H. Ht *1.18 *1.59 *0.82 *1.08

1

F

02:45 AM 3 06:29 09:0301:09 AM W 06:21 Sa 04:04 PM 09:35 PM

AM 0.3 1.8 9 PM 2.0 0.561 PM 0.4 1.112 1.6 49

Annapolis, Md,201

Times and heights of high and L

ChEsApEAkE BAy August september JulyBRIdgE TunnEL

Height TimeTime Height

ft AM 0.3 AM 2.1 PM 0.4 PM 1.4

0.4 2.0 0.5 1.2

Datum: MLLW

h mh m 12:42 AM 1 04:58 07:2311:35 AM M 04:31 Th 02:40 PM PM ● 07:4510:42

AM 17 01:00 07:53 AM

3

m

Height TimeTime Height

Height cm 12 61 15 37

2

h

AM 16 12:14 07:13 AM

Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS

Times and heights of high and Low Waters

AnnApOLIs July August

Time

ft 0.4 2.0 0.5 1.2

1

JuLy 2019 TIdES

Height

nOAA Tide prediction

nOAA Tide predictions StationId: 8638863

Type: Primary Station Type: Primary F I S H TA L K M AStation G . CBaltimore, OLST_LDT M / F I SFort H I NMchenry, G-REPO R T S River, Time Zone: patapsco Md,2019 Time Zone: LST_LDT

ft AM 0.5 PM 1.8 PM 0.6 PM 1.4

ft cm cm 1.815 1 55 0.555 15 1.118 34 Su 0.343 9

1.815 0.555 30 W 06:25 Sa 03:29 PM PM 0.5 1.115 6 09:06 PM 1.5 46

18 12:20 55 03:02 AM AM 0.6 18 15 09:1207:11 AM AM 1.7

0.318 1.752 Th 01:43 PM 0.5 34 Su 03:54 PM 0.5 15 09:4607:08 PM PM 1.5 1.146

sept

HeightHeightTimeTime Time Height Height Time TimeHeight H TimeTime Time Height Height cm hcmmh m hft m ft cm cm cm h mh m h ft m ft cm ft ft ft cm h m h m ft 06:09 AM 1.9 58 12:02 AM 0.4 12 01:01 12 02:44 AM 0.4 12 02:51 AM 0.6 18 1 12:43 16006:42 AM 0.0 02:48 AM 0.1 1 3 1 AM 02:530.4 AM -0. 16 1 01:37 16 08:50 PM 15 08:38 52 52 08:42 AM 07:38 1.9 0.5 58 2.4 1.6 1.7 49 2.4 AM 73 AM AM AM 7307:16 AM 09:011.7 AM 2.9 Th 06:07 PM 37 F -301:07 15 Su 301:39 03:23 PM 0.3 1.2 M 03:04 PM 0.5 0.5 15 0.1 M 01:31 PM 9 -0.1 Tu PM 02:37 PM Th PM 02:590.3 PM -0.9 40 49 09:15 PM 08:03 1.8 PM 55 3.2 09:16 PM 1.7 1.3 52 3.0 ● 9806:47 09:06 PM 9107:52 09:261.6 PM 3.5 ○ PM ● PM

12 2 AM 0.4 0.2 12 -0.1 AM AM 0.7 0.4 21 0.1 55 03:46 12:12 AM 6 03:36 17 AM -312:45 2 17 2 06:55 03:27 AM 2 02:26 17 AM 07:13 AM AM 1.8 1.855 55 09:11 AM 1.6 1.6 49 49 15 09:29

08:29 AM 2.5 76 09:30 AM Sa 34 F 01:28 PM 12 M 04:04 PM 0.3 0.4 Tu 03:31 PM 0.4 0.5 12 Tu 02:22 PM 9 -0.2 -601:40 W PM 03:19 PM 07:06 PM 40 09:53 10:10 PM 1.9 1.3 58 3.3 PM PM 1.7 1.3 52 PM 10107:30 09:45 PM ● 08:52 9 04:51 01:28 01:09 AM 9 04:25 AM 03:14 0.5 0.3 15 -0.2 AM AM 0.7 0.5 21 18 3 3 18 AM -6 04:04 AM 52 10:16 3 09:19 18 AM 07:41 AM 55 09:46 AM 1.7 1.8 52 2.6 AM 1.5 1.6 46 AM 7907:44 10:08 AM 15 Su Sa 02:13 PM 9 04:00 Tu 04:45 PM 0.3 0.3 W PM 0.4 0.5 12 W 03:13 PM 9 -0.2 -602:13 Th PM 04:00 PM 34 11:08 08:07 PM 43 10:32 PM 09:42 1.9 1.4 58 3.3 PM PM 1.8 1.4 55 PM 10108:13 10:22 PM

2.4 15 0.2 40 2.9 15 0.1 49 2.5 15 0.2 43 2.9

301:59 2 7308:01 M 602:25 F 8808:50

AM 15 03:430.5 AM -0. AM 49 09:541.6 AM 3.0 PM 03:540.3 PM -0.9 PM 52 10:171.7 PM 3.4

3

15 302:59 04:330.5 AM -0. 3 AM 46 7608:47 AM 10:471.5 AM 3.1 Tu 603:11 Sa PM 04:500.3 PM -0.9 52 8809:50 PM 11:081.7 PM 3.3

12:23 4 07:15 03:49 AM 09:53 AM Th 01:56 Su 04:4607:18 PM 10:32 PM 01:18 5 08:02 AM 5 04:55 10:42 AM F 02:43 M 05:2808:19 PM 11:31 PM 02:16 6 08:50 AM 6 06:07 11:32 AM Sa 03:30 Tu 06:1209:23 PM

AM 0.4 AM 1.9 PM 0.3 PM 1.7 AM 0.5 AM 1.8 PM 0.3 PM 1.8 AM 0.6 AM 1.6 PM 0.3 PM

0.2 1.812 0.458 1.1 9 52 0.2 1.815 0.455 1.2 9 55 0.3 1.718 0.349 1.2 9

6 03:46 19 01:04 AM AM 0.7 19 55 09:4507:45 AM AM 1.7

7 03:17 12:32 AM 07:2209:39 AM Su 04:18 W 12:25 PM 10:29 ◐ 06:58 PM

AM 1.8 AM 0.7 PM 1.5 PM 0.3

0.455 1.621 0.346 1.3 9

22 AM AM 0.9 22 49 06:3209:26 11:37 AM 1.4

03:23 AM 0.6 1.427 9 M 04:07 PM 0.443 Th 05:5510:19 PM PM 0.4 1.312 40

18 02:10 AM AM 1.9 0.8 58 2.5 24 7 7612:59 AM 1.9 0.7 58 3.1 AM 9404:43 12:12 AM 01:511.7 AM AM 21 12:54 22 22 7 7 12:18 22 AM 7 AM 7 05:21 43 09:33 AM 0.8 1.3 24 0.3 40 AM 06:39 0.7 1.3 21 -0.2 AM -609:51 06:26 AM 907:19 AM 08:040.8 AM 10:55 AM 40 08:35

AM 1.9 AM 0.7 PM 1.4 PM 0.3

0.558 1.521 0.243 1.4 9

15 12:41 AM AM 1.8 23 04:15 23 46 07:4410:00 AM AM 0.9

0.755 1.427 Tu 04:45 F6 12:26 PM PM 1.3 0.440 43 PM PM 0.4 1.412 ◑ 06:3611:13

21 03:12 AM 01:13 24 8 7302:01 AM 1.9 1.6 58 2.9 AM 1.9 0.8 58 2.4 AM 8805:43 12:52 AM 1.7 AM 49 01:53 23 8 23 8 AM 23 AM 8 02:53 8 12:22 43 10:34 37 AM 07:34 0.7 0.7 21 -0.2 AM AM 0.7 1.2 21 0.4 AM -610:31 07:05 AM 1208:24 AM 09:020.8 AM 06:31 AM 21 09:36

AM 0.6 1.9 1.458 AM 0.7 0.221 PM 1.3 40 0.3 9

18 01:32 24 05:13 AM AM 1.8 24 43 08:5810:36 AM AM 0.8

52 2.5 24 0.2 37 3.0 12 0.4

0.755 1.324 0.337 12 1.4 0.858 1.224 0.337 12 1.5 0.861 1.121 0.337 12 1.6 0.861 1.118 0.340 12 1.7 0.764 1.118 0.243 12 1.8 0.764 1.115 0.246

21 04:11 AM 02:12 1.9 1.7 58 2.7 AM 1.9 1.6 58 2.3 AM 8212:24 01:35 AM 49 9 7002:57 04:011.7 AM 52 02:54 9 24 9 AM 24 AM 24 9 AM 9 01:27 40 11:26 AM 08:31 0.7 0.7 21 -0.1 AM AM 0.6 0.8 18 0.4 24 AM -306:47 07:47 AM 1209:19 AM 07:42 AM 21 10:29 10:020.8 AM 37 2.5 0.69

M7602:30 F PM 04:421.2 PM 1808:37 PM 11:110.4 PM

52 2.3 24 0.3 37 3.0 12 0.4

52 2.2 24 0.4 34 2.6 0.69

6703:45 05:091.7 AM 10 10AM 1210:05 AM 0.7

52 2.3 21 0.3 37 3.0 12

12:091.7 AM 11AM 6404:26 11 06:110.7 AM 10:44 AM

0.4 52 2.3 21 0.3 40 3.0 12

12:591.7 AM 12AM 6705:02 12 07:040.6 AM 11:19 AM

0.3 52 2.4 18 0.3 40 3.0 15

01:441.6 AM 13AM 6705:36 13 07:490.6 AM 11:53 AM

0.3 49 2.5 18 0.3 43 3.0 15

1.8 9 0.661 Tu 04:06 30 F 02:03 PM PM 0.4 1.112 10:22 PM 0.249 6 07:25 PM 1.6 ●

312:28 03:000.5 AM 15AM 15 7606:37 AM 09:061.6 AM

7

8 04:23 01:35 AM 08:3810:30 AM M 05:08 Th 01:20 PM 11:36 07:45 PM

8 9

F

9 05:33 02:38 AM 11:23 09:51 AM Tu 05:58 02:19 PM ◐ 08:36 PM

10 12:43 AM AM 2.0 10 03:39 10:5606:45 AM AM 0.7

1.561 0.621 W 12:19 Sa 03:21 PM PM 1.2 1.337 09:2806:48 PM PM 0.4 0.212

11 01:47 AM AM 2.0 11 04:36 11:5407:57 AM AM 0.6

1.661 0.618 Th 01:17 PM Su 04:22 PM 1.2 1.237 10:2207:39 PM PM 0.4 0.212

12 02:46 AM AM 2.0 12 05:27 12:4309:06 PM AM 0.6

1.761 0.618 F 02:16 M 05:20 PM PM 1.2 1.137 08:29 PM 11:14 PM 0.4 0.212

AM 13 03:41 AM AM 2.0 13 06:14 10:08 01:26 PM 0.6

1.8 0.661 Sa 03:12 PM 1.118 Tu 06:1209:18 PM PM 1.3 0.240

AM AM 0.4 14 04:30 14 12:04 06:5511:02 AM AM 1.9

1.812 0.658 Su 04:05 W 02:03 PM PM 0.6 1.018 06:5910:06 PM PM 1.3 0.240

AM AM 0.5 15 05:15 15 12:51 07:3311:49 AM AM 1.9

1.815 0.658 M 04:55 Th 02:35 PM PM 0.6 1.018 PM PM 1.4 0.243 ○ 07:4310:52

dIFFEREnCEs

0.321 1.752 12 F 02:18 PM 0.515 M 04:20 PM 0.5 34 07:53 PM 1.1 10:27 PM 1.6 49

20 AM AM 0.7 20 55 04:3408:19 10:19 AM 1.6

6 01:48 AM 0.4 1.621 12 Sa 02:53 PM 0.549 Tu 04:49 PM 0.4 37 08:39 PM 1.212 11:10 PM 1.6 49

21 AM AM 0.8 21 52 05:2808:52 10:56 AM 1.5

9 02:34 AM 0.5 1.524 9 Su 03:29 PM 0.446 W 05:2009:28 PM PM 0.4 1.212 37 11:54 PM 1.7 52 12

6 01:22 W 05:25 Sa PM 07:24 PM 12:08 25 46 02:2606:15 AM 25 18 10:05 AM Th 11:16 40 Su 02:25 PM 06:08 ◑ 6 08:20 PM 01:03 26 49 03:23 AM 26 18 11:0307:19 AM F 12:04 37 M 03:3106:54 PM 6 09:23 PM 27 01:59 52 04:21 AM 27 18 11:5408:22 AM Sa 12:59 34 Tu 04:3407:43 PM 6 10:30 PM 02:52 28 AM 55 05:18 28 18 12:3909:22 PM Su 02:01 34 W 05:3408:34 PM 6 11:36 PM 03:44 29 55 06:12 AM 29 18 01:2210:17 PM M 03:04 30 Th 06:3009:27 PM 6

PM 1.2 0.4 AM 1.9 AM 0.8 AM 1.2 PM 0.4 AM 2.0 AM 0.7 PM 1.2 PM 0.4 AM 2.0 AM 0.6 PM 1.3 PM 0.4 AM 2.1 AM 0.6 PM 1.4 PM 0.4 AM 2.1 AM 0.5 PM 1.5 PM

30 04:34 55 12:40 AM AM 0.3 30 18 07:0411:08 AM AM 2.0 31 11:56 01:42 AM AM 0.3 31 07:54 AM 2.0

05:22 AM 1.9 0.6 9 W 05:07 PM 1.261 Sa 02:4311:16 PM PM 0.4 0.212 08:20 PM 1.7 52

High Mtn Pt, Magothy River +1:24 Chesapeake Beach –1:14 Cedar Point –3:16 Point Lookout –3:48

Low +1:40 –1:15 –3:13 –3:47

H. Ht *0.88 *1.12 *1.33 *1.37

9 06:00 18 4 12 05:19 AM 04:04 0.6 0.4 18 -0.3 AM AM 0.8 0.6 24 0.2 19 4 02:08 AM -902:12 04:40 AM 4 19 52 11:06 4 AM 19 AM 08:14 08:27 AM AM 1.5 1.746 52 10:25 AM 1.4 1.5 43 46

10:10 AM 2.7 82 10:45 AM 15 M-602:48 Su 02:59 PM 9 04:32 W 05:29 PM 0.3 0.3 Th PM 0.4 0.4 12 Th 04:07 PM 9 -0.2 F PM 04:40 PM 34 09:09 10:33 PM 1.5 46 11:15 PM PM 1.8 1.4 55 PM 3.3 10108:57 10:58 PM 12 12:06 AM AM 2.0 0.561 15 06:21 02:58 5 AM AM 0.8 0.7 24 20 5 03:09 04:54 AM -0.3 -908:45 05:15 AM 20 49 07:12 5 20 AM 0.7 21 AM 1.5 09:14 11:03 AM 1.6 49 11:11 AM 11:23 1.3 AM 40 AM 8203:23 15 Th 11:59 AM PM 1.4 0.3 43 2.7 Tu PM 0.4 12 M 03:46 9 05:11 F PM 0.4 F 05:02 PM -0.2 -6 Sa 05:20 PM 37 06:16 PM PM 0.3 9 46 09:44 PM 1.4 10:12 11:251.5 PM 3.2 98 11:35 PM 15 01:07 AM AM 2.0 0.661 21 AM AM 1.9 0.7 58 03:48 6 18 12:02 21 6 04:13 AM -909:16 05:50 AM 46 08:25 6 05:46 21 AM AM 0.7 1.5 21 -0.3 AM 0.8 1.4 24 10:03 AM 46 07:28 AM 8503:59 12:02 PM 12 F 12:56 PM 11:57 1.3 0.2 40 2.8 Sa PM PM 1.2 0.4 37 W Tu 04:35 PM 6 12:03 Sa 06:01 PM -0.1 -3 Su 06:02 PM 37 PM PM 0.4 1.612 49 05:56 PM PM 0.4 1.5 12 10:33 ◐ 07:0711:17

2.5 12 0.3 43 2.8 21 0.2 46 2.5 12 0.4 43 2.7 21 0.3 43 2.5 12 0.4 46

12 Su PM 1.2 0.4 37 2.5 Th 12 Sa 01:58 PM 1.2 0.2 37 2.8 Su 12:55 PM 8504:39 M PM 12:42 PM W 05:26 PM 6 01:04 40 08:05 PM 07:02 PM PM 0.4 1.5 12 0.5 46 ◑ 06:53 0.4 PM 12 0.0 011:27 06:47 PM ◐ 12 F8505:24 12 Su 03:03 PM 1.2 1.2 37 2.8 M 02:09 PM 1.2 0.4 37 2.5 M 01:55 PM Tu PM 01:25 PM Th 11:51 AM 37 43 09:06 PM 08:08 0.5 0.2 15 0.16 08:01 0.4 PM 12 0.6 PM ◑ 3 PM 07:36 06:18 PM

9 04:05 PM M 1.2 1.2 37 2.9 Tu 03:14 PM 1.3 1.2 40 Sa Tu 02:58 PM 8811:21 W AM 02:12 PM F 12:50 PM 37 10:07 PM 0.5 0.2 15 0.26 09:14 PM PM 0.4 0.3 12 08:29 PM PM 606:14 07:12 PM ◐ 09:16 43 AM 1.9 58 03:56 AM 1.9 58 01:22 AM 1.7 02:23 AM 24 05:04 02:28 AM 1.7 52 03:15 AM 2.5 76 10 25 25 25 10 08:50 10 AM PM 09:28 0.6 0.7 18 0.0 AM AM 0.6 0.8 18 08:34 AM 37 12:10 21 11:17 AM 007:52 Tu PM 1.3 1.1 40 2.9 W 04:18 PM 1.4 1.1 43 Su Th PM 03:02 PM Sa 01:51 PM 34 9 05:02 W 04:02 PM 8812:25 11:04 PM 10:24 0.5 0.3 15 0.29 10:27 PM 0.4 0.3 12 09:26 PM 08:05 PM PM 607:10 ◑ PM 46 AM AM 1.8 1.8 55 2.4 AM 1.9 1.7 58 03:23 AM 55 04:55 04:21 AM 7302:20 03:16 AM 24 05:50 26 11 26 11 11 26 PM 10:26 0.6 0.7 18 0.0 PM AM 0.5 0.8 15 09:50 AM 21 12:01 AM 008:53 09:25 AM 34 12:49 M9101:36 W PM 1.4 1.1 43 3.0 Th 05:17 PM 1.5 1.1 46 Su 02:50 PM 34 Th 05:04 PM F PM 03:56 PM 9 05:52 11:56 PM 11:28 0.5 0.3 15 0.29 11:35 PM PM 0.4 0.3 12 08:58 PM PM 608:09 10:24 PM 49 AM AM 1.8 1.8 55 2.3 AM 1.9 1.8 58 04:12 AM 55 05:50 05:26 AM 7003:16 04:14 AM 24 06:29 27 12 27 12 12 27 PM 11:22 0.6 0.7 18 0.1 PM AM 0.4 0.7 12 10:40 AM 21 12:43 AM 309:48 10:20 AM 34 01:21 Tu Th PM 1.4 1.1 43 3.0 F 06:14 PM 1.6 1.2 49 M 03:45 PM 34 F 06:02 PM 9102:47 Sa PM 04:53 PM 9 06:38 09:09 PM 0.3 09:47 PM 0.3 9 11:22 PM 52 12:43 AM 12:26 0.5 1.8 15 0.1 AM AM 0.3 1.8 9 AM 304:09 13 28 13 AM 55 12:39 05:15 AM 21 07:04 28 13 04:55 28 AM AM 06:27 1.8 0.7 55 2.3 AM 1.9 0.7 58 AM 7010:39 11:22 AM 21 06:40 11:17 AM 34 F 01:50 PM 0.6 1.1 18 0.1 Sa 01:23 PM PM 0.4 1.2 12 Sa 12:16 PM W 303:53 Tu 04:35 PM 34 Su 05:50 PM 6 07:20 PM PM 1.8 0.3 55 PM 06:55 1.5 0.3 46 3.0 PM 9110:08 ●9 07:08 10:35 PM

52 2.1 24 0.4 34 2.7 0.59 55 2.2 21 0.3 37 2.8 0.49 55 2.2 21 0.2 37 3.0 9

18 604:00 05:230.6 AM -0. 4 AM 43 7609:35 AM 11:401.4 AM 3.2 W 904:00 PM 0.3 Su 05:48 PM -0.9 52 8510:52 PM 1.7

5

05:05 5 610:27 7604:53 Th M 1211:55 82

AM 21 12:000.7 AM 3.1 AM 40 06:151.3 AM -0. PM 9 12:360.3 PM 3.2 PM 52 06:491.7 PM 0.0

6

06:12 24 12:540.8 AM 2.9 6 AM 911:23 AM 37 07:081.2 AM -0. F 7605:47 PM 0.3 9 12 Tu 01:33 PM 3.1 07:52 PM 0.2 ◐

7612:24 W PM 02:341.2 PM Sa 1506:44 08:590.3 PM ◐ PM

7601:28 Su Th PM 03:381.2 PM 1807:42 PM 10:070.4 PM

11:02 AM Tu 7903:26 Sa PM 05:431.2 PM 1809:28 PM 0.4 12 Su PM 11:591.3 AM W8204:17 06:370.4 PM 1510:17 PM 9 M PM 12:501.3 PM Th 8505:03 07:250.5 PM 1211:02 PM 6 Tu PM 01:371.4 PM F 9105:46 08:070.5 PM 11:45 PM

55 01:26 AM 0.6 18 0.1 AM 304:58 12:18 AM9 0.2 02:241.6 AM AM 0.3 1.9 14 58 14606:07 14 01:18 29 AM 14AM 29 AM 1.8 55 01:41 21 07:37 29 14 05:34 AM 07:20 1.7 AM 52 2.3 07:29 7011:26 06:15 AM 7012:26 PM 08:290.5 AM AM AM 1.8 0.6 55 2.3 18 11:59 AM 0.6 18 34 Sa 02:15 PM 0.5 1.2 15 0.1 Su 01:06 PM M PM 12:13 PM9 0.1 Su 02:02 PM 0.3 1.3 Th304:56 40 W 05:21 PM 37 PM 07:42 1.6 0.4 49 3.1 PM 9411:06 06:47 PM ○6 08:0011:19 PM PM 1.9 0.3 58 3.29 PM 12 08:02 55 AM 305:45 01:11 AM AM 0.6 1.7 18 0.1 AM 0.4 1.8 12 0.1 55 15 02:05 30 AM AM 52 02:42 15 30 18 02:09 30 15 06:09 AM 7312:11 07:13 AM AM 08:07 1.7 0.6 52 2.4 AM PM 1.7 0.5 52 2.5 15 12:33 PM 18 08:15 34 08:07 M 01:53 PM Tu PM 01:09 PM6 -0.1 Su PM 0.5 1.2 15 0.1 M 02:41 PM 0.2 1.4 F 305:56 43 Th 06:05 PM 37 6 02:39 08:38 PM 08:26 1.6 PM 49 3.0 08:55 2.0 PM 61 3.3 ●91 PM 07:41 ○ 58 18 37 6

Spring L. Ht Range *0.88 1.0 *1.14 1.1 *1.33 1.4 *1.33 1.4

02:030.3 AM 31 AM 12:03 31 06:31 08:081.8 AM AM

-0.1 9 2.7 55 W PM 02:040.4 PM -0.2 Sa 12:55 12 08:34 PM 3.4 06:54 PM 1.5 46

dIFFEREnCEs Onancock Creek Stingray Point Hooper Strait Light Lynnhaven Inlet

High +3 :52 +2 :01 +5 :52 +0 :47

Low H. Ht +4 :15 *0.70 +2 :29 *0.48 +6 :04 *0.66 +1 :08 *0.77

W PM 02:191.4 PM Sa 306:27 08:45 PM ○98

Th PM 02:590.5 PM Su-312:59 10107:07 09:211.5 PM ○ PM

2.7 52 0.0 24 3.1 37 0.3 9

0.3 49 2.5 15 0.3 43 3.0

0.3 15 2.6 49 0.3 15 3.0 46

-3 82 -6 104

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 the published disclaimer: data are based upon the latest information available as disclaimer: These data are based upon the latest information available as of the date of your request, and may differ from the publishedThese tide tables.

52 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

Generated On: Tue dec 04 20:09:32 uTC 2018

Generated On: Tue dec 04 20:08:08 uTC 2018

Generated On: Tue dec 04 20:15:45 uTC Page 4 of 5 2018


3

02:18AM 06:06AM 1.3F 09:42AM 01:00PM -1.1E 04:54PM 07:06PM 0.5F Th 09:42PM

4

12:30AM -0.6E 01:24AM -0.5E Source: 04:00AM NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 03:06AM 06:48AM 1.2F 07:30AM 1.0F 05:00AM 10:24AM 01:42PM -1.1E 10:54AM 02:12PM -1.0E Su 11:24AM Station Type: Harmonic F 05:30PM 07:54PM 0.6F 05:54PM 08:30PM 0.6F 06:00PM Time Zone: LST/LDT 10:36PM 11:30PM

-0.8E 08:12AM 1.0F 02:36PM -1.1E M 09:00PM 0.9F

5

01:18AM -0.6E 04:00AM 07:36AM 1.2F 11:06AM 02:24PM -1.1E Sa 06:06PM 08:36PM 0.6F 11:36PM

02:06AM -0.5E 04:48AM 08:12AM 0.9F 11:30AM 02:48PM -1.0E M 06:24PM 09:12PM 0.7F

12:12AM 06:06AM 12:12PM 06:42PM

03:00AM 09:06AM 03:24PM 09:48PM

6

02:18AM -0.6E Slack Maximum 05:00AM 08:30AM 1.0F h m h m-1.1E knots 11:48AM 03:12PM Su 12:48AM 04:36AM 06:42PM 09:30PM 0.7F 1.2F

12:24AM 03:00AM -0.5E Slack Maximum 05:36AM 08:54AM 0.8F h m h m-0.9E knots 12:06PM 03:24PM Tu 01:42AM 05:18AM 07:00PM 09:54PM 0.7F 1.2F

01:12AM 04:06AM -0.8E Slack Maximum 07:12AM 10:06AM 0.7F h m h m-0.9E knots 01:00PM 04:12PM W 02:06AM 05:48AM 07:24PM 10:42PM 1.0F 1.2F

W

Th

F

18

12:36AM -0.6E 03:12AM 06:48AM 1.1F 10:18AM 01:36PM -1.1E Sa 05:18PM 07:48PM 0.6F 10:42PM

3

19 20 21

1

M

7

Su

18

Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown 02:06AM

4 5

July

Sa

01:06AM -0.8E 04:00AM 07:24AM 1.1F 10:42AM 01:54PM -1.1E Su 05:24PM 08:06PM 0.8F 11:12PM

16

08:18AM 11:36AM -1.0E 03:30PM 05:30PM 0.4F Tu 07:54PM 10:48PM -0.6E

12:36AM 03:18AM -0.6E 06:06AM 09:24AM 0.9F 12:36PM 03:54PM -1.0E M 01:30AM 05:24AM 1.2F 07:24PM 10:18PM 0.8F -1.1E 2 09:00AM 12:18PM

22

Tu

6

06:36AM 09:42AM 0.7F 12:48PM 04:06PM -0.8E

02:30AM -0.6E 01:48AM 05:30AM 08:30AM 0.7F 08:00AM 11:36AM 02:48PM -0.8E 01:12PM W Th 0.8F 06:06PM 09:12PM 07:30PM

-1 07:06AM 09:48AM 07:12AM 09:42AM 10:42AM 1.1F ce 0.7F 08:54AM 11:24AM 0.8F OPS0.4F 09:18AM 12:12PM 1 Sou NOAA NOS CO 12:36PM -1.4E 03:42PM -0.8E 12:24PM -1.0E 03:24PM -0.6E 04:12PM 02:12PM 05:06PM 03:06PM 06:06PM -1 Th Ha Fon 1.1F Su 0.9F S a Type mon c 06:42PM 10:12PM 06:18PM 09:54PM 11:06PM 1.9F 08:18PM 11:42PM 1.4F 09:18PM

4

-1.0E

02:54AM 04:30AM -1.1E 06:18AM 08:54AM 10:36AM 0.8F -0.9E 11:48AM -1.1E 02:48PM 01:36PM W 04:30PM Sa 1.1F 05:42PM 09:06PM 07:42PM 11:00PM 1.4F

01:54AM 18 18 0.8F 08:06AM

3

04:42PM 07:06PM 09:54PM

◐ 0.6F

-0.8E 02:12AM 0.5F 08:24AM -0.6E 02:00PM 0.9F 08:18PM

05:00AM 11:12AM 04:54PM 11:42PM

-1 1 -1 1

NOAA 04:30AM Tidal Current S a on-0.9E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h 22-0.8E ee 12:42AM -1.4E 03:42AM 12:36AM 03:42AM 02:36AM 05:12AM -1.1E 03:00AM 05:54AM 4

19

19

4

Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2019 Ch T me Zone LST LDT Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683° W

Mean (T) Mean Ebb 20 20 Dir. 189° (T) National Oceanic 5 Flood5 Dir. 25°and 20 5 Times and speeds of minimum current, in knots Th maximum and F F Sa M Atmospheric Administration August Ju september y

-0.8E 0.9F -1.0E Tu 1.0F

12:30AM 06:24AM 12:12PM 06:42PM

03:18AM 09:18AM 03:24PM 09:54PM

-0.6E 02:30AM 0.6F 08:54AM -0.8E 02:12PM 0.8F 08:30PM

01:42AM -1.4E 04:48AM 05:24AM 08:18AM 10:48AM 11:36AM 1.2F 01:30PM -1.3E 04:36PM 05:06PM 07:36PM 11:06PM

-0.9E 03:12AM 0.5F 09:36AM -0.7E 02:54PM 1.1F 09:00PM

01:24AM -1.0E 04:30AM 06:12AM 08:18AM 10:36AM 12:06PM 0.8F 01:06PM -0.9E 04:06PM 06:06PM 07:00PM 10:36PM

1

-0.7E 0.4F 03:48AM -0.5E 10:12AM 0.9F 04:12PM 10:18PM

12:36AM 07:00AM 01:06PM 07:18PM

1 -1 1 -1

h m

h m

03:18AM 06:24AM -1.4E knots

h m

h m

03:48AM 07:06AM -1.0E knots

h m

02:12AM 05:12AM -0.8E ● 08:30AM 11:06AM 0.6F 01:48PM 05:00PM -0.8E

F

h m

04:36AM 07:54AM -1 knots

12:54PM 04:06PM -0.7E 02:30PMm05:36PM 02:00PMm05:00PM 09:48AM 12:30PM 1.2F Su -0.7E 10:18AM 0.8F Tu -0.5E 11:00AM m 02:00PM m 1 m Fcheck Sa m12:54PM Sa 0.8F For more n 10:36PM orma on-0.6E www noaa gov 12:18AM 01:00AM -0.9E 01:30AM -0.8E 08:18PM 07:12PM 08:30PMou 07:48PM 11:30PM 03:12PM 06:24PM -1.2E -0.8E 05:30PM -1A AM E 03:42PM 07:06PM AM AM E 0.9F AM 16 1 16 03:06AM 06:30AM 1.0F ◐ 09:30PM 09:48AM 01:00PM -1.0E M 0.7F 04:36PM 07:18PM 02:12AM 05:06AM -0.6E 10:18PM

1

09:18AM 12:30PM -1.1E 04:12PM 06:36PM 0.6F F 09:24PM

22

7

7

16

1.0F 09:42PM AM 04:06AM AM 07:06AM Su AM 10:18AM PM 01:24PM E Tu -1.0E 1.0F PM 04:36PM PM 07:36PM 12:06AM 1.0F 10:54PM 12:54AM 1.6F ○

22

22

1

0.7F 11:24PM AM 04:36AM AM 07:30AM M PM 10:36AM PM 01:36PM E Th -0.8E 0.9F PM 04:42PM PM 07:54PM 03:18AM 06:30AM -0.7E 11:12PM 01:06AM 1.2F ●

7

AM PM PM

02:18AM 08:42AM 03:00PM AM 09:18PM AM

08:30AM 11:00AM 0.4F 03:42AM -1.4E 06:54AM -0.9E 10:24AM -0.9E 12:30PM 0.3F 04:12AM 07:24AM 04:30AM 07:48AM 05:36AM 01:36PM 04:48PM -0.6E 10:36AM 01:00PM 0.4F 03:00PM 06:00PM 10:36AM 01:24PM 1.3F 10:54AM 01:36PM 0.8F 02:06AM 12:00PM -0.8E W E-0.5E 06:48PM 08:12AM 0.6F 2 ◑ Tu 11:12AM 02:12PM 09:30PM ◐E 10:00AM 01:12PM -1.1E Sa 10:24AM 01:42PM -0.9E M 11:00AM 02:06PM -1.0E -0.7E PM 10:30PM 10:30PM AM PM E PM PM Tu W F

02:24AM 06:06AM W 1.1F 12:12AM -0.7E 01:06AM Th Sa AM Su AM Su 0.8F -0.6E M E-0.6E -1.0E AM 01:54AM AM 07:36PM 10:36PM 0.7F -1.1E 2 08:12PM 11:36PM 1.1F 1.2F 17 07:48PM 11:24PM 03:36PM 06:42PM 08:42PM 17 2 17 -1.2E 04:36PM -0.8E 09:36AM 12:54PM 03:00AM 06:36AM 03:54AM 07:12AM 0.9F 07:30PM 0.9F 07:54PM 204:24PM 17 AM 05:00AM AM 08:00AM AM 05:24AM AM

04:12PM 06:18PM 0.4F W 08:48PM 11:36PM -0.6E

● 01:36AM 04:24AM -0.6E

7

02:48AM 03:48AM -1.3E 06:06AM 08:54AM 09:48AM 1.0F 11:48AM -1.5E 02:54PM 03:30PM Th 06:00PM 09:18PM 10:18PM 1.9F

3

3

01:18AM 04:12AM 02:42AM 05:48AM -0.9E 02:18AM 05:30AM -0.7E 12:00AM 1.8F Maximum 12:24AM 1.3F Maximum 01:24AM 1 U S21Depa men o-0.6E Comme ce Slack Slack Slack Ma mum21 0.5F 21 S a 09:24AM Ma mum6 0.3F S a Ma 07:24AM 10:06AM 0.5F 6S a 09:30AM 11:48AM 11:30AM 6Maximum

08:54AM 12:12PM -1.1E 04:00PM 06:18PM 0.5F Th 09:00PM 11:48PM -0.6E

01:12AM 03:48AM -0.5E ○

19

01:48AM -0.6E 01:06AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 0.8F 07:12AM 11:00AM 02:12PM -0.9E 12:12PM Tu W 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F 06:30PM 11:48PM

04:48PM 07:24PM

0.7F

05:06PM 07:54PM

0.7F PM

05:18PM PM 08:24PM

1.1F PM

05:12PM PM 08:30PM

0.9F PM

A P P

1 -1 1 -0A A

P P

11:00PM 11:48PM 11:54PM ● 03:06AM 06:06AM -0.6E 1.0F 0.9F 01:48AM 01:06AM 1.5F 01:42AM 12:36AM 1.0F 12:36AM 03:18AM 0 09:42AM 11:54AM 0.3F 04:42AM -1.4E 07:54AM -0.9E 04:12AM -0.9E 07:24AM -0.8E 05:12AM 08:18AM 05:06AM 08:18AM 06:30AM 09:30AM -1 01:48AM -0.6E 02:48AM -1.0E -0.8E 04:18PM 02:18PM 05:36PM -0.5E 11:42AM 02:00PM 0.4F 11:18AM 01:36PM AM AM TuE 11:24AM AM AM 02:54AM E 0.3F AM 11:30AM 02:18PM 1.3F 02:12PM 0.8F 12:54PM 1A M Su M 18 3 18 M Th 04:42AM 07:54AM 0.8F 06:06AM 08:54AM 0.8F 06:18AM 08:54AM 0.5F AM 3 18 3 AM AM AM AM 08:30PM 04:48PM 07:42PM -0.6E 04:06PM 07:00PM -0.5E 05:42PM 08:30PM -1.1E 05:54PM 08:36PM -0.7E 07:54PM -0A 07:06PM 0.5F Th 10:18AM 01:36PM -1.1E Sa 10:42AM 01:54PM -1.1E 02:12PM -0.9E Tu 11:48AM 02:54PM -0.9E W 11:48AM 02:48PM -0.6E 10:24PM ◑ W 04:54PM Su 11:00AM PM Station PM E cb0102 PM PM E ID: PM DeP 10:30PM 09:48PM Station ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: cb0102 Depth: 22 feet ID: Depth: Station 22 feet cb0102 W Th Sa nOAAID: Tide predictions 11:36PM 11:24PM 09:42PM 05:18PM 07:48PM 0.6F 05:24PM 08:06PM 0.8F 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F 06:00PM 09:18PM 1.1F 05:42PM 09:06PM 0.9F

02:06AM 04:42AM -0.5E 07:18AM 10:24AM 0.8F 07:36AM 10:30AM 0.5F 02:18AM 06:06AM 1.3F 01:24PM 04:48PM 12:36AM 01:24PM 04:42PM -1.0E Tu -0.8E -0.6E Th 3 18 09:42AM 01:00PM -1.1E 03:12AM 06:48AM 08:06PM 11:12PM 0.9F 08:12PM 11:24PM 0.8F 1.1F

ns

19

Low Waters

tember August

10:18PM 03:18AM 06:18AM -0.8E 09:48AM 12:06PM 0.5F 01:06AM 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E -0.8E 3 04:00AM 07:24AM F 1.1F 09:00PM

8 23 8 23Current 8Depth: 22 feet23 23 8 8 Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown Station ID: cb0102 NOAA Tidal Predictions NOAA T Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS NOAA Tidal Current Predictions NOAA Tidal Predictions NOAA Tidal Current Predictions NOAA T Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic PMCurrent PM PM PM PM P 10:42PM 11:12PM 11:48PM Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/C Baltimore Harbor (off Sandy Point), 2019 Chesapeake Bay 04:42AM Ent., Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT 02:42AM 05:30AM -0.7E Type: 03:00AM 05:42AM -0.5E 12:36AM Approach 1.1F 12:18AM 0.9F 02:06AM 1.0FHarmonic 0.9F 02:42AM 1.2F Type: 02:18AM 01:30AM 0.8F 01:54AMHarmonic 0 Station Type: Station Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Station Type: Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, VA,2019 9 Harmonic 24 9 24 9 24 08:36AM 11:24AM 0.6F -0.6E 08:48AM 11:30AM 0.4F -0.5E 04:18AM 07:24AM -0.8E -0.8EN04:00AM 07:06AM -0.7E 05:42AM 08:54AM -0.9E -0.9E 08:48AM 05:06AM 08:24AM -0.8E 9LST/LDT 24 9 Zone: 06:06AM -1.3E -0.8E 07:18AM 10:30AM -1A 12:30AM 01:24AM 02:06AM 02:30AM -0.6E 09:06AM 12:42AM 03:42AM -0.8ESandy Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: 76.3683° W Latitude: 36.9 AM AMZone: E 05:30AM AM 12:36AM AM 03:42AM E (off AM Baltimore Harbor Baltimore Approach Harbor (off Sandy Baltimore Approach Point), Harbor (off 2019 Sandy Chesapeake Approach Point), Bay 2019 Ent., Ches Time Zone: Tu LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Zone: Time LST/LDT Time LST/LDT 4 4 19 4 19 02:12PM 05:30PM -0.9E 02:12PM 05:30PM -0.7E 11:00AM 01:18PM 0.4F Sa 10:54AM 12:54PM 0.3F 12:36PM 03:06PM 0.5F 12:06PM 02:30PM 0.4F 03:06AM 06:48AM 1.2F 19 04:00AM 07:30AM 1.0F 05:00AM 08:12AM 1.0F Time 05:30AM 08:30AM 0.7F 03:30PM 0.7F 03:00PM 0.4F 12:24PM 1.3F 11:54AM 0.9F 05:30PM 1P 439.0130° 19 401:54PM W F M Tu AM 07:06AM AM 09:48AM AM 07:12AM AM 09:42AM AM Tu76.3683° W -0.6E F -0.6E Flood Dir. (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189°09:36PM (T) Flood Dir Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: Latitude: W N12:36PM Longitude: 76.3683° 39.0130° W-0.6E N Latitude: 76.3683° Times and heights of high and Low Waters 08:48PM 08:48PM 03:48PM 07:00PM -0.7E25° 03:12PM 06:24PM -0.5E 05:54PM 08:42PM 05:12PM 08:12PM 10:24AM 01:42PM -1.1E F 10:54AM 02:12PM -1.0E Mean 11:24AM 02:36PM -1.1EN 11:36AM 02:48PM -0.8E 03:42PM -0.8E 03:24PM -0.6E 07:00PM -1.0E 06:54PM 09:30PM 09:06PM 11:30PM -0P PM PM Latitude: E F PM 12:24PM PM Longitude: E Mean PM 36.9 Th Su M W Th Th Su

◐ 05:30PM 07:54PM 0.6F 05:54PM 08:30PM 0.6F Mean 06:00PM 09:00PM 0.9F(T) 06:06PM 09:12PM 0.8F 06:42PM 10:12PM 1.1F 06:18PM 0.9F 09:54PM 09:18PM 11:30PM 11:00PM ◐ Dir. PM PM PM25° PM 09:54PM PM 189 Flood Dir. 25° Mean Mean Ebb Flood Dir. 189° 25° (T) (T) Mean Ebb Flood Dir. Dir. 189° (T) (T) Mean Mean Ebb Flood Dir. Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, inMean knots Times and speeds ofDir m 10:36PM Approach 11:30PM Baltimore harbor Chesapeake Bay Entrance september Times and speeds of maximum Times and and speeds minimum of maximum current, Times in and and knots speeds minimum of maximum current, Times in and knots and minimum speeds ofcur m 12:06AM 1.0F 12:12AM 0.8F 01:36AM 1.1F 01:06AM 03:06AM 0.9F 0.9F 12:54AM 03:54AMHenry 0.9F Lt.) 12:18AM 03:06AM 02:30AM 0.5F 03:12AM 05:48AM 0 (2.0 n.mi.0.9F N of Cape

(Off Sandy Point) July 10

25

August 10

25

10 10 July september

25

25

August10

01:18AM -0.6E 03:48AM 02:06AM 12:12AM 03:00AM 12:30AM 03:18AM -0.6E 06:30AM -0.9E 06:00AM -0.7E Time Time Height Height AM 01:42AM AM 04:48AM E-0.9E AM 01:24AM AM 04:30AM E-0.9E 03:48AM 06:42AM -0.7ETime 06:42AM -0.6E -0.5E 5 04:54AM 08:06AM -0.7E 09:42AM 09:12AM 05:18AM 08:24AM -0.9E -0.8E 20 Height Time Height Height -1.2E 05:54AM -0.8E -1A 5 20 04:00AM 07:36AM 1.2F 20 04:48AM 08:12AM 0.9F 06:06AM 09:06AM 0.9F 12:00PM 06:24AM 09:18AM 0.6F 10:00AM 10:48AM 0.5F 09:18AM 08:18AM 0.4F 11:30AM 507:00AM 20 508:18AM AM 08:18AM AM AMAugust PM 10:36AM AM July W 5 July August July August July september August July september July september A1AP 10:00AM 12:30PM 0.5F 10:06AM 12:24PM 0.3F -1.0E 12:12PM 02:24PM 0.4F Su 02:06PM 0.3F 01:18PM 03:54PM 0.6F 12:42PM 03:18PM 0.6F 01:18PM 1.4F 12:24PM 1.0F 03:06PM Th Sa Sa Tu 04:42PM W 04:06PM 12:12PM 03:24PM -1.0E 12:12PM 03:24PM -0.8E -0.7E -0.5E 06:24PM cm m W -0.5E Th Sa PM 01:30PM PM 04:36PM E-0.6E PM 01:06PM PM 04:06PM E-0.7E AM F M Tu Th F cmh m h mft h m ft 11:06AM cm 02:24PM h -1.1E m ft11:30AM cm02:48PM ft cm F Sa M 03:06PM 06:24PM -0.8E 02:54PM 06:12PM -0.6E 04:12PM 07:24PM 06:48PM 09:42PM 06:12PM 09:12PM 04:54PM 08:00PM -0.6E 08:06PM 10:42PM -0.9E 11:06PM 07:54PM 10:24PM -0.6E 10:36PM 10:06PM 06:06PM 08:36PM 0.6F 06:24PM 09:12PM 0.7F 06:42PM 09:48PM 1.0F 06:42PM 09:54PM 0.8F 07:36PM 1.1F 07:00PM 0.9F 2 01:10 AM 0.6 18 PM PM PM P Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maxi Slac .2 16-6 16 03:33 AM 0.3 9 1 04:08 AM 09:36PM -0.3 11:36PM -9 16 03:59 0.4 12 ◑ AM09:24PM 10:48PM 10:12PM ◑ PM 2 1.5 46 9 8807:07 AM 09:41 AM h 2.7 82 knots10:27 AM 10:19h AM 3.0 91 h mh m107 h mknots knots h mknots knots hh mknots knots mh h hh mknots knots mh h mh mknots hh mknots knots m h hmknots mh mknots hh mknots knots h hmkn m m h m h m 3.5 m h m h hm mh m knots h m h mh hm mh mknots m hh mm h knots m mh mknots m h m hh mm hhmknots m knots m h m h hm mhhmknots m h m h hm mh mknots 9 M -901:32 0.4 12 .3 F PM 03:37 PM12:48AM 0.3 9 Su 04:36 PM -0.2 -6 M 04:24 PM 0.5 15 1.2F 01:42AM 12:48AM 05:18AM 04:36AM 1.2F 1.2F -0.6E 02:06AM 01:42AM 05:48AM 12:48AM 05:18AM 1.2F 04:36AM 1.2F -0.5E 1.2F 02:06AM 12:18AM 01:42AM 05:48AM -0.6E 05:18AM 1.2F -0.8E 02:36AM 1.2F -1.1E 01:00AM 02:06AM 12:18AM -0.9E 05:48AM 12:42AM -0.6E 03:24AM 1.2F 02:36AM -1.1E 01:30AM -1.1E 01:00AM -0.8E 12:18AM 12:42AM -0.9E 12:42AM -0.6E 03:30AM 03:24AM -1.4E 02:36AM -1.1E 01:30AM 01:00AM 01:36AM -0.8E 12:42AM -0.9E 04:12AM 12:42AM 03:30AM -1.1E 03:24A -1 01:06AM 1.1F 01:00AM 0.9F 02:30AM 1.1F 02:06AM 1.0F 12:30AM 03:54AM 0.9F 12:06AM 03:30AM 0.9F 12:48AM 04:36AM 1.2F 01:42AM 1.2F 02:06AM 05:48AM 1.2F 12:18AM 02:36AM -1.1E 01:00AM 12:42AM 03:24AM -1.1E 01:30AM 12:42AM 03:30AM -1.4E 01:36AM 04:12AM 02:18AM 12:24AM 03:00AM 01:12AM 04:06AM 01:18AM 04:12AM -0.6E 02:42AM 05:48AM -0.9E 02:18AM 05:30AM -0.7E 9 46 04:36AM 02:18AM 05:12AM 0.8F 01:24AM 04:06AM 0.4F 12:30AM -0 AM AM A 11.5PM08:18AM 16 1 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 -0.6E 1 16 1 16-0.9E 1 16 1 16 1 -0.8E 16 1 16 1 16 -1.1E 1 16 16-1.1E 1 09:55 2.9 88 -1.0E 10:48 PM 3.405:18AM 104 10:31 PM 2.8 85 5 10707:47 PM 11:36AM 08:54AM 08:18AM 12:12PM 11:36AM -1.1E -1.0E 09:18AM 08:54AM 12:30PM 08:18AM 12:12PM -1.1E 11:36AM -1.1E -1.0E 03:06AM 09:18AM 06:30AM 08:54AM 12:30PM 1.0F 12:12PM 05:48AM -1.1E -1.1E 08:06AM 04:06AM 03:06AM 07:06AM 0.7F 09:18AM 06:30AM 1.0F 12:30PM 06:42AM 1.0F -1.1E 09:24AM 04:36AM 08:06AM 04:06AM 07:30AM 0.8F 03:06AM 07:06AM 0.7F 0.7F 06:30AM 06:36AM 1.0F 06:42AM 09:30AM 1.0F 05:48AM 09:24AM 04:36AM 1.2F 08:06AM 04:06AM 07:30AM 0.8F 0.7F 07:06AM 07:42AM 0.7F 06:36AM 10:18AM 1.0F 06:42AM 09:30AM 0.9F 09:24A 04:36 1 6 21 6 21 6 21 605:48AM 21 6 05:00AM 08:30AM 05:36AM 08:54AM 07:12AM 10:06AM 0.7F 07:24AM 10:06AM 0.5F 09:30AM 11:48AM 0.5F 09:24AM 11:30AM 0.3F 04:48AM 07:48AM -0.8E 04:42AM 07:42AM -0.6E 06:12AM 09:24AM -0.9E 05:48AM 09:00AM -0.8E 07:18AM 10:30AM 06:48AM 09:54AM 08:54AM 12:12PM -1.1E 09:18AM 12:30PM -1.1E 03:06AM 06:30AM 1.0F 04:06AM 07:06AM 1.0F 06:42AM 09:24AM 04:36AM 07:30AM 0.8F 0.7F 06:36AM 09:30AM 1.2F 07:42AM 10:18AM 0.9F 08:18AM 11:36AM 05:48AM 08:06AM 0.7F AM-1.6E AM -1.3E E-0.9E AM-1.2E AM -0.8E E-0.9E AM-1.2E 10:54AM -1.2E 06:18AM 09:48AM -0.9E 04:18AM 06:30AM 0A 03:30PM 05:30PM -1.0E 0.4F 04:00PM 03:30PM 06:18PM 05:30PM 0.5F 0.4F 1.0F 04:12PM 04:00PM 06:36PM 03:30PM 06:18PM 0.6F 05:30PM 0.5F 0.8F 0.4F 09:48AM 04:12PM 01:00PM 04:00PM 06:36PM 06:18PM 10:24AM 0.6F 01:54PM 0.5F 10:18AM 09:48AM -1.3E 01:24PM 04:12PM 01:00PM 06:36PM 12:06PM -1.0E 10:24AM 03:18PM 0.6F 10:36AM 01:54PM 10:18AM 01:36PM 09:48AM -1.3E 01:24PM 01:00PM 12:00PM -1.0E 12:06PM -1.0E 03:18PM 03:18PM 10:36AM 01:54PM 10:18AM -1.2E 01:36PM 01:24PM 01:12PM -0.8E 12:00PM -1.0E 04:12PM 12:06PM 03:18PM 03:18P 10:36 -1 M M Th Tu M F Th Tu M -1.0E Su F Th Tu -1.0E M M07:48AM Su F Th -0.8E Tu M M10:24AM Su F Th Tu M S 11:48AM 03:12PM -1.1E 12:06PM 03:24PM -0.9E 01:00PM 04:12PM -0.9E 12:54PM 04:06PM -0.7E 02:30PM 05:36PM -0.7E 02:00PM 05:00PM -0.5E 11:18AM 01:36PM 0.4F 11:18AM 01:24PM 0.3F 01:12PM 03:24PM 0.4F 12:54PM 02:54PM 0.3F 02:00PM 04:42PM 0.6F 01:18PM 04:06PM 0.7F AM-1.6E PM AM-1.2E PM AM-1.2E 04:00PM 06:18PM 0.5F 04:12PM 06:36PM 0.6F 09:48AM 01:00PM -1.0E 10:18AM 01:24PM -1.0E 12:06PM 03:18PM 10:36AM 01:36PM 12:00PM 03:18PM 01:12PM 04:12PM 03:30PM 05:30PM -0.6E 0.4F Tu 10:24AM 01:54PM -1.3E 02:18PM 05:48PM 1.5F 01:06PM 05:06PM 1.2F 09:18AM 12:30PM -12P Sa Su Tu W F Sa 07:54PM 09:00PM 07:54PM 11:48PM 10:48PM -0.6E -0.6E 09:24PM 09:00PM 07:54PM 11:48PM 10:48PM -0.6E -0.6E 04:36PM 09:24PM 07:18PM 09:00PM 0.7F 11:48PM 05:00PM -0.6E 08:42PM 04:36PM 04:36PM 07:36PM 1.8F 09:24PM 07:18PM 1.0F 06:18PM 0.7F 05:00PM 09:48PM 04:42PM 08:42PM 04:36PM 07:54PM 1.5F 04:36PM 07:36PM 1.8F 0.9F 07:18PM 06:24PM 1.0F 06:18PM 10:00PM 0.7F 05:00PM 09:48PM 04:42PM 2.0F 08:42PM 04:36PM 07:54PM 1.5F 1.8F 07:36PM 07:18PM 0.9F 06:24PM 10:36PM 1.0F 06:18PM 10:00PM 1.5F 09:48P 04:42 5 17-901:53 AM 0.6 18 10:48PM Sa Su Tu Th F Su M W Th M Tu Th F M Su Tu M Th F S Th F Su 04:05 AM 0.3 9 04:57 AM -0.2 -6 04:31 AM 0.4 12 .3 06:42PM 09:30PM 0.7F 07:00PM 09:54PM 07:24PM 10:42PM 1.0F 07:12PM 10:36PM 0.8F 08:30PM 07:48PM 0.9F 07:12PM 17 10:161.5AM07:54PM 2-0.6E11:19 17-0.8E ○ ● ○ ● ○ ● ○ 1.0F ● 0.9F ○ ● ○ PM 2.0F PM 11:30PM E-0.8E PM 07:54PM PM E-0.7E PM 1.5F 04:06PM 07:24PM 03:48PM 07:06PM -0.6E 0.7F 06:00PM 09:00PM -0.6E 08:42PM 05:18PM 08:24PM -0.5E 07:42PM 10:36PM 07:06PM 10:06PM 10:18PM 10:54PM 10:18PM 11:12PM 10:54PM 10:18PM 11:12PM 10:54PM 11:12 09:00PM 11:48PM -0.6E 09:24PM 04:36PM 07:18PM 0.7F 04:36PM 07:36PM 06:18PM 09:48PM 04:42PM 1.5F 06:24PM 10:00PM 07:18PM 10:36PM 05:00PM 1.8F 09:18PM 11:54PM -0.9E 08:54PM 11:24PM -0.6E 04:06PM 1P 9 46 10:48PM ◐ 2.7 82 AM 10:24PM 3.5 107 10:53 AM 3.0 91 0 9107:37 AM PM PM PM ○ ● ○ ● 10:00PM 11:48PM 11:06PM 10:18PM 10:54PM 11:12PM 11:00PM 9 Tu-902:06 0.4 12 SaPM 04:14 PM01:30AM 0.4 12 M 05:32 PM -0.1 -3 1.1F Tu 1.2F 05:02 PM 0.5 15 .3 05:24AM 1.2F 02:24AM 01:30AM 06:06AM 05:24AM 02:24AM 12:12AM 01:30AM 06:06AM -0.7E 05:24AM 1.1F 1.2F 01:06AM 02:24AM 12:12AM -0.6E 06:06AM 12:24AM -0.7E 03:12AM 1.1F -1.2E 01:54AM 01:06AM -1.0E 12:12AM 01:18AM -0.6E 12:24AM -0.7E 03:54AM 03:12AM -1.1E 02:06AM -1.2E 01:54AM -0.8E 01:06AM 01:24AM -1.0E 01:18AM -0.6E 04:12AM 12:24AM 03:54AM -1.5E 03:12AM -1.1E 02:06AM -1.2E 01:54AM 02:12AM -0.8E 01:24AM -1.0E 04:48AM 01:18AM 04:12AM -1.1E 03:54A -1 2 46 10:28 2.8 85 -1.1E11:39 PM 3.112:54PM 94 -1.1E PM 2.7 82 21.5PM09:00AM 17 2 211:06 17 2 17 -0.5E 2 17 2 0.9F 2 17 2 17 0.9F 2 17 2 17 2 0.6F 17 207:24AM 17 2 17 06:30AM 2 17 17 0.9F 2 4 10408:28 PM 12:18PM 09:36AM 09:00AM 12:18PM -1.1E 03:00AM 09:36AM 06:36AM 09:00AM 12:54PM 1.2F 12:18PM -1.1E -1.1E 03:54AM 03:00AM 07:12AM 09:36AM 06:36AM 12:54PM 06:24AM 1.2F -1.1E 09:00AM 05:00AM 03:54AM 08:00AM 0.8F 03:00AM 07:12AM 06:36AM 07:24AM 0.9F 06:24AM 10:00AM 1.2F 05:24AM 09:00AM 05:00AM 08:12AM 0.8F 03:54AM 08:00AM 0.8F 07:12AM 07:30AM 0.9F 10:18AM 0.9F 06:24AM 10:00AM 05:24AM 1.3F 09:00AM 05:00AM 08:12AM 0.8F 0.8F 08:00AM 08:24AM 0.6F 07:30AM 10:54AM 0.9F 07:24AM 10:18AM 10:00A 05:24 1 12:36AM 03:18AM -0.6E 01:12AM 03:48AM 02:12AM 05:12AM 02:12AM 05:06AM -0.6E 12:06AM 1.0F 03:18AM -0.7E AM AM A 02:06AM 1.1F 01:48AM 1.0F 03:24AM 1.1F -0.8E 03:00AM 1.0F 01:24AM 04:42AM 0.9F 01:12AM 04:24AM 1.0F 01:30AM 05:24AM 02:24AM 06:06AM 1.1F 12:12AM -0.7E 01:06AM 12:24AM 03:12AM -1.2E 01:54AM 01:18AM 03:54AM 02:06AM 01:24AM 04:12AM 02:12AM 04:48AM 06:06AM 0.7F 02:42AM 05:06AM 0.4F 01:30AM -0 06:18PM 1.2F 0.4F W 04:42PM 04:12PM 07:06PM 06:18PM 0.6F 0.4F 0.9F 10:00AM 04:42PM 01:12PM 04:12PM 07:06PM -1.1E 06:18PM 0.6F 0.7F 0.4F 10:24AM 10:00AM 01:42PM 04:42PM 01:12PM -0.9E 07:06PM 11:18AM -1.1E 0.6F 11:00AM 10:24AM -1.4E 02:06PM 10:00AM 01:42PM -1.0E 01:12PM 12:48PM -0.9E 11:18AM -1.1E 03:54PM 11:12AM 02:42PM 11:00AM -1.2E 02:12PM 10:24AM -1.4E 02:06PM -0.7E 01:42PM 01:00PM 12:48PM -0.9E 04:06PM 11:18AM 03:54PM 11:12AM -1.6E 02:42PM 11:00AM -1.2E 02:12PM 02:06PM 01:48PM 01:00PM -1.0E 04:42PM 12:48PM 04:06PM -1.1E 03:54P 11:12 -1 7 22 7 22 7 22 703:42AM 22 7 06:06AM 09:24AM 06:36AM 09:42AM 08:30AM 11:06AM 0.6F 08:30AM 11:00AM 0.4F 03:42AM 06:54AM -0.9E 10:24AM 12:30PM 0.3F AM-1.1E AM E-1.0E AM-1.5E AM E-0.7E AM-1.1E A Tu 04:12PM Tu F W Tu Sa F W Tu -0.6E M 02:42PM Sa F W -1.0E Tu Tu M Sa F -0.8E W Tu Tu M Sa -1.4E F W Tu M 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.9E 05:30AM 08:42AM -0.7E 07:06AM 10:18AM -1.0E 06:36AM 09:48AM -0.9E 08:00AM 11:12AM -0.9E 07:36AM 10:42AM -0.9E 09:36AM 12:54PM -1.1E 03:00AM 06:36AM 1.2F 03:54AM 07:12AM 0.9F 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.9F 07:24AM 10:00AM 05:24AM 08:12AM 0.8F 0.6F 07:30AM 10:18AM 1.3F 08:24AM 10:54AM 0.9F 09:00AM 12:18PM -1.1E05:47 AM 06:24AM 09:00AM 0.8F 5 18-902:38 AM 0.7 21 11:36PM 08:48PM -0.6E 09:54PM 08:48PM 11:36PM -0.6E 04:48PM 09:54PM 07:24PM 08:48PM 0.7F 11:36PM -0.6E 05:06PM 04:48PM 07:54PM 09:54PM 07:24PM 0.7F 05:42PM 0.7F -0.8E 09:30PM 05:18PM 05:06PM 08:24PM 1.9F 04:48PM 07:54PM 1.1F 07:24PM 07:00PM 0.7F 05:42PM 10:24PM 0.7F 05:12PM 09:30PM 05:18PM 08:30PM 1.5F 05:06PM 08:24PM 1.9F 0.9F 07:54PM 07:18PM 1.1F 07:00PM 10:48PM 0.7F 05:42PM 10:24PM 05:12PM 1.9F 09:30PM 05:18PM 08:30PM 1.5F 1.9F 08:24PM 08:00PM 0.9F 07:18PM 11:12PM 1.1F 07:00PM 10:48PM 1.4F 10:24P 05:12 08:42AM 11:54AM -1.1E 07:00AM 10:42AM -0.9E 05:00AM 07:18AM 01P 12:36PM 03:54PM -1.0E 12:48PM 04:06PM -0.8E 01:48PM 05:00PM 01:36PM 04:48PM -0.6E 10:36AM 01:00PM 0.4F 03:00PM 06:00PM -0.5E 04:37 AM 0.3 9 -0.1 -3 05:06 AM 0.5 15 AM PM AM PM PM .3 Su M W Th Sa Su 18 3 18 Su M W ●1.4 04:12PM ● ● ● 11:36PM ● 0.4F ● 10:18PM 11:00PM 10:18PM 11:48PM 11:00PM 10:18PM 11:54PM 11:48PM 11:00PM 11:54PM 11:48PM 11:54 12:30PM 02:42PM 0.4F 12:30PM 02:30PM 0.3F 02:00PM 04:24PM 0.5F 01:36PM 03:54PM 02:36PM 05:24PM 01:54PM 04:54PM 6 43 06:18PM 0.4F12:11 04:42PM 0.6F 10:00AM 01:12PM -1.1E 10:24AM 01:42PM 11:18AM 11:00AM -1.4E 02:06PM 03:54PM 11:12AM 02:12PM 01:00PM 04:06PM 01:48PM 04:42PM 03:18PM 06:36PM 1.5F 01:54PM 1.4F 10:18AM 01:24PM -1P 07:24PM 10:18PM 0.8F 07:36PM 10:36PM 0.7F 08:12PM 1.1F 07:48PM 11:24PM 0.8F 03:36PM 06:42PM -0.6E 08:42PM PM-1.2E PM E 0.7F PM-1.6E PM E 0.9F PM-1.1E Sa Tu Th F 05:54PM 10:51 AM 2.7 82 PM 3.507:06PM 107 AM 3.0 91 Tu W F F11:29 Sa M Tu -0.9E M 02:42PM W -1.0E Tu F -0.7E Sa M M F12:48PM Sa 1 9408:08 AM 05:06PM 08:18PM -0.7E 04:42PM 07:54PM -0.6E 07:00PM 09:54PM -0.6E 06:18PM 09:18PM -0.6E 08:24PM 11:18PM -0.7E 08:00PM 11:00PM -0.9E ◐ ◑ ◐ 9 W 02:40 PM 0.4 12 08:48PM 11:36PM -0.6E 09:54PM 04:48PM 07:24PM 0.7F 05:06PM 07:54PM 0.7F 05:42PM 09:30PM 05:18PM 08:24PM 1.9F 1.1F 07:00PM 10:24PM 05:12PM 08:30PM 1.5F 0.9F 07:18PM 10:48PM 1.9F 08:00PM 11:12PM 1.4F 09:30PM 10:24PM 09:48PM 04:54PM 08:00PM 1 PM PM PM02:18AM 0.4 06:06AM 12 Tu 06:30 PM 02:18AM 0.112:36AM 3 -0.6E W 1.3F 05:43 PM 0.6 18 .2 -6 Su 04:51 1.3F 06:06AM 01:06AM 02:18AM 12:36AM -0.8E 06:06AM -0.6E 1.3F 01:48AM 01:06AM 12:36AM 01:06AM -0.8E -0.6E 03:48AM -1.3E 02:48AM 01:48AM 01:06AM 01:54AM -0.6E 01:06AM -0.8E 04:30AM 03:48AM -1.1E 02:54AM -1.3E 02:48AM 01:48AM 02:12AM -1.0E -0.6E 05:00AM 01:06AM 04:30AM -1.5E 03:48AM -1.1E 02:54AM 02:48AM 02:48AM -0.8E 02:12AM -1.0E 05:36AM 01:54AM 05:00AM 04:30A -1 ● ● 11:12PM 10:48PM 2 49 10:18PM 11:00PM 11:48PM 11:54PM 11:42PM 11:02 2.8 85 -1.1E 18 3 PM 2.6 79 31.6PM09:42AM 311:43 18 3 18 3 18 3 -0.6E 3 18 3 18-1.0E 3 18 3 18 3 -0.8E 18 301:54AM 18 3 18 -1.3E 3 18 18-1.0E 3 3 10109:11 PM 01:00PM 03:12AM 09:42AM 06:48AM 01:00PM 1.1F -1.1E 04:00AM 03:12AM 07:24AM 09:42AM 06:48AM 1.1F 01:00PM 1.1F -1.1E 04:42AM 04:00AM 07:54AM 03:12AM 07:24AM 0.8F 06:48AM 07:12AM 1.1F 09:48AM 1.1F 06:06AM 04:42AM 08:54AM 1.0F 04:00AM 07:54AM 0.8F 07:24AM 08:06AM 0.8F 07:12AM 10:36AM 1.1F 06:18AM 09:48AM 06:06AM 08:54AM 0.8F 04:42AM 08:54AM 1.0F 0.5F 07:54AM 08:24AM 0.8F 08:06AM 11:12AM 0.8F 07:12AM 10:36AM 06:18AM 1.4F 09:48AM 06:06AM 08:54AM 0.8F 1.0F 08:54AM 09:06AM 0.5F 08:24AM 11:36AM 0.8F 08:06AM 11:12AM 0.9F 10:36A 06:18 1

1

16 11

1 26

16 11

1

1 26

16 11 16 11

1 26

26

16 11

1

2

17 12

2 27

17 12

2

2 27

17 12 17 12

2 27

27

17 12

2

W 03:27 AM 0.7 09:42PM 21 02:18AM 19-908:40 05:09 19AM 40 31.3AM 0.3

98 Th-303:17 M 09:59

4

Station 13 ACT4996 Depth: 28 18 ID: 3 Unknown Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Harmonic Time Zone: LST/LDT 19 14 4 29

28 Current 3NOAA 3 Tidal 18 13 18 13 3 28 Predictions S a on D cb0102 Dep h 22 ee Sou ce NOAA NOS CO OPS S a on Type Ha mon cPoint), Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy LST Latitude: Longitude: 76.3683° 29 NT me 14LDT W 4 29 19 14 4 439.0130° 19Zone 14 19 Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) 18 13

28

2019 29

18 13

July 15 20

5 30

August 20 15

6 1

21 16

6 131

21 16

7 2

22 17

7 2

8 3

23 18

9 4

3

NOA

Chesapeake Bay En4 19 14

La ude Mean F ood

Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, in knots

5

JuLy 2019 CuRRENTS

01:36AM 04:24AM 02:06AM 04:42AM 03:18AM 06:18AM 03:06AM 06:06AM -0.6E 01:06AM 1.0F 12:36AM 0.9F AM AM AM-1.0E A 04:54PM 07:06PM 0.5F Th W 10:18AM 04:54PM 01:36PM 07:06PM -1.1E 0.5F -0.6E 10:42AM 10:18AM 01:54PM 04:54PM 01:36PM -1.1E 07:06PM -1.1E 0.5F 11:00AM 10:42AM 02:12PM 10:18AM 01:54PM 01:36PM 12:12PM -1.1E -1.1E 03:30PM 11:48AM 11:00AM -1.5E 02:54PM 10:42AM 02:12PM 01:54PM 01:36PM -0.9E -1.1E 04:30PM 11:48AM 03:30PM 11:48AM -1.1E 02:48PM 11:00AM -1.5E 02:54PM 02:12PM 02:00PM -0.9E 01:36PM -0.9E 04:54PM 12:12PM 04:30PM 11:48AM -1.5E 03:30PM 11:48AM -1.1E 02:48PM 02:54PM 02:30PM -0.6E 02:00PM -0.9E 05:30PM 01:36PM 04:54PM 04:30P 11:48 -1 Sa Th W Su -0.5E Sa Th W -0.9E Tu -0.8E Su Sa Th -0.9E W W Tu Su Sa -0.6E Th W W Tu Su -1.5E Sa Th W T 809:42PM 23 8 23 8 23 812:12PM 23 8 2.912:36AM 88 -0.6E AM-1.1E AM -0.8E E 0.9F AM-1.5E AM 07:24AM E 0.9F AM-1.0E 07:18AM 10:24AM 0.8F 07:36AM 10:30AM 09:48AM 12:06PM 0.5F 09:42AM 11:54AM 0.3F 04:42AM 07:54AM -0.9E 04:12AM -0.8E 05:18PM 07:48PM 0.6F 05:24PM 05:18PM 08:06PM 09:42PM 07:48PM 0.8F 0.6F 0.5F 05:36PM 05:24PM 08:30PM 05:18PM 08:06PM 0.7F 07:48PM 06:30PM 0.8F 10:18PM 0.6F 06:00PM 05:36PM 09:18PM 1.9F 05:24PM 08:30PM 1.1F 08:06PM 07:42PM 0.7F 06:30PM 11:00PM 0.8F 05:42PM 10:18PM 06:00PM 09:06PM 1.4F 05:36PM 09:18PM 1.9F 0.9F 08:30PM 08:18PM 1.1F 07:42PM 11:42PM 0.7F 06:30PM 11:00PM 05:42PM 1.8F 10:18PM 06:00PM 09:06PM 1.4F 1.9F 09:18PM 08:42PM 08:18PM 11:54PM 1.1F 07:42PM 11:42PM 1.3F 11:00P 05:42 02:54AM 1.2F 02:36AM 1.1F 12:36AM 04:18AM 1.1F 12:06AM 03:48AM 1.1F 02:12AM 05:30AM 02:12AM 05:12AM 06:06AM 01:06AM -0.8E 01:48AM -0.6E 01:06AM 03:48AM -1.3E 02:48AM -1.0E 01:54AM 04:30AM 02:54AM 02:12AM 05:00AM 02:48AM 05:36AM 12:54AM -0.9E 12:18AM -0.7E 02:24AM -01A 9 41.3F12:31 AM 05:44 AM 0.5 15 19-1.0E 0.106:48AM 3 1.1F AM 08:54AM PM 0.5F AM 1.4F PM 01:36PM PM 0.9F 0P 10:42PM 11:12PM 10:42PM 11:48PM 11:12PM 10:42PM 11:48PM 11:12PM 11:48PM 01:24PM 04:42PM -1.0E 01:24PM 04:48PM 02:42PM 06:00PM 02:18PM 05:36PM -0.5E 11:42AM 02:00PM 0.4F 05:54AM 11:18AM 0.3F 08:06AM 06:36AM 09:48AM 06:24AM 09:30AM -0.8E -0.8E 07:48AM 11:06AM -1.0E -0.7E 07:24AM 10:36AM -1.0E 08:42AM 11:54AM -0.9E 08:24AM 11:24AM -1.0E 07:12AM 09:48AM 1.0F 03:12AM 04:00AM 07:24AM 1.1F 04:42AM 07:54AM 0.8F 06:06AM 08:54AM 0.8F 08:06AM 10:36AM 06:18AM 0.8F 08:24AM 11:12AM 09:06AM 11:36AM M Tu Th M Tu Th F Su M 04:42AM 06:54AM 0.7F 03:48AM 0.5F 05:36AM 11:27 AM09:42AM 2.8 01:00PM 85 -1.1E06:39 AM 12:09 PM 3.0 91 PM-1.1E PM -0.6E E 0.8F -0.6E PM-1.5E PM 07:00PM E 1.0F -0.5E PM-1.0E P 08:06PM 11:12PM 0.9F 08:12PM 11:24PM 0.8F 09:00PM 08:30PM 04:48PM 07:42PM 04:06PM W 01:07 PM 3.301:36PM 101 PM 0.4 12 07:06PM 01:36PM 03:42PM 0.4F 01:30PM 03:30PM 0.3F 02:48PM 05:12PM 0.5F 02:12PM 04:42PM 0.5F 03:12PM 06:00PM 02:36PM 05:42PM 04:54PM 0.5F 10:18AM -1.1E 10:42AM 01:54PM -1.1E 11:00AM 02:12PM -0.9E 12:12PM 03:30PM 11:48AM -1.5E 02:54PM -0.9E 01:36PM 04:30PM 11:48AM 02:48PM 02:00PM 04:54PM 02:30PM 05:30PM 09:36AM 12:48PM -1.1E 07:48AM 11:36AM 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12:54PM 02:00PM 12:30PM 02:30PM 05:00PM 0.8F 12:54PM 05:36PM 1.2F -0.5E 04:06PM 11:00AM -0.7E 10:18AM -0.7E 02:00PM 09:48AM 12:54PM 02:00PM 1.4F 12:30PM 02:30PM 05:00PM 0.8F 1.2F 05:36PM 10:30AM -0.5E 11:00AM -0.7E 01:42PM 10:18AM 02:00PM 1.0F 12:54P 02:00 11:18AM 02:36PM -1.2E 10:00AM 01:24PM -1.4E 12:30PM 03:36PM -11T M Tu Th F Su M Sa Su Sa Tu Su Sa W Tu Su Sa F W Tu Su Sa Sa F W Tu Su Sa Sa F W Tu Su Sa 0.9F F F M Tu F Th Sa F M Tu 12:56 AM06:42PM 2.4 73Maximum 02:11 AM 2.4 73 M Tu Th AM 0.8 24Slack 7 8206:22 03:39 AM 2.409:12PM 73 0.7F 2 22 22 22 09:30PM 0.7F 07:00PM 06:42PM 09:54PM 09:30PM 0.7F 0.7F 07:24PM 07:00PM 10:42PM 06:42PM 09:54PM 1.0F 09:30PM 0.7F 0.7F 07:12PM 07:24PM 10:36PM 07:00PM 10:42PM 0.8F 09:54PM 03:12PM 1.0F 06:24PM 0.7F 08:30PM 07:12PM -1.2E 07:24PM 10:36PM 10:42PM 03:42PM 0.8F 03:12PM 07:06PM 1.0F 07:48PM 06:24PM 08:30PM -0.8E 11:30PM 07:12PM -1.2E 0.9F 10:36PM 05:30PM 03:42PM 08:18PM 0.8F 03:12PM 07:06PM 07:48PM -1.1E 06:24PM 08:30PM -0.8E 11:30PM -1.2E 05:18PM 0.9F 05:30PM 08:12PM 03:42PM 08:18PM -0.7E 07:06P 07:48 -1 Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 7 08:06PM 11:00PM -0.6E 07:30PM 10:30PM -0.6E 09:30PM 09:06PM 04:12PM 07:12PM 0.8F 03:54PM 07:12PM 1.2F 06:24PM 06:42PM 09:48PM 1.0F 06:42PM 09:54PM 0.8F 07:36PM 11:06PM 1.1F 09:00PM 07:00PM 10:36PM 0.9F 04:12PM 07:18PM -1.2E 04:06PM 07:30PM -0.8E 06:06PM 08:36PM 0.6F 08:30PM 05:42PM 09:06PM 1.5F 04:42PM 08:18PM 1.8F 06:42PM 10:00PM 1A AM 12:30AM AM 03:54AM AM 12:06AM AM 03:30AM 07:03 AM 0.5 15 08:18 AM 0.6 1801:00AM ○ 1.2 37 ◐ ◐ ◐ ◐ 01:06AM 1.1F 0.9F 02:30AM 1.1F 02:06AM 1.0F 0.9F 0.9F 0 010:59 AM 09:38 AM 0.6 18 4 09:30PM 09:42PM 09:30PM 11:24PM 09:42PM 09:30PM 11:00PM 11:24PM 09:42PM ● 10:30PM 10:30PM ○10:12PM 10:18PM 11:54PM 11 26 Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack AM AM Eknots AM 06:48AM AM 09:54AM E 11 AM A 26 Th PM 01:29 PM11:36PM 2.8 Suknots 02:47 PM 3.0 9107:42AM -0.8E 04:42AM -0.9E 26 -0.8E 11 -0.9E 26 -0.9E Maximum 0.4 12h m 85h mSa 04:16 knots PM 11 h m 04:48AM h m 07:48AM h m h m knots -0.6E 11 h m 06:12AM h m 09:24AM knots h m 05:48AM h m 09:00AM knots h m 07:18AM h m 10:30AM 1 3.0 91 7 Su9405:43 PM 06:30AM PM 04:42PM PM 1.1F PM 1.6F AM 0.7F P 11:18AM 01:36PM 0.4F 11:18AM 01:24PM 0.3F 01:12PM 03:24PM 0.4F M 12:54PM 02:54PM 0.3F 02:00PM 0.6F 01:06AM 01:18PM 0.7F 07:50 PM12:36AM 0.7 2104:36AM 09:22 PM 0.7 21 Thh m Fh m Su 0.603:48AM 18 -0.5E 3 ◑ -0.6E 03:18AM -0.6E10:48 01:12AM 12:36AM 03:18AM 02:12AM 01:12AM 05:12AM 12:36AM 03:48AM -0.8E 03:18AM -0.5E 02:12AM 02:12AM 05:06AM 01:12AM 05:12AM -0.6E 03:48AM -0.8E -0.5E 12:54AM 02:12AM 12:06AM 1.6F 02:12AM 05:06AM 1.0F 05:12AM -0.6E -0.8E 01:06AM 03:18AM 12:54AM 1.2F 02:12AM 12:06AM 1.6F-0.7E 05:06AM 1.0F -0.6E 02:18AM 03:18AM 12:54AM 06:30AM 1.2F 04:06PM 12:06AM -0.7E 01:48AM 1.0F 02:18AM 01:06A 03:18 1 9 ◑ 9 Th F Su W Th 12:48AM 1.2F PM 01:42AM 05:18AM 1.2F 02:06AM 05:48AM 1.2F -0.6E 12:18AM -0.6E 01:00AM -0.9E 01:30AM -0.8E h m h m knots h m knots h m knots h m h m kn PM PM E PM PM E PM P 01:12AM 05:00AM 1.2F 12:06AM -0.9E 7 06:06AM 22 7 7 22 7 22 7 22 7 -0.6E 7 22 7 22-0.9E 7 22 7 22 7 -0.7E 22 704:30AM 22 7 22 -1.4E 7 22 22-0.8E 04:06PM 07:24PM 03:48PM 07:06PM 06:00PM 09:00PM 05:18PM 08:24PM -0.5E 07:42PM 10:36PM -0.7E 07:06PM 10:06PM -0.8E 02:18AM -0.6E 12:24AM 03:00AM -0.5E 01:12AM 04:06AM -0.8E 01:18AM 04:12AM 12:00AM 02:42AM 05:48AM 1.8F -0.9E 12:24AM 02:18AM 05:30AM 1.3F 01:24AM 1.3F 01:12AM 0.9F 09:24AM 0.9F -1.0E 06:36AM 06:06AM 09:42AM 09:24AM 0.7F 0.9F -0.8E 08:30AM 06:36AM 11:06AM 06:06AM 09:42AM 0.6F 09:24AM 0.7F -0.6E 0.9F 08:30AM 08:30AM 11:00AM 06:36AM 11:06AM 0.4F 09:42AM 04:12AM 0.6F -0.6E 07:24AM 0.7F 03:42AM 08:30AM -1.4E 06:54AM 08:30AM 11:00AM 11:06AM 04:30AM 0.4F 04:12AM 07:48AM 0.6F 10:24AM 07:24AM 03:42AM -0.9E 12:30PM 08:30AM -1.4E 06:54AM 0.3F 11:00AM 05:36AM -0.9E 08:42AM 0.4F 04:12AM 07:48AM 10:24AM -1.3E 07:24AM 03:42AM -0.9E 12:30PM 06:54AM 04:24AM 0.3F 05:36AM -0.9E 08:06AM 04:30AM 08:42AM 07:48A 10:24 -17 02:48AM -1.2E 08:18AM 11:36AM 08:54AM 12:12PM -1.1E 09:18AM 12:30PM -1.1E 03:06AM 06:30AM 1.0F 04:06AM 07:06AM 1.0F 04:36AM 07:30AM 0.7F PM 1.0F 02:36AM -1.1E 12:42AM 03:24AM -1.1E 12:42AM 03:30AM -1.4E 01:36AM 04:12AM -11 10:24PM 10:00PM 11:48PM 11:06PM 12:36PM 03:54PM -1.0E 12:48PM 12:36PM 04:06PM 03:54PM 01:48PM 12:48PM 05:00PM 12:36PM 04:06PM -0.8E 03:54PM -0.8E 01:36PM 01:48PM 04:48PM 12:48PM 05:00PM 04:06PM 10:36AM -0.8E 01:24PM 10:36AM 01:36PM 01:00PM 1.3F 01:48PM 04:48PM 05:00PM 10:54AM -0.6E 10:36AM -0.8E 01:36PM 03:00PM 01:24PM 10:36AM 06:00PM 0.8F 01:36PM 01:00PM 1.3F 04:48PM 12:00PM 0.4F 10:54AM -0.6E 03:00PM 10:36AM 01:36PM 03:00PM 1.3F 01:24PM 10:36AM 06:00PM 0.8F 01:00PM 11:00AM -0.5E 12:00PM 02:24PM 0.4F 10:54AM 03:00PM 01:36P 03:00 08:36AM 11:48AM -1.1E 03:06AM 06:18AM 1.1F 05:36AM 0.8F -1.0E 07:12AM 10:06AM 0.7F 07:24AM 10:06AM 0.5F 09:30AM 11:48AM 0.5F 03:48AM 07:06AM 09:24AM -1.0E 11:30AM 0.3F 04:36AM 07:54AM -1.4E 04:06AM 07:42AM 05:00AM 08:30AM 1.0F04:50 03:18AM 06:24AM -1.4E 05:48AM 08:30AM 1.0F Su M Su W M Su Th -1.0E W M Su -0.6E Sa -0.8E Th W M 0.4F Su Su Sa Th W -0.5E M Su Su Sa Th 1.3F W M Su -0.8E 01:44 AM 2.3 7005:30PM 03:30PM 04:00PM 06:18PM 04:12PM 06:36PM 0.6F 09:48AM 01:00PM -1.0E 10:18AM 01:24PM -1.0E 10:36AM 01:36PM -0.8E AM 2.408:54AM 73 -0.8E 03:17 AM 2.4 73 2 23 1.7 52 5 7612:50 23AM 05:48AM 08:06AM 0.7F 06:42AM 09:24AM 0.8F 06:36AM 09:30AM 1.2F 07:42AM 10:18AM 0S 8-1.1E 230.5F M Th Su M 07:24PM 10:18PM 0.8F 0.4F Tu 07:36PM 07:24PM 10:36PM 10:18PM 0.7F 0.8F 08:12PM 07:36PM 11:36PM 07:24PM 10:36PM 1.1F 10:18PM 0.7F F 0.8F 07:48PM 08:12PM 11:24PM 07:36PM 11:36PM 0.8F 10:36PM 04:24PM 1.1F 07:30PM 0.7F 03:36PM 07:48PM -1.2E 06:42PM 08:12PM 11:24PM -0.6E 11:36PM 04:36PM 0.8F 04:24PM 07:54PM 1.1F 08:42PM 07:30PM 03:36PM -0.8E 07:48PM -1.2E 06:42PM 11:24PM 06:48PM -0.6E 04:36PM 09:18PM 0.8F 04:24PM 07:54PM 08:42PM -0.9E 07:30PM 03:36PM -0.8E -1.2E 06:42PM 06:24PM 06:48PM -0.6E 09:00PM 04:36PM 09:18PM -0.7E 07:54P 08:42 -0 03:36PM 05:54PM 0.5F 09:36AM 12:42PM -1.1E 12:06PM 01:00PM 04:12PM -0.9E 12:54PM 04:06PM 02:30PM 05:36PM 10:18AM 12:54PM 02:00PM 05:00PM 0.8F -0.5E 11:00AM 02:00PM 1.4F 10:30AM 01:42PM 1.0F 03:12PM 09:48AM 12:30PM 1.2F 11:00AM 02:24PM -1.5E 07:51 AM11:48AM 0.5 1510:48PM W Sa Sa Su AM Tu W ◐ Sa -0.7E F10:24AM Su -0.7E Sa Tu W ◐ F 07:54PM -0.6E 09:00PM 11:48PM 09:24PM 04:36PM 07:18PM 0.7F 04:36PM 07:36PM 1.0F 04:42PM 07:54PM 0.9F 10:42 0.603:24PM 18 -0.9E -0.6E AM 0.6 18 4 0.8 24 ◐09:25 ◐ ◑ ◐ ◑ ◑ W 2 607:25 AM 10:30PM 09:30PM 10:30PM 10:30PM 09:30PM 10:30PM 10:30PM 09:30PM 11:48PM 10:30PM 01:54PM -1.3E 12:06PM 03:18PM -1.2E 12:00PM 03:18PM -1.6E 01:12PM 04:12PM -1 AM AM AM AM 08:30PM 11:24PM -0.7E 1.0F 04:00PM 0.9F 07:06PM 02:06AM 1.1F 01:48AM 03:24AM 1.1F 03:00AM 1.0F 01:24AM 0.9F 04:42AM 0.9F 09:12PM 01:12AM 1.0F M Tu Th F05:18PM 07:00PM 09:54PM 0.7F 07:24PM 10:42PM 1.0F 07:12PM 10:36PM 0.8F 08:30PM 03:42PM 07:48PM -0.8E 11:30PM 05:30PM 08:18PM -1.1E 08:12PM -0.7E A 0.7F05:20 ○ 03:12PM 06:24PM -1.2E 06:54PM 05:30PM 1.9F 04:24AM ● F PM 02:20 PM06:42PM 2.8 85 Su 10:18PM 10:54PM 11:12PM PM 2.9 88 M 03:54 PM 3.0 91 7 M 9112:11 1.1 34 09:30PM 12 27 12 0 AM 08:00AM AM 11:12AM E 06:24PM AM 07:36AM AM 10:42AM E 07:18PM AM 1.8F 09:48AM 06:18PM 1.5F 2.0F 1A 12 27 12 27 ◐05:00PM ◐ 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.9E 27 05:30AM 08:42AM -0.7E 12 07:06AM 10:18AM -1.0E 08:42PM 06:36AM -0.9E 09:48PM -0.9E 10:00PM -0.9E 10:36PM 10:00PM 09:42PM 11:24PM 11:00PM 09:30PM 08:48 PM01:36AM 0.7 21 -0.6E11:45 PM 0.604:42AM 18 -0.5E 10:27 PM 0.5 15 ◑ PM 2 0.4 12 04:24AM 02:06AM 01:36AM 04:24AM -0.6E 03:18AM 02:06AM 06:18AM 01:36AM 04:42AM -0.8E 04:24AM -0.5E -0.6E 03:06AM 03:18AM 06:06AM 02:06AM 06:18AM -0.6E 04:42AM -0.8E -0.5E 01:48AM 03:06AM 01:06AM 1.5F 03:18AM 06:06AM 1.0F 06:18AM -0.6E -0.8E 01:42AM 01:48AM 1.0F 03:06AM 01:06AM 1.5F 06:06AM 12:36AM 1.0F -0.6E 03:18AM 01:42AM 01:48AM 12:36AM 1.0F 1.5F 01:06AM 0.9F 12:36AM 02:24AM 1.0F 03:18AM 01:42A 0 ○8 ●23 4 1206:46 PM 12:36AM PM 0.9F PM 0.8F PM 04:54PM AM 0.5F P 12:30PM 02:42PM 0.4F 12:30PM 02:30PM 0.3F 02:00PM 04:24PM 0.5F 01:36PM 03:54PM 0.4F 02:36PM 05:24PM 0.7F 01:54PM 0.9F F Sa M F Sa M Tu Th F 8 07:18AM 23 8 8 23 8 23 8 23 8 8 23 8 23 23 8 23 8 8 23 8 23 8 23 23 8 10:24AM 0.8F 1.2F 07:36AM 07:18AM 10:30AM 10:24AM 0.5F 1.1F 0.8F 09:48AM 07:36AM 12:06PM 07:18AM 10:30AM 0.5F 10:24AM 0.5F 0.8F 09:42AM 09:48AM 11:54AM 07:36AM 12:06PM 0.3F 10:30AM 05:12AM 0.5F 08:18AM 0.5F 04:42AM 09:42AM -1.4E 07:54AM 09:48AM 11:54AM -0.9E 12:06PM 05:06AM 0.3F 05:12AM 08:18AM 0.5F 04:12AM 08:18AM 04:42AM 07:24AM 09:42AM -1.4E 07:54AM -0.8E 11:54AM 06:30AM -0.9E 05:06AM 09:30AM 0.3F 05:12AM 08:18AM 04:12AM 08:18AM 04:42AM -0.9E 07:24AM -1.4E 07:54AM 04:48AM -0.8E 06:30AM -0.9E 08:30AM 05:06AM 09:30AM 08:18A 04:12 -1 PM-0.9E PM-1.2E PM-0.9E P 01:30AM 05:24AM 02:24AM 06:06AM 12:12AM -0.7E 01:06AM -0.6E 01:54AM -1.0E 02:06AM -0.8E 05:06PM 08:18PM -0.7E 04:42PM 07:54PM -0.6E 07:00PM 09:54PM -0.6E 06:18PM 09:18PM -0.6E 08:24PM 11:18PM -0.7E 08:00PM 11:00PM -0.9E 01:24PM 04:42PM -1.0E 01:24PM 01:24PM 04:48PM 04:42PM -0.8E -1.0E 02:42PM 01:24PM 06:00PM 01:24PM 04:48PM -0.7E 04:42PM -0.8E -1.0E 02:18PM 02:42PM 05:36PM 01:24PM 06:00PM -0.5E 04:48PM 11:30AM -0.7E -0.8E 02:18PM 11:42AM 02:18PM 02:00PM 1.3F 02:42PM 05:36PM 0.4F 06:00PM 11:24AM -0.5E 11:30AM -0.7E 02:12PM 11:18AM 02:18PM 11:42AM 01:36PM 0.8F 02:18PM 02:00PM 1.3F 0.3F 05:36PM 12:54PM 0.4F 11:24AM -0.5E 04:18PM 11:30AM 02:12PM 11:18AM 1.3F 02:18PM 11:42AM 01:36PM 0.8F 1.3F 02:00PM 11:36AM 0.3F 12:54PM 03:18PM 0.4F 11:24AM 04:18PM 1.1F 02:12P 11:18 1 12:36AM 03:18AM -0.6E 01:12AM 03:48AM -0.5E 02:12AM 05:12AM -0.8E 02:12AM 05:06AM -0.6E 12:54AM 12:06AM 1.6F 1.0F 01:06AM 03:18AM 06:30AM 1.2F -0.7E 02:18AM 1.1F 01:48AM 0.7F PM M Tu M Th Tu M F Th Tu M Su F Th Tu M M Su F Th Tu M M Su F Th Tu M S 02:38 AM 2.3 70 05:51 AM 2.4 73 04:27 AM 2.5 76 2 24 AM 1.7 52 11:12PM 10:48PM 3 7001:50 09:00AM 12:18PM 09:36AM 12:54PM -1.1E 03:00AM 06:36AM 1.2F 03:54AM 07:12AM 0.9F 05:00AM 08:00AM 0.9F 05:24AM 08:12AM 0.6F 24 9 24 08:06PM 11:12PM 0.9F -1.1E 06:36AM 08:12PM 08:06PM 11:24PM 11:12PM 0.8F 0.9F 09:00PM 08:12PM 08:06PM 11:24PM 11:12PM 0.8F 0.9F 08:30PM 09:00PM 08:12PM 11:24PM 05:42PM 08:30PM 0.8F 04:48PM 08:30PM -1.1E 07:42PM 09:00PM -0.6E 05:54PM 05:42PM 08:36PM 04:06PM 08:30PM 04:48PM -0.7E 07:00PM 08:30PM 07:42PM -0.5E 07:54PM -0.6E 05:54PM 10:24PM 05:42PM 08:36PM 04:06PM -0.8E 08:30PM 04:48PM -0.7E 07:00PM -1.1E 07:42PM 07:18PM -0.5E 07:54PM -0.6E 09:42PM 05:54PM 10:24PM -0.6E 08:36P 04:06 -0 12:24AM 03:12AM -1.2E 01:18AM 03:54AM -1.1E 01:24AM 04:12AM -1.5E 02:12AM 04:48AM -1 09:42AM 0.7F 08:30AM 11:06AM 0.6F 08:30AM 11:00AM 0.4F 03:42AM 06:54AM -0.9E 04:30AM 07:48AM 10:24AM -0.9E 12:30PM 0.3F 05:36AM 08:42AM -1.3E 04:24AM 08:06AM -0.8E 06:06AM 09:24AM 0.9F 04:12AM 07:24AM -1.4E 4 0.7 21 08:47 AM AM 04:42PM 0.6 18 10:33 AM 0.5 01:12PM 15 -1.1E ◑ ◑ ◑ ◑ 3 908:24 AM 04:12PM1506:18PM 11:41 0.4F W 07:06PM 0.6F 10:00AM 10:24AM 01:42PM -0.9E 11:00AM 02:06PM -1.0E 11:12AM -0.7E 11:36PM 10:30PM 11:24PM 11:36PM 09:48PM 10:30PM 02:12PM 11:24PM 11:36PM 09:48PM 10:30PM 11:24PM 09:48 06:24AM 09:00AM 0.8F 0.4F 07:24AM 10:00AM 0.8F 07:30AM 10:18AM 1.3F 08:24AM 10:54AM 0A Tu 0.5 Sa M Tu 03:54PM -1.0E06:15 12:48PM 01:48PM 05:00PM -0.8E 01:36PM 04:48PM -0.6E 10:36AM 01:24PM 10:36AM 01:00PM 1.3F 10:54AM 01:36PM 03:00PM 06:00PM 0.8F -0.5E 12:00PM 03:00PM 1.3F 11:00AM 02:24PM 1.0F AM E 0.9F AM E available 7 Tu9101:29 1.2 37 SaPM 03:17 PM12:36PM 2.9 8811:36PM M 2.904:06PM 88 -0.8E Tu W 05:01 PM 3.2 98 disclaimer: These data are F based upon the latest information available as the date of your request, and may differ from the published tidal current tables. 0 Su M PM Th 1.1F Su of Sa M Su W Th S 08:48PM -0.6E 09:54PM 04:48PM 07:24PM 0.7F 05:06PM 07:54PM 0.7F 05:18PM 08:24PM 1.1F 05:12PM 08:30PM 02:54AM 1.2F 02:36AM 12:36AM 04:18AM 1.1F 12:06AM 03:48AM 1.1F 02:12AM 05:30AM 0.9F 02:12AM 05:12AM 0.9F disclaimer: These data are based upon the latest information as of the d 11:18AM 02:42PM -1.4E-0.6E 12:48PM 03:54PM -1.2E 01:00PM 04:06PM -1.6E 01:48PM 04:42PM -1A 13 28 13 Tu W F06:48PM Sa 07:36PM 10:36PM 0.7F 08:12PM 11:36PM 1.1F 07:48PM 11:24PM 0.8F 03:36PM 06:42PM 04:36PM 07:54PM 08:42PM 09:18PM 06:24PM 09:00PM 07:24PM 10:18PM 0.8F 04:24PM 07:30PM -1.2E AM-0.8E AM 0.9F AM-0.9E AM 11:24AM AM-0.7E 2 0.3 9 05:30AM ●02:42AM 09:50 PM 0.6 18 -0.7E 11:28 PM 0.4 12 13 28 13 28 13 28 4 1207:51 PM 03:00AM 02:42AM 05:42AM 05:30AM -0.5E -0.7E 03:00AM 12:36AM 02:42AM 05:42AM 1.1F 05:30AM -0.5E -0.8E -0.7E 12:18AM 03:00AM 12:36AM 0.9F 05:42AM 1.1F -0.5E 02:42AM 02:06AM 1.2F 12:18AM 1.0F 12:36AM 0.9F 02:18AM 1.1F 02:42AM 01:30AM 0.8F 02:06AM 1.2F 12:18AM 01:54AM 1.0F 04:42AM 0.9F 10:48PM 02:18AM 0.6F 02:42AM 01:30AM 0.8F 1.2F 02:06AM 12:42AM 0.9F 01:54AM 03:06AM 1.0F 11:12PM 04:42AM 0.4F 02:18A 06:36AM 09:48AM -1.0E 06:24AM 09:30AM 07:48AM 11:06AM -1.0E 07:24AM 10:36AM -1.0E 08:42AM 11:54AM -0.9E 08:24AM -1.0E 10:18PM 11:00PM 11:48PM 11:54PM 05:42PM 09:30PM 1.9F 07:00PM 10:24PM 1.5F 07:18PM 1.9F 08:00PM 10P ◐ ◑ ◐ AM-0.8E PM E-0.9E AM-1.1E AM E-0.8E AM-0.9E 09:30PM 10:30PM 11:48PM 10:30PM 9 08:36AM 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 -0.7E 9 24 9 24-0.9E 9 24 9 24 9 -0.8E 24 9 24 9 24 4-1.3E 9 24 24 9 11:24AM 0.6F 24 9 08:48AM 08:36AM 11:30AM 11:24AM 0.4F 0.6F 04:18AM 08:48AM 07:24AM 08:36AM 11:30AM -0.8E 11:24AM 0.4F 0.3F 0.6F 04:00AM 04:18AM 07:06AM 08:48AM 07:24AM 11:30AM 06:06AM -0.8E 09:06AM 0.4F 05:42AM 04:00AM -1.3E 08:54AM 04:18AM 07:06AM 07:24AM 05:30AM -0.7E 06:06AM -0.8E 08:48AM 05:06AM 09:06AM 05:42AM 08:24AM 04:00AM -1.3E 08:54AM 07:06AM 07:18AM 05:30AM -0.7E 10:30AM 06:06AM 08:48AM 05:06AM 09:06AM 05:42AM -0.8E 08:24AM 08:54AM 05:30AM 07:18AM -0.9E 09:06AM 05:30AM 10:30AM 08:48A 05:06 -1 Sa Su Tu Generated on: Tue dec 04 20:17:30 uTC 2018 Page of 5 01:36PM 03:42PM 0.4F 01:30PM 03:30PM 02:48PM 05:12PM 0.5F 02:12PM 04:42PM 0.5F 03:12PM 06:00PM 0.8F 02:36PM 05:42PM 1.0F Generated on: Tue dec 04 20:20:19 uTC 2018 ● Sa Su Tu W F Sa PM PM PM PM PM P AM 0.605:30PM 18 -0.7E 02:12PM 05:30PM 10 -0.9E12:34 02:12PM 02:12PM 05:30PM -0.9E 11:00AM 02:12PM 01:18PM 02:12PM 05:30PM 0.4F 05:30PM -0.7E -0.9E 10:54AM 11:00AM 12:54PM 02:12PM 01:18PM 05:30PM 12:24PM 0.4F -0.6E -0.7E 03:30PM 12:36PM 10:54AM 03:06PM 1.3F 11:00AM 12:54PM 01:18PM 11:54AM 0.3F 12:24PM 03:00PM 0.4F 12:06PM 03:30PM 12:36PM 02:30PM 0.9F 10:54AM 03:06PM 1.3F 12:54PM 01:54PM 0.5F 11:54AM 05:30PM 0.3F 12:24PM 03:00PM 12:06PM 1.3F 03:30PM 12:36PM 02:30PM 0.9F 1.3F 03:06PM 12:24PM 0.4F 01:54PM 04:30PM 0.5F 11:54AM 05:30PM 03:00P 12:06 1 06:12PM 09:18PM -0.7E 05:36PM 08:48PM 07:54PM 10:48PM 07:18PM 10:18PM -0.7E 09:06PM 08:54PM -1.0E Tu W Tu F05:35 W Tu Sa -0.6E F W Tu 0.3F M Sa F W 0.5F Tu Tu M Sa F 0.4F W Tu Tu M Sa 11:54PM F W Tu 1.1F M 2 25 AM 1.7 52 03:40 AM08:48PM 2.3 AM 2.8 85 3 7002:47 25AM 25-0.6E 02:18AM7006:06AM 1.3F 12:36AM 01:06AM 01:48AM -0.6E 02:48AM -1.0E 02:54AM -0.8E PM-0.6E PM-0.7E 08:48PM 08:48PM 03:48PM 08:48PM 07:00PM 08:48PM -0.7E -0.8E 03:12PM 03:48PM 06:24PM 08:48PM 07:00PM -0.5E 07:00PM -0.7E 09:36PM 05:54PM 03:12PM -1.0E 08:42PM 03:48PM 06:24PM -0.6E 07:00PM 06:54PM -0.5E 07:00PM -0.7E 09:30PM 05:12PM 09:36PM 05:54PM 08:12PM 03:12PM -1.0E 08:42PM -0.6E 06:24PM 09:06PM -0.6E 06:54PM -0.5E 11:30PM 07:00PM 09:30PM 05:12PM 09:36PM 05:54PM -0.6E 08:12PM -1.0E 08:42PM 08:12PM -0.6E 09:06PM -0.6E 10:42PM 06:54PM 11:30PM -0.6E 09:30P 05:12 -0 06:42 AM 2.504:42AM 76 -0.5E ● 11:30PM 1 09:18 0.7 21 09:48 AM 0.5 15 11:39 AM 0.3 9 01:36AM 04:24AM -0.6E 02:06AM 03:18AM 06:18AM -0.8E 03:06AM 06:06AM -0.6E 01:48AM 01:06AM 1.5F 1.0F 01:42AM 12:36AM 1.0F 0.9F 12:36AM 03:18AM 0.8F 02:24AM 0.5F 3 9 ◐ ◐ ◐ ◐ 0.8F ◐ 09:54PM 07:54AM 11:30PM 09:18PM 09:54PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 09:18PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 11:00 09:42AM 01:00PM -1.1E ◐ 03:12AM 06:48AM 1.1F 09:54PM 04:00AM 07:24AM 1.1F 09:18PM 04:42AM 0.8F 06:06AM 08:54AM 06:18AM 08:54AM 0.5F Tu PM 0.510:30AM 15 0.5F 01:06AM 03:48AM -1.3E 01:54AM 04:30AM -1.1E 02:12AM 05:00AM 02:48AM 05:36AM 7 W9102:41 1.2 37 SuPM 04:19 PM07:18AM 3.0 9107:06PM W-1.1E 06:05 PM 3.3 101 10:24AM 0.8F12:33 05:12AM 08:18AM -1.4E 07:36AM 09:48AM 12:06PM 0.5F -1.1E 09:42AM 11:54AM 0.3F 04:42AM 07:54AM -0.9E 05:06AM 08:18AM 04:12AM -0.9E 07:24AM -0.8E 06:30AM 09:30AM -1.2E -1.5E 04:48AM 08:30AM -0.9E -1 0 04:54PM 0.5F 10:18AM 01:36PM 10:42AM 01:54PM 11:00AM 02:12PM -0.9E 11:48AM 02:54PM -0.9E 11:48AM 02:48PM -0.6E AM E AM E AM A 07:02 PM 3.0 91 07:12AM 09:48AM 1.0F 0.4F 08:06AM 10:36AM 0.8F 0.3F 08:24AM 11:12AM 1.4F 06:00AM 09:06AM 11:36AM 0 W Th Sa Su Tu W 12:00AM 03:48AM 03:24AM 01:30AM 05:06AM 1.1F 01:06AM 04:42AM 1.1F 12:06AM -0.7E 03:06AM 0.9F 2 08:56 PM 0.3 9 10:52 PM 0.5 15 -1.0E 01:24PM 04:42PM 01:24PM 04:48PM -0.8E 02:42PM 06:00PM -0.7E 02:18PM 05:36PM -0.5E 11:30AM 11:42AM 02:00PM 1.3F 11:24AM 02:12PM 11:18AM 01:36PM 0.8F 12:54PM 04:18PM 1.3F 11:36AM 03:18PM 12:06AM 1.0F Tu 12:12AM 12:06AM 0.8F 1.0F 1.2F 01:36AM 12:12AM 1.1F 12:06AM 0.8F 1.1F 1.0F 01:06AM 01:36AM 0.9F 12:12AM 12:54AM 1.1F 02:18PM 03:54AM 0.8F 03:06AM 0.9F 01:06AM 0.9F 01:36AM 12:18AM 0.9F 12:54AM 03:06AM 1.1F 03:54AM 0.5F 09:06PM 03:06AM 0.9F 0.9F 01:06AM 03:12AM 0.9F 12:18AM 05:48AM 0.9F 12:54AM 03:06AM 03:54AM 02:30AM 0.5F 0.9F 03:06AM 01:36AM 0.9F 03:12AM 04:30AM 0.9F 12:18AM 05:48AM 0.4F 03:06A 0 14 29 14 M Th F M Su Tu M Th F S 09:42PM 05:18PM 07:48PM 0.6F 05:24PM 08:06PM 0.8F 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F 06:00PM 09:18PM 1.1F 05:42PM 0.9F AM 02:30AM AM AM 0.6F AM AM 1.1F A 14 29 14 29 14 29 12:12PM 03:30PM -1.5E 01:36PM 04:30PM -1.1E 02:00PM 04:54PM -1.5E 02:30PM 05:30PM -1 07:24AM 10:42AM -1.0E 07:06AM 10:18AM -0.9E 08:30AM 11:48AM -1.0E 08:06AM 11:18AM -1.0E 03:00AM 06:12AM 0.9F 09:06AM 12:12PM -1.0E 10 03:48AM 10 25 10 25 10 25 10-0.7E 10 25 10 25-0.9E 10 25 10 25 10-0.9E 25 10 25 10 25 -1.2E 10 25 25 1 W Th Sa Su 08:06PM 06:42AM 11:12PM -0.7E 0.9F 25 10 08:12PM 11:24PM 0.8F 09:00PM 08:30PM 05:42PM 08:30PM 04:48PM -1.1E 07:42PM -0.6E 05:54PM 08:36PM 04:06PM 07:00PM -0.5E 07:54PM 10:24PM -0.8E 07:18PM 09:42PM 03:48AM 03:48AM 06:42AM 06:42AM -0.6E -0.7E 05:18AM 03:48AM 08:24AM 03:48AM 06:42AM -0.9E 06:42AM -0.6E -0.7E 04:54AM 05:18AM 08:06AM 03:48AM 08:24AM 06:42AM 07:00AM -0.9E -0.6E 10:00AM 06:30AM 04:54AM -1.2E 09:42AM 05:18AM 08:06AM 08:24AM 05:54AM -0.7E 07:00AM -0.9E 09:18AM 06:00AM 10:00AM 06:30AM -0.8E 09:12AM 04:54AM -1.2E 09:42AM 08:06AM 08:18AM 05:54AM -0.7E 11:30AM 07:00AM 09:18AM 06:00AM 10:00AM 06:30AM -0.8E 09:12AM 09:42AM 06:24AM 08:18AM -0.9E 10:00AM 05:54AM 11:30AM -1.0E 09:18A 06:00 -1 AM-0.7E PM E-0.9E AM-1.1E PM E-0.9E AM-0.6E 10:42PM 11:12PM 11:48PM Su M W 06:30PM 10:18PM 1.9F 07:42PM 11:00PM 1.4F 08:18PM 11:42PM 1.8F 08:42PM 11:54PM 11P 02:30PM 04:42PM 0.4F 02:18PM 03:24PM 05:54PM 0.6F 02:48PM 05:24PM 0.7F 09:24AM 12:30PM -0.9E 03:12PM 1.1F AM 0.512:24PM 15 0.3F 12:25 AM 0.2 604:18PM ◑ ◑ 4 1203:41 AM 0.5F01:16 10:06AM 10:00AM 12:30PM 0.5F 12:12PM 10:06AM 02:24PM 10:00AM 12:24PM 0.4F 12:30PM 0.3F 0.3F 0.5F 12:00PM 12:12PM 02:06PM 10:06AM 02:24PM 12:24PM 01:18PM 0.4F 04:42PM 0.3F 01:18PM 12:00PM 03:54PM 1.4F 12:12PM 02:06PM 02:24PM 12:24PM 0.3F 01:18PM 04:06PM 0.4F 12:42PM 04:42PM 01:18PM 1.0F 12:00PM 03:54PM 1.4F 02:06PM 03:06PM 0.6F 12:24PM 06:24PM 0.3F 01:18PM 04:06PM 12:42PM 04:42PM 01:18PM 03:18PM 1.0F 1.4F 03:54PM 01:24PM 0.6F 03:06PM 05:24PM 0.6F 12:24PM 06:24PM 04:06P 12:42 26 10:30PM 11:24PM 09:48PM 11:36PM Su M W Th Sa Su 2 26 1.7 52 12:30PM W Th W Sa Th W Su Sa Th W 0.3F Tu Su Sa Th 0.6F W W Tu Su Sa 0.6F Th W W Tu Su 06:24PM Sa Th W T 04:46 AM10:00AM 2.4 73 11 PM 03:18PM PM PM 1.4F PM PM 1.3F P 26 07:12PM 10:06PM -0.6E 06:36PM 09:42PM -0.6E 08:48PM 11:36PM -0.6E 08:12PM 11:12PM -0.8E 03:42PM 06:36PM 0.8F 09:42PM 06:24PM -0.8E07:25 AM 02:54PM 03:06PM 06:24PM 04:54PM 02:54PM 08:00PM 03:06PM 06:12PM -0.6E 06:24PM -0.6E -0.8E 04:12PM 04:54PM 07:24PM 02:54PM 08:00PM -0.5E 06:12PM 08:06PM -0.6E 10:42PM 06:48PM 04:12PM -0.9E 09:42PM 04:54PM 07:24PM -0.6E 08:00PM 07:54PM -0.5E 08:06PM -0.6E 10:24PM 06:12PM 10:42PM 06:48PM -0.6E 09:12PM 04:12PM -0.9E 09:42PM -0.7E 07:24PM 10:06PM -0.6E 07:54PM -0.5E 08:06PM 10:24PM 06:12PM 10:42PM 06:48PM -0.6E 09:12PM -0.9E 09:42PM 09:06PM -0.7E 10:06PM -0.6E 11:36PM 07:54PM-0.7E 10:24P 06:12 2.606:12PM 79 -0.6E -0.8E 06:37 AM 3.0 91 3 7010:07 AM 1 0.6 18 PM 10:51 AM03:06PM 0.4 12 ◑ ◑ ◑ ◑ ◑ ◑ ○ 09:36PM 09:24PM 09:36PM 10:48PM 09:24PM 09:36PM 10:48PM 09:24PM 10:12PM 10:48PM 10:12PM 09:48PM -0.6E PM 01:24AM 02:06AM 02:30AM -0.6E 12:42AM 03:42AM -0.9E 12:36AM 03:42AM -0.8E W 01:18 0.5 15 Th-0.5E 12:40 PM 0.1 3 -0.8E 10:12PM 3 0 Th 903:47 1.3 40 05:30AM M PM 05:23 PM02:42AM 3.1 9412:30AM -0.7E07:42 03:00AM 05:42AM -0.5E 1.0F 12:36AM 1.1F 1.0F 12:18AM 0.9F 0.7F 02:42AM 02:06AM 1.2F 09:48AM 1.0F 0.7F 02:18AM 01:30AM 0.8F 09:42AM 0.9F 01:54AM 04:42AM 0.6F 12:42AM 03:06AM 0.4F 03:06AM 06:48AM 1.2F 04:00AM 07:30AM 05:00AM 08:12AM 05:30AM 08:30AM 07:06AM 07:12AM 0.4F PM 3.0 91 07:03 PM 3.4 104 0 91 01:48AM 04:30AM -1.4E 02:36AM 05:12AM -1.1E 03:00AM 05:54AM -1.4E 03:18AM 06:24AM -0 2 09:58 PM 0.3 9 01:06AM 11:52 PM08:36AM 0.3 9 AM-0.8E AM -0.8E E 0.9F AM 12:48AM E 0.9F AM-0.9E A 11:30AM 0.4F 04:18AM 07:24AM -0.8E 04:00AM 07:06AM -0.7E 05:42AM 08:54AM -0.9E 05:30AM 08:48AM 05:06AM 08:24AM 07:18AM 10:30AM -1.1E 05:30AM 09:06AM 11:24AM 0.6F -1.1E 08:48AM 06:06AM -1.3E 1.1F 01:00AM 01:06AM 0.9F 1.1F 1.2F 02:30AM 01:00AM 1.1F 01:06AM 0.9F 1.2F 1.1F 02:06AM 02:30AM 1.0F 01:00AM 02:18AM 1.1F 09:06AM 05:12AM 0.9F 12:30AM 03:54AM 0.8F 02:06AM 0.9F 02:30AM 01:24AM 1.0F 02:18AM 04:06AM 1.1F 12:06AM 05:12AM 12:30AM 03:30AM 0.4F 03:24PM 03:54AM 0.8F 0.9F 02:06AM 01:24AM 12:30AM 1.0F 02:18AM 04:06AM 12:06AM -0.7E 05:12AM 12:30AM 03:30AM 0.4F 0.8F 03:54AM 02:42AM 05:30AM 0.9F 01:24AM 12:30AM 0.6F 04:06A 12:06 -0 12:54AM 04:36AM 12:24AM 04:12AM 02:18AM 05:48AM 1.0F 02:06AM 05:30AM 1.1F 12:42AM -0.8E -1.1E 10:24AM 01:42PM 10:54AM 02:12PM -1.0E 11:24AM 02:36PM -1.1E 11:36AM 02:48PM -0.8E 12:36PM 03:42PM -0.8E 12:24PM -0.6E 15 30 15 08:00AM 10:42AM 1.1F 08:54AM 11:24AM 0.8F 09:18AM 12:12PM 1.4F 09:36AM 12:18PM 00A Th F04:42AM Su M W Th 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 11 26 26 1 AM-0.9E AM AM 0.6F AM AM-1.1E 04:48AM 07:48AM -0.8E 04:48AM 07:42AM 07:48AM -0.6E -0.8E 06:12AM 04:42AM 09:24AM 04:48AM 07:42AM -0.9E 07:48AM -0.6E -0.8E 05:48AM 06:12AM 09:00AM 04:42AM 09:24AM 07:42AM 07:48AM -0.9E -0.6E 10:54AM 07:18AM 05:48AM -1.2E 10:30AM 06:12AM 09:00AM 09:24AM 06:18AM -0.8E 07:48AM -0.9E 09:48AM 06:48AM 10:54AM 07:18AM 09:54AM 05:48AM -1.2E 10:30AM 09:00AM 04:18AM -0.9E 06:18AM -0.8E 06:30AM 07:48AM 09:48AM 06:48AM 10:54AM 07:18AM -0.9E 09:54AM 10:30AM 07:30AM -0.9E 04:18AM -0.9E 11:06AM 06:18AM 06:30AM 09:48A 06:48 02:12PM 05:30PM -0.9E 0.6F 02:12PM 05:30PM -0.7E 11:00AM 01:18PM 0.4F 10:54AM 12:54PM 0.3F 12:24PM 03:30PM 12:36PM 03:06PM 1.3F 0.5F 11:54AM 03:00PM 12:06PM 02:30PM 0.9F 0.4F 01:54PM 05:30PM 1.3F 12:24PM 04:30PM 1.1F 15 30 15 30 15 30 08:12AM 11:24AM -1.1E 07:54AM -1.0E 09:12AM 12:24PM -1.0E 08:54AM 12:00PM -1.0E 03:48AM 06:48AM 0.8F 04:06AM 06:54AM 0.9F Tu W 11 F Sa Tu -0.8E M W -0.9E Tu F -0.9E Sa -1.2E M 05:30PM 07:54PM 05:54PM 08:30PM 0.6F 06:00PM 09:00PM 0.9F 06:06PM 09:12PM 0.8F 06:42PM 10:12PM 1.1F 06:18PM 09:54PM AM 0.501:24PM 15 0.3F 01:17 AM 0.0 011:06AM 3 01:12PM 04:12PM -1.4E 02:12PM 05:06PM -1.0E 03:06PM 06:06PM -1.3E 03:12PM 06:30PM -0 AM-0.6E PM E 0.9F AM-1.1E PM E 0.7F PM-0.6E P 01:36PM 0.4F01:53 11:18AM 11:18AM 01:36PM 0.4F 01:12PM 11:18AM 03:24PM 11:18AM 01:24PM 0.4F 01:36PM 0.3F Su 0.4F 12:54PM 01:12PM 02:54PM 11:18AM 03:24PM 0.3F 01:24PM 02:18PM 0.4F 05:48PM 0.3F 02:00PM 12:54PM 04:42PM 1.5F 01:12PM 02:54PM 0.6F 03:24PM 01:06PM 0.3F 02:18PM 05:06PM 0.4F 01:18PM 05:48PM 02:00PM 04:06PM 1.2F 12:54PM 04:42PM 1.5F 0.7F 02:54PM 09:18AM 0.6F 01:06PM 12:30PM 0.3F 02:18PM 05:06PM 01:18PM 05:48PM 02:00PM 04:06PM 1.2F 1.5F 04:42PM 02:30PM 09:18AM 06:12PM 0.6F 01:06PM 12:30PM 1.5F 05:06P 01:18 -1 27-0.8E 2 27904:31 AM 1.7 52 05:52 AM11:18AM 2.5 76 12 M Tu Th Th FTh Su M 08:48PM 08:48PM 03:48PM 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Min. 08:43 AM 3.2 98 1.5 46 02:06AM 1.1F09:45 01:48AM 1.0F -0.6E 03:24AM 1.1F 03:00AM 1.0F 03:42AM 06:06AM 01:24AM 04:42AM 0.7F 0.9F 02:42AM 05:06AM 01:12AM 04:24AM 0.4F 1.0F 01:30AM -0.8E 12:30AM -0.8E 6 7906:49 AM 3.009:42PM 91 -0.6E 10:05 AM 3.7 113 Baltimore Harbor Chesapeake Bay 07:12PM 10:06PM -0.6E 06:36PM 07:12PM 10:06PM 06:36PM 11:36PM 07:12PM 09:42PM -0.6E 10:06PM -0.6E 08:12PM 08:48PM 11:12PM 06:36PM 11:36PM -0.8E 09:42PM 05:00PM -0.6E 08:18PM 03:42PM 08:12PM 06:36PM 1.5F 08:48PM 11:12PM 0.8F 11:36PM 03:48PM -0.8E 05:00PM -0.6E 07:24PM 09:42PM 08:18PM 03:42PM 1.7F 08:12PM 06:36PM 1.5F 11:12PM 06:06PM 0.8F 03:48PM -0.8E 09:24PM 05:00PM 07:24PM 09:42PM 1.4F 08:18PM 03:42PM 1.7F 1.5F 06:36PM 05:24PM 06:06PM 08:48PM 0.8F 03:48PM 09:24PM 1.8F 07:24P 09:42 06:06AM 09:24AM 0.9F AM 09:42AM 0.7F 08:30AM 11:06AM 0.6F -0.6E 08:30AM 11:00AM 0.4F -0.6E 03:42AM 06:54AM -0.9E 10:24AM 12:30PM 0.3F 9 AM AM AM AM 1○ ○ ○ ○ F 02:46 PM -0.2 -6 M 01:05 PM 0.2 6 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.9E 05:30AM 08:42AM -0.7E 07:06AM 10:18AM -1.0E 06:36AM 09:48AM -0.9E 08:42AM 11:54AM 08:00AM -1.1E 11:12AM -0.9E 07:00AM 10:42AM 07:36AM -0.9E 10:42AM -0.9E 05:00AM 07:18AM 0.7F 03:48AM 06:18AM 0.8F 09:48PM 11:12PM 09:48PM 11:12PM 09:48PM 11:12PM 3 9 Su 03:48 PM 0.4 12 M 04:20 PM -0.1 -3 12:36PM 03:54PM -1.0E Mbefore 12:48PM 04:06PM -0.8E 01:48PM 05:00PM -0.8E Th 01:36PM 04:48PM -0.6E Sa 0.4F Su -0.5E AM before before before 5 AM 10:36AM AM 01:00PM E 01:54PM AM 03:00PM AM 06:00PM E 10:18AM AM E AM AM Su W 09:08 PM 3.6 11010:18PM 55 12:30PM 02:42PM 0.4F09:58 12:30PM 02:00PM 04:24PM 0.5F 1.1F 03:54PM 03:18PM 06:36PM 02:36PM 05:24PM 1.5F 01:54PM 04:54PM 1.4F 01:24PM -1.1E -1.3E Approach Entrance 2.902:30PM 88 0.3F 0.7F PM 3.2 98 0 9107:35 ● PM F1.8 Sa PM M10:26 Tu 01:36PM F 0.4F Th Sa 0.7F F 05:54PM M 0.9F Tu 08:42AM 12:06PM T 07:24PM 0.8F 07:36PM 10:36PM 08:12PM 11:36PM 07:48PM 11:24PM 0.8F 06:42PM -0.6E 08:42PM 6 AM 03:36PM PM AM PM PM PM AM 03:36AM PM Ebb 12:54AM 08:18PM 04:36AM -0.7E 1.2F 12:24AM 12:54AM 04:12AM 04:36AM 1.2F 1.2F 02:18AM 12:24AM 05:48AM 12:54AM 04:12AM 1.0F 04:36AM 1.2F Ebb 1.2F 02:06AM 02:18AM 05:30AM 12:24AM 05:48AM 1.1F 04:12AM 12:00AM 1.0F 02:48AM 1.2F 02:06AM -1.0E 12:42AM 02:18AM 05:30AM 05:48AM 1.1F 12:00AM 02:00AM 1.0F 02:48AM -1.0E 12:48AM 02:06AM -1.0E 12:42AM -1.1E 05:30AM 01:00AM -0.8E 03:36AM 1.1F 12:00AM 02:00AM -1.1E 02:48AM -1.0E 12:48AM -1.0E 12:42AM 12:12AM -1.1E 01:00AM -0.8E 03:06AM 02:00A -1 Flood Flood Ebb◐07:00PM Ebb Flood Flood Flood Ebb Flood Su M W Th 04:42PM 07:54PM -0.6E 09:54PM -0.6E 06:18PM 09:18PM 10:24PM 08:24PM 11:18PM -0.7E 09:48PM 08:00PM 11:00PM -0.9E 04:54PM 08:00PM 1.3F 03:36PM 07:00PM 1.6F ◑ 15AM05:06PM 15 30 15 30 15 30 15-0.6E 15 30 15 30E-0.8E 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30EEbb 15 30 30-1.4E 1 PM 09:30PM PM PM 08:36AM PM E 0.9F PM PM PM PM 08:12AM 11:24AM -1.1E 30 15 07:54AM 08:12AM 11:06AM 11:24AM -1.0E -1.1E 09:12AM 07:54AM 12:24PM 08:12AM 11:06AM -1.0E 11:24AM -1.0E -1.1E 08:54AM 09:12AM 12:00PM 07:54AM 12:24PM -1.0E 11:06AM 06:06AM -1.0E -1.0E 08:36AM 03:48AM 08:54AM 06:48AM 0.7F 09:12AM 12:00PM 0.8F 12:24PM 05:12AM -1.0E 06:06AM -1.0E 07:30AM 04:06AM 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.8F 08:54AM 06:48AM 0.7F 12:00PM 06:54AM 0.8F 05:12AM -1.0E 09:36AM 06:06AM 07:30AM 04:06AM 0.9F 08:36AM 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.8F 0.7F 06:48AM 06:06AM 0.9F 06:54AM 09:06AM 0.8F 05:12AM 09:36AM 1.4F 07:30A 04:06 0 11:12PM 10:48PM 11:42PM 10:42PM 03:20 -0.3 -9 31 09:35 ◐Tu 05:30PM 0.5F Tu M 03:00PM 03:18PM 05:06PM 05:30PM 0.4F Th 0.5F Tu 04:00PM 03:00PM 06:36PM 03:18PM 05:06PM 0.6F 05:30PM 0.4F Th 0.5F 03:24PM 04:00PM 06:06PM 03:00PM 06:36PM 0.8F 05:06PM 11:18AM 0.6F 02:36PM 0.4F 10:00AM 03:24PM -1.2E 01:00PM 04:00PM 06:06PM -0.8E 06:36PM 10:00AM 0.8F 11:18AM 01:24PM 0.6F 09:54AM 10:00AM -1.4E 12:54PM 03:24PM -1.2E 01:00PM -0.9E 06:06PM 12:30PM -0.8E 10:00AM 03:36PM 0.8F 11:18AM 01:24PM 09:54AM -1.2E 02:36PM 10:00AM -1.4E 12:54PM -1.2E 01:00PM 11:54AM -0.9E 12:30PM -0.8E 03:06PM 10:00AM 03:36PM -1.7E 01:24P 09:54 -1S PM Th PM 02:36PM PM M AM03:18PM M F Tu M Su F Tu M M Su F Th M M Su F Th Tu M 3.4 104East 08:06PM 11:00PM -0.6E -0.6E 07:30PM 08:06PM 10:30PM 11:00PM -0.6E -0.5E -0.6E 09:30PM 07:30PM 10:30PM 11:00PM -0.6E -0.6E 09:06PM 09:30PM 07:30PM 10:30PM 05:42PM -0.6E 09:06PM 04:12PM 09:06PM 07:12PM 1.5F 09:30PM 0.8F 04:42PM 05:42PM 08:18PM 03:54PM 09:06PM 04:12PM 07:12PM 1.8F 09:06PM 07:12PM 1.5F 1.2F 06:42PM 0.8F 04:42PM 10:00PM 05:42PM 08:18PM 03:54PM 1.5F 09:06PM 04:12PM 07:12PM 1.8F 0.7 1.5F 07:12PM 06:12PM 1.2F 06:42PM 09:42PM 0.8F 04:42PM 10:00PM 1.9F 08:18P 03:54 1 Cove Point, 3.9 n.mi. -3:29 -3:36 -3:4408:06PM 0.4 0.6 Chesapeake Beach, 1.5○ miles North +0:29 +0:48 +0:06 +0:00 1.0 01:36AM 04:24AM 02:06AM 04:42AM 03:18AM 06:18AM -0.8E 03:06AM 06:06AM -0.6E 01:06AM 1.0F 12:36AM ○-4:0812:36AM ● ○ ● ● ○ 0.9F 0.9F ● ○ Sa 03:41 PM -0.2 -6 10:30PM 11:54PM 12:18AM 10:30PM 10:30PM 11:54PM 10:30PM 10:30PM 11:54PM-1.0E 10:30 02:54AM 1.2F 02:36AM 1.1F 04:18AM 1.1F 12:06AM 03:48AM 1.1F 12:54AM 02:12AM -0.9E 05:30AM 0.9F 02:12AM -0.7E 05:12AM 02:24AM -0.9E 01:24AM 07:18AM 10:24AM 0.8F 07:36AM 10:30AM 0.5F 09:48AM 12:06PM 0.5F 09:42AM 11:54AM 0.3F 04:42AM -0.9E 04:12AM -0.8E AM AM 07:54AM AM 07:24AM AM AM 09:58 PM06:36AM 3.5 09:48AM 10704:42PM -1.0E 06:24AM 09:30AM -0.8E -0.8E 07:48AM 11:06AM -1.0E -0.7E 0.5 07:24AM 10:36AM -1.0E 04:42AM 06:54AM 08:42AM 11:54AM 0.7F -0.9E 03:48AM 08:24AM 11:24AM 0.5F -1.0E 05:36AM 08:06AM 0.8F 04:36AM 07:12AM 1.0F -1.0E Tu 01:24PM 04:48PM 02:42PM 06:00PM 02:18PM 05:36PM -0.5E 11:42AM 02:00PM 0.4F 05:54AM 11:18AM 0.3F Sharp M Island01:24PM Lt.,03:42PM 3.4 n.mi. West -1:39 -1:41 -1:43 0.4 Chesapeake Channel, +0:38 +0:32 +0:19 2.2 AM (bridge AMtunnel) E +0:05 AM AM 01:36PM E 12:06AM AM 02:48AM AM -1.2E E 1.2 AM AM Th Su M 01:12AM 05:00AM 1.2F -1:57 01:12AM 05:00AM 1.2F F 01:12AM 05:00AM 1.2F 12:06AM -0.9E 11:36AM 02:48AM -1.2E -0.9E 01:00AM 01:12PM 03:48AM -1.5E 02:48A 0.4F 0.9F 03:30PM 0.3F 02:48PM 05:12PM 0.5F W 02:12PM 04:42PM 0.5F 09:36AM 12:48PM 03:12PM -1.1E 06:00PM 07:48AM 02:36PM 05:42PM 11:06AM 02:18PM -1.2E -1.4E Sa 01:36PM Su Tu 31 Sa -0.9E F -1.1E Su Sa Tu 1.0F W F 08:06PM 11:12PM 08:12PM 11:24PM 09:00PM 08:30PM -0.6E 07:00PM -0.5E 31 01:30PM 31 31 12:06AM 31 31 0.8F 31-1.1E 31 31 F09:48AM 31 07:54PM 08:36AM 11:48AM -1.1E 0.8F 08:36AM 11:48AM -1.1E 03:06AM 06:18AM 08:36AM 1.1F 11:48AM 03:06AM 06:18AM 05:48AM 1.1F 06:36PM 08:30AM 1.0F 03:06AM 06:18AM 05:48AM 1.1F 07:00AM 10:00AM 05:48AM 1.7F 1.5F 08:30A AM 04:48PM PM 07:42PM AM 04:06PM PM PM 08:30AM PM 1.0F AM PM M Tu Th 06:12PM 09:18PM -0.7E 05:36PM 08:48PM -0.6E 07:54PM 10:48PM -0.6E 07:18PM 10:18PM -0.7E 04:12PM 07:30PM 09:06PM 1.6F 02:54PM 08:54PM 11:54PM 1.5F -1.0E 05:30PM 08:48PM 1.4F 04:30PM ◑ 10:30PM 09:48PM 03:36PM 0.5F 0.6 09:36AM 03:36PM -1.1E 05:54PM 0.5F 09:36AM 11:00AM -1.1E 02:24PM 09:36AM 11:00AM -1.1E 12:54PM 11:00AM-1.7E 02:24P PM PM 12:42PM PM PM E 12:42PM PM 02:24PM PM -1.5E PM PM Thomas Pt. Shoal Lt., 2.0 n.mi. East -1:05 05:54PM -0:14 0.5F -0:22W 03:36PM -0:20 05:54PM 0.6 Sa W W 12:42PM Sa W E +2:18 Sa -1.5E W +2:36 SaE 0.6 W 03:54PM Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East +3:00 +2:09 1.2 ● 11:30PM 11:18PM 10:36PM 11:30PM 08:30PM 11:24PM -0.7E 08:30PM 11:24PM -0.7E 04:00PM 06:54PM 08:30PM 0.9F 11:24PM -0.7E 04:00PM 06:54PM 05:30PM 0.9F 09:12PM 1.9F 04:00PM 06:54PM 05:30PM 0.9F 09:12PM 1.9F ◑ 07:12PM 10:30PM 05:30PM 1.8F 09:12P PM PM 10:00PM 10:00PM 10:00PM 02:42AM -0.7E 03:00AM+0:48 05:42AM -0.5E 12:36AM 1.1F 12:18AM 0.9F 1.0F 01:30AM 0.9F Pooles12:00AM Island, 4 03:48AM miles05:30AM Southwest +0:56 +1:12 0.6 Smith Point Light,02:00AM 6.7 n.mi. -0.9E East 02:06AM +2:29 +2:57 -0.8E +2:45 +1:59 0.5 0.3 1.2F 0.6F +0:59 03:24AM 1.1F 0.4F 01:30AM 05:06AM 1.1F -0.8E 0.8 01:06AM 04:42AM 1.1F -0.7E 12:06AM -0.7E 03:06AM 06:00AM 0.9F 12:18AM -1.0E 02:18AM -1.2E 08:36AM 11:24AM 08:48AM 11:30AM 04:18AM 07:24AM 04:00AM 07:06AM 05:42AM -0.9E 01:06AM 05:06AM -0.8E 03:06AM AM 08:54AM AM 08:24AM AM AM AM AM 07:24AM 10:42AM -1.0E -0.9E 07:06AM 10:18AM -0.9E -0.7E 08:30AM 11:48AM -1.0E 0.4F 08:06AM 11:18AM -1.0E 05:30AM 07:42AM 03:00AM 06:12AM 0.7F 0.9F 04:30AM 06:42AM 09:06AM 12:12PM 0.6F -1.0E 06:12AM 0.8F 05:18AM 08:12AM 1.2F 02:12PM 05:30PM 02:12PM 05:30PM 11:00AM 01:18PM 10:54AM 12:54PM 0.3F 12:36PM 03:06PM 0.5F 12:06PM 0.4F 08:54AM AM AM E-0.9E AM+5:33-1.2E AM 02:30PM E 1.1F AM AM E 0.2 AM AM Tu W F03:24PM Sa M Tu Turkey Point, 1.2 n.mi. Southwest +2:39 +1:30 +0:58 +1:00 0.6 0.8 Point No Point, 4.3 n.mi. East +4:49 +6:04 +5:45 0.4 02:30PM 04:42PM 0.4F 02:18PM 04:18PM 0.3F 05:54PM 0.6F 02:48PM 05:24PM 0.7F 10:30AM 01:42PM 09:24AM -1.2E 12:30PM 08:54AM 12:30PM 03:12PM 06:24PM 11:48AM 03:00PM -1.2E 10:54AM 02:12PM -1.6E Sudisclaimer: Thdata Su Safrom M Su Ware available Th 08:48PM 08:48PM 03:48PM 07:00PM -0.7E 03:12PM 06:24PM -0.5E 05:54PM -0.6E 05:12PM 08:12PM -0.6E These data are M based06:36PM disclaimer: upon the latest These information dataWare available based upon disclaimer: as of the the latest date These information of your are request, available based and upon as may disclaimer: of the the differ latest date information These of the your published data request, available are08:42PM based tidal and as may current disclaimer: upon of differ the the tables. date latest from These of the your information published data request, based tidal and may current disclaimer: upon as differ of the tables. the latest from These date information of data published your are request, available based tidal and current upon as may of the tables the differ late dS PM PM AM PM PM PMthe PM PM Tu W F Sa 07:12PM 10:06PM -0.6E 09:42PM -0.6E 08:48PM 11:36PM -0.6E 08:12PM 11:12PM -0.8E 05:00PM 08:18PM 03:42PM 06:36PM 1.5F 0.8F 03:48PM 07:24PM 09:42PM 1.7F 06:06PM 09:24PM 1.4F 05:24PM 08:48PM 1.8F ◐ 09:54PM 09:18PM PM 11:30PM PM E 11:12PM PM 11:00PM PM E PM PM E PM PM 09:48PM Generated on: Tue dec 04 20:17:30 Generated uTCon: 2018 Tue dec 20:17:30 Generated uTCon: 2018 Tue dec 04 20:17:30 Generated on: Tue dec 04 20:20:19 Generated uTCon: 2018 Page Tue4dec ofto 504 20:20:19 Generated uTC on: 2018 Page Tue4dec of 504 20:20:19 uTC○ Corrections Applied to 04 Batlimore Harbor Approach Corrections Applied Chesapeake Bay Entrance ◐uTC○ 2018

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12:06AM 1.0F 12:12AM 0.8F 01:36AM 1.1F 12:54AM 04:36AM 1.2F -0.7E 12:24AM 04:12AM 1.2F -0.6E 02:18AM 05:48AM 1.0F -0.9E 03:48AM 06:42AM 03:48AM 06:42AM 05:18AM 08:24AM tide tables. 08:12AM 11:24AM -1.1E 0.5F 07:54AM 11:06AM -1.0Etables. 09:12AM 12:24PM -1.0E 0.4F 10:00AM 12:30PM 10:06AM 12:24PM 0.3F Sa 12:12PM 02:24PM s of the date of your request, and may differ fromTh the published tide W 03:18PM 05:30PM 0.5F 03:00PM 05:06PM 0.4F 04:00PM 06:36PM 0.6F -0.6E M Tu Th F 03:06PM 06:24PM -0.8E 02:54PM 06:12PM -0.6E 04:54PM 08:00PM 08:06PM 11:00PM -0.6E 10:30PM -0.6E 09:30PM ◑07:30PM 09:36PM 09:24PM 10:48PM ○ ●

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Charters, Guides, and Headboats

M iddle B ay

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Contact Captain Wayne to make your reservations! 301-751-6056 or captain@triciaanncharterfishing.com

triciaanncharterfishing.com

F or lin k s , visit fishtalkmag . com / charter - fishing - guide 54 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS

The deadline for the Brokerage and Classified sections is the 3rd of the month prior to publication (July 3 for the August issue). Contact Lucy Iliff for advertising, (410) 216-9309 or lucy@fishtalkmag.com

power Chaparral 21 H20 OB Sport ‘19 Yamaha Four stroke F150XB 150hp, cockpit & bow cover, Garmin GPS map 742XS w/ deluxe package, 5 yr premier level limited component warranty $47,125 Waterfront Marine 443-949-9041 Grady White 232 Gulfstream ’13 Low hrs & loaded. Twin Yamaha 150-hp w/warranty. Outriggers. autopilot. Twin Raymarine CPUs, radar, windlass. Indoor stored. Deltaville VA. Reduced $112,000. Call (804) 436-4484 or email jonathan@annapolisyachtsales.com

28’ Mako - 28’ Mako ’03 - $46,000 David Robinson - 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

24’ Chaparral 246 SSI ’18 Located in Edgewater beautiful condition custom GPS unit - $77,900 Waterfront Marine 443-949-9041

32’ Legacy 32 ’08 $279,000 Pasadena, MD. Single Cummins QSB5.9 425-hp (820 hrs) Downeast Red custom hull paint. pilothouse enclosure. custom nav & TV. To schedule a showing please contact Bob Wagner at 484-832-3331 or bob@cyc.yachts

24’ Edgewater 245CX ’11 Powered with Yamaha 250-hp O/B with Less then 275 hrs. One owner and always rack stored. Like NEW! Asking $73,000. Call Mike Skreptack at 443-336-6243 or email mike@annapolisyachtsales.com

32’ Luhrs Open Tournament ’99 $60,000 Everything works, 5 star fishing machine, not your average Luhrs contact Mike DeRycke at 240-602-7495 or mderycke@annapolisyachtsales.com

Amanda L - 36’ Chesapeake Deadrise ’91 - $36,500 - Mary Catherine Ciszewski 804-815-8238 marycatherine@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net Monterey 360 Sport Coupe ’18 $335,000 760-hp Merc with Bravo IIIX drives & Axius joystick control, generator, AC/Heat, Very low hrs, An awesome boat for entertaining or weekending! Call Gordon Bennett at 410-739-4432 or Gordon@AnnapolisYachtSales.com

Strike –36’ Pacemaker ’72 - $19,900 Lars Bergstrom 910-899-7941 lars@curtisstokes.net – www.curtisstokes.net 25’ May-Craft ’17 $99,900 Mark Welsh (410) 645 0007 mark@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

Cats In The Hatt - 32’ Hatteras ’83 $49,000 - Curtis Stokes - 410-919-4900 curtis@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

26’ Edgewater 268cc ’12 $99,900 Twin Yamaha F-250 O/B 233 hours, blue hull, outriggers, lift kept. Gordon 410-739-4432 or Gordon@AnnapolisYachtsales.com

35’ Monterey 330SY ’08 Super clean trade in w/Volvo Penta Ocean X, Duo Prop, canvas enclosure, chartplotter, bow sunbed, swim platform, more. Asking $91,500. Call Mike Skreptack at 443-336-6243 or email mike@annapolisyachtsales.com

Chaparral 264 Sunesta ‘18 Just 49 hrs on the eng! powered w/ Volvo Penta 350 V8 dou-prop drive, freshwater cooled. Vacuflush head, Garmin 742, Arch, cockpit & bow cover, beechweave floor covering, U-slide seat, trim tabs $84,900 Waterfront Marine 443-949-9041

Fighting Lady – 2010 35’ Markley ’10 $175,000 David Robinson 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

27’ Shamrock ’01 $25,000 David Robinson - (410) 310 8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

36’ Meridian 341 ’13 $239,000. Baltimore. Exquisite cond.. Only 90 hrs. Like new. Motivated seller. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts

42’ Bertram ’80 $59,900 Lars Bergstrom - (910) 899 7941 lars@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net 42’ HCB 42 Siesta ’18 DEMO MSRP $999,000. Baltimore. Quad Yamaha 350 engines. Helm Master joystick. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

Sea Ducer - 43’ Trojan ’87 - $129,000 David Robinson - 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net 44’ Tiara 44 Coupe ’15 $650,000. Annapolis. x2 Volvo IPS 600s (590 hrs). Powered sunroof. cockpit entertainment center. Garmin Glass cockpit technology. To schedule a showing please contact Bob Wagner at 484-832-3331 or bob@cyc.yachts

Out N About - 37’ Tiara - ’98 $125,000 Mary Catherine Ciszewski 804-815-8238 marycatherine@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

My Island Lady – 47’ Buddy Davis ’86 David Robinson 39’ HCB 38 Speciale ’18 DEMO $339,000 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net MSRP $777,000. Baltimore. Triple Yamaha 350 engines. Custom T Top. Transom Bait/Prep Station. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

To find more used boats, visit fishtalkmag.com

Charmer – 48’ Viking ’87 - $119,750 Mark Welsh 410-645-0007 mark@curtisstokes.net – www.curtisstokes.net

To list your boat for sale, call (410) 216-9309 or email lucy@fishtalkmag.com FishTalkMag.com July 2019 55


Brokerage & Classified

Visit Us Online

52’ Sea Ray 52 Sedan Bridge ’06 $450,000. Baltimore. Upgraded MAN 700-hp engs. 3 strms, 2 heads. Best maintained 52 Sedan Bridge on market. Motivated seller. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts Nonchalant - 48’ Evans ’03 - $139,000 David Robinson 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net 50’ Beneteau Monte Carlo MC 5 ’15 $749,900. Charleston, SC. x2 Volvo IPS 600s (300 hrs). Cockpit docking station. hydraulic swim platform w/ Inlaid chalks. custom stereo system. Motivated sellers. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts 50’ Prestige 500S ‘16 $799,000. Middle River, MD. x2 Volvo IPS 600s (215 hrs). Cockpit docking station, hydraulic swim platform, Williams Jet Tender in tender garage. To schedule a showing please contact Brad Heil at 443-262-1760 or brad@cyc.yachts

To find more used boats, visit fishtalkmag.com

for

the

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53’ HCB 53 Sueños ’18 DEMO MSRP $1,823,000. Baltimore. Quad Yamaha 350 engines. Helm Master joystick. Seakeeper. cockpit summer kitchen. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts 55’ Prestige 550 Fly ’14. $874,900. Kent Island. Like new cond, Only 230 hrs. Engine/Pod warranty through July 2019. 3 strms, 2 heads. Single owner, motivated seller. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts 56’ Prestige 550HT Fly ’17 $1,120,000. Kent Island. Hard Top. Engine Warranties through 10/21, Pods through 10/22. Well maintained. Only 150 hrs. To schedule a showing please contact Brad Heil at 443-262-1760 or brad@cyc.yachts 56’ Prestige 560 Fly ’17 TRADE $1,099,099. Baltimore. Like new cond.. Yacht/Engine warranty through November 19. x2 Cummins 600-hp. 380 hrs. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

f i s h t a l k m a g . c o m

Brokerage/Classified Order Form Interested in an eye-catching Display or Marketplace Ad? BROKERAGE CATEGORIES:  BOAT SHARING  BOAT WANTED  DINGHIES  DONATIONS  POWER  SAIL MARKETPLACE  ACCESSORIES  ART  ATTORNEYS  BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES  CAPTAINS  CHARTERS  CREW & CLASSIFIED  DELIVERIES  ELECTRONICS  EQUIPMENT  FINANCE  HELP WANTED  INSURANCE  LURES CATEGORIES:  MARINE ENGINES  MARINE SERVICES  REAL ESTATE  RENTALS  RODS & REELS  SCHOOLS  SLIPS & STORAGE  SURVEYORS  TACKLE SHOPS  TRAILERS  WANTED  WOODWORKING

Ad Copy:

We accept payment by cash, check or: Account #: _________ ________ ________ _________ Exp: _____ / _____ Security Code (back of card): ______ Name on Card:_____________________________________ Phone: ____________________ Billing Address:____________________________________ City:____________________State: _____ Zip: __________

Rates/Insertion for Word Ads $30 for 1-30 words $60 for 31-60 words Photos Sell Boats. Add a 1” photo to your listing for just $25. List in FishTalk and get a FREE online listing at FishTalkMag.com!

56 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com

Mail this form to: 612 Third St., Ste 3C, Annapolis, MD 21403 lucy@fishtalkmag.com Fax: 410.216.9330 Phone: 410.216.9309 • Deadline for the August issue is July 3rd • Payment must be received before placement in FishTalk. • Include an additional $2 to receive a copy of the issue in which your ad appears.


MARKETPLACE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS

The deadline for the Marketplace and Classified sections is the 3rd of the month prior to publication (July 3 for the August issue). Contact Lucy Iliff for advertising, (410) 216-9309 or lucy@fishtalkmag.com

ACCESSORIES | ART | ATTORNEYS | BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES | CAPTAINS | CHARTERS | CREW | DELIVERIES | ELECTRONICS EQUIPMENT | FINANCE | HELP WANTED | INSURANCE | LURES | MARINE ENGINES | MARINE SERVICES | PRODUCTS | REAL ESTATE RENTALS | RODS & reels | SCHOOLS | SLIPS & Storage | SURVEYORS | Tackle Shops | TRAILERS | WANTED | WOODWORKING

HELP WANTED Advertising sales Do you live in the Tidewater VA area? Are you on a search for a part-time gig sales position that requires you to get out and visit marinas and other marine businesses, and where flip-flops and shorts are considered business casual? SpinSheet, PropTalk, and FishTalk magazines are in growth mode and we are looking for that special advertising sales rep who understands the marine industry. If you think you will excel in creating sales and marketing solutions for advertisers then we would love to chat with you. Contact mary@spf-360.com today!

MARINE SERVICES

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Boater’s readyMarine for Directory SPRING? for annapolis/eastern shore

CAPTAIN’S COUR TERschools SE CHAR CHARTER CAPTAIN’S COURSE 100 TON MASTERS • OUPV • TOWING • SAILING

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Call today to place your ad! 410.216.9309

P O R T B O O K .cO m

For the latest listings, visit: f i s h t a l k m a g . c o m / c l a s s i f i ed s

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 57


Biz Buzz New Ownership

In April 2019, Tome’s Landing Marina (TLM) was purchased by Marine Endeavors, Inc. Tome’s Landing Marina is located in historic Port Deposit, MD, just 45 minutes north of Baltimore on Interstate 95. Under the new acquisition, Tres and Glen Martin, of the Martin family’s Everglades Marina in Ft. Lauderdale, FL, will be implementing their legacy of first class service and vast experience with high performance powerboats into TLMs operations. Tres and Glen’s history of retailing and servicing Cigarette, Fountain, Formula, Sunsation, and others, will bring decades of experience with these brands to the Chesapeake Bay. Along with the Bennington lineup of pontoons, TLM will be expanding its sales product line and enhancing the marina services offered to target all recreational boating segments of the market popular within the Northeast/ Mid-Atlantic section of the United States. tomeslandingmarina.com

New Hires

Annapolis Yacht Sales (AYS) announces two new additions to its service department: James Thomas and Jimmy King have joined the team as service technicians. James joins the AYS Service team with over 30 years of experience in the marine industry. Having grown up on the water in Cecil County, he is familiar with all brands of boats, both power and sail. He started his career working on outboards but has kept up with trends and changes and is well rounded enough to service any boat. He has several certifications, including CruisAir, and continues his education in the industry. Jimmy brings over 25 years of experience in the marine industry to AYS. He has worked on many different brands of powerboats over the span of his career, and his service adeptness adds great depth to the already impressive AYS service department. “James and Jimmy are both key additions to the AYS service team,” said Tom Turner, director of service. “They bring a wealth of knowledge and expertise to our service department, and we are excited to have them on our team at AYS.” annapolisyachtsales.com

CSI Awards

Top Products List

Grady-White’s Canyon 456 was recognized by Boating Industry in its sixth annual Top Products list. The Canyon 456, the new flagship for Grady-White, re-imagines the luxury sportfishing yacht with spacious seating for seven under the AirView AV² T-top, Grady-exclusive Sea Command Center and sophisticated technology including CZone system controls, Zipwake dynamic auto-leveling trim controls, Seakeeper 6 gyro stabilizer, and much more. The attention to detail continues below deck with a console cabin offering elegant styling, luxurious seating, a well-equipped galley, lighted storage, roomy head and stand-up shower, and integrated fishing rod storage throughout. “At GradyWhite we strive each day to craft boats that enhance the ownership experience and exceed customer expectations. The Canyon 456 is the pinnacle example of all that we have learned in 60 years of boat building; paying exceptional attention to every detail to delight our customers. We are honored and grateful that the Canyon 456 was named one of Boating Industry’s Top Products of 2019,” says Shelley Tubaugh, vice president of marketing at Grady-White Boats. gradywhite.com

Top Product Award

Boating Industry Magazine recognized Techron Protection Plus Marine Fuel System Treatment with a “2019 Top Products” award. Following extended development and testing, Techron Marine was launched in August of 2018 as a comprehensive new fuel system treatment formulated specifically for gasoline- powered boats. It’s exclusive alcohol and emulsifier-free formula doesn’t contribute to water uptake and provides boaters with superior protection and performance, along with the proven engine cleaning power of the Techron brand. Techron Marine also stabilizes fuel for up to 24 months, so the same treatment boaters use with every fill-up can provide extended protection during winter storage or other periods of non-use. Techron Marine is available for purchase at West Marine and AutoZone stores nationwide. TechronClean.com

Regal Boats announces its recognition as a recipient of the National Marine Manufacturer Associations’s (NMMA) 2018 Marine Industry Customer Satisfaction Index (CSI) Award. Regal Boats was recognized in five 2018 CSI Award categories, including deck boats, fiberglass outboard boats, inboard express cruisers, sterndrive bowrider boats, and sterndrive cuddy and express boats. NMMA CSI Awards honor boat and engine manufacturers who actively measure customer satisfaction and pursue continuous improvement to better serve their customers. As a CSI Award recipient, Regal Boats achieved and maintained an independently-measured standard of excellence of 90 percent or higher in customer satisfaction over the past program year, based on information provided by customers purchasing a new boat or engine. The 2018 CSI Award marks a total of 46 categories of award recognition in seventeen-straightyears Regal Boats has provided their customers with unparalleled customer service. regalboats.com

Marine Tagging

Oceanmax, maker of foul-release products Propspeed and Lightspeed, announced its great white shark and manta ray marine-tagging collaborations with Conservation International’s Asia-Pacific Marine Program, the New Zealand Department of Conservation, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, and Auckland’s Tindale Marine Research Charitable Trust. One of the obstacles ocean researchers face is the biofouling of pop-up archival transmitting (PAT) tags used to collect and transmit data to better understand shark and manta ray behavior. In response, Oceanmax donated its specialty foul-release coatings to better serve the scientific community’s tracking efforts. Researchers need a nonmetallic, nontoxic, antifoul coating to extend the life of each tag, and Oceanmax found that its environmentally friendly products, which are typically used on commercial and recreational vessels, also prevent unwanted marine fouling for satellites tags. Lightspeed coated marine tags have been found to last for years and are more likely to be recovered. oceanmax.com

Send your Chesapeake Bay business news and high-resolution photos to kaylie@fishtalkmag.com 58 July 2019 FishTalkMag.com


What’s New on

FishTalkMag.com New Evinrude ETEC G2 Outboards You want a boat so fast off the mark that when you nail the throttle, you put Einstein’s Theory of Relativity to the test? The uber-torque delivered by Evinrude’s new E-TEC G2 in-line-three 1.9-liter outboard might just make it happen.

Starcraft 231 MDCC You say you enjoy fishing for flounder in DelMarVa bays and inlets? We do, too, and having a boat that fishes comfortably and effectively in those coastal bays is imperative.

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These Businesses Make FishTalk Possible. shop with them and let them know their ad is working ! AllTackle.com.............................................................................. 9 Anglers..................................................................................... 39 Annapolis Yacht Sales............................................................... 13 Backyard Boats......................................................................... 51 Bass Kandy Delights................................................................. 16 Bay Shore Marine..................................................................... 23 BOE Marine.............................................................................. 16 Buras Marine............................................................................ 37 Chesapeake Yacht Center........................................................ 60 Cigars International.................................................................. 19 Curtis Stokes.............................................................................. 5 Fish For a Cure......................................................................... 11 Formula X2............................................................................... 18 Geico/BoatU.S............................................................................ 7 PortBook.................................................................................. 51 PYY........................................................................................... 31 Riverside Marine......................................................................... 3 Suzuki ....................................................................................... 6 Techron....................................................................................... 4 Tideline Boats........................................................................... 46 TowBoatU.S................................................................................ 2 Tradewinds - Crevalle Boats..................................................... 39 Tradewinds - Polar Boats.......................................................... 18 Trident Marine.......................................................................... 10 Waterfront Marine.................................................................... 15

FishTalkMag.com July 2019 59


and you’ll never regret calling

410.823.BOAT

D i s cove r t h e H C B E x p e r i e n ce It has been said that life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away. At HCB Center Console Yachts ™ , we build that sentiment into every custom boat we create for you. Because of all the investments you make in life, time out here should top the list.

4 1 0. 8 2 3 . B OAT | sales@cyc.yachts | 27 8 0 L i ght hous e Poi nt | Balt i more, MD 21 224 RGB Values:

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