3 Great March Angling Opportunities RUDOW’S
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White Perch
Bonanza
Stocked Trout
Tactics 101
march 2022
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IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 6 | ISSUE 3
38
Features 36
Tidal Pond White Perch
Most anglers head for tributaries with moving water as spring arrives, but tidal ponds offer unique opportunities for white perch. By Staff
38
March Madness
40
There may still be a chill in the air, but that spring sun is shining bright and there’s plenty of fishing to be done in the DelMarVa domain at this very moment. By Lenny Rudow
40
By Car
In the second installment in our four-part series on awesome angling opportunities for those traveling the incomparable state of Maryland, we first set off to find fishing opportunities that you can drive right up to — and in some cases, fish right from your car.
By Staff
presented by Fish and Hunt Maryland
44
Stocked Trout Tactics 101
Stocked trout offer a great shot at bending the rods for beginner and expert anglers alike.
By Jim Gronaw
46
A Towering Ocean Reef
Just off the Virginia coast, the Tower Reef is a spot all area anglers need to know about.
By Wayne Young
48
48 on the cover 10 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Shoreline Bass Fishing for Beginners
Look for these top 10 fish-attracting features when you walk down a shoreline in search of largemouth bass. By Eric Packard
Uses the fishing force Jim Gronaw does.
Mojo Lure
Gear Up For
Departments 14
Notes From the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow
16
Letters
18
Fishing News By Staff
21
Hot New Gear By Staff
24
Calendar
27
Reader Photos
52
Fishing Forecast By Mollie Rudow
54
FishTalk Monthly Subscription Form
55
Tips & Tricks By Staff
56
Tides & Currents
58
Biz Buzz
59
Brokerage: Used Boats for Sale
60
Marketplace: Services, Supplies, and Much More
62
Paddler’s Edge By Lenny Rudow
63
What’s New at FishTalkMag.com?
63
Index to Advertisers
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presented by Harbour Cove Marina
This trophy striped bass was caught and released using Bloody Point Baits! Your Source For:
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Plan Of Attack: Angling Tactics 23
Spring Snakehead Tactics and March Madness By Staff
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow 33
Aquasport 224 Bay: Break Out the Jigs
34
Release 210 RX: The Fishin’ Prescription
35
Terra Wind: RVing on the River
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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 COPY EDITOR Lucy Iliff, lucy@fishtalkmag.com Fishing Reports Editor Mollie Rudow INTERN Ian Rubin ADVERTISING SALES Lily Doerfler, lily@fishtalkmag.com Eric Richardson, eric@fishtalkmag.com Customer Service Manager Brooke King, brooke@fishtalkmag.com Administrative and marketing assistant Beatrice Roderick, beatrice@fishtalkmag.com ART DIRECTOR / PRODUCTION MANAGER Zach Ditmars, zach@fishtalkmag.com Graphic Designer / Production Assistant Royal Snyder, royal@fishtalkmag.com
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Tactician Craig Ligibel Coastal Correspondent John Unkart
Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022 8am-3pm
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CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Alan Battista, Jim Gronaw, Chuck Harrison, Capt. Monty Hawkins, Eric Packard, Mollie Rudow, Beth Synowiec, Wayne Young DISTRIBUTION Martin Casey, Bob and Cindy Daley, Dave Harlock, Ron Ogden 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 $45 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 850 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 beatrice@fishtalkmag.com.
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12 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Escape from the Ordinary
Adventure comes in many forms. Come find yours … From the historic charm of Annapolis along the shores of the Chesapeake Bay to the entertainment district of Arundel Mills and beyond, discover all that Annapolis and Anne Arundel County have to offer. CHOOSE YOUR ADVENTURE AT VISITANNAPOLIS.ORG
from Notes the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow
The brainiacs are coming! The brainiacs are coming!
N
ot long ago I sat in on a Zoom call with a disparate collection of folks who all have connections to St. Mary’s College of Maryland. We’d gathered to talk with Dr. Randolph Larson, a professor there who’s been developing a marine science major program at the school. On the call were water-oriented people as diverse as an oyster farmer, the executive director of the Coastal Conservation Association of Maryland, and of course none other than an obscure fishhead-turned-editor. Despite being located on the banks of the St. Mary’s River, home of one of the state’s most successful oyster sanctuaries and one of the cleanest, most life-filled tributaries on the Chesapeake, the college hadn’t established such a program. Now, however, it’s becoming a reality. Why should we anglers care? Because the kids who end up at St. Mary’s could offer us anglers a double-whammy win. They will not only be exposed to (and thus naturally fall in love with) the Chesapeake Bay, they’ll also be learning how to help us fix it. It’s important for all of us to know our own limitations, and I know darn well that one of my personal failings is a lack of scientific knowledge. Heck, any time I see a letter jammed up against a number my vision blurs and my brain locks up. But I can understand science well enough to know that in order for it to be applied to the things we care about, we need people who are both passionate about and highly educated in the topic matter. We want to improve rockfish stocks? We need energetic, highly educated professionals who will make it their mission. We want better water quality? Again, we need this combination of motivation and brainpower.
##Lenny’s custom mini SMCM fishing map, circa 1990. Image courtesy of Google Earth
What better place than St. Mary’s College of Maryland to institute a program that engenders a love of the Bay as it educates the future scientists who will one day study it? Frankly, with the abhorrent state of water quality in the Bay, its declining fisheries, and rapid development along its shorelines, the idea of growing a new crop of marine scientists who might one day help restore the Chesapeake gets me downright excited. And if you’re a Chesapeake Bay angler, it should get you excited, too. Do you know a young angler fascinated by the Bay and all it has to offer? Tell them about St. Mary’s. Does one of your own children show an interest in marine biology or aquatic restoration? Take them down to southern Maryland for a visit. Do you want to see just what the college might have to offer for a future fisherman? You can launch a boat at Piney Point on St. George’s Creek,
and fish your way upriver right to the school’s docks. Tip: Be sure to cast at the rip-rap along the historic St. Mary’s City waterfront and the mouth of the little salt pond at Church Point. You’ll catch rockfish, white perch, specks, and sometimes even redfish at these spots. I know because I went to school there myself. I may have made a cast or two (or 5000) into the river during those four years. And the insanely good fishing in this place — not to mention at St. Mary’s Lake just down the road — almost forced me onto the collegiate five-year plan. Hopefully, the up-and-comers headed for St. Mary’s and this new marine sciences program will make it out in four. But if they stretched it… well, who could blame them?
Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 14 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
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Letters A Letter From a New Angler
To Lucas, our first grandchild, lease accept our apologies that Granddaddy McIntyre was never a fisherman, and there is not much guidance that he can offer you. That’s why he has joined the Virginia Beach Angler’s Club, and at their December 2021 meeting he told the group that he needed their help. He told them that when his dad returned from WWII he went right to work, never fished, and when he had sons, he didn’t teach them how to fish. He told the club about the kindness of two neighbors, Robert and Mary, who showed you where to cast from their dock — and how you caught a 22-inch puppy drum. A man at the meeting mentioned how there were club members who
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at that very moment would do just about anything to catch a 22-inch fish, and Mary said that maybe Lucas was the one they really wanted in the club! Members offered to help with equipment, taking us out on their boats, and even with recipes for cooking the fish. Your Granddaddy left the meeting feeling so fortunate that so many of the fishermen in our community want to reach out to help an up-and-coming young fisherman. When opportunities come around for us to fish with our new friends in the Angler’s Club, it will be a whole new and wonderful experience for all of us. -Gary M, Virginia Beach, VA
Monthly Flash of Brilliance
Dear Gary, We’re glad you found the Virginia Beach Angler’s Club! And to Lucas: Try not to out-fish Granddaddy EVERY time you guys hit the water, okay??
Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com
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Fish News By Lenny Rudow
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Tripletail Record for VA
p until now Virginia didn’t have a state record for tripletail, but in 2020 they added the species to their list of potentials with a minimum size of eight pounds to start. Last summer teen angler Hayden Head of Yorktown landed an eight-pound, nine-ounce fish while fishing near York Spit. The record tripletail was spotted hanging near a weed mat. Head flipped a live crab to it, and back on shore the catch was weighed and positively identified by a Virginia Saltwater Fishing Tournament committee member. This winter, the state of Virginia accepted the catch as a new official state record. Congrats, Hayden Head!
##Hayden with his new state record tripletail — sweet catch, Hayden!
Maryland 2022 Striped Bass Season Mirrors 2021
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##The Maryland rockfish regs will go unchanged for the 2022 season.
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ASA Expands
he American Sportfishing Association (ASA) has announced that John Chambers has joined its ranks as its new public affairs manager. As the sportfishing industry’s trade association works to ensure a unified voice for the industry and for all anglers, Chambers will support strategies including building the sportfishing community, strengthening communications, and increasing engagement. Learn more about the ASA at asafishing.org.
18 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
he Maryland DNR has announced no changes in the Chesapeake Bay striped bass fishery for the 2022 season, which will remain identical to 2021 regulations. March 1 through March 31 will allow limited catch-and-release fishing (with specific gear restrictions as outlined on the DNR website) in the main-stem Bay (spawning rivers and Upper Bay spawning areas will remain closed as illustrated on the DNR Striped Bass Regulations Maps); April will be 100-percent closed to targeting striped bass for any reason in any waters; May 1 through May 15 is a main-stem Bay from Brewerton Channel south trophy season with a one-fish, 35-inch minimum size limit; and May 16 the size limit drops to 19 inches with a one-fish per person limit, but fishing is still limited to the main-stem Bay as outlined on DNR maps. June 1 through July 15 and August 1 through December 10 all areas of the Bay are open, and July 16 through 31 the summer closure remains in place. All of last year’s additional restrictions such as the use of nonoffset circle hooks with bait and the trophy season prohibition of using eels as bait also remain in place. In Maryland coastal waters the year-round one-fish per day, 28- to 35inch slot limit remains in effect through 2022. For additional information check the latest on the Maryland DNR website.
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Fish News
James River Muskie Study Complete
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esearchers from Coastal Carolina University in cooperation with the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources, the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources, and West Virginia University completed a two-year study on catch-and-release muskellunge fishing mortality during the summer months in the upper James River. Almost 100 fish were surgically implanted with tags, and tagged fish were caught and released when water temperatures were above 80 degrees. Researchers then used mortality estimates along with growth data and angler catch data to simulate how a summer closure might reduce mortality. The bottom line? Mortality did rise substantially when fish were caught and released in warm water, to the tune of 33.3 percent. However, few muskie are caught during this period of time due to a combination of low angler targeting effort and “extremely low” fishing action. As a result, researchers concluded that a summer closure would not significantly impact the size structure of the population in the upper James and no regulation changes are expected at this time.
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20 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
The Original Invasive
emember zebra mussels? All the way back in the 1980s these tiny shellfish were first recognized as a problematic invasive species, and when they began their biofouling blitz, biologists turned their attention to the issue of invasive species in a big way. Now, scientists say these pests could lead to significant scientific advances. Researchers at the University of Toronto are studying their impeccable ability to stick to things, and professor Eli Sone believes that understanding the protein-based glue they secrete could be critical. “If we understand why they stick so well, that could help us design things like nontoxic biodegradable glue, which could offer an alternative to internal stitches for surgery or localized drug delivery applications,” he says.
Tournament News
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s one might, expect March is a quiet month for tournaments in this region, but there are a few local ones taking place. Virginia freshwater anglers will want to check the schedule at Anna Point Marina on Lake Anna, as March kicks off the Fish Tales series as well as a couple of other bass tournaments. Fishers of Men has a March event on Kerr Lake, and CATT VA’s James River division has a March 12 qualifier. There are also a handful of Maryland and Potomac River bass tournaments taking place this month, which are detailed on the dnr.maryland.gov listing of approved bass tournaments.
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.
Space Invaders
F
ishermen are full of excuses, but you’ll have no alibi for failing to catch fish if you’re casting C&H Lures No Alibi Alien Jigs. Well, maybe that’s a stretch, but it is fair to say that you won’t be able to lay the blame on your lures. Available in eighth-, quarter-, three eighth-, and half-ounce sizes in the Inshore Series (larger versions up to eight ounces are in the Offshore Series), Alien Jigs are ideal for casting in the shallows. They can be had as plain heads, pre-skirted with silicon of varying colors, or with a mylar strip skirt. We particularly liked the pink mylar version for tipping the jig with a live minnow, which produced a ton of flash and shimmer every time the baitfish kicked — and triggered bites from speckled sea trout when the fish were acting finicky. We also found that the hooks are significantly stronger than many found on relatively lightweight jig heads, and you won’t have to worry about these bending out on big fish. Price: $8.99 to $10.99/3-pack. Visit afwfishing.com to learn more.
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Eely Interesting
ou want a soft plastic with the skinny profile of a sand eel, but the toughness of a super-plastic? Z-Man’s DarterZ will fit the bill. We tried the Smokey Shad six-inchers, which have a segmented aft end and a forked tail to increase the action. DarterZs are salt-impregnated and ever so slightly buoyant. This is also one of the few soft plastic baits we’ve come across which has hook pockets molded both in the back and on the belly, so it can be rigged hook-up or hook-down with jig heads, shankweighted hooks, or weedless-style. Best of all, like other Z-Mans the DarterZ can last through attacks from toothy fish without the tail getting bitten off. Price: $5.99/5-pack. Visit zmanfishing.com to learn more.
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Shake it Up
ou love casting shakey-heads, and you wish there was a rod designed specifically for ‘em? Well, there is. G Loomis’s redesigned NRX+ lineup includes the NRX+822S SYR, a one-piece, six-foot 10-inch conventional rod with extra-fast action and Mag-medium power. It’s rated for eight- to 12-pound test and one-eighth to five-sixteenth ounce lures. Construction highlights include Spiral X triple-layer construction (incorporating an oblique fiber core layer, a longitudinal middle layer, and a reverse oblique outer layer), a multi-taper design, cork split-grips, Fuji titanium SIC guides, and a CI4 reel seat. Price: $625. Visit gloomis.com for more information.
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Hot New Gear
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Someone Call Guinness
while back we took a peek at the world’s smallest “functional” fishing rod, but we’re ‘Mericans so bigger is always better, right?! Who’s got the biggest fishing rod in the world? We came across several that claimed to be, but fell far short of the mark: the 26-foot Ledytech, the 34foot High Carbon, and of course the 30-foot Jameson — which also happens to glow in the dark. Much to our surprise, we also located a 30-footer built by an actual tackle manufacturer: Daiwa’s Flame Hawk, which boasts a Yuan diameter of 25.7 M&Ms, whatever that means. But none of these contenders match up to the Carbon Super Hard Pole-A1. With 16 telescopic sections this “more than perfect for recreation fishing” rod extends out to either 36 feet or 40 feet, depending on which part of the published specifications you want to believe. Plus, its light weight “allows fishing all day without arm fatigue, to be able to concentrate ground baits in very small areas of water and be able to fish outside, above, or over your fish area with upmost accuracy.” Um… okay. Price: 131.50 (we can’t tell if that’s dollars or renmibis or what). Visit allfishingbuy.com, if you must. Editor’s Note: The Guinness Book of World Records recognizes Swiss rod maker Schweizerischer Fischereiverband’s 73-foot, seven-inch fishing rod as the longest fishing rod in the world. Who could beat that? Ron B., we’re looking at you, bud!
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A New Bote
ote has introduced a new offering for anglers: the Zeppelin Aero 10 inflatable kayak. A shrunk-down version of their Zeppelin Aero 12 tandem kayak, this model weighs in at a mere 37.5 pounds and when deflated will fit in the trunk of a compact car or under the couch in a studio apartment. It comes with the seat, a repair kit, a hand pump, a bucket rack with four rodholders, a Kula 5 cooler bucket, and a five-piece paddle. It also comes with a nifty 36-ounce “Magnepod” water bottle which secures to the deck via magnets. Three-chamber construction includes a self-bailing deck and extra seat elevation to keep you dry. Price: $1479. Visit boteboard.com for more information.
M
Weather or Not
any anglers think of Huk gear for their warm-weather shirts and shorts, but the Pursuit jacket takes Huk into the chilly weather game. These lightweight jackets are intended for four-season use, with windproof but breathable layers, a “stowaway” fold-out hood, and hand warmer pockets. Waterproofing is to 10K (which means it can handle some pressure build-up due to sitting or leaning prior to leaking, on top of moderate rainfall). Pursuit jackets come in Glacier, Sargasso, Kalamata Olive, Silver Blue, Camo, and Gill Red color patterns, in small, large, XL and XXL sizes. Price: $90. Visit hukgear.com to learn more.
F or more ge a r revie w s , visit : fishtal k mag . com / gear 22 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Plan Of Attack
Spring Snakehead Tactics
A
s the days begin to grow warmer and we get some sunny afternoons, this month marks the rebirth of the snakehead fishery. It’s still a bit chilly for a topwater bite, but these three methods work great on those early spring snakes.
1. Minnow under a bobber. There’s not much to expand on here, except to say that you’ll want to offer up the biggest minnow possible, and allow it to hang a bit deeper than you might during the summer months. In large shallow areas like the Blackwater, you may even want to let it hang just above bottom. 2. Cast and retrieve chatterbaits. These lures provide plenty of action at relatively slow speeds, so you can fish them with less zeal than during warmer months of the year yet still trigger reaction strikes. Just make sure you’re always reeling quickly enough to feel the lure’s vibration in the rod tip.
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##Contributor Eric Packard displays a March snakehead that fell victim to a white fluke.
3. Dart a fluke. Flukes are a deadly lure to use when fish are moving slowly. You can get them darting back and forth with subtle twitches of the rod tip, without moving them far from the target zone as you make them zig and zag. Threeand four-inch white flukes rigged weedless can be utterly devastating to the snakeheads; choose one that’s neutrally buoyant so the weight of the hook makes it sink at a microscopic rate, and start twitching when it’s six or eight inches under the surface — WHAMMO!
March Fluke
ho goes flounder fishing in March? Almost no one… except for those who know better. Truth be told, however, the first early birds will appear in our coastal bays this month, usually by the second week of March. And although their numbers are thinner than they will be in April, so are the crowds. You can catch them using many methods, but LT trolling over shallow flats is a killer — here’s how it’s done. • Try to fish on days following a calm stretch, when turbidity is minimal. Flounder fishing the day after a big blow is usually fruitless.
• Rig up light fast-action rods with 12- to 15-pound braid and a two- to threefoot 15-pound fluoro leader, and then tie on a half-ounce jighead with a three- to four-inch twister tail, Gulp!, or similar offering.
• Look for shallow flats in the three- to five-foot range with sandy bottoms and deeper channels nearby. If at all possible, try to time your trip to begin at the peak of a high tide so you fish through the outgoing tide (when sun-warmed waters are flowing out of the back-bays and marshes).
• Troll at absolutely minimal speed. One mph is not too slow, and 1.5 mph can be too fast. If the current is very strong, going with it will help keep your light jigs down near bottom. And if it’s blowing too hard to maintain a course this slow, it’s usually best to switch to drift fishing. • Cast out and feel for bottom by sweeping the rod forward and then dropping the tip. If you don’t feel bottom drop back more line, and if you’re dragging, take some in. • Troll as many lines as you like, but work as many as possible by constantly sweeping the tip forward, then dropping it back until the jig taps bottom again. Rods being worked will out-catch those that are static two to one.
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 23
C hesapea k e C alen d ar Brought to you by
For Chesapeake Bay boating news, visit proptalk.com
March
2
CBMM Winter Speaker Series: Building Business
1 to 2 p.m. virtual event presented by the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Topic: Burn - Finding the American Dream in the Chesapeake. $7.50 per session, register: cbmm.org
2
Free Environmental Seminar for Maryland Marinas
Marinas, boatyards, and yacht clubs are invited to attend a free seminar to learn about becoming certified Clean Marinas, stormwater management projects and funding, and proposed Maryland regulations. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Solomons Island Yacht Club.
2
FSFF Monthly Meeting
Striped Bass update and invasive species management with Erik Zloconovitz, MD DNR. 7 to 9 p.m. at the Free State Fly Fisher’s clubhouse at the Davidsonville Family Recreation Center in Davidsonville, MD. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@gmail.com for any questions.
3
AMM Virtual Winter Lecture Series
Virtual lecture at 7 p.m. over Zoom. Presented by the Annapolis Maritime Museum. Topic: Osprey on the Patuxent - Their Important Role in this Ecosystem. Cost: $10: amaritime.org
3
Free Environmental Seminar for Maryland Marinas
Marinas, boatyards, and yacht clubs are invited to attend a free seminar to learn about becoming certified Clean Marinas, stormwater management projects and funding, and proposed Maryland regulations. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Pip Moyer Annapolis Recreation Center.
4
Middle River Bass Fishing Flea Market
5
FSFF Monthly Fly Tying
8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Back River United Methodist Church, 544 Back River Neck Road, Essex, MD. Join FSFF as Marke Bange, club member and author, instructs us on how to tie a couple of fly patterns and demonstrates proper tying techniques. Patterns will be an articulated crystal bugger and a gurgler. All materials will be provided. Please bring your own vice and tying tools. 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Davidsonville Family Recreation Center. Please contact Ryan Harvey at rybeer@ gmail.com for any questions.
9
CBMM Winter Speaker Series: Building Business
1 to 2 p.m. virtual program presented by the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum. Topic: Port of Baltimore - the Wealth in our Water. $7.50 per session, register: cbmm.org
10
Free Environmental Seminar for Maryland Marinas
Marinas, boatyards, and yacht clubs are invited to attend a free seminar to learn about becoming certified Clean Marinas, stormwater management projects and funding, and proposed Maryland regulations. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Safe Harbor Bohemia Vista, Chesapeake City.
12
Anglers Small Boat Offshore Seminar
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Podickory Point Yacht Club in Annapolis, MD. Your $100 ticket includes: panel discussions on a variety of offshore tactics, rigging demonstrations, exclusive savings, lunch, drinks, captains bags, raffles, Boston Whaler 380 Outrage with tower on-site, and more.
12
CAPCA CPR, AED, and First Aid for Boaters
Upon completion of the training, students will receive an American Heart Association Course Completion Card in CPR, AED, and First Aid. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Selby Bay Yacht Club, 1116 Turkey Point Rd. Edgewater, MD. Cost: $100 for CAPCA and SBYC members and their families; $115 for all others. Register: capca.net/classes. Questions? education@capca.net. This course will be conducted following all CDC and Heart Association Covid-19 Procedures.
12-13
Essex-Middle River Fishing Club Fishing
Flea Market
8 a.m. - 2 p.m. at Rosedale Volunteer Fire Company, 8037 Philadelphia Road, Rosedale, MD 21237. New and used fishing tackle and crabbing supplies. Freshwater, saltwater, offshore, and boating supplies. Admission $5, Kids under 13 Free. Questions: (410) 6862348.
12-13
Third Annual Bosun’s Boat Expo
Held at Bosun’s Grasonville, MD, showroom.
16
CBMM Winter Speaker Series: Building Business
19
Annapolis Oyster Roast and Sock Burning - SOLD OUT
1 to 2 p.m. in the Van Lennep Auditorium at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, MD. Topic: Crab Industry Catalysts Coulbourne and Jewett Seafood Packing Company. $7.50 per session, register: cbmm.org 12 to 4 p.m. at the Annapolis Maritime Museum. All proceeds benefit the museum’s education programs.
Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com 24 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
2020
2021
2022
SUNDAY MAY 1, 2022 PARTY, BAND, GREAT FOOD
Registration Deadline April 27 Limited to 100 boats
Fish Measure-in Results based on Catch & Release only, using digital photos on the Official Boatyard 2022 yardstick. Entry Fee $250 per boat of 4 anglers $50 for each extra angler Registration Forms & Rules: boatyardbarandgrill.com Great Sponsor Prizes! 1st Place fish outline hung from a Boatyard beam!
E V E N T S
SATURDAY, APRIL 30
Skipper’s Meeting 5-7 pm Live Music: Sean Pelan
BENEFITS
SUNDAY, MAY 1
Fish Measure-in Must be in line by 4:30 pm
Party + Band 4 -8 pm Timmie Metz Band featuring Tambo Awards Ceremony 5 pm
Registration opens March 1. More info at boatyardbarandgrill.com
On Restaurant Row in Annapolis’ Historic Eastport Fourth & Severn, Eastport–Annapolis • 410-216-6206
Chesapeake Calendar
MArch (continued)
19
Maryland Fly Fishing & Collectible Tackle Show
Bringing together fishing enthusiasts throughout the Mid-Atlantic region with high quality fishing dealers for a day of tackle review, sales, demonstrations, seminars, clinics, and conversation. Mountain Epicenter, 21 Aberdeen Shopping Plaza, Aberdeen, MD.
19-20
SMRFO Fishing Show
At the St. Mary’s Fairgrounds in Leonardtown, MD. Presented by the Southern Maryland Recreational Fishing Organization.
25
CMM Maritime Performance Series
25
Maryland Day at St. Clement’s Island Museum
7 to 9 p.m. in Harms Gallery at the Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons, MD. Doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets: $20 online, $25 at the door. Music by Claude Bourbon. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Celebrate the founding of Maryland at the state’s birthplace at St. Clement’s Island Museum with free admission to the museum all day. Free water taxi rides, official ceremony featuring guest speakers (2 to 3 p.m.), a commemorative mass on St. Clement’s Island will occur at 11 a.m. A food truck will also be on site all day. This event commemorates the first landing of the colonists on St. Clement’s Island.
26 - Apr 9 America’s Boating Course
Two Saturdays: March 26 and April 9. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Bosun’s Marine in Grasonville, MD. Cost: $10. Presented by the Kent Narrows Sail and Power Squadron. Register: tinyurl. com/2m3m92tn
29
##The Bay Bridge Boat Show returns to Bay Bridge Marina April 21-24. Be sure to check out the hot new fishboats at the PropTalk demo dock!
Angler Night at the Boatyard
7 p.m. fishing film and discussion at the Boatyard Bar and Grill in Annapolis, MD.
April
1-14
Speckled Trout Tournament
Presented by Tidewater Kayak Anglers Association. Target Species: Top 3 Speckled Trout. Location: Anglers may fish anywhere in the State of Virginia provided it is open to the public and is public access (launches). No private ponds, lakes, military bases, etc. Registration Fee: $30 ($5 to iAngler Tournament Systems). CPR format (catch, photo, release): See rules on iAngler tournament app for details.
2-3
2022 US Naval Academy Safety at Sea Seminar
The seminar will focus on safety and seamanship suitable for inshore and offshore racing and cruising sailors. Live, on-the-water demonstrations and man overboard rescue demonstrations. The Safety at Sea Seminar in Annapolis is our 40th edition and will be held in Alumni Hall and other locations at the Naval Academy. One day, two day, and refresher course options available. Visit mtam. org/safety-at-sea for more details and to register.
9
Annapolis Book Festival
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Key School in Annapolis, MD. The festival brings together nationally and internationally renowned authors with thousands of book fans for author talks, panel discussions, book signings, children’s activities, food trucks, and more. Free.
9
CAPCA CPR, AED, and First Aid for Boaters
Upon completion of the training, students will receive an American Heart Association Course Completion Card in CPR, AED, and First Aid. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Selby Bay Yacht Club, 1116 Turkey Point Rd. Edgewater, MD. Cost: $100 for CAPCA and SBYC members and their families; $115 for all others. Register: capca.net/classes. Questions? education@capca.net. This course will be conducted following all CDC and Heart Association Covid-19 Procedures.
21-24
Bay Bridge Boat Show
At Bay Bridge Marina in Stevensville, MD. General admission: $18, $20 at the gate. Children under 12 are free. Tickets: annapolisboatshows.com
29
CMM Maritime Performance Series
7 to 9 p.m. in Harms Gallery at the Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons, MD. Doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets: $20 online, $25 at the door. Music by Bob Zentz.
29 - May 1
Annapolis Spring Sailboat Show
At City Dock in Annapolis, MD. General admission: $18, $20 at the gate. Children under 12 are free. Tickets: annapolisboatshows.com
Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com 26 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Reader Photos
presented by
Marine Engine Sales, Parts & Service 410-263-8370
www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com ##John enjoyed the tug from some very fat fish off Point Lookout over the winter. Photo courtesy of Mike Billings
##Allie enjoyed some great fall fishing tugging on some tog in the OCMD back bays and also caught a red snapper among the sea bass, while fishing off the Virginia coast.
##Andrew, Christine, and Kevin had a great day late last season fishing the Upper Bay.
##James M. Reynolds III was fishing out of Gwynns Island when he encountered this beaut of a redfish.
##Ray Smart, with his very first rockfish – WTG, Ray.
Send your fishing pics to lenny@fishtalkmag.com FishTalkMag.com March 2022 27
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Junior found this footballshaped rockfish near the Bay Bridge late last season.
##Scott, George, and Nick found some keepers jigging spoons down deep near Poplar Island. Photo courtesy of Dit Zachmars
28 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
H PI TH
##Ezra, Gideon, Elijah, and Caleb had an awesome day of jigging on the Tangier Sound.
OF
##Eddie pulled up some porgies among the sea bass, fishing on the Dauntless.
IS
C
F
##Mike Fusco sent in this pic which was taken chumming near Pooles Island—just look at that thing!!
TH N E MO
##Marty found a nice one in the final days of the season.
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Tommy tugged against this 48-incher last winter off Smith Point.
##Ian Todd found some winter pickerel on the Severn.
##Jeff hit a new PB this winter on the Gunpowder, when this 43-pounder tried to run away with his bait.
##Leah and Jeremy Bowling caught ‘em aboard Kim and Jimmy Day’s boat Miss My Money near Colonial Beach VA, Thanksgiving morning.
##Ed hoists a 48-incher, trolled up late in the fall in Eastern Bay aboard the Heatwave.
##Noah and Daniel caught ‘em up off a pier in OC and then in a Rockville farm pond.
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 29
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Colton and Bryson enjoyed some epic blue cat action on fish to 48 pounds with their father Lance, fishing on the James.
##Jimmy got this beautiful rockfish at the tail end of the season in the Potomac.
##David Gaestel caught this 15-inch slab in the Potomac.
30 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
##Zachary showed his dad how it’s done on the Magothy this winter. WTG, Zachary!
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Matt caught the fish of a lifetime – a 52-incher – in the Rappahannock, on Christmas eve. Th epic pic he and his dad got before releasing the fish was a Christmas present that will never be forgotten!
##Kenny enjoyed a solid crappie bite in the upper reaches of the Bay even as winter set in.
##Mike Gombert closed out 2021 with this final 42-incher, trolled up on an umbrella rig in the Choptank for a quick pic and release.
##Steve jigged up a 49-incher at the mouth of the Potomac — on 20-pound test, no less!
##Dennis got a monster rock in the Potomac, stretching the tape to 48 inches.
##Mike McGuire, Lou Gearhart, and Jeff Avery went fishing on the Potomac and W-O-W — 79.9 pounds, confirmed on the scale! Check out their YouTube at Po Cats.
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 31
Reader Photos
presented by
Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.
##Tom Czajkowski had a feisty largemouth and Rich Lehr a competitive smallmouth, finishing off the boating season at Prettyboy Reservoir.
##Live spot produced this 31-incher for Justin, while fishing aboard the Lady Katy.
##Brad enjoyed hooking into three blue cats topping 30 inches, fishing cut menhaden in Still Pond.
##The Van Dyke crew enjoyed Thanksgiving fishing in the best of ways.
##Seth got in on the catfish action off Pooles Island while soaking cut bait on bottom.
##Seth and his dad found the stripers biting near Worton Creek, casting jigs and jerkbaits to the shoreline.
32 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow
Aquasport 224 Bay: Break Out the Jigs
T
hose of us who went to the new Chesapeake Bay Boat Show in Timonium, MD, this winter enjoyed a number of pleasant surprises: tons of new boats to check out, lots of happy boaters looking for a new ride, awesome how-to fishing seminars, plus free and easy parking. But one of the best surprises one could enjoy was meeting the Aquasport 224 Bay. Immediately after stepping aboard, you’re hit with where’s-my-rod urges and need-to-cast desires. Deck layout is going to be the big attraction for light tackle anglers. Most of the boat forward of the console is dedicated to the forward elevated casting deck, which has room for multiple anglers to swing their rods without hooking each other in the ear. No doubt the 224 Bay benefits greatly in this regard from its 8’6” beam, which is several inches wider than some competitors in this class and makes for noticeably more deck space. Stowage compartments in the wings have integrated lighted rod lockers with locking hatches, there’s an integrated mounting flat for your trolling motor, and the center compartment is dedicated to an insulated fishbox that’s got more than enough room
to house a pair of keeper cobia. Added bonus: there’s a forward livewell under the console seat. The stern incorporates an elevated casting deck as well, which is laid out more or less like many bay boats with fold-down jump seats on either side of a lighted 20-gallon livewell, plus stowage compartments aft. A detail about both of those livewells that shouldn’t go unnoticed: Aquasport adds a plexi cap under the hatch to prevent slosh-out, a nice touch that many builders don’t bother with. Speaking of nice touches, the leaning post has four rocket launchers across the back, there are four flush-mount stainless-steel rodholders on either side of the console, pop-up cleats and a stainlesssteel rubrail are standard fare, and even blue underwater LED lighting is on the standard features list. The one cost-adding option we’d call a must-have is the raw water washdown. As far as construction goes, the 224 Bay is built like other Aquasports, with a layer of Kevlar reinforcement in the hull, stainless-steel hardware, and a urethane foam-injected stringer grid. While poking through the boat we noted that hatches dogged down securely, large ones came
See our video review of the Aquasport 224 at youtube.com/fishtalkmagazine
Quick Facts LOA: 22’4” Beam: 8’6” Displacement: 2450 lbs. Draft (hull): 11” Transom Deadrise: 20 degrees Fuel Capacity: 60 gal. Max. Power: 250 hp
up on twin gas-assist struts or friction hinges, and none flexed or creaked when walked on. Note that the Aquasport comes with a limited lifetime hull warranty. What about on-the-water performance? Well shucks, we just can’t speak to it since we saw the boat on dry land, but if we get a ride in the future, we’ll be sure to post a sea trial update. In the meantime, the best way to assess just how well the 224 Bay runs and rides is to take one for a spin for yourself — which is exactly what we’d suggest in any case, if a 22-foot bay boat designed to maximize light tackle fishability is what you’re hunting for. Area Dealer Tradewinds Marina, Middle River, MD (410) 335-7000 or tradewindsmarina.com FishTalkMag.com March 2022 33
Hot New Fishboats
Release 210 RX
The Fishin’ Prescription
W
hen it comes to boats, size matters. The weird thing is, you can get on two different boats of the exact same length and beam from two different builders, and one can feel tiny while the other feels huge. Case in point: the Release 210 RX. Step aboard this boat without first looking at the specs, and you could swear it was really a 23-footer. The first reason why the 210 RX seemed so bodacious when we jumped aboard was the upgrade hard top package surrounding the console. The console itself is on the large side, but more importantly, the top on this boat integrated a three-sided enclosure at the helm. Finding this kind of protection on a 21-foot center console is rare and will be much appreciated when
34 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
the early spring or late fall bite is going off. The console’s size also makes for an exceptionally large head compartment, which was easy to get in and out of. Wait a sec — doesn’t utilizing a larger console make for less deck space? Well, sure. But Release recoups the investment with several smart design touches. Walk into the bow, and you’ll note that there are flanking seats (with stowage boxes underneath) rather than U-shaped or wrap-around seating. This means you can walk all the way up to the peak of the bow and cast or work a fish without a forward seat getting in your way. Or, ditch the seat cushions and you can use the flanking seats as forward casting decks. The stern arrangement is rather unusual for a boat of this nature, as well. In fact, it’s more similar to what
Quick Facts LOA: 20’8” Beam: 8’6” Displacement: 2500 lbs. Draft (hull): 1’2” Transom Deadrise: 20 degrees Fuel Capacity: 68 gal. Max. Power: 200 hp
you’ll see on many bay boats as opposed to deep-V center consoles. Three individual transom seats have flip-down backrests that allow you to convert the seating into an elevated aft casting platform. Or flip the seat bottoms up, and you get access to a 15-gallon livewell and more stowage compartments. Ready for the list of additional angling accoutrements? Four flushmount gunwale rodholders come standard along with a raw water washdown, there are under-gunwale racks on both sides, a Simrad Go9 XSE sits at the helm (exchanging for a Garmin is optional), coaming bolsters ring the
cockpit, and there’s a fishbox in the foredeck. There are also a few non-fishy but still important standard features included on this boat that many other manufacturers would charge extra for, like trim tabs, a Fusion RA70 stereo with four speakers, a Simrad RS20 VHF radio, and hydraulic steering. This is one of the new boats we discovered at the Chesapeake Bay Boat Show, so alas, we weren’t able to put it through any on-the-water paces. That said, Yamaha has a performance report (and in our experience their reports are dead-on accurate) on a slightly older version of this model which shares the same specifications, and with a F150 they pegged a 4500-rpm cruising speed at 31.7 mph and top-end at 42 mph. Best efficiency came at 4000 rpm and 26.1 mph, when the boat got 3.9 mpg. And if you want a bit more juice, the 210 RX is rated to take an additional 50 horses on the transom. What size boat is best for your specific needs? That’s a call only you can make. But one thing is for sure: step aboard the
Area Dealer Maryland Boat Sales, Middle River, MD (410) 574-3988 or mdboatsales.com.
Release 210 RX and you’ll wonder how some other boats make the same size feel so darn small, while this one feels so darn big.
Terra Wind
RVing on the River
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e’ve seen people fish from some fairly nutty contraptions, but we have yet to see a 41,000-pound, six-wheel motor coach that you can drive to the lake… and then drive across the lake. Until now. The Terra Wind is a custom amphibious RV that can hit 80 mph on the open road and seven knots while afloat. In addition to its pair of “rapid deploy sponsons” this king of the road packs twin 19-inch bronze props in a pair of aft tunnels, joystick-controlled rudders, bilge pumps, and a windlass. One gripe: the fishfinder is optional — c’mon, man! Built by an outfit called Cool Amphibious Manufacturers International in Bluffton, SC, the specific model you see here costs a mere $1.2 mil. Visit camillc.com for more info, and if you get one of these things, please, please, please can we go for a ride???
For more fishboat reviews, visit: FishTalkMag.com/fishboat-reviews FishTalkMag.com March 2022 35
##This fat spring white fell to a grass shrimp on the bobber rig.
Most anglers head for tributaries with moving water as spring arrives, but tidal ponds offer unique opportunities for white perch.
T
he snow has melted, spring has sprung, and you’re ready to go fishing — WOOHOO! At this time of year most of us have yellow perch on the mind, since the “ring perch” run first in the tributaries and March is often a prime time to target them. Look instead to tidal ponds,
By Staff however, and you can tap into a different but no less attractive early spring fishery: mega-monster white perch. Like the yellows, when white perch get ready to spawn the first arrivals are the largest of the year. And it’s true that March is a bit early, even for these fish, in many tidal ponds. But if you go ##The later in the spring it gets, the bigger the stringer but the smaller the average size of the fish.
36 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
fishing before the crowds arrive, you’ll discover that those monster whites will often be found a solid month ahead of the big numbers of perch. You want to catch fish after fish? Then hit the tidal ponds in April. You want to catch a half dozen or so in the 12-plus inch class, and maybe catch the largest white perch you’ve ever seen? March is the time.
Pick Your Pond
Countless tidal ponds up and down the shores of the Chesapeake have a spring white perch run. Some have cuts or creeks connecting them to the Bay, but many have little more than a trickle running through a storm drain offering the perch entry. Yet still they come. Those that have a trickle of freshwater feeding them from the other end are best, and most will be just a few feet deep from shore to shore. How should you choose which one to try? Again, they’re literally countless on both eastern and western shores and we certainly can’t list them all here. In this case, a combination of Google Maps and
your local tackle shop is the best recommendation. Look for those ponds that appear on Google Maps to be just barely separated from the Bay or a tributary, or which have a visible connection no larger than a one-lane road. Then, ask around at the shops. Put two and two together and you’ll have your spots. We’ll call out Deep Pond at BeverlyTriton Park and Blackwalnut Creek as examples here, not because they’re particularly unusual or exclusive spots, but because they offer ideal examples of what to look for. While we wouldn’t encourage anyone to drive for hours to hit either of these bodies of water, we would encourage you to look at them on Google, and find the similar looking tidal pond in your neck of the woods.
Pondering Tactics
When there are tons and tons of seven-inchers next month, you can toss spinners or jigs and catch your fill. But in March the fish are fewer and farther between. Stand on the bank and cast ‘till your arms are sore and sure, you should hook into a fish or three. But fishing bait generally proves far more effective. Choosing the bait once again differs from April. At that time, grass shrimp are often the only game in town. Early on, however, night crawlers can be shockingly effective. Yet for some inexplicable reason, other days it is in fact the grass shrimp that do the trick. The bottom line? Bring both, fish multiple lines, see which gets the bites, and switch over accordingly. Standard-issue tactics are to fish a bottom rig with number-six hooks and a bobber rig suspending a shad dart two to three feet down. First, the bottom rig: cast out with one hook baited with crawlers and the other with shrimp, lean the rod up on the old “Y” stick, and leave it alone until the tip jiggles. If it doesn’t get any bites for half an hour or more, pull it in and freshen the baits. But also be sure to switch their position. If you had worm on the bottom and shrimp up top, on the next cast make sure it’s shrimp on the bottom and worm up top. Yes, it will make a difference some days. While the bottom rig soaks, bait your dart rig with one or the other offering, cast it out as far as possible, and then work the bobber back as slowly as hu-
##Early in the season is when you’ll get the whoppers!
manly possible. Don’t just reel, but jiggle your rod tip ever so slightly so that the bobber bounces and quivers the tiniest bit. After fan-casting the area twice with no bites, switch the bait out. By the time you’ve tried both baits it will probably be time to check the bottom rig again. If either of your rigs gets hit, shift your focus to it for a while. If the bottom rig gets a bite while it’s leaning and you don’t get to it very quickly, you’ll likely miss the fish. But you’ve just gathered intel — for the next 15 or 20 minutes, let the bobber rig drift in the wind while you hold the other rod, ready to set the hook. On the other hand, if your bobber goes down once or twice ignore the bottom rig and focus on the float. If you re-set the bottom rig a couple of times and have fan-casted the bobber four or five times all around, it’s usually time to move on and try another spot. That said, tide will have an impact. There are days when nothing bites for a couple of hours and then all the sudden the fish turn on. If you’re at a spot you know has produced in the past, it may be wise to wait out a tidal change. One note about the bottom rig: many of the tidal ponds have algae growth, sticks, leaves, and other detritus lining the bottom. Try not to drag the rig across the bottom or you’ll likely get fouled or snagged. Instead, after a cast sit the rod down with tension on the line while dragging the weight minimally. And when it’s time to check the bait, hold your rod tip high and reel quickly to avoid hooking into all the goop and garbage. Remember, spending a March day (at least, an early or mid-March day),
Tackle Tips W
hile you may be targeting the monsters of the perch world, these are still relatively small fish so light gear has plenty of backbone to take them on. It also gives you an advantage when it comes to casting, especially when fishing from shore. Many tidal ponds have overhanging trees that will make it necessary to side-arm cast or use rods no longer than six foot, so making long casts can be tough and light lines will offer better casting distances. Taking this into consideration, a six-foot ultralight spooled with four- or six-pound test is an ideal rig for tidal pond white perch fishing. If you’re using braid, add a two- or three-foot mono leader to your bobber line. Bobbers should be the small, quarter-size variety, and shad darts in the 1/16th of an ounce range. at a tidal pond is not a numbers game. The end of the month or early April is usually when you’ll load up the stringer. But if you get a half-dozen tidal pond white perch when most anglers think the bite is too slow to bother, that stringer of yours may well end up weighing more than the one holding twice as many fish, next month. P FishTalkMag.com March 2022 37
##You don’t have to wait for April to get in on some perch-jerking action.
By Lenny Rudow
There may still be a chill in the air, but that spring sun is shining bright and there’s plenty of fishing to be done in the DelMarVa domain at this very moment.
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ou say you’re sick and tired of sub-freezing temperatures, cold winds, and being bottled up inside? Us too — thank goodness we’ll soon be putting winter into the rearview. Some days this month it’ll be difficult to head outdoors and others it will be impossible to resist, but regardless of what the weekend brings we have the solution to all your cabin fever ills. And unsurprisingly it’s the very same solution that we find effective for solving virtually every problem in life: go fishing. (Trust us, it works!) That said, if you don’t normally engage in the early spring angling game you may be wondering where the heck you can go to (sort of) reliably bend a rod right about now. Never fear, dear angler. Again, we have the answer.
38 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Three of ‘em, actually. So pull out the long johns, freshen up the line on your reels, brew some hot coffee, and try:
The Gig: Perch Jerking, Spring Style
Every year is different, of course, but by the time March hits it should be prime time for yellow perch jerking. Early in the month look to still find the fish just downstream of the spawning grounds in holes and channels if it’s been exceptionally chilly in February, but don’t be afraid to start checking out those upriver areas after the first few warm, sunny days. And if February has been mild savvy anglers will head right for the spawning zone post-haste. The Gear: Light or ultra-light spinning gear with six- to eight-pound test line. Shad darts tipped with bull min-
now or bull minnow on bottom rigs are the most common offerings, though at times tubes and twisters will get the job done, too. The Geography: Most of the Chesapeake Bay tributaries support a yellow perch run to one degree or another. The earliest fish will be found where the river or creek bottlenecks and begins to transition from brackish to fresh. Deep holes are usually best at first, then the fish move shallower and closer to the freshwater flow at the headwaters of feeders and creeks.
The Gig: Fishing for PCBs
Not the bad kind of PCBs, we’re talking about a mix of pickerel, crappie, and bass. All three of these species bite strongly in the early spring, and the
“P” comes first because pickerel often bite best early on when the temps are still low. Just remember to slow your presentations down, and consider using live bait even if you’re a lure-lover (the live stuff does tend to work a lot better when the fish are lethargic).
##Pickerel are a great target right about now.
The Gear: Whatever you usually use for freshwater fishing, with one caveat: consider dropping leader size if you’re after crappie. They can get line-shy, and the cold spring waters hold fewer suspended solids than in the summer. As long as there hasn’t been a recent weather event where you fish, the clarity will likely be far better than you’re used to. At times like this the crappie often won’t bite well until you go all the way down to four-pound test leader. The Geography: All the usual summer freshwater suspects including reservoirs, lakes, and the Eastern Shore millponds. We have to give the millponds a special call-out, though. Early spring can be a great time to fish these waters, because they’re so shallow — in many of the millponds four feet is a “deep” spot. That means that temperatures can climb fast during a few days of sunny weather, kicking the fish into gear.
The Gig: Tautog in the Salt
If you want an oceanic adventure and see a weather window, tog will likely be the target. They bite great in the cold… sort of. Truth be told tautog are very finicky fish which bite great one
day and get lockjaw the next. The bite can change hour to hour and tide to tide, making them a frustrating target. That said, few things are as satisfying as filling the cooler on a chilly Atlantic Ocean when the spring sun is shining. The Gear: Stiff rods that can handle five to 10 ounces of weight and are long enough to pendulum up and down as the boat rocks (so the sinker doesn’t
##Tog can be toughies, but they do bite year-round and there are some head boats that specialize in targeting them. This pic was taken aboard the Morning Star out of Ocean City, MD.
get yanked up and down, something that turns the tog off). Green or white crab (out in the ocean), or peeler crab (inshore) baits are usually the ticket, though sand fleas can come in handy as well (also inshore). Two-hook Snafu rigs or top-and-bottom rigs will get the job done. The Geography: Any of the wrecks and reefs off the coast, from Delaware down through Virginia. As a rule of thumb, the colder it is the deeper you’ll want to fish, and also note that the closer you stay to shore the smaller the fish are likely to be. Tog are slow growers and don’t move around much, so the wrecks close to home often get picked over. Which of these bites is best right now? Keep your eyes on our weekly fishing reports for specifics on where and when the fish are biting. P
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FishTalkMag.com March 2022 39
Where To Where To Fish Fish presented presentedby by
PLAN YOUR ADVENTURE TODAY
By Car A
By Staff
FishandHuntMaryland.com In the second installment in our four-part series on awesome angling opportunities for those traveling the incomparable state of Maryland, we first set off to find fishing opportunities that you can drive right up to — and in some cases, even fish from your car.
re you a lifelong Marylander, have you moved here from afar, or are you just in the state for a visit? No matter why you find yourself in a Maryland state of mind, if you’re an angler, you’re in luck. This is one of the few states in the union to offer fishing opportunities so diverse that you can be fly casting in a clear mountain brook one day and trolling for tuna at the ocean canyons the next. This month, we’re going to take a peek at some rod-bending hotspots you can drive right up to from wherever your home-base may be. ##Surf fishing at Assateague can lead to some spectacular catches.
Assateague Island DRIVE down Route 50 until you hit 113, take a quick hop south to 376 east, hang a right onto 611 south, and you’ll soon reach Assateague Island. Sure, this barrier island is best known for the wild ponies romping across the sand, but there are also some utterly spectacular angling opportunities. The beach sees runs of black and red drum, bluefish, and striped bass in the spring and fall. Species like kingfish, spot, croaker, flounder, sharks, and snapper blues can be caught all season long. And in the fall even pompano and speckled sea trout sometimes show up. There are both state and national seashore parks, day-use and camping areas, and if you have four-wheel drive there’s a stretch of beach you can drive down and quite literally fish from your vehicle. If surf fishing isn’t your speed, there’s also a public launch and marina on the bay-side where fishing is permitted. You’re not likely to hook into the oce-
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anic monsters on this side of the bridge, but panfish like spot and croaker can be plentiful, and flounder are always a possibility in the bay. Fishing Tips: Surf anglers need to hone their methods to match the specific season and what’s biting; the rigs and baits you’ll catch black drum with are very different than those used for kingfish, for example. Check the reports at FishTalkMag.com for the latest intel on what’s biting and when. Savvy surf anglers, however, will almost always hit the beach with some bloodworms or, in the warmer months of the year, Fishbites artificial bloodworms. Fished on a small “doodlebug” rig (a top-andbottom rig with floats to help keep your baits away from the pesky crabs), these baits will attract hits from a wide variety of panfish. This can be helpful even when catching larger quarry is your goal since you can catch spot, slice them up, and offer a fresh meal to the predators out there.
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One more surf fishing tip everyone needs to know: while hurling your bait as far out into the ocean as possible is effective for some species at some times, don’t neglect to try fishing right behind the breakers, too. Quite often fish will feed just beyond the surf line where mole crabs and other tiny critters are being dislodged from the sand and washed around. Accommodations and Amenities: Camping at the parks is incredibly popular, so make your reservations early (state facilities have bath houses; both state and national have showers, fire rings, and picnic tables). Visit the National Park Service at nps.gov, and to find information for the state park look on the Maryland DNR website at dnr.maryland.gov. You’ll also find a full listing of the regulations and permits you need to know about on these websites. Note that the Over Sand Vehicle (OSV) area is limited to 145 vehicles at a time, and on summer weekends a line (sometimes a very long one) can form as vehicles headed for the beach have to wait for others to leave. Travelers looking for overnight accommodations will find plenty of places to stay and to eat just a few miles north of Assateague in West Ocean City and Ocean City, MD. Note that if you want to charter a boat for fishing in the ocean, rent a boat for fishing in the bay, or jump on a party boat, all of these options are
FishandH unt Maryland.c om
Dorchester County
Assateague Island
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Point Lookout also available in Ocean City. When it comes to hotels, however, again remember to make your reservations early because these places fill up during the summer months. Salisbury is also a quick drive (about 30 minutes) from Assateague, and you’ll find plenty of hotels and restaurants there as well.
Point Lookout
DRIVE down the Western Shore of Maryland to its southernmost point, and you’ll hit Point Lookout State Park. This is a fantastic place to wet a line because you’ll have a number of options all in this one place, which is bordered by the Potomac
##Point Lookout offers a great shot at redfish many seasons.
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on the west side and the Chesapeake Bay on the east side. You can pull your car over on the wide shoulder along the causeway, and lean back against it as you cast baits into the Bay right from the shoulder of the road or from the rocks lining it. This spot can produce panfish, bluefish, rockfish, and even a speckled trout or red drum here and there. Or you can pull down a bit farther, park your vehicle, and stroll down the 710-foot public fishing pier. Anglers can also try their luck fishing from the shoreline by the lighthouse (which proved to be a hotspot for puppy drum last summer) or from the jetty at the mouth of Lake Conoy (which held speckled trout and rockfish for much of the season last year). Added bonus: the piers just north of the boat ramps in Lake Conoy are reserved for crabbing, and dropping down chicken necks here is a sure-fire way to put some jimmies into your bucket. Fishing Tips: As a rule of thumb, when fishing from the causeway or the pier the best method is to cast out a top-and-bottom rig with cut bait. Many anglers will fish with surf rods here, so they can make long casts and reach deeper waters. Those searching for puppy drum or sea trout will often use lighter spinning gear and cast four- and five-inch paddle or grub tail soft plastic jigs on half-ounce heads, and then bounce them along bottom. Bait anglers focusing on these species will want to toss out chunks of soft or peeler crab or shrimp. FishTalkMag.com March 2022 41
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Where To Where To Fish Fish presented presentedby by PLAN YOUR ADVENTURE TODAY
FishandHunt Maryland . com
##The bridges are loaded with snakeheads, but you never know just what will munch on your minnow when you go bridge-hopping. Photo courtesy of Eric Packard
If you want to try your hand at crabbing at the piers, simply tie a chicken neck to a piece of kite string long enough to hit bottom. When a crab yanks it taunt, slowly pull the chicken neck up until it’s within scooping distance of your net. The crabs will move into shallow water so don’t worry about staking out a spot at the very end of one of the piers, but instead, spread your baits out as far as the room that’s available allows, and walk back and forth to monitor the action. Accommodations and Amenities: The state park has campsites, restrooms, swimming beaches, and a small store with snacks, ice, and a limited selection of bait and basic supplies. Canoe rentals are also available in Lake Conoy. More information is available on the Maryland DNR website. Point Lookout is relatively isolated, and there aren’t many amenities available in the immediate area other than a couple of nearby inns. Most travelers will be heading up to Lexington Park, about 20 minutes up the road. Once in Lexington Park, you’ll find hotels and 42 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
restaurants of all types. History buffs will want to stop at historic St. Mary’s City along the way, where you can check out several museum exhibits, historic recreations, a reproduction of the Dove (one of the ships that brought the first settlers to Maryland in 1634), and a visitor center. (Visit hsmcdigshistory. org for details). Several charter boats also run out of the area and fishermen interested in booking a charter on the Chesapeake Bay can find listings at visitstmarysmd.com.
Dorchester County Bridge Hopping
DRIVE over a bridge and non-anglers might think driving is what the bridges are for, but we anglers know better. The traditional angling endeavor of “bridge hopping,” to cast from multiple bridges in a day until locating a good bite, can be incredibly effective. And in Dorchester County between Cambridge and Hebron there are a number of small bridges with pull-offs including a few
where you can sit in the driver’s seat as you fish, if you so choose. Added bonus: many of these small bridges pass over rivers and creeks utterly riddled with snakeheads. The bridge at Key Wallace Drive over the Little Blackwater is the king of them all, although due to recent changes in the parking restrictions, at this spot you’ll have to leave your car at the lot and walk out to the causeway. Still, to get a line wet in some of the best snakehead waters in the nation it’s well worth the stroll. Next, head east to Bestpitch where Bestpitch Ferry Road crosses the Transquaking River. The water’s a bit deeper here and along with the snakes you’ll encounter bass, crappie, catfish, and perch. If you get no bites it’s no problem — jump right back in that car and drive north to Drawbridge Road where it crosses the Transquaking farther upriver. If the fish are still playing hard to get you can head for the Chicamacomico River, crossed at New Bridge Road where there’s a parking lot and boat ramp, or at Drawbridge Road where there are
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want to donate your tackle to the power company, be sure to ID where the power lines are before you let anything fly. What about the biggest fishing bridge of them all in these parts: the huge Bill Burton Fishing Pier? The retired Rt. 50 bridge over the Choptank River has long been a favorite of many anglers hoping to catch spot, croaker, stripers, and more. Unfortunately, the bridge was closed this past winter due to structural issues. We’re waiting to hear when and if it will be reopened, and will update you asap the moment we learn more. Accommodations and Amenities: This area of Dorchester County is remote, to say the least, so you’ll want to arrive
several pull-offs and the remnants of an old bridge you can walk out and fish from. Fishing Tips: During the warmer months of the year plenty of anglers will cast lures from these bridges, but in the spring and the fall a minnow suspended under a bobber is a better bet. If you’re focused on snakeheads use the biggest bull minnow you can get. For other species, smaller minnow can be a top pick. In all cases, don’t just cast way out from the middle of the bridge. Quite often you’ll catch the most fish by dropping your offering straight down or casting it parallel to the bridge and retrieving it back along the pilings. Several of these bridges also have points or shorelines within casting distance. Note: most of these bridges also have overhead power lines. Look up at them, and you’ll commonly see a splendid assortment of lures, rigs, and line. Unless you
with everything you need for the day already packed in your car. And, of course, remember to pack up everything you came with, trash included, and haul it back out at the end of the day. Cambridge, about half an hour up the road from most of these locations, represents the closest area where you’ll find numerous restaurants plus some hotels. Okay: are you ready to fill up the fuel tank, load the trunk, and hit the road? We certainly hope so. Because no matter where you may be coming from nor what your eventual destination may be, if you’ve got rods packed into that car and you’re driving in Maryland, those rods are about to get bent. #
Coming next month - By Air: uber-awesome action fisherfolks will find just a hop, skip, and jump away from Maryland airports.
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FishTalkMag.com March 2022 43
Stocked Trout Tactics 101 By Jim Gronaw
Stocked trout offer a great shot at bending the rods for beginner and expert anglers alike.
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t happens every year, somewhere between mid-March and early April. The trees bud out, the weather patterns warm, Easter flowers bloom, and the decades-old tradition of springtime trout fishing begins. Whether on opening day or shortly thereafter, the early spring trout gig usually signals the start of another fishing season for thousands of anglers in the Mid-Atlantic region. It can range from native brookies in the high-country trickles to established rainbow populations in wellmanaged streams, but for the vast majority of trout scouts, the best of the action involves the catching and consuming of the stocked rainbows, browns, and coveted golden trout provided by state DNRs and local agencies. Indeed, this is not the same experience you might expect in Montana, Colorado, or even prime Pennsylvania streams. But it does provide us with a wealth of 10- to 13inch fish that are willing to take a variety of baits and lures and give us a great ultralight tussle along the way. Throw in some harvest of tasty trout fillets and the chance for a hatchery giant, and this is what many of us have grown up knowing as “trout fishing.” Many anglers view the early trout gig as the initial rite of spring kicking off their fishing season. Others fish year-round in open waters that provide catch and release action during the winter. But to me, the spring trout gig is a chance to veer from those early hit-or-miss yellow perch runs, chain pickerel sessions, or the early panfish bite at warmer climes. Here is a game plan for success when and if the stocked trout are your target.
Tackle
Unless you expect to encounter trout that consistently exceed the 20-inch benchmark, most of your fishing can be done with ultralight spinning gear. In most 44 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
creeks and small rivers, a five- to six-foot rod will do. Teamed with a smoothdragged 1000 series reel you can cast to most reaches of smaller, moving water. Lines are often a matter of choice, but we use Trout Magnet SOS four-pound mono in light green for most of this work. Trilene extra limp four-pound mono in clear or Yo-Zuri Hybrid are other good options. A quality limp, castable line makes for more accurate casting and will propel small spinners, spoons, or other lures the distance you’ll need to catch fish. Over the years, I have found that while the shorter ultralight rods tend to work best in the confines of small streams, longer sticks shine where trout are stocked in community lakes or larger reservoirs. Currently, I like the eight-foot Wally Marshall Crappie Rods teamed with a Lews 100 Series Speed Spin for reaching stockers that tend to roam far from the shorelines of some lake venues. For greater distance on the cast I like Yo-Zuri Super Braid in 10-pound test. For a leader any quality, clear mono testing six or eight pounds will do the trick. This is a great rig for long distance casting with float rigs or delivering spoons or small crank baits. Although many trout fans like to fish manufactured dough baits of various kinds, I prefer to cast either hardware or tiny panfish-sized jigs on bobbers to coax feeding fish. As far as hardware goes, the standard issue of Kastmaster, Super Duper, and Little Cleo spoons continue to catch their share of trout just about everywhere you go. Don’t overlook the Swedish Pimples of ice-fishing fame as a “straight-retrieve” option for stockers. We’ve had our best success with tenth to eighth of an ounce spoons with gold, silver, and rainbow trout patterns showing the best results. Small spinners are another metal option. Mepps, Panther Martin, and the timehonored Joes’ Flies head the list. Sizes range from number-zero to number-two
##Elena Gronaw hefts some plussized trout from a southern Pennsylva nia venue last spring.
and gold, silver, and black blades again shine and attract these hatchery fish. Don’t be afraid to try an odd polka-dot or striped pattern as some days they will pound something offbeat. Additionally, we have found that bigger blades don’t necessarily attract bigger trout. Most trophy fish tend to choose a smaller lure than a large one, perhaps due to being conditioned to feeding on tiny, high-protein pellets at the hatchery. Which leads to my favorite artificial selection: micro jigs. I actually stumbled upon the efficiency of these tiny lures several years ago when recently stocked fish refused those traditional offerings. As a last resort, I tied on a 1/64th ounce brown hair jig and suspended it three feet below a tiny bobber. It was literally almost like magic, as one two-pound trout after another buried the bobber out of sight and followed up with twisting, high-flying acrobatics that those stocked rainbow trout are famous for. Crazy results after a disappointing earlier effort, I couldn’t help but wonder… did the miniscule hair jig resemble a feeding pellet from the hatchery? I’ll never know for sure. But truly, I have caught more quality-sized trout on micro-jigs than all other options combined. Favored sizes are 1/80th to 1/32nd of an ounce. We also look for jigs that have heavier gauge hooks than the thin wire varieties. Big trout can writhe and open up thin gauged hooks. We like to suspend them below small oval floats made by Plasti-Lite or the Rocket Bobbers in 3.75 and 4.75 inches. Traditionally, the fish will be in the top three to four feet of the water column, looking for insects or remaining conditioned to pellet feeding.
##Lenny took time out from the salt to nab a few stockers with the hair jig tactic. Editor’s note: Jim out-fished Lenny in a rather epic fashion!
Tactics
When still water ponds and lakes are initially stocked, fish tend to hold in the release area but spread out over time. In community lakes it pays to be mobile and stay on the move until you locate fish. At other times the trout will be on the move themselves and you may catch more fish by staying put. By utilizing a variety of lures locating fish should not take too long, and keep in mind that the majority of these fish are going to be active feeders. Some anglers prefer to settle in and fish Power Bait or salmon egg options on a slip-sinker bottom rig. And it is undeniable as to the effectiveness of this tactic. However, keep in mind that almost all bait-caught trout swallow those hooks and are not eligible for release. Unlike catch-and-release fishing with barbless hooks, when you reach your allotted limit, your fishing day is over. But then, for many anglers that’s what put-andtake trout fishing is all about anyway. Most bait anglers use number-10 or number-12 baitholder hooks and bury them in a small doughball of Power Bait, fishing them on the bottom. The scent and varied color combinations of these baits are great attractors to hatchery trout and remain a time-honored favorite for the catch-n-cook crowd. Yet another technique is to drift any variety of synthetic or preserved baits on floats along with the wind to cover water and pinpoint active fish. Our standout for this pattern is the Berkley Power Trout Worms in pink or orange. Using a 1/64th ounce Trout Magnet head, simply thread the two-inch worm wacky-style and suspend it below your favorite panfish bobber. Allow the wind to push your worm throughout open spaces and nooks and crannies for those hungry stockers. Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia all have an abundance of stocked trout water, both lakes and streams, to provide anglers with a six week or longer period of bountiful harvest and fast action. Check each of the state websites for specific opening or stocking dates and key in on some of the fastest action of the year.
Plan your trip to Maryland’s charter boat capital Bounded by the Chesapeake Bay to the east and Patuxent River to the west, Calvert County offers plenty of opportunities to cast a line in open water.
For charter fishing, marinas and more visit
www.ChooseCalvert.com/PropTalk22
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 45
A Towering Ocean Reef Just off the Virginia coast, the Tower Reef is a spot all area anglers need to know about.
E
stablished in 1970, the Tower Reef is one of Virginia’s early artificial reefs. Sponsored by the Tidewater Artificial Reef Association of Virginia (TARAV), this circular fish haven is now part of the official State reef program administered by the Virginia Marine Resources Commission (VMRC). It’s no problem finding the site. Just steer towards the towering Chesapeake Light because the reef is about a half mile west-southwest of the tower. The first structure placed in the fish haven was an old menhaden trawler. Planned additional reefs for the Tower Reef were tires, landing craft, and other materials. There are actually two reef sites to fish. The other is the massive light tower. There are also a number of charted and uncharted wrecks and obstructions south and southwest of the charted reef boundary. Resources to scout bottom structure at this reef site include the VMRC grid drawing, narrative for the fish haven, and a 2010 side-scan sonar report. Also available are the Navionics Chart
By Wayne Young ##Location of Tower Reef, bearing 250-degrees true about 1500 yards from the Chesapeake Light Tower.
Viewer sonar charts and community layer, diver underwater videos, and the BAG Color Shaded Relief image available using the Bathymetric Data Viewer (BDV). Armchair scouting using the aforementioned resources reveals several broad, rough mounds. Although conditions change over time, the depiction seen here is approximately representative of existing conditions. The western half of the fish haven straddles one of the mounds. The
eastern half lies on the east side of the mound down into a trench, almost a ravine, between two mounds. This bathymetry would be expected to provide interesting hydrodynamic interactions with current flows, which should favor predator foraging and fishing. The Light Tower is in the middle of the eastern mound. Chesapeake Light has a massive underwater structure. Diver videos posted on YouTube provide a closeup view of its heavily biofouled tubular structure. There’s a large, dense mussel bed spread out across the bottom beneath and around the tower in addition to some sandy areas. Multiple species of fish are shown in the video on the mussel bed and suspended under the structure. Schools of fish are shown at the corners where multiple tubular supports intersect. Although there are some pipes or tubular support pieces lying on the bottom, there is little else to snag tackle other than the mussel shells and the structure itself. The tower is a good place to start before taking on the spread-out, irregular, rugged artificial structure in the fish haven. Each leg of the tower provides a visual reference that facili##General layout of reef sites within the Tower Reef boundary. Screenshots from NOAA Bathymetric Data Viewer.
46 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
##Military and naval equipment deployed as reefs. Images were electronically stitched together from side-scan sonar excerpts. Screenshots from VMRC 2010 Sonar Report.
tates boat positioning. There’s also an uncharted obstruction or small wreck about 50 yards west-northwest of the northwest corner of the tower. The wrecks and obstructions southerly of the fish haven are all rather small. However, those in charted wreck and obstruction circles are relatively easy to find by using electronic charts as a reference to steer into the circles. Although relatively minor structures, they may attract fish. They also appear to be smoother and thus more friendly to end tackle than the more rugged and irregular materials within the fish haven. The VMRC grid and the BAG Color Shaded Relief image confirm a patchwork quilt of different materials of opportunity. TARAV, VMRC, and material donors and sponsors collectively placed thousands of tires in concrete, 100-plus pontoon sections, numerous landing craft, barges, a tug, the menhaden trawler, four drydock sections, four barges, tanks, subway cars, and miscellaneous vessels and materials. Some reefs are by themselves, some are alongside each other, and a few are stacked. The BAG montage image also shows that reef materials are in scour holes. This indicates there is considerable current flow and periodic turbulence affecting the bottom, as would be expected off the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. Trying to identify specific reef structures at Tower Reef is an exercise in frustration. The water depth at Tower Reef is below the threshold where BDV image clarity is sufficient to distinguish most reef materials by type. Electronically overlaying the grid and a screenshot of the Navionics community layer (which has a number of reef sites marked by users) is not all that helpful either. There was insufficient alignment to enable positive correlation with objects shown in the
BDV image. However, images and coordinate data from a VMRC 2010 side-scan sonar report prepared for this fish haven enables locating a few of the reefs. The tug J. B. Eskridge, sunk in 2002, is the tug at 36’53.95034 x 75’43.34989. An underwater video by diver J. K. Jenkins on YouTube explores the tug and shows her condition as a fishing reef. The wreck is a substantial structure and intact. The 2010 sonar report included excerpts for many of the individual structures, but the preparers were only able to identify a few by type. Coordinates for more of the structures in the fish haven can be obtained by consulting the sonar report, available at the VMRC website. A more complete set of coordinates for this fish haven correlated with the BDV image, albeit without specific characterization as to structure type, is contained in the Virginia Artificial Reef Guide published for the Virginia Saltwater Fishing Association (VSSA). Ultimately, the only reef identifications for which I have high confidence are the tug and the sonar report
excerpts which have coordinates for the object in the excerpt. Without local knowledge of the reef’s sweet spots or high-definition sonar scans to help identify structure, a reasonable fishing strategy would be to fish the few larger structures shown by the BDV image first, starting with the tug. The tug and other vessels and some of the tanks and subway cars are marked by icons in the Navionics community layer for those that use this technology. The accuracy is uncertain, but I’ve found that user positions tend to be reasonably close. Whether or not they got the reef type correct is an open question. If these structures don’t produce, run a ladder search pattern across the reef taking fishfinder and sonar scans until something promising shows up. Reef fish relate to structure, and so should those who want to catch them! If anchoring, there’s a lot of material to snag. Reef spacing makes it difficult to anchor just off individual structures in open water area. Consider rigging a trip line or use an expendable reef anchor or a grapple with bendable prongs, when anchoring here.
Wayne Young is the author of “Bridges Under Troubled Waters: Upper Chesapeake and Tidal Potomac Fishing Reefs,” “Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs, Voyage of Discovery,” “Phantoms of the Lower Bay,” and “Hook, Line, and Slinker.” All are available at Amazon.com, and you can find his Facebook page at Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs. FishTalkMag.com March 2022 47
Shoreline
ng i h s i F ss Ba
s r e n n i g e B r o f
beginmistake 1
By Eric Packard
h-attracting Look for these top 10 fis k down a features when you wal largemouth bass. shoreline in search of
M
y earliest memory of catching a largemouth bass is fishing from the shoreline on a small pond near my home when I was a 10-year-old living in Leavenworth, KS. I walked down to the pond carrying my Zebco 77 and found a
##The author holds up a bass caug ht next to fallen trees lining the shor e.
topwater bait hanging in a bush near the waters’ edge. I tied on the red and yellow bait and took a few casts — then caught my first largemouth bass on a topwater bite! I was hooked for life, making countless trips back to the water’s edge. Throughout my childhood and early teens most of my fishing adventures were fishing from the shore, casting my bait out to where I imagined the bass to be waiting for my offerings. Over the years I learned a lot about reading the water from the shoreline. Trees that have fallen into the water, lily pads, sand, and gravel bottoms are a few of the places where you’ll find bass. There are 10 different locations I look for bass while casting from the shoreline of a lake, pond, or river. First, I look for obvi##Fish will often hide right alongside — or even underneath of — of a tree lying in the water.
48 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
ous structure like fallen trees, large rocks, and flooded timber. Lily pads, points of land, gravel bottoms, and changes in strata, are good to fish, too. There are manmade structures as well, like boat docks, riprap, and concrete structures. Let’s examine each from a beginner’s perspective.
1. Trees When I see a tree lying in the water I do several things before taking the cast. I look at standing trees near the shoreline, note their height, and where the tree is lying in the water. I can estimate the distance it reaches into the water by looking at the other trees in the area. This helps me determine where I need to cast my bait to reach the trees’ underwater canopy. Baitfish will hide in the limbs of a tree, attracting bass that are feeding on them. Bass will also hide in the shade of the trunk of the tree or under it to ambush its prey. Wacky rigs, spinner baits, and jigs are all good choices for casting around fallen trees.
2. Overhangs Trees and brush hanging over the water will cast shadows and provide a place out of the sun for fish, which can be very important especially during summer. Remember, fish
##Points are natural fish-attracting hotspots, but you may have to probe differing sections and depths of a point to figure out where the fish are. Illustrations by Eric Packard.
don’t have eyelids so they need shade in shallow water to provide protection from sunlight as well as a break from the heat. Plus, trees, bushes, and grass along the shoreline attract insects. Another helpful tip with respect to overhanging trees: when I’m working a shoreline I look for pine trees, as they seem to attract a larger amount of insects. Insects fall into the water and attract smaller fish, like bluegill, which in turn attract feeding bass.
3. Points When approaching points of land I look for the obvious items like fallen trees, stump fields, lily pads, and any other structure bass may be using to ambush prey. Points of land also provide a quick getaway to deeper water for safety. When feeding, bass often seek out a place to dart away so as to avoid other feeding bass while managing their meal. Along with the physical features, look at wind direction and, if there is any current, which direction the water is flowing. Fish will face into the current or into the direction the wind is coming from. As bait gets pushed over a point bass simply have to rise up to eat, saving precious energy. When casting into the wind and working a bait back over the point, small spinner baits and Beetle Spins are often effective. Also try fan-casting shaky head jigs and Ned rigs, or other plastic worm rigs. Cast out and let the bait settle and work the bait back, and if you get bit, make note of how far out the bite was. This gives some idea of how deep the fish are. Take another cast out to that location and count down the bait by counting 1001, 1002, 1003, and so on. You may not know the exact depth, but when you get a bite you’ll know “X” number of seconds gets your lure to the depth where the fish are. Then you can concentrate your efforts in the same depth range at other locations around the lake. Always re-
member, when you find a pattern that results in catching fish, like counting down to a specific depth, stick with that pattern until it no longer proves effective. Points that drop off steeply or near channels will often hold bass. If you have access to topographic data for a lake it can be helpful to research those before you head out. Depending on depth, casting square billed or deepdiving crankbaits along a drop off is another good bet.
4. Dams Earthen dams with riprap at their base are another feature that may hold
fish. In winter the riprap heats up from the sun, which draws in the bait fish that attract bass. During the summer the water can be cooler due to its depth at the base of the dam (dams are normally the deepest spot in a man-made lake) or because of water flowing through a drainpipe or spillway. While fishing riprap I only use crankbaits, and I particularly like casting a crawfish-colored squarebilled crankbait. I find that when using square-billed crankbaits I get fewer snags on the rocks. Square bills will bounce erratically off the rocks, too, which can trigger bites.
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 49
Fishing For Beginners 5. Transition Zones
6. Concrete Structures
7. Spillway Discharges
It’s also good to target fish where the riprap ends and the natural shoreline starts. You would be surprised by how a simple change from rock to dirt, or for that matter any change in the strata, attracts fish. Casting a bait along the line of change or across it can generate a bite.
Concrete structures like spillways and bridge pilings are another good place to target fish. Fish will use the structure as an ambush point, and in the winter the structure heats up the surrounding water a few degrees, thanks to sunlight, and attracts fish. Casting a swimbait or a crankbait past it can generate a bite.
The downstream side of a dam spillway usually holds a few fish, too. Where the water flows out there is normally a deeper pool. This water can be cooler, attracting fish. The water here will normally flow very quickly. Cast your bait up into the flowing water and let it drift down and back out into calmer water, all the while taking line in as the bait moves, keeping the line tight. Fish will face into the flow looking for bait to come to them. I like to use wacky rig, small spinner baits, and jigs in this situation.
##Culverts below spillways are always a good spot to walk to.
8. Docks and Piers
Ponds and lakes that allow boating will normally have docks and piers. Casting plastic worms, swimbaits, small crankbaits, and spinner baits around and under them works well. Bass and other fish will use the structure for protection from the sun and/or predators. Docks and piers are often also situated near deep water, giving bass and other fish a place to hide and bolt into the deeper water to make a quick getaway. But when approaching a dock or pier always work your bait thoroughly around and under it before you venture out onto it. Any movement on the dock (including your footsteps) causes noise and vibration and could scare fish, stopping any potential bites from those that are close by.
9. Lily Pads
Another great spot to target bass from the shoreline is lily pad fields. Casting weedless topwater baits can generate a great bite. Baits like weedless frogs, weedless rigged flukes, or paddle tails work well. I like to start by casting along the edge of the lily pad field and work my bait back in a walk-the-dog pattern. If I can reach open water on the far side of the pads I will cast there too, then bring the bait to the pads. A lot of the bites will come from the leading edge of the pads. Bass will hide
50 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
##Docks, points, trees, spillways, and rip-rap are all good places to look for largemouth bass. Illustrations by Eric Packard.
along them to dart out and ambush their prey. But don’t discount the blowup you may get as you move your bait across the pads and then drop it off the edges, too. Lily pads are
translucent, and as your bait moves across them, their shadow can be seen from below. The vibration your bait generates as it moves across the water and the lily pads can be heard by bass also.
##Cast beyond and then retrieve parallel to piers; also try casting at an angle to them. Sometimes, skipping a lure underneath of a pier works well, too. Try all these tactics before stepping onto the pier, which will likely spook any fish hiding around it.
10. Stump Fields Casting around stump fields can be a blast. There are days that I have caught well over 30 bass casting a Ned rig into a stump field. Stumps provide shade, protection from predators, and forage for bass. Fishing square billed crankbaits, spinner baits, Ned rigs and jigs produces fish in this structure. One last tip: any of these spots can be better accessed while wearing waders. Wearing waders will allow you to reach locations you wouldn’t otherwise be able to fish. Visit FishTalkMag.com and check out “Wade Fishing Tips” for more helpful information on how to put them to work. Remember, a cast not taken is a fish not caught. Take the cast! I hope to see you out on the water or fishing from on the shoreline. P For more fishing tips for beginners, visit: fishtalkmag.com/tag/ fishing-beginners
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 51
C hes a pe a k e
and
M id - Atl a n tic
Fishing Forecast 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 fishing Friday byreports noon—just in time for your weekend fishing adventures.
Coastal Spring is coming! Spring is coming! Our angling options are about to explode, which can make March a tough month, especially early on, as the anticipation of multiple incoming bites makes it very hard to live with limited options. For much of this month we’ll have to be content with one of two main possibilities in Delaware and Maryland: fishing the coastal bay tribs for perch, and hitting the wrecks and reefs for tog. Virginia anglers may have another temptation to handle if the weather cooperates, in the form of puppy drum and specks in the Virginia Beach inlets. Last season that bite started up exceptionally early in the season, so if the weather warms
up quickly don’t be afraid to take some exploratory trips. Later in the month it’ll be time to start flounder hunting. Although the catch is usually on the thin side until April hits (two or three fish can be a good day), the crowds will be absent and dedicated flounder-pounders working the inlets from Ocean City down through Virginia can get in some early licks.
Freshwater
Holy cow people, it’s all about to bust loose — perch runs up the tribs, crappie and bass in the lakes, and of course trout. Lots and lots of trout. During this month hatchery fish will get planted throughout our region by the thousands ##Those shad will begin arriving this month, providing tons of action in many upriver areas.
and in some cases by the tens of thousands a day. Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia all maintain good stocking schedule web pages (Google is your friend) and you can get those hatchery fish on a stringer with ease. Jars of Berkley Trout Nuggets will be flying off the tackle shop shelves, but casting spinners and float-n-flies will do the job quite well, too. If you haven’t gone after stockers before, flip back to page 44 and check out our freshwater correspondent Jim Gronaw’s “Stocked Trout Tactics 101” article. What about the region’s lakes, ponds, and reservoirs? Expect the bass and crappie to start shifting from deepwater haunts to ledges and drop-offs closer to pre-spawn staging areas. But remember that swings in the weather will have significant impacts on the bite at this time of year, and if you can time your fishing trips to follow a several-day warming trend, your chances of success will rapidly climb. Upriver areas should also see the start of the shad runs later this month, but that will likely hit peak action in April. Keep your eye out for next month’s edition of FishTalk if you want to tap into this fishery, because it will have a feature dedicated to the how-to/where-to of catching spring shad.
Way North
Expect this month to begin with yellow perch, and end with white perch. Both will be found in deep waters near Perryville, the channel between the Route 95 and Route 40 bridges, and similar areas at first, prior to their runs up into
52 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
the spawning zones. Think: minnow for the yellows, grass shrimp or bloodworms for the whites. All the while catfish will be available for anyone dropping cut bait or chicken livers into the channels and holes. Remember, these fish have been swelling in size year by year — you might well hook into one as big as a trophy rock!
Upper Bay
The perch runs are coming! The perch runs are coming! By the time this edition hits the streets we’ll likely be hearing about yellow neds snapping up minnow on darts or bottom rigs, and by the time the month ends it’s just as likely we’ll be hearing about white perch chomping on grass shrimp. The tribs and the salt ponds that support runs will soon be hopping, folks! If you’re not familiar with targeting the perch runs just hop on over to FishTalkMag.com, and plug “perch” into the search box. You’ll find a bunch of articles (some with videos) covering all the bases.
##Yellow perch are the harbinger of spring, and March is prime time for catching ‘em.
Middle Bay Again, we say: The perch runs are coming! The perch runs are coming! The one item Middle Bay anglers need to keep in mind is that in this zone the best yellow perch
action on the Western Shore is ancient history, and while you can have a good day here or there you’ll almost always catch more fish if you travel north or south, or cross the bridge and fish the east side.
Visit us online for our Weekly Fishing Reports Current reports will be published on our website every Friday by noon, just in time for your weekend fishing adventures. FishTalk’s weekly fishing reports are presented by:
Scan this QR code using your phone’s camera or visit: fishtalkmag.com/fishing-reports FishTalkMag.com March 2022 53
Fishing Forecast
Tangier, Pocomoke, and Lower Shore
The Patuxent is an exception to some degree, but if you want to load up on yellows from a Middle Bay trib, your best bet will be heading for places like Red Bridges, Hillsboro, Greensboro, etc.
The sounds and the Bay may still be in a wintery mode as this edition reaches you, but the tributaries will be in prime form. Heading up the Nanticoke, Wicomico, and Pocomoke can produce epic numbers of perch right about now. Better yet, crappie, bass, and pickerel will all be on the prowl as well. Got minnow?
Lower Bay
The west side of the Bay holds plenty of spring perch action once you get from the Potomac south and the shad runs should start up this month, too. By the end of March these fish will in all likelihood be in full stride, as the run tends to lead northern areas by a week or two. Fredericksburg, Fletchers, and other traditional haunts had hickories moving through last year most of the month. Those who want to feel a much heavier bend in their rods will be on many of the same tributaries, but instead will drop cut bait like gizzard shad or bunker down to the bottom in deep channels and holes. Yes we’re talking about catfish, and yes some real monsters get caught as the weather begins warming up. Expect the James, Rappahannock, and Potomac to produce the highlights.
W’S RUDO E E A K S A P C H E
Way South and VA
This zone of the Bay is the first to wake from its winter slumber, and if this year is anything like 2021, it’ll happen in a big way this month. Will we get the same early rush from puppy drum? That’s impossible to predict, but remember that last March the inlets, the lower Elizabeth, and Willoughby Bay were producing some absolutely fantastic catches with a few specks also in the mix. We could also see
Visit our current fishing reports to get the latest intel in a blink via this cell phone camera QR code link.
RUDOW ’S A N D
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the tog snap back into action at just about any time; keep an eye on the water temps at the CBBT, and when they get back into the 50s get some crab baits and head on out there. Black drum may also move in by the end of the month, too, and up the tribs perch, shad, and freshwater species should be hitting as well. ROCKFISH – Why haven’t we said a darn thing about rockfish in this forecast? As we go to print it appears as though anglers will be able to catch and release rock in the Bay this month, followed by a month closed to all fishing, catch and release included, in April. However, there are some additional gear and location restrictions in effect. And to say that the rules and regs have been fluid and fast-changing recently would be an understatement. March should provide solid action on the Bay, but if you want to try C & R rock this month we’d advise carefully checking the MD/VA/PRFC’s latest regulations, as applicable, before wetting any lines.
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Tips & Tricks
When fishing for early spring crappie in former gravel pits and on the Eastern Shore, you may encounter clear but rust-colored waters. This is the perfect time and place to reach for your gold in-line spinners, like the classic Mepps Aglia, which are often highly effective in these stained ponds and lakes.
When crappie fishing with minnow always choose the smallest bobber that will keep your offering afloat. Crappies commonly mouth the bait and play with it a bit before eating, and if they feel lots of resistance from a large float they can’t pull under, they’re likely to bail.
On small boats with electric motors, slow-trolling tiny tubes at a snail’s pace will prove a killer technique. Try tubes with lots of contrast like blue/white or red/ white, and keep the rod in your hand while giving it a twitch every few seconds. You may be shocked at the results.
Yellow perch are on the menu this spring? Minnow on a dart is a classic offering; savvy anglers will choose to use the smallest dart possible which you can reach and feel bottom with.
Remember that those big yellow perch with sagging bellies are egg-laden females. Consider keeping the smaller nine- and 10-inch fish for dinner, and letting the larger ones go.
Anytime you see pilings in a tidal trib in five or more feet of water, be sure to check them out. Especially where pilings are hit by current in deep spots, yellow perch tend to congregate.
FishTalkMag.com March 2022 55
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BALTIMORE January March February
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AM -0.121 0.7 6 AM342.6-9 -0.3 PM 1.0 -30.030 PM372.0
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AM -0.7 -21 AM 18 12:19 01:49 AM01:54 0.1 -0.1 -3 101 18 AM 03.318 06:01 AM AM08:27 1.2 0.734-0.5 21 07:27 PM -15 F 12:18 PM Tu 02:42 F 01:59 PM 0.0 -0.5 -15 -9 PM 2.4 73 PM PM08:42 1.2 1.037 30 ○ 08:0006:38 AM -0.6 -18 12:5502:32 AM 19 -0.1 -3 0 02:19 AM 0.1 19 AM 3.219 98 06:4609:02 AM 0.734-0.5 21 08:09 AM PM 1.3 PM -15 Sa 01:04 W 03:17 -0.3 -9 -6 Sa 02:49 PM 0.0 PM 2.4 73 07:1209:20 PM 0.937 27 08:37 PM 1.2 AM -0.5 -15 01:3103:12 AM 20 -0.2 -6 20 0 02:50 AM 0.0 AM 3.120 94 07:3409:38 AM 0.837-0.4 24 08:54 AM PM 1.4 PM -12 Su 01:54 Th -0.2 -6 03:42 PM03:52 0.0 PM -32.4Su 73 07:49 PM 0.834 24 09:18 PM09:58 1.1 AM -0.4 -12 02:1003:53 AM 21 -0.2 -6 03:22 21 AM AM 0.0 AM 02.821 85 08:26 0.837-0.3 24 09:40 AM10:14 1.5 PM -9 02:48 M PM F -0.1 -3 04:40 PM04:29 0.1 PM 02.4M 73 08:29 PM 0.730 21 10:01 PM10:38 1.0
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0 01:50 AM AM 0.0 21 05:10 21 70 08:1711:12 AM AM 1.3
ft
2AM 12:54 0.5 0 2 15 12:48 0.0 AM 07:32 2 12:05 AM 01:55 1.0 AM 53 AM 0.8 -0.524 -15 05:5505:30 Su W 12:28 PM 07:54 -0.4 W 11:50 AM 0705:28 PM PM -0.3 1.0 -9 30 ● PM PM 1.3 3311:42 PM PM 1.2 0.037 ●0 06:5306:38 3AM 01:50 15 01:27 12:49 AM 1204:50 AM AM 0.0 0.5 0 3 0.0 8 3 08:26 AM 3411:11 AM AM 0.9 -0.427 -12 06:4506:26 AM 02:49 1.1 M Th 12:43 PM 5206:03 PM PM -0.2 1.0 -6 30 Th 01:21 PM 08:49 -0.3 07:21 PM 08 PM 1.1 34 07:35 PM 1.2 12:21 AM 0.0 0 4AM 02:45 9 AM 4205:32 AM AM -0.1 0.5 -3 4 0.0 4 01:31 09:18 15 02:03 AM 1711:51 AM AM 0.9 -0.427 -12 07:3507:21 AM 03:41 1.1 Tu F 01:36 PM 4006:37 PM PM -0.2 1.0 -6 30 F 02:12 PM 09:43 -0.2 45 PM 1.1 34 08:1408:02 PM PM 1.2 12:59 AM -0.1 -3 5AM 03:40 0 02:12 AM 1306:15 AM AM -0.1 0.5 -3 5 02:36 0.0 5 10:10 15 AM 0312:31 AM PM 1.0 -0.430 -12 08:2308:16 AM 04:32 1.2 W Sa 02:30 PM 3307:10 PM PM -0.1 0.9 -3 27 Sa 03:03 PM 10:36 -0.1 25 PM 1.0 30 08:5208:42 PM PM 1.1 01:36 AM -0.1 -3 6AM 04:37 1 02:54 AM 4507:01 AM AM -0.2 0.6 -6 6 03:07 0.0 6 11:00 18 09:12 AM 5301:14 AM PM 1.1 -0.334 AM 05:23 1.2 Th -9 09:11 Su 03:25 PM 3507:45 PM PM 0.0 0.9 0 27 Su 03:55 PM 11:31 0.0 08 PM 0.9 27 09:3009:22 PM PM 1.0 02:14 AM -0.2 -6 7AM 05:34 2 AM 7 03:38 2107:51 AM AM -0.2 0.6 -6 7 -0.1 11:51 18 03:37 10:10 AM 4602:02 AM PM 1.2 -0.237 AM 06:14 1.2 F -6 10:00 M 04:22 4708:21 PM PM 0.1 0.8 3 24 M 04:52 PM PM 0.1 56 PM 0.8 24 10:0910:03 PM PM 0.9 12:26 8 06:34 02:52 AM -0.2 -6 3 04:24 AM 8 11:10 0308:45 AM AM -0.2 0.6 -6 8 AM -0.1 18 04:10 AM Sa 4402:56 AM PM 1.3 -0.240 AM 12:41 1.2 -6 10:49 Tu 05:20 PM 0508:59 PM PM 0.1 0.8 3 24 Tu 05:53 PM 07:04 0.2 10:47 ◐ 51 PM 0.7 21 10:52 PM PM 0.8 01:23 9 03:33 AM -0.2 -6 4 AM AM 07:37 0.0 9 05:14 5409:44 AM AM -0.3 0.7 -9 9 21 04:48 Su PM AM 01:34 1.2 4703:58 PM PM 1.3 -0.140 -3 11:4112:12 07:53 W 06:20 PM ◐ W 06:58 PM 0.3 2109:41 PM PM 0.1 0.7 3 21 11:35 PM 11:40 PM 0.7 02:22 10 08:41 04:18 AM -0.3 -9 5 5210:48 AM AM 0.6 0.818 24 05:34 10 06:06 AM AM 0.0 PM 5605:05 AM PM -0.3 0.0 -9 10 M PM 02:29 1.2 0 12:3701:13 Th 07:17 PM 5510:29 PM PM 1.3 0.640 18 Th 08:01 PM 08:43 0.3 29 PM 0.1 3 ◐ 03:19 11 09:43 05:08 AM -0.3 -9 11 12:27 AM 6 5811:56 AM AM 0.7 0.921 27 12:35 AM AM 0.7 07:00 Tu 0706:16 AM PM -0.3 0.0 -9 11 AM 03:26 0.0 0 06:30 F 02:09 PM 0411:24 PM PM 1.3 0.540 15 F 01:3708:11 PM 09:32 1.1 PM 27 PM 0.1 3 08:58 PM 0.3 04:14 12 10:39 06:04 AM -0.4 -12 12 01:20 AM 7 0301:04 AM PM 0.7 0.921 27 01:34 AM AM 0.7 07:52 W 04:23 2107:27 AM PM -0.3 0.1 -9 12 3 07:34 Sa 02:59 PM AM 10:20 0.0 11 PM 1.3 40 Sa 02:3809:01 PM PM 1.1 19 PM 0.1 3 09:48 PM 0.3 05:04 12:26 AM 0.5 15 13 11:29 8 02:11 AM 13 08:41 0507:03 AM AM 0.8 -0.524 -15 03:33 AM AM 05:15 0.8 Th 30 09:40 2902:11 AM PM -0.3 1.0 -9 13 Su 03:43 PM AM 11:07 0.0 3 04:3509:45 1208:34 PM PM 1.3 0.140 Su PM PM 1.1 11:31 PM 0.3 05:50 01:31 AM 0.5 15 14 9 08:03 03:01 AM AM -0.5 -15 14 09:2712:14 AM AM 06:03 0.8 14 F 34 04:28 03:13 PM 1.1 M 04:21 PM AM 11:51 0.0 09:35 PM 0.0 0 10:4110:27 M 05:25 PM PM 1.1
M A R C H 2022 T I d E S
4204:08 AM AM 0.0 7 10:31 AM
02:34 AM 0 09:02 AM 04:11 PM 10:30 PM
03:36 AM 1 10:00 AM 05:04 PM 11:20 PM
0.5 -0.6 1.1 0.0 0.5 -0.6 1.1 0.0
06:33 15 15 12:54 03:48 AM 15 10:11 -18 12:09 AM AM 0.3 15 Sa 34 05:17 AM 06:46 0.9 Tu 04:57 PM 0 11:3511:06 Tu AM PM 0.0 06:08 PM 1.2 15 -18 34 0
dIFFEREnCEs
AM -0.2 -6 02:5304:37 AM 22 -0.2 -6 03:58 22 AM AM 0.0 AM -32.622 79 09:23 0.837-0.2 24 10:30 AM10:52 1.6 PM -6 03:49 Tu PM Sa 05:09 0.0 3 Tu 0 05:43 PM PM 0.1 09:14 11:22 0.627 18 10:49 PM 0.9 AM 2.3 70 AM 23 -0.2 AM -30.0-6 04:40 0 03:43 23 AM05:27 0.0 AM 0.8372.323 24 11:23 PM 70 10:27 AM11:35 1.6 W PM Su 05:53 0.1 6-0.1W 3 06:51 PM -3 04:54 PM 0.2 ◑ 10:08 PM 0.524 15 11:43 PM 0.9 AM 2.3 70 12:10 AM 24 24 AM 00.1-6 05:32 3 04:40 -0.2 AM06:22 0.0 24 11:37 AM PM 64 M 0.8372.124 12:22 PM12:22 1.5 Th 06:04 PM PM 0 0.1 90.0Th 3 08:00 PM 0.2 06:41 11:10 PM 0.521 15 AM 2.3 70 01:04 AM 25 25 AM07:24 0.9 -0.3 -9 12:44 AM 00.225 6 05:44 PM AM01:17 0.0 0.9371.927 06:37 PM 58 12:48 Tu F 07:13 PM PM07:35 1.5 0.2 90.0F6 01:28 PM 0 ◑ ◑ 09:05 PM 0.3 AM 2.3 70 12:2002:05 AM 0.5 0.315 26 26 AM 9 06:50 AM08:32 0.9 AM 21 26 01:49 -0.3 PM 01.8-9 07:54 55 AM02:19 0.1 Sa 01:58 PM W 0.9 27 PM340.1Sa 02:40 3 08:18 PM08:36 1.4 PM 0.2 6 10:05 PM 0.3 9 AM 2.415 27 73 01:3003:11 AM 0.5 27 AM210.327 9 07:55 AM09:41 1.0 AM -0.3 -9 02:56 PM 1.7 52 09:16 AM 0.0 Su 03:01 PM Th 03:29 0.9 0 27 PM 3 09:15 PM PM09:40 1.4 0.2340.1Su 6 03:52 10:58 PM 0.3 9 AM 2.4 73 02:35 AM 0.6 18 28 28 04:19 AM 0.228 6 08:57 AM AM10:49 1.1 -0.3 24 -9 03:59 PM 55 M 03:56 PM AM04:40 0.0 F 0.9 01.827 10:30 PM 0.0 0 10:06 PM M 04:58 PM10:44 1.4 0.134 3 11:46 PM 0.3 9 AM 0.6 2.518 76 29 05:26 PM 0.229 6 AM11:52 1.2 -0.3 24 -9 04:58 PM 55 Sa AM05:48 0.0 1.0 01.830 11:36 PM 0.0 0 Tu 05:55 PM 1.4 11:47 0.134 3
-0.2 AM 0 -0.1-6 1.0 2.530 AM 0.049 0 PM -0.2 0.7 32.321 PM 27 -0.2 AM 00.0-6 1.0 2.330 AM 0.149 PM -0.2 3 0.6 6 18 27 AM 2.4-6 -0.2 AM 1.0 00.130 PM 0.2462.2 6 PM -0.218 0.6 6
AM 76 0.6 2.518 12:29 AM06:28 0.2 PM 90.130 3 30 -0.3 -9 05:52 AM12:50 1.3 PM 58 Su 06:50 1.0271.930 W 12:34 PM -0.1 0.0 0 0 06:43 PM 1.3 37 31 12:46 01:08 AM07:24 0.2 31 06:42 AM01:43 1.4 M Th 01:27 PM07:45 0.0 07:24 PM 1.3
AM 63.0 PM40 -0.3 PM -32.3 40 AM -0.6 AM 63.1 PM43 -0.4 PM 02.4 40
High Sharps Island Light –3:47 Havre de Grace +3:11 Sevenfoot Knoll Light –0:06 St Michaels, Miles River –2:14
Low –3:50 +3:30 –0:10 –1:58
H. Ht *1.18 *1.59 *0.82 *1.08
L. Ht *1.17 *1.59 *0.83 *1.08
ftcm cm h mh m ft -0.624 -18 AM AM 0.9 16 01:33 16 04:28 3.2 -9 98 10:5008:03 AM AM -0.1 0 04:45 Tu 02:33 W 02:12 Tu PM PM 1.2 -0.537 -15 W 05:16 PM PM 1.1 61 10:50 ● 08:37 ○ 08:18 PM PM 0.1 2.5 3 76 11:21 PM PM 0.2 h
mh
m
-0.627 -18 AM AM 1.0 17 02:13 17 05:15 3.1 -9 94 11:3608:38 AM AM 0.0 0 05:30 W 03:20 Th 02:46 W PM PM 1.1 -0.534 -15 Th 05:51 PM PM 1.1 61 PM PM 0.0 2.6 0 79 11:5808:55 PM PM 0.1 ● 11:3109:26
-0.530 -15 AM AM 1.1 18 02:54 18 05:59 3.0 -9 91 12:2209:14 PM AM 0.0 -3 06:11 Th 04:05 F 03:22 F 06:27 PM PM 1.0 Th PM PM 1.0 -0.430 -12 64 10:14 PM 2.6 79 09:34 PM ○ -0.4 0 -12 AM AM 0.0 19 03:36 19 12:34 2.730 82 06:4409:50 AM AM 1.2 F PM PM -0.2 -0.3-6 Sa -3 12:32 F 04:49 -9 01:08 Sa 03:59 PM PM 0.0 PM PM 1.0 2.630 79 07:0310:14 64 06:4911:00 PM PM 1.0 -0.2 0 2.534 Sa PM PM -0.1 -0.2-3 -3 01:21 Sa 05:31 07:26 PM 0.9 67 11:47 PM 2.527 76 Su -3 67
01:2606:01 AM 6 12:00 07:47 AM 02:10 PM Su 06:14 08:02 PM
-0.1 0.0 -3 AM 1.1 2.334 PM 0.0 -0.1 0 PM 0.8 24
25
February10
1
16 11
1 26
16 11
2
17
2
17
-6 01:57 Su 04:39 Su PM PM 0.1 76 07:4110:58 PM PM 1.0
-3 02:48 M 05:23 M PM PM 0.1 08:2211:46 PM PM 0.9
Height Time Height 12:54AM 01:00AM 04:54AM -0.8E -1.2E 12:42AM 04:06AM -0.7E -1.0E 501:30AM 04:36AM 07:12AM 04:42AM 07:18AM 08:00AM 11:30AM 1.0F 0.6F 20 07:12AM 10:48AM 0.9F 0.5F ftcm cm h 12:48PM m -0.7E -0.7E ft Th cm h m ft cm 10:00AM 10:06AM 12:48PM 03:12PM 06:06PM 02:30PM 05:30PM -0.7E -0.5E W M Tu Th -0.127Slack -3 1 12:41 AM -0.4 -12 Maximum 01:26 AM 0.1 3 Maximum Slack09:30PM Slack09:06PM Maximum Sla 03:30PM 07:00PM 03:24PM 06:54PM 16 11:54PM 0.4F 1.1F 11:12PM 0.3F 0.9F 2.7 -3 82 07:14 AM 3.0 91 10:24PM 07:55 AM ◑ 2.7 82 10:18PM h m 01:26 knots m 01:58 knots PM 0.1 h m h3 m knots h m -0.134 h m-3 Tu PM -0.3h m -9 h W 01:48AM 03:42AM 0.3F 02:24AM 04:36AM 0.4F 02:42AM 05:12AM 0.6F 02:5 2.3 6 70 07:34 PM 2.6 79 08:09 PM -1.1E 2.5 76 01:42AM 01:36AM -1.0E 05:42AM -0.7E 0.7F 01:24AM 04:54AM -0.6E 0.6F 602:18AM 21 05:54AM 09:00AM -0.6E 07:00AM 09:48AM -0.5E 07:48AM 10:48AM -0.7E 08:1 05:18AM 08:00AM 05:12AM 07:54AM 08:42AM 12:24PM 1.0F 11:42AM 1.0F 03:36PM 1.4F 12:18PM 1.1F 01:30PM 05:06PM 1.2F 01:4 11:06AM 01:48PM 10:54AM 01:42PM 01:34 AMSu-0.4 -1204:12PM 02:09 AM -0.1 -3 -0.23011:36AM -6 2 Sa Tu -0.6E W -0.5E Th F07:54AM 17 04:06PM 07:12PM -0.7E 03:30PM 06:36PM -0.7E 0.8F 04:30PM 07:54PM 04:18PM 07:42PM -1.1E 07:48PM -1.0E 08:30PM 11:48PM -1.1E 08:3 Tu 08:02 AM 3.1 9411:06PM 08:32 AM 1.0F 2.8 85 2.7 007:18PM 82 10:36PM ● W ○ F 10:48PM 10:54PM -9 11:06PM Th 02:35 PM 0.0 10:30PM 0 -0.134 -3 W 02:11 PM -0.3 08:21 PM 2.8 85 08:49 PM 2.7 82 2.4 3 73 ● 02:30AM -1.1E 02:12AM -0.9E 02:36AM 04:36AM 0.4F 03:06AM 05:18AM 0.4F 03:18AM 0.7F 03:2 7-1210:36AM 22 06:00AM 05:54AM 08:54AM 05:42AM 08:36AM 01:00AM 0.3F 0.8F 12:24AM 0.2F 0.7F 02:52 AM -0.2 09:54AM -0.7E 07:48AM -0.5E 08:48AM -6 11:42AM -0.7E 08:5 -0.23406:54AM -6 3 02:24 AM -0.4 18 12:06PM 02:48PM -0.6E 11:48AM 02:30PM -0.5E F Sa 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.6E 02:18AM 05:48AM -0.6E 09:10 AM 2.8 85 1.4F 02:30PM 05:54PM 02:3 2.7 012:30PM 82 04:24PM 08:45 AMM 3.001:00PM 9104:54PM Su W Th 05:42PM 1.1F 08:54PM 0.8F 05:18PM 1.1F 08:30PM 0.7F 09:24AM 1.0F -0.1 08:42AM 12:36PM 1.1F Sa F 01:12PM 03:12 -3 -1.2E 08:24PM -1.1E PM 09:18PM 09:1 -0.23008:06PM -6 11:24PM Th 02:53 PM -0.3 -911:48PM W Th 11:54PM 11:30PM ●2.5 04:54PM 09:28 -0.8E PM 2.9 04:24PM 88 07:42PM -0.8E 76 09:05 PM○ 2.8 85 ○ 08:06PM 11:54PM 11:42PM 03:12AM -1.0E 02:48AM -0.8E -0.2 003:18AM -6 4 03:11 AM -0.4 03:35 AM 0.9F -0.2 23 -6 8-1206:00AM 05:30AM 0.5F 03:42AM 0.4F 12:30AM 06:36AM 09:48AM 06:06AM -1.1E 09:18AM 0.8F 19 2.73707:54AM 82 10:48AM 09:26 AM 2.908:36AM 8811:18AM 09:48 AM 2.8 02:00AM 0.3F -0.6E 01:30AM 0.2F -0.6E 01:12PM 03:54PM 12:42PM 03:24PM -0.7E -0.5E 03:54AM 06:48AM 0.8F 03:4 Sa Su 85 -0.2 001:30PM -6 05:18PM F 03:33 PM -0.3 -905:36PM Sa 03:50 PM 0.6F -0.2 -6 06:54PM 09:48PM 06:30PM 09:18PM 04:12AM 07:24AM -0.6E 03:24AM 06:48AM -0.6E 1.3F 01:48PM 1.1F 09:48AM 12:36PM -0.8E 09:3 M Tu Th F 0.5F 2.63008:48PM 79 09:46 PM 2.9 88 10:09 PM 91 10:12AM 02:00PM 1.1F F3.0 09:30AM 01:30PM 09:00PM 03:30PM 06:48PM 1.0F 1.2F Su 03:2 Th 05:42PM 08:54PM -0.9E 10:00PM 05:18PM 08:36PM -0.9E 09:4 04:00AM 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.8E -0.1 0 -3 5 03:56 AM -0.2 -6 12:36AM 04:20 AM -0.9E -0.2 -6 20 98212:24AM 07:18AM 10:36AM 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 2.540 76 12:12AM 10:05 AM 2.7 10:28 AM 0.9F 2.7 24 82 -1.2E -1.0E 01:12AM 02:12PM 05:00PM -0.6E M -6 01:36PM -1.0E 04:30PM -0.6E -0.2 303:54AM -6 06:18AM Sa 04:11 PM -0.2 -606:36AM Su 04:30 PM Su 12:54AM 02:54AM 0.3F -0.2 12:36AM 02:30AM 0.3F 0.4F 0.6F 04:12AM 0.5F 04:36AM 07:30AM 0.9F 04:1 08:12PM 10:48PM 07:42PM 10:12PM 2.73009:00AM 82 11:48AM 10:26 PM 2.809:24AM 8512:06PM 10:51 PM 0.5F 3.1 94 05:12AM 08:12AM -0.5E 04:30AM 07:48AM -0.7E -0.5E 10:42AM 01:36PM -0.8E -0.6E ◐ Tu W F Sa 10:2 10:54AM 02:48PM 10:30AM 02:30PM 02:24PM 06:12PM 1.2F 02:30PM 06:12PM 1.0F 1.1F Sa 04:30PM 07:36PM 0.8F 1.2F M 04:1 F -0.1 009:36PM -3 6 04:41 AM -0.1 -3 21 05:06 -0.9E AM -0.2 -6 09:30PM -1.0E 10:2 06:24PM 09:48PM 06:12PM 09:42PM 10:42PM 04:54AM 12:42AM 04:06AM -0.7E 2.440 73 10:43 AM 2.5 76 01:30AM 11:10 AM -0.8E 2.6 25 79 10 11:30AM 1.0F 07:12AM 10:48AM 0.9F -0.2 3 -6 Su 04:48 PM 0.0 0 08:00AM M 05:13 PM -0.2 -6 03:12PM -1.0E 06:06PM -0.7E Tu 01:54AM 02:30PM -1.0E 05:30PM -0.7E -1.2E M8201:00AM 2.727 82 12:54AM 11:06 PM 2.7 11:37 PM 0.4F 3.1 94 09:30PM 11:54PM 09:06PM 11:12PM 01:42AM 03:48AM 0.3F 05:12AM 03:30AM 0.4F 0.3F 04:36AM 07:12AM 0.6F 04:42AM 07:18AM 0.5F 08:18AM 0.9F 04:4 ◑01:24AM 06:06AM 09:00AM 05:42AM 08:48AM 12:48PM -0.7E -0.5E -0.5E 11:36AM 02:30PM -0.7E -0.6E W Sa Su 11:1 0.0 010:00AM 0 7 05:25 AMTh 0.110:06AM 312:48PM 05:57 AM -0.1 -3 22 03:30PM 07:00PM 1.1F 03:24PM 06:54PM 0.9F 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F 05:1 11:36AM 03:30PM 1.1F 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F Tu Sa Slack Su 2.340 70 AM 2.3 70 02:18AM 11:56 AM -0.7E 2.5 Slack 76 Slack 11:22 Maximum Maximum Maximum 05:42AM 01:24AM 04:54AM -0.6E 10:24PM 10:18PM 11:24PM 10:5 07:06PM 10:30PM -1.0E 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E -0.1 6 -3 M 05:26 PM 0.1 3 08:42AM Tu 06:01 PM 1.0F -0.1 26 -3 11 12:24PM 07:54AM 11:42AM 1.0F h m h m knots h m h m knots h m h m knots 11:48 PM 2.6 79 27 04:06PM 07:12PM -0.7E W 03:30PM 06:36PM -0.7E Tu 01:36AM 01:42AM -1.1E 0.3F -1.0E 0.4F 02:42AM -0.9E 0.6F 01:48AM 03:42AM 02:24AM 04:36AM 02:42AM 05:12AM 10:48PM 10:30PM 2.7 05:18AM 82 12:27 AM 3.0 91 08:00AM 0.7F 0.6F -0.5E 05:48AM 09:06AM 0.9F -0.7E 02:06AM 04:18AM 0.5F 05:1 23 05:54AM 09:00AM -0.6E0.305:12AM 07:00AM 09:48AM 07:48AM 10:48AM 06:12 AM 907:54AM 0.1 011:06AM 3 8 06:52 AM 0.1 3 01:48PM -0.6E 10:54AM 01:42PM -0.5E 12:36PM 03:30PM -0.7E -0.7E 12:0 06:48AM 09:48AM 11:36AM 03:36PM 1.4F 12:18PM 04:12PM 1.1F 01:30PM 05:06PM 1.2F 12:02 PMF 2.1 64 Th Su Tu M W Sa Su 2.140 64 W 12:48 PM 2.4 73 04:30PM 07:54PM 1.0F 0.8F 06:42PM 09:18PM 0.5F 06:2 12:30PM 04:12PM 1.3F 0.2F 07:18PM 10:36PM -1.1E0.304:18PM 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.0E 0.3F 08:30PM 11:48PM -1.1E Tu 06:07 PM 907:42PM 01:00AM 12:24AM 6 M -0.1 11:06PM -3 06:55 PM -0.6E 0 12 03:12AM ●0.0 27 ○11:3 10:54PM 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.1E -0.6E 06:30AM 02:18AM 05:48AM 24
3
Time
12
27
18 ID: ACT4996 Depth: 3 Unknown Station 13 28 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Harmonic Time Zone: LST/LDT 19 4 14 29
4
18
12 13
Baltim 19
14
Time
5
20 January 15
5
30
20 Februar 15
6 1 31
21 16
AM AM -0.1 7 12:35 7-3 02:06 08:3606:55 AM AM 1.1
AM AM 0.0 22 06:05 22 6 02:33 09:0912:01 AM PM 1.3
02:48 AM AM 0.0 8 01:25 80 09:27 07:53 AM AM 1.1
70 23 12:40 AM 6 1 AM AM 0.0 23 9 03:2207:06 10:07 AM 1.3
03:36 AM AM 0.0 9733 10:22 9 02:20 AM AM 1.0 08:54
12:33 AM 2.5 7602:12AM 01:23 AM -0.8E 2.9 88 04:54PM 08:06PM 04:24PM -0.8E 07:42PM -0.8E 70 04:18 9 24 24 01:42 02:30AM -1.1E -0.9E 03:24AM AM AM 0.0 2.7 0 82 02:36AM 04:36AM 03:06AM 05:18AM 0.4F 0.2 03:18AM 06:00AM 0.7F 24 11:54PM 11:42PM 07:02 AM0.4F 1508:36AM 07:54 6 12 11:1108:14 0.240 6 08:54AM 220.5 7 212:06AM 0.8F 05:42AM 0.7F AM 06:30AM 10:00AM 0.9F 22 17 05:4 205:54AM 17 AM AM 1.3 7 06:54AM 09:54AM -0.7E 07:48AM W 12:48 PM 1.9 58 Th10:36AM 01:47 -0.5E PM 2.2 08:48AM 67 11:42AM -0.7E
2.4 -3 0.234 76 M 12:45 M PM PM 0.1 2.0 3 -6 03:00 PM PM 0.7 0.121 70 08:3906:58
2.3 0 0.334 70 Tu 01:34 Tu PM PM 0.2 1.8 6 -6 03:50 09:19 PM PM 0.7 0.221 ◐ 07:47 2.3 0 0.430 67 W 04:43 PM PM 0.3 1.7 9 W 02:30 -6 10:0308:40 PM PM 0.7 0.321
AM 2.4-6 10 73 04:28 AM -0.2 10 03:20 27 AM 3 11:2109:55 AM 1.1 00.134 PM Th 05:38 PM Th 03:33 0.2462.1 6 64 PM -0.2 -6 10:5309:36 PM ◐ 9 0.6 2.518 76 05:2504:21 AM 11 AM 11 -0.3 AM270.1-9 3 12:2210:50 PM 1.1 32.034 61 PM F 04:35 F 06:33 PM 0.243 PM -0.2 6 -6 11:5010:32 PM 9 0.6 2.618 79 06:2305:17 AM AM 12 PM 12 -0.3 AM300.1-9 3 01:2111:39 1.1 01.934 58 PM Sa 05:30 Sa 07:27 PM 0.1 3 43 PM -0.3 -9 11:23 9 0.7 2.821 13 AM AM 85 12:49 06:06 13 -0.3 AM AM34 -0.1-9 -3 08:2012:22 1.2 02.037 61 Su 03:13 PM PM Su 06:18 0.143 PM -0.3 3 -9 09:17 PM 9 AM 14 12:10 14 AM 2.9 88 02:46 AM AM37 -0.2 -6 09:1306:48 M 01:01 M 03:59 PM PM 02.1 64 PM PM43 -0.5 -15 10:0207:01
Spring Range 1.5 1.9 1.1 1.4
ft
-3 03:35 AM AM 0.8 1 01:42 179 09:5508:16 AM AM -0.3
Times a
January10
Height TimeTime Height
ft cm ftcm AM -0.121 0.7 6 AM302.6-9 -0.3 PM 1.0 00.030 PM 0.0372.0 0
m
○
Times and Heights of HighSuand Low 05:00PM Waters-0.6E M 01:36PM 02:12PM 04:30PM -0.6E W Tu 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.7E W 09:24AM 12:06PM -0.5E
h mh mh ftm ft cm cm h mh m h ftm ft cm ftcm cm 06:36 98 04:33 0.1 AM AM12:34 0.2 0.5 0 1 15 12:05 AM 0.6 33.216 18 12:45 AM 1AM 01:01 16 1 04:34 16 PM27-0.4 -12 10:53 AM AM 0.9 -0.6 AM07:13 1.0 -0.421 -12 05:0210:55 -18 06:02 AM Sa 70 Su 2304:52 PM PM -0.3 1.0 -9 30 Tu 11:31 AM 06:58 -0.4 PM -122.334 W 12:25 PM01:31 0.0 Tu 05:53 PM 1.1 W 05:31 PM 0 06:05 PM 5911:03 PM PM 1.1 0.034 PM 1.3 40 06:47 PM07:26 1.2 ● ○ 11:43
mh
1003:25 AM AM 0.0 6 1209:50 AM AM 0.7
cm
Height TimeTime Height
7
03:12AM -1.0E 02:48AM -0.8E Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown 8 06:36AM 23 06:06AM 8 09:48AM 0.9F 0.5F 09:18AM 0.8F 0.4F 03:18AM 05:30AM 03:42AM 06:00AM 01:12PM 03:54PM -0.6E -0.7E 12:42PM 03:24PM -0.6E -0.5E 07:54AM 10:48AM 08:36AM 11:18AM Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Sa 3 Su 18 Tu 01:30PM 05:18PM 1.3F 01:48PM 05:36PM 1.1F 06:54PM 09:48PM 0.6F 06:30PM 09:18PM 0.5F NOAA Tide Predictions M Tu Station Type: Harmonic ◐ 08:48PM 09:00PM P.O. BOX 437 Time | DEALE, MD 20751 Baltimor Zone: LST/LDT Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel, VA,2022 12:36AM 04:00AM -0.9E 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.8E 12:12AM 12:24AM ( 36 58.0N / 76 06.8W ) 9 407:18AM 24 06:36AM 10:00AM 9 10:36AM 0.9F -1.2E 0.9F -1.0E 03:54AM 06:18AM 0.6F 19 04:12AM 06:36AM 0.5F
( 38 59.0N / 76 28.9W ) Times and Heights of High and Low Waters
Times and Heights of High and Low Waters
07:48PM 11:06PM -1.0E
harbourcove.CoM ●
5910 VACATION LANE | Annapolis, MD,2022
22
6
0.0 AM 1.0 AM 0.3 PM 0.7 PM
2.3 0 0.530 1.7 9 0.321
AM 0.0 AM 1.0 PM 0.3 PM 0.7
2.3 0 0.430 1.7 9 0.221
AM 0.0 AM 1.0 PM 0.3 PM
2.3 0 0.330 1.8 9 0.1
0.7 2.421 AM 0.0 0.3 0 PM 1.0 2.030 PM 0.3 9
AM 0.8 AM 0.0 PM 1.0 PM 0.3
0.024 2.5 0 0.130 2.1 9
73
61 Tu 06:13 PM Tu 3 03:43 PM 0.2 09:07 PM 0.9 55 W 12:57 PM W PM PM 0.2 6 04:42 ◑ 07:11 10:00 PM 0.8
0
76 03:39 AM 29 09:54 AM
AM AM 0.9 15 12:53 15 91 03:39 10:0307:27 AM AM -0.1
-18 94 -12 73
AM 31 05:24 11:44 AM
dIFFEREnCEs
High Mtn Pt, Magothy River +1:24 Chesapeake Beach –1:14 Cedar Point –3:16 Point Lookout –3:48
W
09:24AM 01:12PM
1.0F Th
08:42AM 12:36PM
1.1F
52 Th 02:02 61 02:48PM -0.6E 11:48AM 02:30PM -0.5E 1.1F 01:30PM 04:30PM -0.7E 1.1F 01:0 Th 05:46 PM PM 0.3 F2.0 Su 912:06PM 12:30PM 04:24PMPM1.4F 01:00PM 04:54PM 02:30PM Sa M M 0.3F Tu 0.2F W Th 06:55 1208:30PM 07:57 PM 0.1 3 05:54PM 02:00AM 01:30AM 9 11:0108:16 0 08:54PM 0.8F -1.2E0.4 05:18PM 0.7F 07:54PM 10:18PM 0.4F 07:3 PM PM 0.8 0.02405:42PM 08:06PM 11:24PM 08:24PM 11:48PM -1.1E 09:18PM 13 28 Disclaimer: These data are-0.6E based upon the latest information 04:12AM 07:24AM 03:24AM 06:48AM -0.6E ●11:54PM ○11:30PM 10:12AM 02:00PM 1.1F 09:30AM 01:30PM 1.2F 01:25 AM 2.4 73 02:29 AM 2.8 85 Th F 70 05:23 02:53 AM 2.7 82 10 07:58 AM 0.6Generated 25 25 AM 0.0 0 05:42PM 08:54PM -0.9E 05:18PM 08:36PM -0.9E on: Wed Dec 01 20:38:45 UTC 2021 25 18 09:03 AM 0.3 9 15 12:2009:27 6 PM AM 1.3 0.240 03:12AM -1.0E -0.8E PM 12:54AM 67 04:12AM -0.7E -1.1E 12:1 03:18AM 05:30AM 03:42AM 0.4F 2.2 12:30AM Th 01:41 PM0.5F1.9 5802:48AM F 06:00AM 02:57 52 F 03:17 F 06:52 PM PM 0.3 2.0 9 61 0.9F 0.8F -0.5E 07:12AM 10:48AM 0.9F 0.8F 06:2 07:54AM 10:48AM -0.7E0.506:06AM 08:36AM 03:54AM PM 1509:18AM 09:08 PM 0.2 6 06:48AM ◐ 07:50 ◑ 11:18AM 09:27 PM 0.0 06:36AM 0 09:48AM ◑9 01:12PM 03:54PM -0.6E 12:42PM 03:24PM -0.6E 02:30PM 05:36PM -0.7E 12:54AM 02:54AM 0.3F 12:36AM 02:30AM 01:30PM 05:18PM 1.3F 01:48PM 05:36PM 1.1F 09:48AM 12:36PM -0.8E Sa M Su Tu 14 Tu Th 29 W 0.3F F02:0 06:54PM 09:48PM 0.6F 06:30PM 09:18PM 09:06PM 11:24PM 0.3F 08:5 05:12AM 0.5F 08:12AM -0.5E 04:30AM 07:48AM 08:48PM 09:00PM 03:30PM 06:48PM 1.0F -0.6E 70 26 04:09 AM 2.7 82 02:25 AM 2.3 70 03:44 AM 2.7 82 ◐ 1.1F Sa ◑ 1.2F 11 09:00 AM 0.6 F 18 10:54AM 26 10:17 02:48PM 10:30AM 02:30PM AM AM 0.8 0.124 10:00PM 26 12 12:1310:38 3 AM 0.3 9 06:24PM 09:48PM -0.9E 06:12PM 09:30PM -1.0E 06:33 AM 0.0 0 52 Sa 04:35 PM 2.1 64 F 02:43 PM 1.8 55 Sa 04:16 PM 2.2 67 Sa PM PM 1.3 -0.14012:36AM -0.9E -0.8E -1.0E 01:42AM 05:00AM -0.6E -1.0E 01:0 6 01:3210:37 -3 04:00AM 08:53 PM 1503:24AM 10:24 PM 0.2 6 01:12AM 12:12AM -1.2E0.512:06AM 12:24AM 07:57 PM 0.3 907:18AM 10:36AM 0.9F 0.6F 06:36AM 10:00AM 0.9F 0.5F 08:00AM 11:42AM 0.9F 0.9F 07:1 03:54AM 06:18AM 04:12AM 06:36AM 04:36AM 07:30AM 01:42AM 03:48AM 0.3F 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F 02:12PM 05:00PM -0.6E 01:36PM 04:30PM -0.6E 03:24PM 06:36PM -0.7E 03:0 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.7E 09:24AM 12:06PM -0.5E 10:42AM 01:36PM -0.8E 15 30 70 01:26 05:20 AM 2.8 85 03:32 AM 2.3 70 05:02 AM 2.7 82 Su M W Th -0.6E 06:06AM 09:00AM -0.5E 05:42AM 08:48AM 27 12 27 Tu W F Sa AM 0.8 2408:12PM 10:48PM 0.5F 10:12PM 0.4F 10:24PM 10:1 27 02:24PM 06:12PM 1.2F0.607:42PM 02:30PM 06:12PM 1.0F 04:30PM 07:36PM 0.8F 1.3F 0 9 07:4411:41 AM 0.0 10:01 AM 18 11:25 AM 0.2 6 11:36AM 03:30PM 1.1F 11:30AM 03:24PM Sa Su AM 0.0 ◐ 0 09:36PM 09:42PM 10:30PM 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E Su 05:44 55 58 07:06PM Su 05:34 PM -1.0E 2.3 10:42PM 70 Su 02:39 PM PM 1.2 2.337 70 Sa 03:50 PM 1.9 PM -0.2 -6 3 08:5611:42 09:55 PM 0.4 12 11:35 PM 0.1 3 PM 0.3 9 01:30AM 04:54AM -0.8E -1.2E 12:42AM 04:06AM -0.7E -1.0E 12:24AM 0.3F -1.0E 12:54AM 01:00AM 01:54AM 02:06AM 04:18AM 08:00AM 11:30AM 1.0F 0.9F AM 02:42AM 05:54AM -0.5E 02:0 73 02:36 91 05:36 AM0.6F2.307:12AM 7010:48AM 06:11 85 04:36AM 07:12AM 04:42AM 07:18AM 0.5F 2.8 05:12AM 08:18AM 0.9F 0.5F 28 06:21 13 28 AM AM 0.9 3.02703:12PM 31 28 06:48AM 09:48AM 06:06PM -0.7E 02:30PM 05:30PM -0.7E -0.5E 08:42AM 12:36PM 1.0F 08:1 9 08:5112:36 PM -0.1 -3 11:55 AM 0.5 15 12:25 PM 0.1 3 10:00AM 12:48PM -0.7E 10:06AM 12:48PM 11:36AM 02:30PM -0.7E M Tu Th F -0.7E AM 0.0 009:30PM 11:54PM 0.4F W Th Sa Su 12:30PM -0.8E 04:12PM 1.3F 0.3F PM 04:18PM 07:36PM 04:0 61 M 06:43 Su 05:52 6111:12PM M06:54PM 06:38 76 M 03:30PM 07:00PMPM1.1F2.009:06PM 03:24PM 0.9F 2.5 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F -1.1E M 03:40 PM PM 1.2 2.537 76 07:48PM 11:06PM ◑ 11:30PM 11:1 9 10:24PM 11:51 PM 0.3 10:18PM 11:24PM 09:48 PM 0.3 9 3 Tu 04:32 64 10:33 -3 79 04:34 30 0 10:51 W 05:18 67 11:14
-0.127 2.6 -3 -9 Tu 01:37 Tu 04:39 PM PM 1.1 0.034 70 10:4307:40 PM PM 0.2 2.2 6
21 16
PM PM
AM AM PM PM
Th 06:00 PM 11:52 PM
Low +1:40 –1:15 –3:13 –3:47
H. Ht *0.88 *1.12 *1.33 *1.37
8 3
23 18
8 3
23 18
9 4
24 19
9 4
24 19
10 5
25 20
10 5
25 20
12:38 AM 0.0 0 29 06:29 AM 2.401:24AM 7304:54AM 05:42AM -0.7E -0.6E -1.0E 01:36AM 0.3F -0.9E 1.0 3002:18AM 14 01:42AM -1.1E0.4 01:36AM 02:42AM 07:09 AM 2.9 88 12:41 PM 1211:42AM 12:24PM 1.0F 1.0F PM 03:48AM 06:54AM -0.5E 0.9F 03:1 0.0 008:42AM 05:18AM 08:00AM 0.7F2.207:54AM 05:12AM 0.6F 0.0 05:48AM 0 09:06AM Tu07:54AM 01:16 M 06:43 PM 67 04:06PM 07:12PM -0.7E 03:30PM 06:36PM -0.7E 09:36AM 01:24PM 1.0F -0.7E 09:1 1.2 Tu 37 W F FdataSu Sa inform 11:06AM 01:48PM -0.6E 10:54AM 01:42PM -0.5E 12:36PM 03:30PM 07:31 PM 2.7 82 upon Disclaimer: These are based the latest Th M 08:30PM -0.8E 0.2 610:48PM 04:30PM 07:54PM 1.0F 10:30PM 04:18PM 07:42PM 0.8F 05:06PM 06:42PM 09:18PM 0.5F 04:5 11:06PM 10:54PM Generated on: AM Wed-0.1 Dec 01 -3 20:38:45 UTC 2021 12:41 AM 0.2 6 30 01:33 15 07:14 1.1 34 AM 2.6 79 07:58 AM 2.9 88 01:00AM 0.3F 0.2F -0.9E 12:24AM 02:24AM 0.3F -0.8E 12:0 0.0 0 Tu 01:21 PM 912:24AM W02:12AM 02:02 PM -0.1 -3 02:30AM -1.1E0.3 12:06AM 03:24AM 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.6E 02:18AM 05:48AM -0.6E 04:48AM 07:48AM -0.5E 0.9F 04:3 1.2 37 70 08:18 PM 88 10:00AM 05:54AM 07:28 08:54AMPM0.8F2.3 05:42AM 08:36AM 0.7F 2.9 06:30AM 01:12PM 1.0F -0.6E 08:42AM 12:36PM 1.1F -0.5E 10:24AM 02:18PM 1.0F -0.7E 0.2 W 609:24AM Th Sa Su 10:2 12:06PM 02:48PM 11:48AM 02:30PM 01:30PM 04:30PM F04:54PM 08:06PM -0.8E Sa M 07:42PM -0.8E AM 05:54PM 09:12PM -0.9E 0.4F Tu 05:4 02:23 -6 05:42PM 08:54PM 0.8F 04:24PM 05:18PM 08:30PM 0.7F -0.2 07:54PM 10:18PM 31 11:42PM 1.2 3711:54PM 08:42 AM 2.9 88 11:54PM 11:30PM 0.0 0 Th 02:43 PM -0.1 -3 1.1 34 09:00 PM 3.0 91 02:00AM 0.3F -1.0E 01:30AM 0.2F -0.8E 01:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F -0.7E 12:4 03:12AM 02:48AM 12:54AM 04:12AM 0.2 604:12AM 07:24AM -0.6E 0.9F 03:24AM 06:48AM -0.6E 0.8F 05:48AM 08:36AM -0.5E 0.9F 05:4 06:36AM 09:48AM 06:06AM 09:18AM 07:12AM 10:48AM 10:12AM 02:00PM 1.1F 09:30AM 01:30PM 1.2F 11:12AM 03:06PM 1.0F -0.7E Spring dIFFEREnCEs Spring Th Sa 01:12PM 03:54PM -0.6E F Su 12:42PM 03:24PM -0.6E Su Tu 02:30PM M 11:3 05:36PM 05:42PM 08:54PM -0.9E 0.6F 05:18PM 08:36PM -0.9E 10:00PM -1.0E 0.3F W 06:4 06:54PM 09:48PM 06:30PM 11:24PM L. Ht Range High Low09:18PM H. Ht0.5F L.06:36PM Ht 09:06PM Range
11 6
26 21
11 6
26 21
12 7
27 22
12 7
27 22
13 8
28 23
13 8
28 23
*0.88 *1.14 *1.33 14 *1.33 F
1.0 Onancock Creek 1.1 Stingray Point 12:54AM 02:54AM 0.3F -0.9E 12:36AM 04:00AM 29 05:12AM 08:12AM -0.5E 1.4 Hooper Strait Light 910:54AM 07:18AM 10:36AM 0.9F 02:48PM 1.1F Sa 1.4 Lynnhaven Inlet-0.6E 02:12PM 05:00PM Su
+3 :52 +4 :15
*0.70
◐ *0.83
2.2
◑
+2 :0102:30AM +2 :29 0.3F *0.48 *0.83 1.4 12:36AM 04:06AM 0.4F -0.6E 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.8E 01:48AM 01:42AM 05:00AM 04:30AM -0.6E 06:42AM 09:30AM -0.5E 0.9F +5 06:36AM :52 07:48AM +6 :04 *0.660.9F *0.67 2.0 11:42AM 10:00AM 08:00AM 10:30AM 02:30PM 1.2F 12:06PM 03:48PM 1.0F -0.7E M +0 :47 +1 :08 *0.77 *0.83 2.4 01:36PM 04:30PM -0.6E 03:24PM 06:36PM Th 06:24PM 09:48PM -0.9E 0.5F M 06:12PM 09:30PM -1.0E 0.4F W 07:18PM 10:36PM -1.0E 08:12PM 10:48PM 07:42PM 10:12PM 10:24PM
24
14 9
24
◐
All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All speeds are in knots. Tides & Currents predictions are provided by NOAA.gov
01:42AM 03:48AM 0.3F 01:24AM 03:30AM 0.4F -0.7E 02:24AM 04:48AM 0.5F 0.3F based upon the available as of thetables. date of your request, and may differ from the published tide tables. ased upon the latest information Disclaimer: available asThese of the data date are of your request, andlatest may information differ from the published tide 01:30AM 04:54AM -0.8E 12:42AM 04:06AM 12:24AM 06:06AM 09:00AM -0.5E 08:48AM -0.6E 07:24AM 10:18AM -0.6E 56 differ March FishTalkMag.com ur request, and may from2022 the published tide tables. 08:00AM 11:30AM 1.0F 05:42AM 07:12AM 10:48AM 0.9F 12:54PM 02:42AM 05:54AM -0.5E 11:36AM 03:30PM 1.1F 11:30AM 03:24PM 1.3F 04:30PM 1.0F Sa M 03:12PM 06:06PM -0.7E Su Tu 02:30PM 05:30PM -0.7E Tu Th 08:42AM 12:36PM 1.0F F 07:06PM 10:30PM -1.0E 07:00PM 10:18PM -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 09:30PM 11:54PM 0.4F 09:06PM 11:12PM 0.3F 04:18PM 07:36PM -0.8E ◑ Generated On: Wed Dec 01 19:47:32 UTC 2021 Page 211:30PM of 5 0:21:19 UTC 2021 Page 2 of 5 Page 2 of 5 02:06AM 04:18AM 0.5F 02:18AM 05:42AM -0.7E 06:48AM 01:24AM 04:54AM 01:36AM 0.3F 09:48AM -0.7E -0.6E
15 10
30 25 31
15 10
25
12:30AM 03:54AM 06:48AM 09:48AM 12:36PM 03:30PM 06:48PM 10:00PM
-1.1E 0.8F -0.8E F 1.0F
18
Unknown 01:12AM S 04:36AM 07:30AM
-1.0E 0.9F 10:42AM 01:36PM -0.8E Sa 04:30PM 07:36PM 0.8F 10:42PM
19
10:48PM
11:36PM
12:24AM 03:48AM 06:36AM 09:36AM 12:30PM M 03:24PM 06:36PM 09:48PM
-0.9E 0.7F 05:18AM -0.7E 12:36PM Th 0.8F 06:48PM 11:48PM
02:36AM -1.9E 05:30AM 0.9F 02:12AM 08:36AM 2.5F 11:36AM -0.9E 08:54AM 05:30AM 02:36PM -1.5E 05:42PM 03:12PM 12:36PM F Tu 0.9F 08:54PM 1.0F 09:12PM 06:54PM
01:00AM 04:12AM 07:12AM 10:24AM 01:18PM Tu 04:18PM 07:24PM 10:24PM
-1.6E 06:12AM 09:42AM 2.3F 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.5F 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.5F 0.8F 03:12AM Sou 06:18AM 03:48AMCO 06:54AM ce 0.9F NOAA NOS OPS0.9F 01:24PM 01:12PM 04:00PM 02:30PM 05:12PM -1.1E Sa -0.7E 09:24AM -1.4E 12:24PM -0.9E 10:06AM-1.1E 01:12PM -0.9E W F F 04:06PM Sa a on Type mon 0.8F c07:18PM 0.7F 07:36PM 10:06PM 1.0F 07:30PMHa 10:00PM 08:18PM 11:24PM 1.3F 0.7F 03:30PM S 06:30PM 0.8F 04:24PM 09:30PM T me Zone LST10:12PM LDT
3 4
3
18
18 ○
11:42PM
12:12AM 02:36AM -1.1E 03:18AM 1.5F 06:24AM 08:54AM 09:24AM-1.1E 12:24PM 03:24PM Th 03:30PM 0.8F 06:36PM 09:24PM 09:42PM
3
-0.9E 12:42AM 0.8F 07:06AM -0.8E 01:48PM 0.8F 07:36PM
03:48AM 10:24AM 04:24PM 10:36PM
-1.7E 1.8F -1.2E F 1.3F
18
NOAA Tidal Current S12:00AM a on -1.0E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h 22-0.8E ee 03:06AM -1.8E 12:12AM 03:12AM -1.1E 01:36AM 04:48AM -0.9E 12:42AM 4
19
4
19
19
12:24AM 06:30AM 01:12PM 07:06PM
03:30AM 09:48AM 04:00PM 10:12PM
01:12AM 07:18AM 01:42PM 07:42PM
04:12AM 10:30AM 04:42PM 11:00PM
-1.3E 1.5F -1.1E Th 1.2F
3
02:48AM -1.8E 06:12AM 09:18AM 1.7F 12:36PM 03:12PM -1.3E F 06:12PM 09:24PM 1.5F
18 ○
12:30AM 06:30AM 12:54PM 06:48PM
03:24AM 09:36AM 03:48PM 10:00PM
-1.4E 1.4F -1.3E 1.5F
NOAA T12:36AM da Curren Pred c01:12AM ons04:06AM -1.3E 03:36AM -1.7E 4
1.4F -1.1E F 1.4F
19
07:06AM 10:00AM 1.4F 01:12PM 03:48PM -1.2E Sa 06:48PM 10:12PM 1.6F
-1.4E 07:12AM 10:18AM 1.3F 01:24PM 04:18PM -1.4E 07:24PM 10:48PM 1.7F
Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2022Chesapeake Bay Ent 2 0 n mi N of Cape Henry Lt 2022 Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683° W Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T)
12:42AM 04:00AM -1.7E 12:48AM 03:48AM -1.1E 02:42AM 05:48AM 01:30AM -0.8E 12:42AM -0.9E 01:18AM -0.8E 5 0.9F 20 1.0F 5 in1.0F 20Times and 5 maximum 20 10:18AM 07:12AM 10:42AM 06:48AM 1.5F 09:12AM 11:54AM 07:54AM 03:48AM 2.1F 07:00AM 04:12AM 07:36AM speeds of and minimum current, knots06:00PM 02:18PM 05:00PM 01:48PM 04:42PM 03:12PM 02:12PM 10:18AM -1.3E 01:18PM 10:54AM-1.0E 02:00PM W -0.7E Th -0.9E Sa -0.9E
01:54AM -1.0E 05:12AM 08:18AM 0.9F 04:42AM 11:36AM 02:30PM -0.7E Su 11:12AM 05:36PM 08:30PM 0.7F 05:18PM 11:24PM 10:54PM February
an aMenities-PaCked Marina JanuaryMarch WitH F ull s6 erviCe21a nd 6 6 21 21 r ePair Sa
Su
08:24PM 11:00PM 08:06PM 10:42PM 09:00PM 08:06PM 0.6F 04:30PM 1.0F 07:18PM 0.7F 05:18PM 0.9F 08:00PM 0.6F 10:12PM 10:48PM
-1.3E 1.2F -1.0E Su
21
Electrical | Mechanical | Cosmetic Expert Repair7 On Yamaha, Mercury, 22 7 22 7 22 Mercruiser & Volvo By Factory Trained Technicians 09:12PM
22
08:12PM 0.9F 11:18PM -1.0E 09:06PM 0.8F 05:54PM 08:18PM 06:12PM 08:42PM
06:54PM 09:48PM
● Mercury ○ ● Certified Outboard 10:48PM 11:36PM 12:42AM 1.1F 12:12AMDealer 1.1F
08:24PM 11:42PM 1.5F
07:24PM 10:54PM 1.6F
February
Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 01:48AM 05:00AM -1.5E 01:24AM 04:30AM -1.1E 12:12AM 1.3F 02:42AM -0.9E 02:06AM -0.8E 01:18AM -0.8E 01:54AM -0.7E Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum 08:12AM 11:36AMh m 1.8F 07:30AM 11:00AMh 1.5F 03:48AM 06:48AM -1.1E 05:48AM 09:06AM 08:36AM 07:42AM 08:12AM h m h m 0.9F knots 05:12AM h m h m 0.9F knots 04:24AM h m 1.0F knots 04:42AM m h m 1.0F knots h m h m-1.1E knots h m h m-1.0E knots h m h m 0.9F knots 03:12PM 05:54PM 02:30PM 05:24PM 10:12AM 12:36PM 12:36PM 03:30PM -0.7E 0.6F 03:06PM 11:06AM 02:06PM 11:42AM 02:48PM -0.9E Th -0.7E F -0.8E Su M M 12:06PM Su M 02:42AM 05:12AM 02:54AM 05:24AM 0.6F 01:24AM 04:00AM 0.6F 02:24AM 05:06AM 0.6F 09:12PM 11:54PM 1.1F 08:36PM 11:24PM 1.0F 03:42PM 06:48PM -1.0E -1.8E 12:30AM -1.8E 0.6F 01:18AM -1.1E 0.5F 02:06AM 09:18PM 0.5F -0.7E 16 06:24PM 09:00PM 0.5F 08:06PM 06:18PM 08:48PM 106:42PM 105:24PM 16 07:48AM 10:48AM 08:12AM 11:00AM 06:48AM 09:42AM 08:00AM 11:00AM -0.7E 1 -0.6E 16 -0.7E 109:48PM 03:30AM 07:06AM 2.4F 04:18AM 07:48AM 1.4F 05:12AM 08:42AM 2.2F 11:30PM 10:54PM 11:24PM 01:42PM 05:12PM 1.0F 12:36PM-1.4E 04:06PM 1.1F 01:48PM-1.0E 05:06PM 0.9F Tu 01:30PM 05:06PM 1.2F W Tu W 10:54AM 01:36PM 11:36AM 02:18PM 12:18PM 02:54PM -1.5E Sa -1.0E Su -1.0E Tu -0.9E 08:30PM 11:48PM -1.1E 08:36PM 11:48PM 07:24PM 0.9F 10:36PM 08:24PM 0.8F 11:36PM 05:00PM 07:24PM 05:36PM 08:06PM 06:18PM 08:54PM 1.2F ●12:06AM 03:24AM -0.8E ○ 02:54AM 06:06AM -1.4E 02:12AM 05:18AM -1.1E 01:00AM 1.3F ● 02:48AM -0.7E 02:00AM -0.8E 02:30AM -0.7E 09:48PM 10:54PM 11:42PM 09:18AM 12:24PM 08:18AM 11:42AM 05:06AM 07:48AM -0.9E 06:30AM 10:00AM 0.9F 05:48AM 09:24AM 1.0F 05:00AM 1.5F 08:30AM 1.0F 05:18AM 1.4F 08:54AM 1.1F 04:00PM -1.0E 03:00PM -1.0E 11:06AM 0.6F -1.8E 03:18AM 06:00AM 03:24AM 06:00AM 0.6F 06:42PM 02:00AM 04:48AM 0.8F 06:00PM 02:54AM 05:48AM 0.7F 01:18PM 01:30PM 04:30PM -0.7E 0.7F 01:00PM 04:06PM -0.7E 11:54AM 03:00PM -0.8E 12:30PM 03:42PM -0.9E F Sa M Tu 01:24AM -1.9E 02:00AM -1.1E 02:54AM Tu M 2 07:42AM 10:42AM Tu 17 08:42AM 11:42AM 207:54PM 08:48AM 11:42AM 08:54AM 11:48AM -0.6E -0.8E -0.7E 09:12PM 04:06PM 07:36PM -1.0E 2.1F 209:54PM 17 10:18PM 0.4F -0.7E 17 07:36PM 09:54PM 0.3F 06:24PM 09:00PM 07:24PM 09:42PM 0.4F 04:24AM 08:00AM 2.5F 0.5F 04:54AM 08:18AM 1.5F 2 06:12AM 09:30AM 0.9F W 01:36PM-1.5E 04:54PM 1.0F 02:42PM-1.1E 05:54PM 0.9F 10:36PM W 02:30PM 05:54PM 1.1F Th 02:30PM 05:54PM Th 02:48PM 02:30PM 12:00PM 01:06PM 03:42PM -1.3E 11:36PM Su 11:48AM M W 09:18PM
La ude 36 9594° N Long ude 76 0128° W
05:00AM F-1.2E -1.5E Ebb D 02:00AM 04:54AM Mean ood D 01:30AM 297° 04:30AM T Mean 112° T -1.4E 20 02:00AM 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.3F 5 08:00AM 10:42AM 1.1F 20 08:00AM 11:00AM 1.2F 05:18PM -1.2E o 01:42PM 04:30PM 01:54PM T 02:12PM mes and speeds mum and-1.1E m nSumum cu 05:00PM en n-1.4E kno s Sa max
1.2F
03:00AM 05:54AM -1.1E Slack Maximum 09:00AM 11:54AM 1.1F h m h m-1.2E knots 02:42PM 06:00PM Su 09:12PM 02:12AM -1.2E
6
16 W
○
08:00PM 11:36PM 1.8F
March 02:30AM 05:24AM -1.2E Slack Maximum 08:54AM 11:24AM 0.9F h m h m-1.1E knots 02:06PM 05:12PM M 08:12PM 11:42PM 1.5F -1.6E 01:06AM
21
1
02:54AM 05:42AM -1.3E Slack Maximum 09:00AM 11:48AM 1.1F h m h m-1.4E knots 02:24PM 05:42PM 08:48PM 02:12AM -1.1E
16
05:12AM 08:24AM 1.5F 04:18AM 07:42AM 2.0F 12:00PM 02:54PM -1.2E Tu 11:12AM 01:54PM -1.4E W 06:06PM 08:48PM 1.1F 05:06PM 08:00PM 1.2F 12:36AM 1.6F 03:36AM 06:24AM -1.0E 11:48PM 10:48PM
7
22
05:12AM 08:18AM 1.3F 11:48AM 02:42PM -1.2E 05:48PM 08:42PM 1.2F 12:24AM 1.9F 11:48PM
04:06AM 06:54AM -1.0E 09:48AM 12:00PM 0.6F 03:54AM 06:42AM -1.2E 10:00AM 12:42PM 0.9F -1.3E -1.0E -1.8E 0.9F -1.3E M 02:30PM 05:54PM Tu 10:00AM 12:36PM 02:48AM 02:00AM 02:48AM 03:06PM 06:30PM -1.4E 1.4F 08:30AM 1.9F 17 05:48AM 08:54AM 10:00PM 09:36PM 12:36PM 03:24PM -1.2E W 11:54AM 02:30PM -1.4E Th 12:18PM 03:18PM -1.3E Th 03:18PM 06:48PM -1.3E 1.5F 2 09:00PM 17 05:48AM 09:06AM 05:12AM 06:36PM 09:30PM
01:54AM 1.3F
1.1F
01:24AM 1.7F
●
05:42PM 08:42PM 1.4F 11:42PM 12:24AM 1.5F
06:18PM 09:18PM
1.4F
01:12AM 2.0F 04:54AM 07:42AM -1.1E 12:30AM 03:24AM 11:06AM 01:24PM 0.7F -1.4E 18 3 18 Sa -0.8E Su -0.7E Tu W 18 06:30AM 09:48AM 1.5F Tu 3 06:12AM 09:18AM 1.7F W 18 02:00PM 05:06PM 12:48PM 03:54PM 01:24PM 04:36PM -0.9E 03:48AM 06:36AM 0.7F 08:36AM 11:36AM -0.9E 03:18AM 06:24AM 0.8F 304:48PM 18 3 05:18AM 08:54AM 2.5F 05:30AM 08:54AM 1.5F 07:06AM 10:24AM 1.8F 06:30AM 09:36AM Tu W 07:36PM -1.0E 03:30PM 06:42PM -1.1E 04:36PM 08:24PM -0.9E 04:06PM 07:48PM -1.2E 03:00PM 06:42PM -0.9E 03:48PM 07:24PM -1.3E 1.4F 09:36AM 12:30PM 02:36PM 05:42PM 0.9F 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.8E 08:54PM 10:54PM 0.3F -0.7E 07:30PM 09:54PM 0.4F 10:36PM 0.3F 12:36PM 03:12PM -1.5E 12:36PM 03:24PM -1.1E 01:48PM -1.2E 01:12PM 04:00PM 12:36PM Station 03:12PM 12:54PM 03:48PM Th F08:30PM Station ID: -1.1E cb0102 Depth: 22 feet-1.3E ID: cb0102 Depth: Station 22-1.3E feetID: Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: 04:24PM ACT4996 Depth: Unknown ◐ ◑ M Tu Th F Th F10:30PM 10:42PM 09:54PM 11:24PM 10:48PM 09:48PM ◑ F 03:24PM 03:30PM 06:48PM 1.0F 06:36PM 0.8F 08:54PM 03:30PM 06:36PM 0.8F 06:48PM 09:12PM 1.0F 06:54PM 09:24PM 0.8F 07:36PM 10:36PM 1.3F 07:06PM 10:12PM 1.2F 06:12PM 09:24PM 1.5F 06:48PM 10:00PM 1.5F
12:12AM 03:24AM 02:48AM 12:06AM 03:12AM -0.6E Station ID: cb0102 22-1.2E feet05:30AM 8 -0.6E 23 -0.7E 812:12AM 23Current 04:06AM 07:12AM 03:06AM -1.0E 06:18AM 08:48AM -0.7E 05:12AM 07:54AM -1.0E 8 04:36AM 07:18AM -0.8E 23 NOAA Tidal Predictions NOAA Tidal Predictions 23 Current 8Depth: 23 06:06AM 06:24AM 10:12AM 1.0F 05:42AM 09:12AM 0.9F 06:00AM 09:48AM 1.1F 12:24AM -0.9E 02:36AM 0.9F -0.9E 02:12AM 02:36AM 12:42AM 03:48AM 12:24AM 03:30AM 02:48AM 10:24AM 01:12PM 1.2F -1.9E 09:06AM 12:24PM 1.3F -1.1E 12:00PM 02:00PM 0.4F -1.7E 11:06AM 01:36PM 0.7F -1.3E 10:42AM 12:36PM 0.5F -1.8E
12:54AM 04:12AM -0.7E 07:12AM 10:48AM 0.9F -1.1E 12:30AM 302:30PM 05:36PM -0.7E 0.8F 03:54AM 06:48AM W 09:48AM 12:36PM -0.8E 09:06PM 11:24PM 0.3F Th
Go boatinG !
Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS find us on cb0102 Dep NOAA T NOAA Tidal Current NOAA Predictions Tidal Current NOAA Predictions Tidal Current Prediction Station Type: Harmonic facebook ○ Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/C Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 10:00PM 09:42PM ○ 11:48PM Chesapeake Bay Ent., 2.0 n.mi. Station N02:24AM of Cape Henry Lt., 2022 re Harbor Approach (offLST/LDT Sandy Point), 2022Type: Time09:48PM Zone: 01:42AM 1.1F 12:54AM 1.2F 02:54AM 1.2F 1.7F 01:06AM 1.3F 02:06AM 1.9F Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic Station Harmonic Station Type: Harmonic 01:42AM 05:00AM -0.6E 01:00AM 04:24AM -0.6E 12:24AM 03:30AM 12:54AM 04:06AM -0.6E Latitude: 36.9594° NApproach Longitude: 76.0128° WBaltimore Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: 76.3683° W 03:06AM 9Zone: 24 -0.6E 912:42AM 24Baltimore 9 Sandy 24 01:12AM 01:00AM -0.9E 12:00AM -1.0E -0.8E 05:24AM 08:18AM -1.0E 04:12AM 07:06AM -1.0E 07:30AM 09:48AM -0.6E -1.6E 06:18AM 09:06AM -1.0E 05:42AM 08:18AM -0.6E 05:54AM 08:48AM -1.1E -1.4E -1.8E 12:12AM 03:12AM -1.1E 01:36AM 04:48AM 01:12AM 04:12AM -1.3E 12:36AM 03:36AM -1.7E 01:12AM 04:06AM Chesapeake Bay Ent., Ches 24N07:18AM 9LST/LDT 24 Baltimore Harbor Harbor (off Approach Point), Harbor (off 2022 Sandy Approach Point), (off 2022 Sand 08:00AM 11:42AM 0.9F -1.0E 11:06AM 1.0F 10:06AM 0.9F 06:48AM 10:42AM Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT 4Mean 406:24AM 19 411:30AM 19 41.0F 19 411:30AM 04:36AM 07:30AM 0.9F 19 04:12AM 07:12AM 0.8F 03:12AM 06:18AM 0.9F 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.9F 02:00PM 0.8F 10:00AM 01:06PM 1.1F 01:06PM 02:48PM 0.3F 12:18PM 02:36PM 0.6F 01:18PM 0.4F 1.4F 12:18PM 02:24PM 0.6F 1.3F 06:12AM 09:42AM 2.3F 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.5F 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.5F 07:18AM 10:30AM 07:06AM 07:12AM 10:18AM Su -0.8E M -0.7E W Th W112° Th 19 03:24PM 06:36PM -0.7E25° 03:00PM 06:12PM 01:42PM 04:54PM 02:24PM 05:42PM -0.8E Mean Flood Dir. 297° (T) Mean Ebb Dir.1.4F (T) Flood Dir. Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T) Latitude: 36.9 Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: Latitude: 39.0130° W10:00AM N Longitude: Latitude: 76.3683° 39.0130° W N -1.4E Longitude: 76.3683 Th (T) W Th 10:42AM 01:36PM -0.8E -0.7E 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.9E 10:06AM 01:12PM -0.9E 01:24PM 01:12PM 02:30PM 05:12PM 01:42PM 04:42PM 01:12PM 03:48PM 01:24PM 04:18PM 05:24PM 08:24PM -0.9E -1.4E 04:06PM 07:24PM -1.2E -1.1E 09:18PM -0.9E -1.1E 05:00PM 08:54PM -1.2E -1.1E 76.3683° 07:42PM -0.8E -1.2E 04:48PM 08:30PM -1.2E F Sa 10:24AM 01:18PM F 04:06PM Sa 04:00PM Tu W F05:24PM Sa F03:48PM Sa
10:24PM 08:42PM 0.3F 0.8F 09:36PM 11:42PM 0.3F 0.7F 04:30PM 07:36PM 0.8F 10:12PM 04:18PM 07:24PM 0.7F 03:30PM 06:30PM 04:24PM 07:18PM ◐ 11:24PM 07:36PM 10:06PM 1.0F 07:30PM 10:00PM 0.8F 08:18PM 11:24PM 1.3FDir. 07:42PM 11:00PM 1.4F 06:48PM 10:12PM 1.6F Ebb 07:24PM 10:48PM Mean Flood 10:36PM 11:48PM 10:36PM 11:24PM Mean Flood 25° (T) Mean Mean Ebb Flood Dir. Dir. 189° 25° (T) (T) Mean Mean Flood Dir. Dir. 189° 25°(T) (T) 1.7F Mean Ebb Dir.Dir 18 Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, in knots and speeds minimum current, in10:54PM knots 10:42PM of maximum and 10:24PM 09:30PM 10:12PM Baltimore harbor Approach Chesapeake Bay Entrance
Times and speeds of cu m Times and speeds of maximum Times and andspeeds minimum of maximum current, Times and inand knots speeds minimum of maximum current, inand knots minimum 1.1F 01:48AM 1.4F 12:24AM 04:06AM 1.1F 03:30AM 1.8Fn.mi. N of Cape 01:54AMHenry 1.1F Lt.) 03:00AM 1.8F (2.0 (Off02:48AM Sandy Point) 01:54AM 01:30AM 12:42AM -0.9E 01:18AM -0.8E 12:24AM 0.3F -1.0E 12:00AM 0.2F -0.8E 01:18AM 04:30AM 02:00AM 05:06AM -0.5E 12:42AM 04:00AM -1.7E 12:48AM 03:48AM -1.1E 02:42AM 05:48AM -1.3E 02:00AM March 05:00AM -1.2E 01:30AM 04:30AM -1.5E 02:00AM 04:54AM -1.4E 10-0.6E 25 -0.5E 10 25 20 10 25 January February 06:42AM 09:18AM -0.8E 05:24AM 08:12AM -0.9E 08:30AM 10:48AM -0.5E 1.2F 07:30AM 10:06AM -1.0E 1.3F 06:36AM 09:12AM -0.6E 1.1F 07:00AM 09:54AM -1.1E 1.2F March 502:42AM 5 20 5 20 5 5 20 25 20 10 25 05:12AM 08:18AM 04:42AM 07:54AM 0.9F 03:48AM 07:00AM 1.0F 04:12AM 07:36AM 1.0F 07:12AM 10:42AM 2.1F 06:48AM 10:18AM 1.5F 09:12AM 11:54AM 08:06AM 11:12AM 08:00AM 10:42AM 08:00AM 11:00AM 05:54AM -0.5E 0.9F 02:06AM 05:24AM 07:12AM 11:00AM 0.9F 07:48AM 11:48AM 1.0F January February January March Fe January January February January February February March03:30PM 12:36PM 02:54PM 0.5F 11:00AM 01:54PM 0.9F 02:12PM 04:06PM 0.3F 01:42PM 03:54PM 0.5F March 12:24PM 02:12PMJanuary 0.3F 01:30PM 0.5F
11:36AM 02:30PM 11:12AM 02:12PM -0.7E 10:18AM 01:18PM -0.9E 10:54AM 02:00PM -0.9E M 1.1F Tu -0.7E Th F Su 02:12PM 05:18PM -1.2E Th Sa 01:42PM 04:30PM -1.1E F Su 01:54PM 05:00PM -1.4E 02:18PM 05:00PM -1.3E 04:42PM -1.0E 03:12PM 06:00PM -1.0E 08:42AM 12:36PM 1.0F -0.7E 08:12AM 12:12PM 02:42PM 05:54PM 03:24PM 06:42PM -0.8E Sa Su Sa Su W Th Sa FMaximum Th F01:48PM 05:54PM 09:12PM -1.0E 04:42PM 08:18PM -1.2E 06:42PM 10:12PM -0.9E Slack 06:18PM 10:00PM -1.2E 1.5F 05:00PM 08:42PM -0.7E 1.6F 06:06PM 09:42PM -1.1E 1.8F Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Slack Maximum ack04:18PM Maximum Slack04:00PM Maximum Slack Maximum 05:36PM 08:30PM 05:18PM 08:06PM 04:30PM 07:18PM 0.7F 05:18PM 08:00PM 0.6F 08:24PM 11:00PM 1.0F 08:06PM 10:42PM 0.9F 08:24PM 11:42PM 07:24PM 10:54PM 08:00PM 11:36PM 09:00PM Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Slack Maximum Maxi 07:36PM -0.8E 0.7F 07:18PM -0.8E 0.6F 09:48PM 10:36PM Slack Maximum Slack Slack Maximum Maximum SlackSlack Maximum Slack Maximum Maximum SlackSlackMaximum SlackMaximum Maximum SlackSlack Maximum SlackMaximum Maximum Slack Slack Maximum SlackMaximum Maximum Slack SlackMaximum Maximum Sl
◐ 11:30PM ◑ 11:24PM 11:24PM 10:54PM 10:12PM ◑ 10:48PM ◐h hhmmm h m ◑hmm h knots m hh m h h mh hh m h mhknots hmmh mknots knots h mhknots hmmh mknots h mkn h m hhhmm knots h m knots h knots m h h hm m h knots mknots knots m knots mknots h mm knots m11:30PM h m knots m11:12PM m knots m h mknots knots hh m knots hh m mhhmmh mknots h hmm knots knots mhhmmh mknots hhh m h m hknots mhhmmh mknots hh m m knots h hmmhknots mhhknots mmh mknots mknots h hmmh mh knots m hh mmknots h -1.8E 12:30AM -1.1E -1.8E 02:06AM 01:18AM -1.8E 12:30AM -1.1E -1.8E 02:12AM 02:06AM -1.2E 01:18A -1 01:48AM 03:42AM 02:24AM 01:48AM 04:36AM 03:42AM 0.4F 0.3F -0.8E 02:42AM 02:24AM 05:12AM 01:48AM 04:36AM 03:42AM 0.6F 0.4F 02:12AM 0.3F 02:54AM 02:42AM 05:24AM 02:24AM 05:12AM 04:36AM 0.6F 0.6F12:30AM 0.4F 01:24AM 02:54AM 04:00AM 02:42AM 05:24AM 05:12AM 0.6F 0.6F01:18AM 0.6F 02:24AM 01:24AM 05:06AM 02:54AM 04:00AM 05:24AM 0.6F 0.6F 0.6F 02:24AM 01:24AM 05:06AM 04:00AM 0.6F 0.6F 02: 12:30AM 01:18AM -1.1E 02:06AM -1.8E -1.2E 01:06AM -1.6E 02:12AM -1.1E 54AM 05:24AM 0.6F 01:24AM -1.8E 04:00AM 0.3F 0.6F 02:24AM 05:06AM 0.6F 01:48AM 05:00AM -1.5E 01:24AM 04:30AM -1.1E 12:12AM 1.3F 03:00AM 05:54AM -1.1E 02:30AM 05:24AM -1.2E 02:54AM 05:42AM -1.3E 02:42AM -0.9E 02:06AM -0.8E 01:18AM 01:54AM -0.7E 12:18AM 04:00AM 1.2F -0.5E 02:48AM 1.5F 01:24AM 05:12AM 1.1F 12:54AM 04:36AM 1.8F 02:48AM 1.0F 12:30AM 04:06AM 1.7F 1 16 1 1 16 104:18AM 16 105:12AM 16 03:30AM 07:06AM 2.4F 04:18AM 03:30AM 07:48AM 07:06AM 1.4F 2.4F 05:12AM 08:42AM 03:30AM 2.2F 07:06AM 1.4F 2.4F 05:12AM 08:24AM 04:18AM 08:42AM 1.5F 07:48A 21 1 16 1 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 16 1 16 1607:48AM 108:00AM 16 05:54AM 09:00AM -0.6E 07:00AM 05:54AM 09:48AM 09:00AM -0.6E 07:48AM 07:00AM 10:48AM 05:54AM 09:48AM -0.7E 09:00AM -0.5E -0.6E 08:12AM 07:48AM 11:00AM 07:00AM 10:48AM -0.6E 09:48AM -0.7E -0.5E 06:48AM 08:12AM 09:42AM 07:48AM 11:00AM -0.7E 10:48AM -0.6E -0.7E 08:00AM 06:48AM 11:00AM 08:12AM 09:42AM -0.7E 11:00AM -0.7E -0.6E 06:48AM 11:00AM 09:42AM -0.7E -0.7E 08: 01:36AM 0.3F 0.9F 01:12AM 0.3F 12:00AM 0.3F 12:54AM 03:30AM 07:06AM 2.4F 04:18AM 07:48AM 05:12AM 08:42AM 05:12AM 08:24AM 1.5F 04:18AM 07:42AM 2.0F 05:12AM 08:18AM 1.3F 608:00AM 21 60.3F 21 6 21 6 11:00AM 21 03:36PM 6 1.4F 21 2.2F 12AM -0.6E 06:48AM 09:42AM -0.7E 08:00AM 11:00AM -0.7E 08:12AM 11:36AM 1.8F 07:30AM 11:00AM 1.5F 03:48AM 06:48AM -1.1E 09:00AM 11:54AM 1.1F 08:54AM 11:24AM 0.9F 09:00AM 11:48AM 1.1F 05:48AM 09:06AM 05:12AM 08:36AM 0.9F 04:24AM 07:42AM 1.0F 04:42AM 08:12AM 1.0F 10:54AM 01:36PM -1.4E 11:36AM 10:54AM 02:18PM 01:36PM -1.0E -1.4E 12:18PM 11:36AM 02:54PM 10:54AM 02:18PM -1.5E 01:36PM -1.0E -1.4E 12:00PM 12:18PM 02:54PM 11:36AM 02:54PM -1.2E 02:18P -1 10:24AM -0.7E 06:36AM 09:18AM -0.9E 09:18AM 11:42AM -0.6E 08:30AM 11:12AM -1.1E 07:24AM 10:00AM -0.6E 08:06AM 10:54AM -1.1E 11:36AM 1.4F 12:18PM 11:36AM 04:12PM 03:36PM 1.1F 1.4F 01:30PM 12:18PM 05:06PM 11:36AM 04:12PM 03:36PM 1.2F 1.1F 1.4F 01:42PM 01:30PM 05:12PM 12:18PM 05:06PM 04:12PM 1.0F 1.2F 1.1F 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09:48AM 1.5F 06:12AM 09:18AM 1.7F 06:30AM 09:36AM 1.4F 01:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F -0.7E 12:42AM 03:06AM 0.5F 03:00AM 0.4F 12:18AM 02:54AM 0.5F 02:30PM 05:36PM 02:00PM 05:06PM -0.8E 12:48PM 03:54PM -0.7E 01:24PM 04:36PM -0.9E 10:00PM 09:48PM 10:00PM 1.2F 09:48PM 10:00PM 09:42PM 09:48PM 09:42PM1.6F 09: Sa Su Tu W 08:36AM 11:36AM -0.9E 48AM 06:36AM 0.7F 03:18AM 06:24AM 0.8F 10:00AM 12:30PM -0.7E 08:54AM 11:30AM -1.1E 03:12AM 06:42AM 03:12AM 06:48AM 2.0F -1.2E Tu 09:54AM 12:42PM -0.8E -0.9E W 03:00AM 06:36AM Tu W Tu 07:36PM W 04:48PM -1.0E 03:30PM 06:42PM -1.1E 04:36PM 08:24PM -0.9E 04:06PM 07:48PM 03:00PM 06:42PM 03:48PM 07:24PM -1.3E 12:36PM 03:12PM -1.5E 12:36PM 03:24PM -1.1E 01:48PM 04:24PM -1.2E 01:12PM 04:00PM -1.1E 12:36PM 03:12PM -1.3E 12:54PM 03:48PM -1.3E 09:06PM 11:24PM 0.3F 08:54PM 10:54PM 0.3F 07:30PM 09:54PM 0.4F 08:30PM 10:36PM 0.3F 05:36AM 08:24AM -0.4E 05:48AM 08:36AM -0.5E 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.7E 05:42AM 08:42AM -0.6E 36AM 12:30PM -0.7E 02:36PM 05:42PM 0.9F 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.8E M Tu Th F Th F 03:48PM 06:06PM 0.3F 03:00PM 05:06PM 0.6F 10:24AM 01:12PM -0.9E 10:24AM 01:06PM -1.3E 04:06PM 06:54PM 0.6F 10:12AM 12:54PM -1.2E ◐ ◑ Th F 10:42PM 0.8F 09:54PM 1.3F 11:24PM 1.2F 10:48PM-1.8E 09:48PM-1.1E 10:30PM 03:06AM 03:12AM -1.8E 01:36AM 04:48AM 03:12AM -1.6E 03:06AM -1.1E -1.8E 01:36AM 04:12AM 12:12AM 04:48AM -1.3E 03:12A -1 Th F07:36PM Su M Su M ◐11:12AM ◑11:30AM 06:48PM 1.0F 03:12PM 06:54PM 09:24PM 10:36PM 07:06PM 10:12PM 06:12PM 09:24PM 1.5F 06:48PM 10:00PM 1.5F 12:12AM -1.2E 12:24AM 12:12AM -1.0E -1.2E 01:12AM 12:24AM -1.0E 12:12AM -1.0E -1.2E 01:00AM 01:12AM -0.9E 12:24AM -1.0E -1.0E 12:00AM 01:00AM -1.0E 01:12AM -0.9E -1.0E03:06AM 12:42AM -0.8E 01:00AM -1.0E -0.9E 12:42AM 12:00AM -0.8E -1.0E 11:00AM 02:48PM 0.9F 03:06PM 1.0F 09:12PM 1.1F 11:30AM 03:00PM 0.9F 08:54PM 24PM 06:36PM 0.8F 03:30PM 06:36PM 0.8F 40.8F 19 412:12AM 412:00AM 19 412:12AM 19 401:12AM 19 11:42PM -1.1E 11:12PM -1.5E 04:24PM 07:12PM 04:30PM 07:12PM 1.0F 09:54PM 04:24PM 07:18PM 1.0F M 06:12AM 2.3F 06:06AM 09:42AM 1.5F 2.3F 08:06AM 11:12AM 06:12AM 1.5F 09:42AM 1.5F 2.3F 07:18AM 08:06AM 10:30AM 06:06AM 11:12AM 1.4F 09:30A 14 4 M 19 4Su 407:36PM 19 404:12AM 19 404:12AM 19 4 09:42AM 19 404:12AM 1909:30AM 403:48AM 19 1909:30AM 403:48AM 19 ○07:12AM 03:54AM 06:18AM 0.6F -1.0E 04:12AM 03:54AM 06:36AM 06:18AM 0.5F -0.8E 0.6F 04:36AM 07:30AM 03:54AM 06:36AM 06:18AM 0.9F -0.9E 0.5F 0.6F 04:36AM 07:12AM 04:12AM 07:30AM 06:36AM 0.8F 0.9F 0.5F 03:12AM 06:18AM 04:36AM 07:30AM 0.9F 06:12AM 0.8F 0.9F 03:12AM 06:54AM 04:12AM 06:18AM 07:12AM 0.9F06:06AM 0.9F 0.8F 03:12AM 06:54AM 06:18AM 0.9F 0.9F 03: 11:48PM ○08:18PM 06:18PM 09:36PM 06:36PM 10:00PM -1.0E 06:42PM 09:54PM 06:24PM 09:36PM 48PM 09:42PM 01:24PM 04:06PM -1.4E 01:12PM 01:24PM 04:00PM 04:06PM -1.1E -1.4E 02:30PM 01:12PM 05:12PM 01:24PM 04:00PM -1.1E 04:06PM -1.1E -1.4E 01:42PM 02:30PM 04:42PM 01:12PM 05:12PM -1.1E 04:00P -1 10:00PM 09:54PM 10:00PM Tu W01:18PM Tu F 12:24PM W Tu Sa01:12PM F W 09:00AM 11:48AM 09:24AM 09:00AM 12:06PM 11:48AM -0.5E -0.7E 10:42AM 09:24AM 01:36PM 09:00AM 12:06PM -0.8E 11:48AM -0.5E 10:42AM 01:18PM 09:24AM 01:36PM -0.7E 12:06PM -0.8E 09:24AM 12:24PM 10:42AM -0.9E 01:36PM -0.7E 09:24AM 01:12PM 10:24AM -0.9E 01:18PM -0.9E -0.7E 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.9E -0.9E 01:42AM 1.1F 12:54AM 1.2F 02:54AM 1.2F 02:24AM 1.7F 01:06AM 1.3F 02:06AM 1.9F Tu -0.6E W -0.6E Tu F -0.6E W Tu Sa -0.7E F10:24AM W F -0.5E Sa F10:24AM Sa -0.8E F10:06AM Sa Sa F10:06AM Sa 10:F 01:42AM 05:00AM 01:00AM-0.7E 04:24AM 12:24AM 03:30AM 12:54AM 04:06AM -0.6E
1
1 26
16 11 16 11
1 26
26
16 11
1 26
16 11
26
2
2
17 12 17 12
2 27
27
17 12
2 27
17 12
27
27
18 ID: 3 feet 3 Tidal Current 18 13Predictions Station cb0102 NOAA 28 13 Depth: 22 28
18 13 3 Tidal 18 13 28 Current Predictions 28 NOAA 28 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Harmonic 07:36PM 10:06PM 1.0F 07:30PM 07:36PM 10:00PM 10:06PM 0.8F 1.0F 08:18PM 07:30PM 11:24PM 07:36PM 10:00PM 1.3F 10:06PM 0.8F 1.0F 07:42PM 08:18PM 11:00PM 07:30PM 11:24PM 1.4F 10:00P 1 24 9 1.2F 02:24PM 1.2F 9 02:30PM 02:24PM 06:12PM 06:12PM 1.0F 1.2F 04:30PM 02:30PM 07:36PM 02:24PM 06:12PM 06:12PM 0.8F 1.0F 04:18PM 04:30PM 07:24PM 02:30PM 07:36PM 06:12PM 0.7F 24 1.0F 03:30PM 04:18PM 06:30PM 04:30PM 07:36PM 0.8F 9 0.7F 0.8F 04:24PM 03:30PM 07:18PM 04:18PM 06:30PM 07:24PM 0.7F24 0.8F 05:54AM 0.7F 04:24PM 03:30PM 07:18PM 06:30PM 0.7F 0.8F 04: 05:24AM 08:18AM -1.0E 04:12AM 07:06AM -1.0E 07:30AM 09:48AM -0.6E 06:18AM 09:06AM -1.0E 05:42AM 08:18AM -0.6E 08:48AM -1.1E 9 01:00AM 24 06:12PM 9 -1.1E 24 08:00AM 11:42AM Approach 0.9F 07:18AM 11:06AM 1.0F 06:24AM 10:06AM 0.9F 06:48AM 10:42AM 1.0F Chesapeake Bay Ent., 2.0Th0.8Fn.mi. N of07:24PM Cape Henry Lt., 2022 more Harbor (off Sandy Point), 2022 Time Zone: LST/LDT 03:06AM 12:12AM 03:12AM 01:36AM 04:48AM -1.6E 01:12AM 04:12AM -1.3E 12:36AM 03:36AM -1.7E 01:12AM 04:06AM -1.4E 09:36PM -1.8E 09:42PM 09:36PM 10:42PM 09:42PM 09:36PM 10:24PM 10:42PM 09:42PM 09:30PM 10:24PM 10:42PM 10:12PM 09:30PM 10:24PM 10:12PM 09:30PM 10: -0.9E 12:00AM -1.0E 12:42AM -0.8E 11:30AM 02:00PM 0.8F 10:00AM 01:06PM 1.1F 01:06PM 02:48PM 0.3F 12:18PM 02:36PM 0.6F 11:30AM 01:18PM 02:24PM 03:00AM 06:54AM 1.4F 02:18AM 06:00AM 2.1F 01:00AM -1.0E 12:42AM -0.8E 0.4F Th 12:18PM 01:06AM -1.4E 0.6F Su M W 10:30AM W 10:18AM 03:24PM 06:36PM -0.7E 03:00PM 06:12PM -0.8E 01:42PM 04:54PM -0.7E 02:24PM 05:42PM -0.8E 4 0.8F 19 0.9F 4 -0.9E 19 436.9594° 19 W Th 06:18AM W Th 06:12AM 09:42AM 2.3F 06:06AM 09:30AM 1.5F 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.5F 07:18AM 1.4F 07:06AM 10:00AM 1.4F 07:12AM 1.3F 439.0130° 19 05:24PM 08:24PM 04:06PM 07:24PM -1.2E 05:24PM 09:18PM -0.9E 05:00PM 08:54PM -1.2E 03:48PM 07:42PM -0.8E 04:48PM 08:30PM -1.2E 01:48AM 04:06AM 0.4F 01:18AM 03:48AM 0.4F 01:00AM 03:48AM 0.7F 14 29 14 14 29 03:12AM 12AM 07:12AM 03:48AM 06:54AM 0.9F Latitude: N Longitude: 76.0128° W 10:36AM 01:12PM -0.8E 09:48AM 12:30PM -1.2E 03:54AM 07:12AM 1.3F 03:36AM 06:48AM 1.0F 04:12AM 07:36AM 1.7F Latitude: N Longitude: 76.3683° W 10:24PM 10:12PM 08:42PM 10:54PM 0.3F 09:36PM 11:42PM 0.3F 12:42AM 04:00AM -1.7E 12:42AM 03:48AM 04:00AM -1.1E -1.7E 02:42AM 05:48AM 12:42AM 03:48AM -1.3E 04:00AM -1.1E -1.7E 02:42AM 05:00AM 12:48AM 05:48AM -1.2E 03:48A -1 ◐04:24PM 14 29 12:54AM 01:00AM 12:54AM -1.2E 01:54AM 01:00AM -1.0E 12:54AM -1.0E -1.2E 01:30AM -0.8E 01:00AM -1.0E10:42AM -1.0E 12:42AM 01:30AM -0.9E 01:54AM -0.8E -1.0E 01:18AM -0.8E 01:30AM -0.9E -0.8E 01:18AM 12:42AM -0.8E -0.9E 01:24PM 04:06PM 01:12PM 04:00PM -1.1E 02:30PM 05:12PM -1.1E 01:42PM 04:42PM -1.1E 01:12PM 03:48PM 01:24PM 04:18PM -1.4E 11:24PM 10:36PM 11:48PM -1.2E 10:36PM 11:24PM 06:42AM 09:30AM -0.5E 06:30AM 09:18AM -0.5E 06:48AM 09:48AM -0.7E 09:24AM -1.4E 12:24PM -0.9E 24AM 01:18PM 10:06AM 01:12PM -0.9E 5F01:54AM 20 512:48AM 512:42AM 20 512:48AM 20 502:00AM 20 Tu -0.7E W -1.2E F -1.0E Sa Sa 06:54PM 0.5F 06:18PM 0.7F 10:54AM 01:42PM -1.1E 10:30AM 01:24PM -0.9E 11:00AM 01:48PM -1.2E 07:12AM 2.1F 06:48AM 07:12AM 10:18AM 10:42AM 1.5F 2.1F 09:12AM 06:48AM 11:54AM 07:12AM 1.2F 10:42AM 1.5F 2.1F 08:06AM 09:12AM 11:12AM 06:48AM 11:54AM 1.3F 10:18A 15 F Dir. Sa Dir. 5 20 504:42AM 504:00PM 20 504:42AM 20 504:42AM 20 5 05:00PM 20 5 20 504:12AM 20 2010:18AM 504:12AM 20 F07:30PM Sa M M Tu 04:36AM 07:12AM 0.6F 04:36AM 07:18AM 07:12AM 0.5F 0.6F 05:12AM 08:18AM 04:36AM 07:18AM 07:12AM 0.9F 0.5F 0.6F 05:12AM 07:54AM 04:42AM 08:18AM 07:18AM 0.9F 0.9F 0.5F 03:48AM 04:42AM 07:00AM 05:12AM 07:54AM 08:18AM 1.0F 02:18PM 0.9F 0.9F 03:48AM 07:36AM 04:42AM 07:00AM 07:54AM 1.0F01:48PM 1.0F 0.9F 03:48AM 07:36AM 07:00AM 1.0F 1.0F 04: Mean Flood Dir. 297° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 112° (T) 07:36PM 10:06PM 1.0F Mean 10:00PM 0.8F 08:18PM 11:24PM 1.3F 07:42PM 11:00PM 1.4F 06:48PM 10:12PM 1.6F 07:24PM 10:48PM 1.7F Mean Flood 25° (T) Ebb 189° (T) 12:06PM 03:48PM 1.0F 12:00PM 03:36PM 0.9F 12:42PM 04:00PM 0.9F 05:18PM -1.2E 02:18PM -1.3E 01:48PM 04:42PM 05:00PM -1.0E -1.3E 03:12PM 06:00PM 02:18PM 04:42PM -1.0E 05:00PM -1.0E -1.3E 02:12PM 03:12PM 01:48PM 06:00PM 04:42P -1 03:30PM 06:30PM 0.8F 18PM 07:24PM 0.7F 04:24PM 07:18PM 0.7F 08:48PM 05:00PM 07:42PM 0.9F 04:48PM 07:36PM 0.8F 05:00PM 1.2F W Th W Sa Th W Su Sa Th M Tu 10:00AM 12:48PM -0.7E 09:18PM 10:06AM 10:00AM 12:48PM 12:48PM -0.5E-0.7E 11:36AM 10:06AM 02:30PM 10:00AM 12:48PM -0.7E 12:48PM -0.5E -0.7E 11:12AM 11:36AM 02:12PM 10:06AM 02:30PM -0.7E 12:48PM -0.7E -0.5E 10:18AM 11:12AM 01:18PM 11:36AM 02:12PM -0.9E 02:30PM -0.7E -0.7E 10:54AM 10:18AM 02:00PM 11:12AM 01:18PM -0.9E 02:12PM -0.9E -0.7E08:06PM 10:54AM 10:18AM 02:00PM 01:18PM -0.9E -0.9E 10:S
M A R C H 2022 C u R R E N T S
3
W Th W Sa Th W Su Sa Th 04:06AM 1.1F Sa 11:00PM Su Sa 1.0F Su10:42PM Sa 11:00PM Su 0.9F Su10:42PM Sa11:00PM Su1.5F 08:24PM 11:42PM 08:24PM 08:06PM 08:24PM 1.0F 1.1F 09:00PM 08:06PM 08:24PM 0.9F 1.0F 09:00PM 08:06PM 10:42P 02:48AM 1.1F 01:48AM 1.4F 12:24AM 03:30AM 1.8F 01:54AM 03:00AM 1.8F 07:00PM 10:18PM -0.9E 07:18PM 10:36PM -1.0E 07:12PM 10:24PM -0.9E 09:30PM 07:00PM 1.1F 24PM 10:12PM 10:42PM 10:36PM 11:00PM 03:30PM 03:24PM 03:30PM 06:54PM 07:00PM 0.9F 1.1F 05:36PM 03:24PM 08:30PM 03:30PM 06:54PM 07:00PM 0.7F 0.9F 1.1F 05:18PM 05:36PM 08:06PM 03:24PM 08:30PM 06:54PM 0.6F 25 0.7F 0.9F 04:30PM 05:18PM 07:18PM 05:36PM 08:06PM 08:30PM 0.7F 10 0.6F 0.7F 05:18PM 04:30PM 08:00PM 05:18PM 07:18PM 08:06PM 0.6F25 0.7F 0.6F 05:18PM 04:30PM 08:00PM 07:18PM 0.6F 0.7F 05: 12:24AM 0.3F 12:00AM 01:18AM 04:30AM 02:00AM 05:06AM -0.5E 10 0.2F 25 -0.5E 10
Times and speeds of maximum and minimum current, in09:12AM knots es10and speeds of maximum and 05:24AM minimum current, in11:00AM knots 0.9F 06:42AM 09:18AM 05:24AM 08:30AM 10:48AM 07:30AM 10:06AM 06:36AM 25 02:06AM 10 25 08:12AM 10:54PM 10:54PM 10:54PM-0.6E 10:24PM 10:18PM 10:24PM 11:24PM 10:18PM 10:24PM 11:24PM 10:18PM-0.5E 10:12PM 11:24PM-1.0E 10:48PM 10:12PM 02:42AM 05:54AM -0.5E -0.6E 07:12AM-0.8E 07:48AM-0.9E 11:48AM 1.0F
07:00AM 09:54AM -1.1E 10:48PM 10:12PM
12:36PM -1.1E 02:54PM 0.5F 11:00AM -1.3E 01:54PM 0.9F 02:12PM -1.2E 04:06PM 0.3F 01:42PM -1.5E 03:54PM 0.5F 12:24PM -1.4E 02:12PM 0.3F F 01:30PM 03:30PM 0.5F M 03:48AM Tu -0.7E Th 05:00AM F 04:30AM Th 04:30AM 12:42AM 04:00AM -1.7E 12:48AM 02:42AM 05:48AM 02:00AM 01:30AM 02:00AM 04:54AM 08:42AM -0.8E 08:12AM -0.9E 02:42PM 05:54PM 03:24PM 06:42PM -0.8E 01:18AM -0.8E Th 01:30AM Th 09:12PM F 08:18PM 12:36AM -1.1E 12:18AM -1.6E 01:36AM -1.1E 01:30AM -0.9E -0.7E 01:24AM 02:00AM -1.6E-1.5E 01:48AM 05:00AM 01:24AM 01:48AM 05:00AM -1.1E -1.5E 12:12AM 01:48AM 04:30AM 1.3F 05:00AM -1.1E 03:00AM 05:54PM 04:42PM 06:42PM 10:12PM 06:18PM-1.5E 10:00PM 05:00PM 08:42PM 06:06PM 09:42PM -1.1E 5 12:36PM 1.0F F 12:42AM 20 12:12PM 1.1F 5 -1.0E 20 -1.2E 5 -0.9E 20 -1.2E
5
20 15 March January 15
30
6 1 6 1
21 16 21 16
6 31 1
7 2 7 2
22 17 22 17
7 2
15 February
15 March
30 31
10:
05:54AM 01:24AM 12:12AM -1.1E 04:30A 1
01:36AM 01:42AM -1.0E -1.1E 02:42AM 01:36AM -0.9E 01:42AM -1.0E -1.1E 02:06AM 02:42AM -0.8E 01:36AM -0.9E11:36AM -1.0E 01:18AM 02:06AM -0.8E 02:42AM -0.8E -0.9E11:36AM 01:54AM 01:18AM -0.7E 02:06AM -0.8E -0.8E 01:54AM 01:18AM -0.7E -0.8E 04:18PM 07:36PM 04:00PM-1.1E 07:18PM -0.8E 09:48PM 10:36PM 07:12AM 10:42AM 2.1F 06:48AM 10:18AM 1.5F 09:12AM 11:54AM 1.2F 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.3F 08:00AM 10:42AM 1.8F 1.1F 08:00AM 11:00AM 1.2F 61.4F 21 607:30AM 61.2F 21 607:30AM 21 609:00AM 21 02:24AM 04:48AM 0.5F 04:30AM 0.5F 04:36AM 0.8F 42AM 07:54AM 0.9F 04:12AM 07:36AM 1.0F 03:48AM 01:42AM 07:00AM 1.0F 08:12AM 08:12AM 1.5F 1.8F 03:48AM 06:48AM 08:12AM -1.1E 11:36AM 1.5F 1.8F 03:48AM 11:54AM 07:30AM 06:48AM 1.1F 11:00A -16 ◑ ◐0.9F ◑ 03:42AM 07:24AM 1.4F 06:54AM 2.2F 04:36AM 07:48AM 04:24AM 07:36AM 05:18AM 08:30AM 1.6F 11:24PM 11:30PM 6 -0.8E 21 605:12AM 603:18AM 21 605:12AM 21 605:12AM 21 6 05:54PM 21 605:12AM 2111:00AM 604:42AM 21 2111:00AM 604:42AM 21 ◐01:54AM ◑01:36AM 05:18AM -1.3E 08:00AM 0.7F 05:18AM 07:54AM 08:00AM 0.6F 0.7F 05:48AM 09:06AM 05:18AM 07:54AM 08:00AM 0.9F 0.6F 0.7F 05:48AM 08:36AM 05:12AM 09:06AM 07:54AM 0.9F 0.9F 0.6F 04:24AM 07:42AM 05:48AM 08:36AM 09:06AM 1.0F 03:12PM 0.9F 04:24AM 08:12AM 05:12AM 07:42AM 08:36AM 1.0F02:30PM 1.0F 0.9F 04:24AM 08:12AM 07:42AM 1.0F 1.0F 04: 11:30PM 11:12PM 02:18PM 05:00PM 01:48PM 04:42PM -1.0E 03:12PM 06:00PM -1.0E 02:12PM 05:18PM -1.2E 01:42PM 04:30PM -1.1E 01:54PM 05:00PM -1.4E 03:12PM -1.1E 02:30PM 05:24PM 05:54PM -1.0E -1.1E 12:36PM 03:12PM 05:24PM 0.9F 05:54PM -1.0E -1.1E 02:42PM 06:00PM 02:30PM 12:36PM -1.2E 05:24P 0S 07:18AM 10:12AM -0.6E 07:24AM 10:18AM -0.6E 07:42AM 10:42AM -0.8E 12AM 02:12PM 10:18AM 01:48PM 01:18PM -0.9E 10:54AM 02:00PM -0.9E W -0.7E Th -0.6E Sa -0.5E Su Sa Th FSu Th Su F10:12AM Th M02:48PM Su F10:12AM 11:06AM 01:48PM -0.9E 10:42AM 01:24PM -1.4E 11:30AM 02:18PM -1.1E 11:12AM 02:06PM -1.1E 11:48AM 02:30PM -1.3E Sa 11:00PM Su 11:06AM 10:54AM 11:06AM 01:42PM 01:48PM -0.6E 10:54AM 03:30PM 11:06AM 01:42PM -0.7E 01:48PM -0.5E 12:06PM 03:06PM 10:54AM 03:30PM -0.7E 01:42PM -0.7E -0.5E 11:06AM 12:06PM 02:06PM 12:36PM 03:06PM -0.8E 03:30PM -0.7E -0.7E 11:42AM 11:06AM 02:48PM 12:06PM 02:06PM -0.9E 03:06PM -0.8E -0.7E 11:42AM 11:06AM 02:06PM -0.9E08:36PM -0.8E 11: Sa Su Tu Tu W Th F Th Su F12:36PM Th M -0.6E Su F12:36PM Su 11:54PM M Su M 11:24PM Su M M 11:24PM Su M 11:24P 09:12PM 1.1F 08:36PM 09:12PM 11:54PM 1.0F 1.1F 03:42PM 08:36PM 06:48PM 09:12PM -1.0E 11:54PM 1.0F 1.1F 09:12PM 03:42PM 06:48PM -1 08:24PM 1.0F 08:06PM 10:42PM 0.9F 09:00PM 08:24PM 11:42PM 1.5F 07:24PM 10:54PM 1.6F 08:00PM 11:36PM 1.8F 18PM 08:06PM 0.6F 04:30PM 07:18PM 0.7F 05:18PM 08:00PM 0.6F 12:54PM 04:24PM 0.9F 12:54PM 04:30PM 1.0F 01:48PM 04:54PM 0.9F 05:00PM 07:30PM 0.6F 04:48PM 07:18PM 0.9F 05:36PM 08:18PM 1.0F 05:18PM 08:12PM 1.0F 05:36PM 08:48PM 1.5F 04:30PM 07:54PM 1.0F 04:18PM 04:30PM 07:42PM 07:54PM 0.8F 1.0F 06:42PM 04:18PM 09:18PM 04:30PM 07:42PM 07:54PM 0.5F 0.8F 1.0F 06:24PM 06:42PM 09:00PM 04:18PM 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05:12AM 1.3F 01:12AM 03:48AM 05:12AM 1.7F 12:18AM 06:00AM 01:12AM 03:48AM 1.1F 05:12AM 1.7F 1.3F 02:06AM 02:24AM 05:42AM 12:18AM 06:00AM 1.9F 03:48A 1 02:48AM 1.1F -1.7E-0.5E 12:48AM 01:48AM 1.4F 12:24AM 04:06AM 1.1F -1.3E 03:30AM 1.8F -1.2E 01:12AM 01:54AM 1.1F -1.5E 12:18AM 03:00AM 1.8F 1.3F 12:42AM 04:00AM 03:48AM -1.1E -0.5E 02:42AM 05:48AM 05:00AM 01:30AM 04:30AM 02:00AM 04:54AM -1.4E 02:24AM AM E 02:00AM AM -0.6E E 27 12:00AM 0.2F -0.8E 01:18AM 04:30AM 02:00AM 05:06AM 12 27 12 12 27 27 12 01:30AM 12:42AM -0.9E 01:18AM -0.8E 09:06AM 11:30AM -0.6E 07:48AM 10:24AM -0.9E -0.6E 09:48AM 07:48AM 12:30PM 09:06AM 10:24AM -0.7E 11:30AM -0.9E 09:30AM 09:48AM 12:18PM 07:48AM 12:30PM -1.2E 10:24A -01 01:00AM 12:24AM 01:00AM 0.2F 0.3F 12:24AM 02:24AM 12:24AM 0.3F 0.2F 0.3F 12:00AM 12:24AM 02:12AM 02:24AM 12:24AM 0.4F 0.3F 0.2F 10:42AM 12:00AM 01:00AM 12:24AM 02:12AM 02:24AM 0.3F 09:06AM 0.4F 0.3F11:30AM 01:54AM 12:00AM 01:00AM 02:12AM 0.4F12 0.3F 0.4F 01:54AM 01:00AM 0.4F 0.3F 06:42AM 09:18AM -0.8E 05:24AM 08:12AM -0.9E 08:30AM 10:48AM 07:30AM 10:06AM -1.0E 06:36AM 09:12AM -0.6E 07:00AM 09:54AM -1.1E 31 31 07:12AM 10:42AM 2.1F 0.3F 06:48AM 10:18AM 1.5F 09:12AM 11:54AM 1.2F 01:00AM 08:06AM 11:12AM 1.3F 08:00AM 1.1F 08:00AM 11:00AM 1.2F AM -0.5E AM AM AM 02:12AM 05:24AM 0.9F 06AM 05:24AM -0.6E 07:12AM 11:00AM 0.9F 07:48AM 11:48AM 1.0F 12 27 12 12 27 12 27 12 27 1205:00PM 27 12 2704:00PM 12 27 2704:00PM 12 27 02:54PM 0.3F 01:36PM 02:54PM 05:00PM 0.6F 0.3F 03:48PM 01:36PM 06:30PM 02:54PM 0.6F 05:00PM 0.6F 0.3F 03:48PM 03:48PM 06:18PM 01:36PM 06:30PM 0.8F 04:00P 0S 04:42AM 07:54AM 0.9F 03:48AM 07:00AM 1.0F 04:12AM 07:36AM 1.0F 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.6E 02:18AM 03:12AM 05:48AM 06:30AM -0.6E -0.6E 04:48AM 02:18AM 07:48AM 03:12AM 05:48AM -0.5E 06:30AM -0.6E -0.6E 04:36AM 04:48AM 07:42AM 02:18AM 07:48AM -0.6E 05:48AM -0.5E -0.6E 03:30AM 04:36AM 06:24AM 04:48AM 07:42AM -0.4E 07:48AM -0.6E -0.5E 04:30AM 03:30AM 07:30AM 04:36AM 06:24AM -0.5E 07:42AM -0.4E -0.6E 04:30AM 03:30AM 07:30AM 06:24AM -0.5E -0.4E 04: W Th W Sa Th W Su Sa 12:36PM 02:54PM 0.5F -1.3E 11:00AM 01:54PM 0.9F 02:12PM 04:06PM 0.3F 01:42PM 03:54PM 0.5F 12:24PM 02:12PM 0.3F 01:30PM 03:30PM 0.5F 01:54PM 05:00PM -1.4E 02:18PM 05:00PM 01:48PM 04:42PM -1.0E 03:12PM 06:00PM -1.0E 02:12PM 05:18PM -1.2E 01:42PM 04:30PM -1.1E 31 AM PM E 1.1F PM PM E Th 08:30AM 11:36AM -0.9E M 1.1F Tu Th F Th F 02:42PM 05:54PM -0.7E 12AM 12:12PM 03:24PM 06:42PM -0.8E 07:18PM 10:48PM -1.0E 06:24PM 07:18PM 10:12PM 10:48PM -1.4E -1.0E 09:12PM 06:24PM 07:18PM 10:12PM 10:48PM -1.4E -1.0E 08:54PM 09:12PM 06:24PM 10:12P W Th Sa Su Sa Su M Th 09:24AM 01:12PM 1.0F 08:42AM 09:24AM 12:36PM 01:12PM 1.1F 1.0F 10:24AM 08:42AM 02:18PM 09:24AM 12:36PM 01:12PM 1.0F 1.0F 10:24AM 10:24AM 02:18PM 08:42AM 02:18PM 12:36PM 1.1F 1.0F 1.1F 09:00AM 10:24AM 12:54PM 10:24AM 02:18PM 02:18PM 0.9F 1.1F 1.0F 10:18AM 09:00AM 01:54PM 10:24AM 12:54PM 02:18PM 0.9F 0.9F 1.1F 10:18AM 09:00AM 01:54PM 12:54PM 0.9F 0.9F 10: 11:12AM 02:12PM -0.7E 10:18AM 01:18PM -0.9E 10:54AM 02:00PM -0.9E Th F W08:24PM Th W Sa Th W Su Sa Th -1.2E 1.5F 05:00PM Sa 08:42PM Su 10:54PM Sa -0.7E 1.6F 06:06PM Su 09:42PM Sa 11:36PM Su-1.1E 1.8F Su Sa Su 05:54PM 09:12PM -1.0E 04:42PM 08:18PM -1.2E 06:42PM 10:12PM -0.9E 06:18PM 10:00PM Sa Su PM PM PM 08:00PM 11:00PM 1.0F-0.8E 08:06PM 10:42PM 0.9F -0.8E 09:00PM 08:24PM 11:42PM 07:24PM 02:48PM 05:42PM 0.8F 08:06PM 04:54PM 07:42PM 08:06PM 04:24PM 04:54PM 07:42PM -0.9E 08:06PM -0.8E -0.8E 05:48PM 05:54PM 09:06PM 04:24PM 09:12PM -1.0E 07:42PM -0.9E -0.8E 04:24PM 05:48PM 07:48PM 05:54PM 09:06PM -0.8E 09:12PM -1.0E -0.9E 05:24PM 04:24PM 08:42PM 05:48PM 07:48PM -0.9E 09:06PM -0.8E -1.0E PM 05:24PM 04:24PM 08:42PM 07:48PM -0.9E -0.8E 05: 09:48PM 00PM 07:18PM -0.8E 10:36PM Th 09:12PM 05:18PM 08:06PM 0.6F 04:54PM 04:30PM 07:18PM 0.7F 04:24PM 05:18PM 08:00PM -0.8E 0.6F 05:54PM ◑ ◐ ◑ 11:24PM 11:30PM PM 08:42PM 11:48PM -0.9E 11:54PM 11:42PM 11:54PM 11:42PM 11:54PM 11:42PM 11:36PM 11:36PM 11:36PM ◐ ◑ 12PM 10:54PM 10:12PM 10:48PM 02:06AM 06:12AM 1.3F 01:18AM 02:06AM 04:54AM 06:12AM 1.9F 1.3F 01:18AM 12:12AM 02:06AM 04:54AM -0.9E 06:12AM 1.9F 1.3F 12:12AM 01:18AM 12:12AM -1.5E 04:54A -0
10 5 10 5
25 20 25 20
10 5
25 20
10 5
25 20
13
28 13
13 28 13
28 13 28
1
10:00AM 12:30PM -0.7E 08:54AM 11:30AM 12:30PM -1.1E -0.7E 03:12AM 06:42AM 10:00AM 11:30AM 1.2F 12:30PM -1.1E -0.7E 03:12AM 03:12AM 06:48AM 08:54AM 06:42AM 2.0F 11:30A 1 02:00AM 01:30AM 02:00AM 0.2F 0.3F 05:12AM 01:06AM 03:24AM 01:30AM 0.4F 0.2F 0.3F 12:42AM 01:06AM 03:06AM 03:24AM 01:30AM 0.5F 0.4F 0.2F 05:24AM 12:42AM 03:00AM 01:06AM 03:06AM 03:24AM 0.4F 10:00AM 0.5F 0.4F 12:18AM 02:54AM 12:42AM 03:00AM 03:06AM 0.5F08:54AM 0.4F 0.5F 12:18AM 02:54AM 03:00AM 0.5F 0.4F 12: 12:18AM 04:00AM 1.2F -1.5E 0.3F 02:48AM 1.5F 01:24AM 1.1F 12:54AM 04:36AM 1.8F 02:48AM 1.0F 12:30AM 04:06AM 1.7F 01:48AM 05:00AM 01:24AM 04:30AM -1.1E 12:12AM 1.3F 02:00AM 03:00AM 05:54AM -1.1E 02:30AM -1.2E 02:54AM 05:42AM -1.3E 01:12AM 0.3F 12:00AM 0.3F -0.8E 12:54AM 0.3F 03:48PM 0.3F 03:00PM 03:48PM 06:06PM 0.6F 0.3F 03:00PM 01:12PM 03:48PM -0.9E 06:06PM 0.6F 0.3F 10:24AM 01:06PM 03:00PM 01:12PM -1.3E 05:06P -0S 13 28 13 13 28 13 28 13 28 1306:06PM 28 13 2805:06PM 13 28 2805:06PM 13 28 04:12AM -0.7E 07:24AM 03:24AM 04:12AM 06:48AM 07:24AM -0.6E -0.6E 05:48AM 03:24AM 08:36AM 04:12AM 06:48AM -0.5E 07:24AM -0.6E -0.6E 05:42AM 05:48AM 08:48AM 03:24AM 08:36AM -0.7E 06:48AM -0.5E -0.6E 05:36AM 05:42AM 08:24AM 05:48AM 08:48AM -0.4E 08:36AM -0.7E -0.5E 05:42AM 05:36AM 08:42AM 05:42AM 08:24AM -0.6E 08:48AM -0.4E -0.7E 05:42AM 05:36AM 08:24AM -0.6E -0.4E 05: 02:06AM -0.8E 01:18AM 01:54AM -0.7E Th F0.9F Th Su F10:24AM Th M08:42AM Su F10:24AM 08:00AM 10:24AM 06:36AM 09:18AM -0.9E 09:18AM 11:42AM -0.6E 08:30AM 11:12AM -1.1E 07:24AM 10:00AM -0.6E 08:06AM 10:54AM -1.1E 08:12AM 11:36AM 1.8F-0.6E 07:30AM 11:00AM 1.5F 03:48AM 06:48AM -1.1E 09:00AM 11:54AM 1.1F 08:54AM 11:24AM 09:00AM 11:48AM 1.1F 08:18PM 11:42PM -1.1E 07:36PM 08:18PM 11:12PM 11:42PM -1.5E -1.1E 04:24PM 07:36PM 07:12PM 08:18PM 0.8F 11:42PM -1.5E -1.1E 04:30PM 04:24PM 07:12PM 07:36PM 07:12PM 11:12P 0 18AM 06:36AM -0.6E 02:24AM 05:24AM -0.4E 03:12AM 06:18AM -0.5E 10:12AM 02:00PM 1.1F 1.0F 09:30AM 10:12AM 01:30PM 02:00PM 1.2F 1.1F 09:30AM 03:06PM 10:12AM 02:00PM 1.0F 1.2F 1.1F 11:30AM 09:30AM 03:06PM 01:30PM 1.1F 1.2F 11:00AM 11:30AM 02:48PM 11:12AM 03:12PM 03:06PM 0.9F 1.1F 1.0F 11:30AM 11:00AM 03:00PM 11:30AM 02:48PM 03:12PM 0.9F 0.9F 1.1F 11:30AM 11:00AM 03:00PM 02:48PM 0.9F 0.9F 11: Th F02:30PM Th Su F11:12AM Th M F11:12AM Suou M Su M om Su M Me11:12PM Su M 1.0F 05:12AM 08:36AM 0.9F 04:24AM 07:42AM 04:42AM 08:12AM 1.0F D 02:54PM a me The e da -0.9E a a e-0.9E ba ed upon he a e01:30PM n-1.0E o ma on-0.9E aSu a 06:00PM ab e 0.6F a03:12PM o-1.2E he da e -1.0E o1.0F eque and ma -0.8E d e-1.0E he05:42PM pub hed da10:00PM u -0.8E en ab 01:48PM 03:54PM 0.4F -1.1E 12:06PM 0.7F 03:06PM 05:36PM 0.4F 02:54PM 05:06PM 01:24PM 03:24PM 0.4F 02:36PM 04:54PM 0.6F 03:12PM 05:54PM 05:24PM -1.0E 10:12AM 12:36PM 0.9F 02:42PM 02:06PM 05:12PM -1.1E 02:24PM -1.4E 09:54PM 10:00PM 05:42PM 08:54PM -0.9E 05:18PM 05:42PM 08:36PM 08:54PM 06:36PM 05:18PM 10:00PM 05:42PM 08:36PM 08:54PM -0.9E 06:42PM 06:36PM 09:54PM 05:18PM 10:00PM -1.0E 08:36PM -0.9E 06:18PM 06:42PM 09:36PM 06:36PM 09:54PM 10:00PM -1.0E 06:24PM 06:18PM 09:36PM 06:42PM 09:36PM -0.9E 09:54PM -1.0E 06:24PM 06:18PM 09:36PM 09:36PM -0.9E -0.8E 06: Tu W F Sa F Sa 18AM 01:12PM 1.1F 08:06AM 11:54AM 0.9F 09:00AM 12:48PM 1.0F Th F Su M Su M Fthe Sa 12:06PM 03:06PM -0.7E 11:06AM 02:06PM -0.8E 11:42AM 02:48PM -0.9E 06:30PM 10:00PM -1.0E 05:24PM -1.3Ethe1.0F 08:06PM 11:12PM -0.8E 11:06PM -1.3E 06:30PM 09:42PM -0.7E 1.5F 07:36PM 10:48PM -1.1E mation available as of date your request, and may09:12PM differ from published tidal current tables. Su of M 09:12PM 11:54PM 1.1F-0.8E 08:36PM 03:42PM 06:48PM -1.0E 07:48PM 08:12PM 11:42PM 08:48PM 54PM 08:12PM -0.9E 06:54PM 04:30PM -0.9E Gene a11:24PM ed 07:48PM on Wed Dec0.5F 01 20 48 16 UTC 2021 09:12PM Page 2 o 1.4F 4 06:24PM 09:00PM 0.5F 03:36PM 05:24PM 08:06PM 0.6F 06:18PM 08:48PM 03:00AM 06:54AM 1.4F 02:18AM 03:00AM 06:00AM 06:54AM 2.1F 1.4F 02:18AM 01:00AM 03:00AM 06:00AM -1.0E 06:54AM 2.1F 02:18AM 01:00AM 06:00A -1 09:48PM 10:48PM 11:30PM Secondary Stations 12:36AM Time Differences Speed Ratios Secondary Stations Time Differences Speed Ratios 14 29 14 14 29 14 29 11:30PM 10:54PM 11:24PM Page of 0.3F 4 10:36AM -0.8E 09:48AM 12:30PM 01:12PM -1.2E -0.8E 03:54AM 09:48AM 07:12AM 10:36AM 12:30PM 1.3F 01:12PM -1.2E -0.8E 03:54AM 07:12AM 12:30P 11 12:54AM 02:54AM 0.3F 12:54AM 02:30AM 02:54AM 0.3F 0.3F 01:48AM 12:36AM 04:06AM 12:54AM 02:30AM 02:54AM 0.4F 2 0.3F 01:48AM 12:36AM 04:06AM 02:30AM 0.4F01:12PM 0.3F 01:18AM 03:48AM 01:48AM 04:06AM 0.4F 10:36AM 0.4F 01:00AM 01:18AM 03:48AM 03:48AM 0.7F14 0.4F 01:00AM 01:18AM 03:48AM 03:48AM 0.7F09:48AM 0.4F 01: 04:24PM 06:54PM 0.5F 04:00PM 04:24PM 06:18PM 06:54PM 0.7F 0.5F 10:54AM 04:00PM 01:42PM 04:24PM 06:18PM -1.1E 06:54PM 0.7F 0.5F 10:54AM 01:42PM -1M 14 29 14 14 29 14 14 29 14 14 29 14 29 14 2906:18P 05:12AM 08:12AM -0.5E 04:30AM 05:12AM 07:48AM 08:12AM -0.6E -0.5E 06:42AM 04:30AM 09:30AM 05:12AM 07:48AM -0.5E 08:12AM -0.6E -0.5E 06:42AM 04:30AM 09:30AM 07:48AM -0.5E -0.6E 06:30AM 09:18AM 06:42AM -0.5E 09:30AM -0.5E 06:48AM 06:30AM 09:48AM 09:18AM -0.7E -0.5E 06:48AM 06:30AM 09:48AM 09:18AM -0.7E04:00PM -0.5E 06: F Sa F M Sa F M Sa Min. Min. Min. Min. 01:12AM 05:12AM 1.3FHarbor 12:18AM 03:48AM 1.7F 02:24AM 06:00AM 1.1F 02:06AM 05:42AM 1.9F 12:30AM 03:48AM 0.9F 01:42AM 05:18AM 1.7F Baltimore Chesapeake Bay 02:54AM 06:06AM -1.4E 1.1F 02:12AM 05:18AM -1.1E 01:00AM 1.3F 02:48PM 12:36AM 1.6F 03:36AM 06:24AM -1.0E 08:48PM 12:24AM 1.9F 09:18PM 09:18PM 05:00PM 08:48PM 07:42PM 09:18PM12:42PM 0.9F 05:00PM 08:48PM 07:42PM 12: 0 10:54AM 02:48PM 10:30AM 10:54AM 02:30PM 02:48PM 1.2F 1.1F 12:06PM 10:30AM 03:48PM 10:54AM 02:30PM 1.0F 1.2F 1.1F 12:06PM 10:30AM 03:48PM 02:30PM 1.0F 1.2F 12:00PM 03:36PM 12:06PM 03:48PM 0.9F 1.0F 12:42PM 12:00PM 04:00PM 03:36PM 0.9F 0.9F 12:00PM 04:00PM 03:36PM 0.9F 0.9F 00AM 02:12AM 0.4F 01:00AM 0.3F 01:54AM 0.4F F Sa F M Sa F M Sa M M Tu M Tu M Tu 02:48AM -0.7E 02:00AM -0.8E 02:30AM -0.7E 09:06AM 11:30AM -0.6E 07:48AM 10:24AM -0.9E 09:48AM 12:30PM -0.7E 09:30AM 12:18PM -1.2E 08:12AM 10:48AM -0.7E 09:12AM 12:00PM -1.1E 10:42PM 10:42PM 09:18AM 12:24PM 1.5F-0.9E 08:18AM 11:42AM 1.4F 05:06AM 07:48AM -0.9E 04:06AM 06:54AM -1.0E 09:48AM 12:00PM 0.6F -0.9E 03:54AM 06:42AM -1.2E 06:24PM 09:48PM 06:12PM 06:24PM 09:30PM 09:48PM -1.0E -0.9E 07:18PM 06:12PM 10:36PM 06:24PM 09:30PM -1.0E 09:48PM -1.0E -0.9E 07:18PM 06:12PM 10:36PM 09:30PM -1.0E -1.0E 07:00PM 10:18PM 07:18PM 10:36PM -1.0E 07:12PM 07:00PM 10:24PM 10:18PM -0.9E-0.9E 07:12PM 07:00PM 10:24PM 10:18PM -0.9E -0.9E 07: before before before before 36AM 07:42AM -0.6E 03:30AM 06:24AM -0.4E 04:30AM 07:30AM -0.5E 05:48AM 09:24AM 1.0F 05:00AM 08:30AM 1.0F 05:18AM 08:54AM 1.1F Approach Entrance 02:54PM 05:00PM 0.3F -1.0E 01:36PM 04:00PM 0.6F 03:48PM 06:30PM 0.6F 0.6F 03:48PM 06:18PM 0.8F 0.9F 02:18PM 04:48PM 0.5F -1.0E 03:36PM 06:12PM 0.7F 0.9F 04:00PM 06:42PM 03:00PM 06:00PM -1.0E 11:06AM 01:18PM 10:00AM 12:42PM 02:30PM 05:54PM 10:00AM 12:36PM W 1.1F Th 0.9F Sa 0.9F SuFlood Sa M Su Tu 24AM 02:18PM 09:00AM 12:54PM 10:18AM 01:54PM F07:18PM Sa M Tu Sa Su Ebb Flood Flood Ebb 07:36PM Ebb -1.0E Ebb 06:48PM -1.3E Flood Flood Ebb Flood Ebb 01:00PM 04:06PM -0.7E 11:54AM 03:00PM -0.8E 12:30PM 03:42PM -0.9E 12:36AM 12:18AM 12:36AM -1.6E -1.1E 01:36AM 12:18AM -1.1E 12:36AM -1.6E -1.1E 01:36AM 12:18A -1 10:48PM -1.0E 06:24PM 10:12PM -1.4E 09:12PM 08:54PM 07:54PM 10:42PM -1.1E -0.7E 08:54PM 09:54PM 09:12PM 04:06PM 03:18PM 09:00PM 03:06PM 06:30PM -1.4E M Tu 48PM 09:06PM -1.0E 04:24PM 07:48PM -0.8E 05:24PM 08:42PM -0.9E 15 30 15 15 30 15 15 30 03:42AM 06:54AM 07:24AM 2.2F 1.4F 04:36AM 07:48AM 03:42AM 06:54AM 1.4F 07:24AM 2.2F 1.4F 04:36AM 07:48AM 06:54A 11 07:36PM 09:54PM 0.3F 01:42AM 06:24PM 09:00PM 07:24PM 09:42PM 0.4F 03:48AM 0.3F 0.5F 01:24AM 01:42AM 03:30AM 03:48AM 0.4F 0.3F 02:24AM 01:24AM 04:48AM 01:42AM 03:30AM 03:48AM 0.5F 0.4F 0.3F 02:24AM 01:24AM 04:48AM 03:30AM 0.5F07:24AM 0.4F 01:54AM1.4F 04:30AM 02:24AM 03:18AM 04:48AM 0.5F 03:42AM 0.5F 01:36AM 01:54AM 04:36AM 04:30AM 0.8F03:18AM 0.5F 01:36AM 01:54AM 04:36AM 04:30AM 0.8F03:18AM 0.5F 01: 10:36PM 10:00PM 09:36PM 11:36PM 11:06AM 01:48PM -0.9E 10:42AM 11:06AM 01:24PM 01:48PM -1.4E -0.9E 11:30AM 10:42AM 02:18PM 11:06AM 01:24PM -1.1E 01:48PM -1.4E -0.9E 11:30AM 02:18PM 01:24P -1T 15 06:06AM 15 30 15 15 30 15 15 30 15 30 15 30 Sa Su Sa Tu Su Tu10:12AM Su 07:18AM 10:12AM -0.6E 07:18AM 10:12AM -0.6E 07:18AM -0.6E 09:00AM -0.5E 30 15 05:42AM 06:06AM 08:48AM 09:00AM -0.6E-0.5E 07:24AM 05:42AM 10:18AM 06:06AM 08:48AM -0.6E 09:00AM -0.6E -0.5E 07:24AM 05:42AM 10:18AM 08:48AM -0.6E -0.6E 07:24AM 10:18AM -0.6E 07:42AM 10:42AM -0.8ESa 07:42AM 10:42AM -0.8E10:42AM 07: 11:36PM 05:00PM 07:30PM 0.6F 07:18PM 07:30PM 0.9F 0.6F 05:36PM 08:18PM 05:00PM 07:18PM 1.0F 07:30PM 0.9F 0.6F 05:36PM 08:18PM 07:18P 1 Cove Point, 3.9 03:30PM n.mi. East 1.1F Su Sa -3:29 -3:36 -4:08 -3:44 0.4 0.6 Chesapeake Beach, 1.5Tu miles North 04:48PM +0:29 +0:48 +0:06 +0:00 1.0 0.7 12:54PM 04:24PM 0.9F 05:00PM 12:54PM 04:24PM 0.9F 12:54PM 04:24PM 0.9F 11:36AM 11:30AM 11:36AM 03:24PM 03:30PM 1.3F 1.1F 12:54PM 11:30AM 04:30PM 11:36AM 03:24PM 03:30PM 1.0F 1.3F 1.1F 12:54PM 11:30AM 04:30PM 03:24PM 1.0F 1.3F 12:54PM 04:30PM 1.0F 01:48PM 04:54PM 0.9F04:48PM 01:48PM 04:54PM 0.9F04:48PM 01: Sa Tu Su Sa Tu Su Tu W Tu W Tu W 10:12PM 10:12PM 11:18PM 11:18PM 02:06AM 06:12AM 1.3F 1.1F-1.0E 01:18AM 04:54AM 1.9F -0.9E 12:12AM -1.5E 01:36AM 05:54AM 0.9F 12:00AM -1.2E 12:42AM 12:12AM 1.1F -1.1E 01:54AM 1.3F -1.0E 01:24AM 1.7F 12:24AM 1.5F 09:54PM 01:12AM 2.0F 07:42PM 11:00PM -0.9E 07:42PM 11:00PM -0.9E10:12PM08:00PM 07:42PM 11:00PM -0.9E 07:06PM 10:30PM 07:00PM 07:06PM 10:18PM 10:30PM -1.0E 12:12AM 08:00PM 07:00PM 11:12PM 07:06PM 10:18PM 10:30PM -1.1E -1.0E 08:00PM 07:00PM 11:12PM 10:18PM -1.0E -1.1E 08:00PM 11:12PM -1.0E 08:00PM 11:06PM -0.9E09:54PM 11:06PM -0.9E09:54PM 08: 42AM 03:06AM 0.5F 03:00AM 0.4F 12:18AM 02:54AM 0.5F 12:12AM 03:24AM -0.6E 02:48AM -0.7E 12:06AM 03:12AM -0.6E 10:00AM 12:30PM 08:54AM 11:30AM -1.1E 03:12AM 06:42AM 1.2F -0.7E0.4 03:12AM 06:48AM 2.0FChesapeake 12:42PM -0.8E 03:00AM 06:36AM 1.6F -1.1E 04:06AM 07:12AM 03:06AM 06:06AM -1.0E 06:18AM 08:48AM 05:12AM -1.0E 09:54AM 04:36AM 07:18AM -0.8E +0:05 04:54AM 07:42AM Sharp Island Lt.,-0.7E 3.4 -1.2E n.mi. West -1:39 -1:41 -1:57 -1:43 0.5 07:54AM Channel, (bridge tunnel) +0:38 +0:32 +0:19 01:12AM 2.2 -1.7E 1.2 42AM 08:48AM -0.7E 05:36AM 08:24AM -0.4E 05:42AM 08:42AM -0.6E 01:12AM -1.7E 01:12A 06:24AM 10:12AM 1.0F 05:42AM 0.9F 06:00AM 09:48AM 1.1F 03:48PM 06:06PM 0.3F 09:12AM 03:00PM 05:06PM 0.6F 10:24AM 01:12PM -0.9E 0.4F 10:24AM 01:06PM -1.3E 0.7F 04:06PM 06:54PM 0.6F 0.5F 10:12AM 12:54PM -1.2E 0.7F 10:24AM 01:12PM 1.2F 09:06AM 12:24PM 1.3F 12:00PM 02:00PM 11:06AM 01:36PM 10:42AM 12:36PM 11:06AM 01:24PM Th 1.1F F Su M Su M Sa Su Tu W Tu W 31 31 31 30AM 03:12PM 11:00AM 02:48PM 0.9F 11:30AM 03:00PM 0.9F 04:18AM 07:48AM 2.3F 04:18AM 07:48AM 2.3F 04:18AM 07:48A Su M 02:00PM 05:06PM -0.8E 12:48PM 03:54PM -0.7E 01:24PM 04:36PM -0.9E 02:06AM 04:18AM 0.5F 02:06AM 0.5F 02:06AM 0.5F 06:42PM -0.9E 04:24PM 02:12AM 05:24AM 0.9F 02:12AM 05:24AM 0.9F 02: 08:18PM 11:42PM -1.1E -1.0E 07:36PM 11:12PM -1.5E 04:24PM 07:12PM 0.8F 04:18AM 04:30PM 07:12PM 1.0F 09:54PM 07:18PM 1.0F 04:48PM 03:30PM 06:42PM -1.1E 04:36PM 04:06PM -1.2E 04:18AM 03:00PM 03:48PM 07:24PM -1.3E Tu W 11:30AM -1.5E 42PM 09:54PM -1.0E Thomas 06:18PM 09:36PM 06:24PM 09:36PM -0.9E Pt.07:36PM Shoal Lt., 2.0 -0.8E n.mi. East -1:05 -0:14 -0:22 -0:20 -0.9E 0.6 0.6 07:48PM Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East M +2:18 +3:00 +2:09 +2:36 3102:12PM 1.2 -1.5E 0.6 M-0.9E11:30AM 31 31 08:24PM 3102:12PM 3102:12P M-0.9E11:30AM 06:48AM 09:48AM -0.7E 06:48AM 09:48AM -0.7E 09:48AM -0.7E 08:30AM 11:36AM 08:30AM 11:36AM 08: 08:54PM 10:54PM 0.3F 08:30PM 10:36PM 0.3F ◐10:00PM ◑09:54PM 10:00PM 10:42PM 07:30PM 09:54PM 0.4F 09:54PM 11:24PM 10:48PM 31 06:48AM 09:48PM 10:30PM 05:36PM 08:06PM 1.1F 05:36PM 08:06PM 1.1F 05:36PM 08:06P 12:30PM 04:12PM 1.3F 12:30PM 04:12PM 1.3F 12:30PM 04:12PM 1.3F M M M Th 02:48PM 05:42PM 0.8F10:48PM Th 02:48PM 05:42PM 0.8F10:48PM Th 02: 10:48PM 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.1E 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.1E 07:48PM 11:06PM -1.1E 08:42PM 11:48PM -0.9E 08:42PM 11:48PM -0.9E 08: Pooles Island, 4 miles Southwest +0:59 +0:48 +0:56 +1:12 0.6 0.8 Smith Point Light,12:42AM 6.7 n.mi. -0.8E East +2:29 01:06AM +2:57 -1.4E +2:45 +1:59 0.5 0.3 03:00AM 06:54AM 1.4F 02:18AM 06:00AM 2.1F 01:00AM -1.0E 01:42AM 1.1F 0.4F 12:54AM 1.2F 0.7F 02:54AM 1.2F 02:24AM 1.7F 01:06AM 1.3F 02:06AM 1.9F 01:18AM 03:48AM 01:00AM 03:48AM 10:36AM 01:12PM -0.8E 09:48AM 12:30PM -1.2E 03:54AM 07:12AM 1.3F -0.6E 06:48AM 1.0F -0.6E 04:12AM 07:36AM 1.7F -1.1E 01:00AM 04:24AM -0.6E 12:24AM 03:30AM -0.6E 12:54AM 04:06AM -0.6E 05:24AM 08:18AM -1.0E 04:12AM 07:06AM -1.0E 07:30AM 09:48AM 06:18AM 09:06AM -1.0E 03:36AM 05:42AM 08:18AM 05:54AM 08:48AM 06:30AM 09:18AM -0.5E 06:48AM 09:48AM -0.7E Turkey Point, 1.2 n.mi. Southwest +2:39 +1:30 +0:58 +1:00 0.6 0.8 No10:30AM Point, 4.3 n.mi. East +4:49 +5:33 +6:04 +5:45 0.4 0.2 04:24PM 06:54PM 0.5F 10:06AM 04:00PM 06:18PM 0.7F 1.1F 10:54AM 01:42PM -1.1E 0.3F Th 12:18PM 02:36PM Point 01:24PM -0.9E 0.4F 11:00AM 01:48PM -1.2E 0.6F 07:18AM 11:06AM 1.0F 06:24AM 0.9F 06:48AM 10:42AM 1.0F 11:30AM 02:00PM 0.8F 10:00AM 01:06PM 01:06PM 02:48PM 0.6F 01:18PM 02:24PM F Sa 0.9F M 0.9F MDisclaimer: Tu Th Su M W W 11:30AM 12:00PM 03:36PM 12:42PM 04:00PM These data0.8F are based Disclaimer: upon12:18PM the08:06PM latest These information data are available based Disclaimer: upon as the of the latest These dateinformation ofdata yourare request, available basedand upon as may the of the diffe late d M05:24PM Tu 09:18PM 08:48PM 05:00PM 07:42PM 0.9F -0.9E 07:36PM 1.2F 03:00PM 06:12PM -0.8E 01:42PM 04:54PM -0.7E 02:24PM 05:42PM -0.8E 08:24PM -0.9E 04:06PM 07:24PM -1.2E 05:24PM 09:18PM 05:00PM 08:54PM -1.2E 04:48PM 03:48PM 07:42PM -0.8E 05:00PM 04:48PM 08:30PM -1.2E W Th 07:00PM 10:18PM -0.9E 07:12PM 10:24PM -0.9E Disclaimer: These data are 0.3F based Disclaimer: upon the latest These information data0.3F are available Disclaimer: upon as the of the latest These date information of data yourare request, based available and upon as may the of10:36PM the differ latest date from information of your the published request, available tidal as may current of11:24PM the differ date tables. from of your the published request, and tidal may current differ tables. from the published currentUTC tabl ◐ 11:24PM 10:42PM 11:00PM 10:12PM 08:42PM 10:54PM 09:36PM 11:42PM Corrections Applied tobased Batlimore Harbor Approach Corrections Applied to 01 Chesapeake Bay Entrance 10:36PM 11:48PM 10:36PM Generated on: Wed Dec 01and 20:48:16 Generated UTC on: 2021 Wed Dec 20:48:16 Generated UTC on: 2021 Wed Dec 01tidal 20:48:16
11 6 11 6
26 21 26 21
11 6
26 21 11 Speed 6 Current Differences and Ratios 26 21
12 7 12 7
27 22 27 22
12 7
27 22
12 7
27 22
13 8 13 8
28 23 28 23
13 8
28 23
13 8
28 23
14 9 14 9
29 24 29 24
14 9
24
14 9
29 24
Generated on: Wed Dec 01 20:38:45 Generated UTC on: 2021 Wed Dec 01 20:38:45 Generated UTC on: 2021 Wed Dec 01 20:38:45 UTC 2021
02:06AM 08:12AM 04:00PM 11:12PM
12:36AM -1.1E 1.1F 12:18AM -1.6E 1.4F 01:36AM -1.1E 1.1F 02:48AM 01:48AM 12:24AM 04:06AM 01:54AM 04:30AM 0.5F 01:36AM 04:36AM 0.8F 03:42AM 07:24AM 1.4F -0.8E 03:18AM 06:54AM 2.2F 04:36AM 07:48AM 1.4F -0.5E 12:00AM 0.2F 01:18AM 04:30AM -0.5E 02:00AM 05:06AM -0.5E 06:42AM 09:18AM 05:24AM 08:12AM -0.9E 08:30AM 10:48AM 07:18AM 10:12AM -0.6E 07:42AM 10:42AM -0.8E 11:06AM 01:48PM -0.9E 10:42AM 01:24PM -1.4E 11:30AM 02:18PM -1.1E 0.3F F 05:24AM -0.6E 07:12AM 11:00AM 0.9F 07:48AM 11:48AM 1.0F 12:36PM 02:54PM 0.5F 11:00AM 01:54PM 0.9F 02:12PM 04:06PM Sa M Su 0.9F Tu 0.9F Tu Th 12:54PM 04:24PM 01:48PM 04:54PM Tu W 05:00PM 07:30PM 0.6F -1.0E 04:48PM 07:18PM 0.9F -1.2E 05:36PM 08:18PM 1.0F -0.9E 12:12PM 1.1F 02:42PM 05:54PM -0.7E 03:24PM 06:42PM -0.8E 05:54PM 09:12PM 04:42PM 08:18PM 06:42PM 10:12PM Th F 07:42PM 11:00PM -0.9E 08:00PM 11:06PM -0.9E ◑09:54PM 10:12PM 11:18PM 07:18PM -0.8E 09:48PM 11:24PM 10:36PM
25
01:30AM -0.9E 1.1F 03:30AM 1.8F 01:54AM 07:36AM 1.2F -0.6E 07:30AM 10:06AM -1.0E 04:24AM 06:36AM 09:12AM 11:12AM 02:06PM -1.1E 0.3F 01:42PM 03:54PM 0.5F 12:24PM 02:12PM Tu Th W 08:12PM 1.0F -0.7E 06:18PM 10:00PM -1.2E 05:18PM 05:00PM 08:42PM ◐11:12PM 11:30PM
01:12AM -1.7E 1.5F 12:18AM 04:00AM 1.2F 02:48AM 02:12AM 05:24AM 0.9F 01:24AM 05:12AM 1.1F 04:18AM 07:48AM 2.3F 01:12AM 0.3F 12:00AM 0.3F 12:54AM 08:00AM 10:24AM -0.7E 06:36AM 09:18AM -0.9E 09:18AM 11:42AM -0.6E 08:30AM 11:36AM -0.9E 0.3F
26
12:54AM 04:36AM 1.8F 08:30AM 11:12AM -1.1E
15 10 15 10
30 25 30 25
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11
15 10
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31 26 31
11
15 10 11
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02:54AM -1.7E 1.7F 02:48AM 1.0F 12:30AM 04:06AM 09:12AM 1.5F -1.1E 07:24AM 10:00AM -0.6E 06:12AM 08:06AM 10:54AM
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Biz Buzz New Leadership
Longtime Watermark president Debbie Gosselin has retired, turning over the business to Watermark general manager of vessel activities and longtime family friend Jake Iversen and his wife Laura. “While this may come as a surprise to some, we have been planning the hand-off for some time,” Gosselin explained. “I couldn’t be more confident of entrusting the stewardship of this organization to Jake. He is passionate about Watermark and everything it stands for. As the new president of Watermark, Jake is well-poised to lead the business to success as it enters the next 50 years,” Gosselin said. “I couldn’t be happier and more honored to take the helm at Watermark,” Jake Iversen said. “Debbie and her father before her have built a strong, vibrant company. Watermark’s biggest asset, though, is the Watermark team.” Iversen, the son and grandson of Coast Guardsmen, takes the helm at Watermark after five years as general manager of vessel activities, a position that provided him intimate knowledge of the boats and the operations of ##Jake and Laura Iversen with daughter, Sky the business. He graduated from the Maritime Institute of Technology and Graduate Studies, where he earned a Merchant Mariner Credential clearing him as an officer on any sized vessel. He worked at sea for several years in international shipping on multiple types of vessels. Jake and Laura are both born and raised in the Annapolis area, where they live with 10-year-old Sky and their yellow Lab Rudder. Laura has worked in business development and nonprofit leadership, most recently as executive director for Start the Adventure in Reading. She resigned last year to assist in the acquisition of Watermark and the transition of ownership. watermarkjourney.com
Accreditation Program
After two years of research, consultation, and fine-tuning, the ABYC Foundation launched the first official Marine Trades Accreditation Program (MTAP) for schools teaching marine service. MTAP is designed to ensure quality training that is aligned with industry needs, at both high school and post-secondary schools, ultimately creating a bigger and stronger pipeline for much needed entry-level workers. The road to accreditation starts with becoming an “ABYC Foundation Affiliated School,” a designation open to all schools that wish to take advantage of the benefits available, including ABYC membership with deep discounts on instructor and student training, access to ABYC standards, and industry outreach. Schools that wish to continue on to accreditation must complete a substantial application process, pass board review and an on-site visit, and the school must maintain professional development and academic training for instructors. “Over the years, ABYC has developed a lot of resources for schools including a textbook, workbook, and the Marine Service Technology curriculum,” said Margaret Podlich, ABYC Foundation executive director. “The Foundation publishes a biweekly newsletter, hosts the Educator Training Conference, and Educator of the Year Award, all pointed at the marine service instructor. MTAP is a natural next step to providing the gold seal of approval recognizing top-level programs. A free informational webinar will take place Feb. 24 at 3 p.m. EST to review the MTAP program and address questions. For more information about MTAP and ABYC Foundation Affiliated schools, please visit teachboats.org.
Send your Chesapeake Bay business news and high-resolution photos to kaylie@fishtalkmag.com 58 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
Top 100 Dealer
Pocket Yacht Company has been named one of the Top 100 Dealers in North America by Boating Industry, the leading trade publication for the marine industry. “Out of the thousands of boat dealers across North America, only the best make the Top 100 list,” says Adam Quandt, director of the Boating Industry Top 100 Program. “The Top 100 is about more than just revenue. While financial success is important, we look at factors including business and marketing strategies, service department efficiency and profitability, customer service, and advocacy for the industry. These Top 100 dealers stand out for their stand-out performance in all areas of their business.” “We are elated to receive the Boating Industry’s Top 100 Dealer Award for the second year in a row,” says managing director and owner, Mark Schulstad. “Our team works hard to earn this award every year, we are constantly looking for ways to better serve our customers to give them the most positive experience on and off of the water.” The Top 100 is the only independent ranking of boat dealers in North America. pocketyachtco.com
New Marina
The marina, formerly known as Backyard Boats, in Shady Side, MD, was sold in 2021 and has been rebranded Parish Creek Landing. The new owners have been hard at work refreshing the marina with recent improvements including a new 20-ton travel lift, new forklift, new indoor boat racks, new concrete pad, new service team, new bathrooms (in progress), and others. The full-service marina has over 100 wet slips, an indoor boatel, outdoor racks, and trailer parking. Steve Schwat, one of the partners in the marina and a Shady Side homeowner notes: “We are excited to revive and improve the old marina, impress our current customers and attract new clients. Parish Creek Landing is centrally located, just south of the mouth of the West River and offers a short “no-wake” zone to the Bay. It is close to all the boating and entertainment on the West and South Rivers and just north of Deale.” The marina has specials for new customers so give them a call at (410) 867-4800 to go for a tour. parishcreeklanding.com
BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS
To advertise in the Brokerage and Classified sections, contact beatrice@fishtalkmag.com
2006 Santa Cruz Coastal Flyer ‘41 This boat has been a very well-maintained day cruiser ever since the boat was purchased by its ONLY owner. Contact Troy Waller at 804.878.9097 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
donations
DONATE YOUR BOAT Help a Wounded Veteran
240-750-9899
29’ Tiara ‘00 $59,500 Ed Pickering 410.708.0633 ed@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net
BOATs4HEROEs.ORg broker services
2007 Regal 3060 Window Express With lots of cockpit seating and easy access to the foredeck, everyone has a comfortable place to hang out and relax. Contact Bob Oberg at 410.320.3385 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com 2009 Sea Ray Sundancer 330 Currently with her second owner, she has very low hours on her engines and is loaded with options. Contact Mike Coe at 410.280.2038 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
Bosun’s Marine Maryland Pre-owned boats are in high demand! If you’re ready to sell your boat, or upgrade, we have the expertise and knowledge to get you the results you want. NO meeting up with people who waste your time - NO lengthy inspections NO title or tax worries - NO payoff paperwork worries - NO haggle or hassle. Meet our buyer, Rick Haas! Give Rick a call today 443.347.6314 or 301.370.4823 rhaas@bosuns.com www.bosuns.com/sell-us-your-boat
33’ Bertram ‘80 $45,000 David Robinson 410.310.8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net
power 2020 Seaway Seafarer Down East Like new 2020 Seaway 21 Seafarer with 115 hp Yamaha 4-stroke outboard. Contact Rick Casali at 410.279.5309 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com 2019 Tidewater 252 CC Adventure Large aft cockpit with great space for fishing, comfortable forward seating makes for an excellent cruising platform. Contact Chris Beardsley at 315.447.1251 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com (Delfini D›Argento) 2012 Chaparral 270 Signature The “Delfini D’Argento” is a 2012 Chaparral 270 Signature that has been really well maintained by two very meticulous owners. Contact Troy Waller at 804.878.9097 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
Edgewater 335 EX ‘10 In great condition. She is a fishing machine & family friendly. Repowered in 2018, only 360hrs on Yamaha 350C engines, under warranty until August 2022. $254,900 Call Matt Weimer for details; 410.212.2628 or email matt@annapolisyachtsales.com 2015 Formula 34 PC The 34 PC combines on-the-water performance with one of the nicest cockpit and interior combinations you will find in this size boat. Contact Grady Byus at 410.533.9879 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
36’ Luhrs SX Express ‘00 Great family boat with all of the fishing amenities you could need. Twin diesels 450C, well taken care of. Asking $144,900 Call Mike McGuire for details; 410.941.4847 or email mmcguire@annapolisyachtsales.com 2005 Tiara Yachts 3800 Open Meticulously maintained and has added several upgrades including helm air, upgraded electronics, and a new enclosure with Bayer acrylic windows. Contact Jack McGuire at 401.290.7066 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com (Time for Us) 1987 Ocean Alexander 390 Sundeck Very comfortable cruiser with ample room for guests aboard and extended stays. Contact Chris Beardsley at 315.447.1251 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
2006 Santa Cruz Coastal Flyer ‘41 With classic lines and a huge interior, she can be comfortably cruised for long distances by a couple. Contact Bob Oberg at 410.320.3385 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
Cruisers Yachts 430 SC ‘13 New arrival & pristine! 422 hrs on twin Volvo Penta dsls w/ joystick control, 255 hrs on Cummins generator, Reverso oil change system. Asking $415,000 Call Jeff Nicklason for details; 410.353.7423 or email jnicklason@annapolisyachtsales.com 1983 Trojan 454 Motor Yacht This Trojan 454 MY has had two meticulous owners who have maintained the boat in nearly factory fresh condition since it was built. Contact Peter Bass at 757.679.6991 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
(Nicky Boy) 40’ Jersey Dawn ‘85 $135,000 Tyler Dulaney 919.830.0188 tyler@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net 2002 Tiara Yachts 4100 Open For both the cruising and fishing enthusiast, the 4100 offers plenty of cockpit area for relaxing and fishing. Contact Jack McGuire at 401.290.7066 Info@NorthPointYachtSales.com www.NorthPointYachtSales.com
(Fennders) 55’ Ocean Yachts ‘83 $169,900 Tom Russell 904.382.9610 tom@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net
Have a boat for sale? List it with FishTalk to be featured right here in the magazine and in our online listings at FishTalkMag.com FishTalkMag.com March 2022 59
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Dock Hand/Dock Staff FT & PT April-October. Hourly pay plus tips $$ to tie-up boats located at a busy dock bar location in Annapolis. Boating knowledge is a plus. 410.263.1981 Download application at www.schoonerwoodwind.com/employment/ Two P/T Delivery Drivers Wanted for three-day-amonth magazine distribution route in both Annapolis and Baltimore areas (one position per area available). Compensation based upon quantity of stops, plus fuel and mileage. Must have a valid driver’s license in good standing, reliable vehicle, and be able to lift up to 25 lbs. Contact Beatrice at 410.216.9309 or beatrice@spf-360.com Waterfront Office for Ticket Sales & CS Ticket Sales for the Schooner Woodwind at the Annapolis Waterfront Hotel. FT & PT. Boating and customer service experience are a plus. 410.263.1981 Download application at w w w . s c h o o n e r w o o d w i n d . c o m / contact-us/employment/
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Paddler’s Edge
##FishTalk kayak fishing sharpie Zach Ditmars fights a mahi-mahi many miles from where kayaks normally roam.
Mothership Operations
I
know I shouldn’t poke my amateur kayak angling nose where it doesn’t belong, so we usually have one of our FishTalk yak-sharpies write this column. But as spring approaches and people are thinking about new potential kayak fishing adventures, many of them seem to be considering mother-shipping a kayak to far off fishing grounds in search of an epic catch of one sort or another. In the past few weeks I’ve been asked about hauling a kayak to the Targets for cobia, to the open Bay for big bull reds, and to the remote salt islands of the Tangier to fish for speckled trout and puppy drum. Readers may remember that in September of 2020 I teamed up with a couple of our kayak fishing pros, Zach Ditmars and Eric Packard, to take a kayak out 30 miles into the open Atlantic and catch mahi-mahi (just pop “Adventure Fishing” into the search box at FishTalkMag.com if you missed the article and video). And while that certainly doesn’t make me a mother-shipping pro by any stretch of the imagination, we did learn a lot of lessons that you ambitious kayak anglers might want to know about before setting off on your own new adventures. • If you have your choice of kayaks, go small. While larger watercraft may seem best for bigger waters, they’re also a bear to get on and off the boat. Actually, even a small one is. Ease the task by
62 March 2022 FishTalkMag.com
By Lenny Rudow
tying lines on the bow and stern of the kayak, so you can lower it and lift it without having to lean down to the water’s height. • Bring the ratchet straps you use to secure the kayak to your vehicle, and use them to strap the kayak down firmly against rails, bulkheads, and T-top supports. Also bring along a blanket to lay between the kayak and the fiberglass, to prevent either from getting beaten up. Be extra careful of the rudder, which can be easily damaged if it comes in contact with fiberglass or pipework when the boat is moving, during the launch, or during retrieval.
doing so, we stayed mobile and were able to cover a lot of ocean. When we did finally locate a big school, rather than catching a fish or two we caught over a dozen and everyone took multiple turns fishing from the micro-boat. • Obviously, you won’t want to let the kayak get too far from the mother ship in open waters. But as an added safety measure the angler should be equipped with a waterproof handheld VHF radio so you can communicate easily if need be.
• Practice launching and retrieving the kayak in calm, protected water, first. Every boat is different, and it’s best to learn the particulars of what you may need to do (like moving forward or aft to get away from a rail-mounted rodholder) in a more controlled environment.
• When you have a serious beast on the line and you want to land it rather than unhook and release the fish while it’s still in the water, guide the fish back to the mothership. Landing a very large fish on a kayak can be downright dangerous (just think about trying to control a 50-inch cobia in the confines of a kayak) and is likely to lead to disaster. Rather than risking it, if you can get the fish close to the big boat someone can then gaff or net it as appropriate and greatly reduce the danger-factor.
• After cruising to your hotspot consider holding off on launching until you locate the fish. We hit five or six different locations where we might have caught one or two mahi, but decided against launching the kayak until we found the mother lode. By
Spring is here, people, and summer is not far behind. If you want to cap off your kayak fishing season with a big-time adrenaline blast, mother-shipping to monster fish might just be the best way to do it. Be careful, and be safe — and enjoy the adventure. P
nner mmer
These Great Businesses Make FishTalk Possible. S hop with them and let them k now their ad is wor k ing ! AllTackle.com.......................................... 11
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Riverside Marine.................................. 3,53
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Coastal Conservation Assoc of MD........ 20
Angler’s Resource..................................... 6
Curtis Stokes.......................................... 64
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Suzuki Dealers.......................................... 4 Annapolis Anglers Club.......................... 12
Fish and Hunt Maryland.................... 40,43
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Annapolis Yacht Sales............................... 7
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Bay Shore Marine................................... 27
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Boatyard Bar & Grill Tournament........... 25
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Are you Thinking of Listing Your Boat or Yacht For Sale? Listing with Curtis Stokes & Associates means your boat is SEEN BY THE MOST BUYERS. Why? Because we will gladly work with other brokers, allowing them to show boats we have listed for sale and splitting the commission with them! Many brokers are jumping on a trend where they will not split commissions with the buyer’s broker. That means when you list your boat with them, only their direct customers are potential buyers. Listing with a broker who will not “cooperate” with other brokers means fewer potential buyers, longer time to sell, and ultimately, a lower sales price because of less competition. If you’re not sure whether a broker you’re considering as a listing agent cooperates with other brokers, ask them about their co-brokerage policy! We welcome co-brokerage so, we sell your boat quicker and bring in more competing buyers. Contact me any time for more information about our co-brokerage policy, or details about listing your boat.
List with us and you are guaranteed to get maximum exposure to ALL potential buyers!
Curtis Stokes | 855.266.5676 | curtis@curtisstokes.net
www.curtisstokes.net