FishTalk Magazine November 2019

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RUDOW’S

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Five Fall Chesapeake Hotspots Tech Edition

Using Technology To Catch More Fish NOVEMber 2019

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Gimme Six Extended Protection promo is applicable to new Suzuki Outboard Motors from 25 to 350 HP in inventory which are sold and delivered to buyer between 10/01/19 and 12/31/19 in accordance with the promotion by a Participating Authorized Suzuki Marine dealer in the continental US and Alaska to a purchasing customer who resides in the continental US or Alaska. Customer should expect to receive an acknowledgement letter and full copy of contract including terms, conditions and wallet card from Suzuki Extended Protection within 90 days of purchase. If an acknowledgement letter is not received in time period stated, contact Suzuki Motor of America, Inc. – Marine Marketing via email: marinepromo@suz.com. The Gimme Six Promotion is available for pleasure use only, and is not redeemable for cash. Instant Savings apply to qualifying purchases of select Suzuki Outboard Motors made between 10/01/19 and 12/31/19. For list of designated models, see participating Dealer or visit www. suzukimarine.com. Instant Savings must be applied against the agreed-upon selling price of the outboard motor and reflected in the bill of sale. (Suzuki will, in turn, credit Dealer’s parts account.) There are no model substitutions, benefit substitutions, rain checks, or extensions. Suzuki reserves the right to change or cancel these promotions at any time without notice or obligation. * Financing offers available through Synchrony Retail Finance. As low as 5.99% APR financing for 60 months on new and unregistered Suzuki Outboard Motors. Subject to credit approval. Not all buyers will qualify. Approval, and any rates and terms provided, are based on credit worthiness. $19.99/month per $1,000 financed for 60 months is based on 5.99% APR. Hypothetical figures used in calculation; your actual monthly payment may differ based on financing terms, credit tier qualification, accessories or other factors such as down payment and fees. Offer effective on new, unregistered Suzuki Outboard Motors purchased from a participating authorized Suzuki dealer between 10/01/19 and 12/31/19. “Gimme Six”, the Suzuki “S” and model names are Suzuki trademarks or ®. Don’t drink and drive. Always wear a USCG-approved life jacket and read your owner’s manual. © 2019 Suzuki Motor of America, Inc.

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IN THIS ISSUE VOLUME 3 | ISSUE 11

30

Features 30

Techno-Fishing

Modern gadgets and gizmos can help you catch more fish.

By Lenny Rudow and Eric Packard

33

Hidden in Plain Sight

You can find fish-attracting structure with a little tech and some time.

By Wayne Young

40

36

How To Fish the Chesapeake Bay Bridges

This Upper/Middle Bay hotspot is an ace in the hole for thousands of anglers.

By Lenny Rudow

40

Five Alive

Check out these five fall fishing hotspots in the Lower Bay and Way South Chesapeake zone. By Chuck Harrison

43

Carp – Why Not?

There’s gold in them thar waters.

By Jim Gronaw

46

on the cover

43

Five Surprise Fishboat Upgrades

You want to make that old fishing boat a better, more efficient fish-hunting machine? These five upgrades will help make it happen.

By Lenny Rudow

There’s this little hotspot we hears about called the Chesapeake Bay Bridge… Photo by Craig Ligibel

6 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Departments 10 12 13 16 19 21

Notes From the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow

47 48 50 51 52 54 55 57 58 59 59

FishTalk Monthly Subscription Form

Letters

Gear Up for Late Season Stripers!

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

SPONSORED BY BAY SHORE MARINE Fishing Reports By Mollie Rudow Tips & Tricks By Staff Paddler’s Edge By Zach Ditmars Tides & Currents Charters, Guides, and Headboats Brokerage: Used Boats for Sale Marketplace: Services, Supplies, and Much More Biz Buzz: Chesapeake Business News What’s New at FishTalkMag.com? Index to Advertisers

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612 Third Street, Suite 3C, Annapolis, MD 21403 (410) 216-9309 FishTalkMag.com Angler In CHIEF Lenny Rudow, lenny@fishtalkmag.com PUBLISHER Mary Iliff Ewenson, mary@fishtalkmag.com Associate PUBLISHER Chris Charbonneau, chris@fishtalkmag.com MANAGING EDITOR Molly Winans, molly@fishtalkmag.com SENIOR EDITORS Beth Crabtree, beth@fishtalkmag.com Kaylie Jasinski, kaylie@fishtalkmag.com Fishing Reports Editor Mollie Rudow

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from Notes the Cockpit By Lenny Rudow

I

love chum. I love the smell of pureed bunker. I get some sort of perverse pleasure from balling up a chumstained T-shirt and hiding it deep in the laundry basket. I also love live-baiting. I love swishing my arm around in a livewell grasping for spot. I love feeling the jitter of a bait going nuts as the predator approaches, and I love feeling the rod bend as the little fish on my hook magically morphs into a lunker. I’ve also decided to give up both tactics when striper fishing in the Upper and Middle Bay next summer – and I hope others will consider doing the same. The recent mandated switch to circle hooks when using bait for striper fishing in Maryland may well reduce gut-hooking, but at this point no one’s going to convince me (or you either, I’d bet, if you’ve been using them) that circle hooks eliminate the problem. Maybe it reduces bait gut-hooks significantly. But my gut tells me that deep-hooking a striper on a jig happens maybe once for every 50 to 100 fish, while with bait and a circle hook it happens every 10 to 20 fish. No, those aren’t scientific numbers. And yes, different anglers with different fishing styles and reaction times are going to have different experiences. I’m just saying this is how it seems to me, personally, and I’d encourage anyone reading this right now to think hard on it and reach their own conclusions. Was catching and releasing fish responsible for the steady stream of belly-up floaters we saw south of the Bridges yet again, this summer? I remain convinced

that the answer is far more complex than a simple “yes” or “no” – especially because it was common to see keeper-sized fish floating dead. Neither chummers nor liveliners release 20-plus-inch fish very often. I also note that at times this summer, huge proportions of the fish I caught between the Bridge and Thomas Point displayed terrible infections and rash, and the vast majority of the stripers were skinny and blatantly underfed. Striper populations in the Chesapeake Bay are threatened by a whole lot more than release mortality.

I applaud the Maryland DNR’s new Striped Bass Advisory System, which it started this past summer (rating days as red, yellow, or green according to temperature), but should we shut down bait fishing entirely in July and August? Should catch-and-release fishing after your limit has been filled be verboten? Is there some way to help increase the food available to these fish, so they’re healthy enough to have a fighting chance after being caught and released? These are questions I can’t answer, but they must be asked and these topics are sure to come up as the fishing community and the powers that be ##Do jigs set perfectly each and every time? Of course struggle with ways to reduce not, but the ratio of deep-hooks is far, far lower. the mortality rate for 2020 and beyond. But they aren’t the only questions we need to be asking. When striper population numbers are by all accounts down, yet three quarters of the fish you catch are diseased and/or underfed, the issues go well beyond fishing tactics. It’s well past time to reinvigorate the menhaden harvest debate. (Note: SAI Global laughingly certified the menhaden fishery “sustainable” this summer; we’re sure Omega had nothing to do with that). It’s well past time to figure out why However, I’m just as convinced that the striped bass carrying capacity of the we have to fess up to the fact that bait Chesapeake is falling. And it’s well past fishing inherently increases mortality time to circle back on each and every rates for the undersized fish we release. water quality issue we struggle with. It’s up to every angler to make his or her The fish are indeed hurting – but it’s own decisions (within the confines of not just from hooks. the law, of course), but after dropping a bleeding 17-incher over the side one day this August, I decided to hang up my bait fishing rigs for the remainder of the season.

Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com 10 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


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Letters

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Cats Eating… Crabs?

ear FishTalk: Do you think the high number of catfish in the Upper and Middle Bay has something to do with the low crab numbers this year? Maybe they eat all the crabs when they molt? David K. Dear David: We’re sure there’s a possibility of some level of impact – those catfish will eat anything they can chomp down on be it a softie or a crab small enough to crunch on – but there have been so many other substantial variables it’s tough to say how big that impact has been. Salinity levels, for example, were extremely low for a very long time and that surely had an effect, too. Hopefully, next year it’ll be a little easier to load the bushel basket!

D

Our Patience Is Wearing Fin

ear FishTalk: While fishing on the Bay, I recently caught an unusual and very colorful fish. I took it home because I thought it would be good to eat, but it tasted really funny. That’s when I realized it must have been a clown fish. Anonymous Send your fish photos, questions, and comments to lenny@fishtalkmag.com

12 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

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Deep in Thought

ear FishTalk: I read your recent article on deep dropping, and was recently out at the Baltimore and missed a ton of bites due to poor hook-sets with circle hooks. As you know it is painful, literally, to reel back up and reset multiple times when deep dropping. That got me thinking: for deep drop jigging, do you use an assist hook from the top of the jig AND a treble on the bottom? If so, what size assist and treble hook? And for shallower deep dropping, say for bluelines, do you prefer J hooks or circles? Thanks in advance for the insight. Andrew T. Dear Andrew: On the deep drop jigs, yes for sure, we like both the treble on bottom and the J hook up top (meat rigs, we say go with circles and let Rodney the Rodholder do all the work). Treble size 6/0s or 8/0s are the right size but be forewarned, it’s hard to find ‘em that big. For shallower dropping, octopus-style jigs with twin J-hooks work well. We do know some (very good) anglers who prefer to use meat rigs with all circles in both scenarios, and their (effective) method is to just let it drag until a fish is on the line, then start cranking only when the rod’s bent over.


A

Good News for Grass

ccording to the early results from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) underwater grass surveys, the epic monsoons of 2018 didn’t harm Bay grasses—imperative habitat and nursery grounds for fish and crabs—nearly as much as feared. Though 91,559 acres were mapped in 2018, down slightly from 2017, between the weather and water turbidity over 20 percent of the area usually monitored couldn’t be

M

accounted for, and the survey ended incomplete. According to VIMS experts, however, they are encouraged by the acreage seen in the areas they were able to survey and a much-feared decline brought about by all the rainfall doesn’t seem to have occurred. Some areas were even showing substantial increases in underwater grass, such as in the upper Rappahannock River (up over 48 percent) and the Tangier Sound (up 18 percent).

##Bay grasses growing in Poplar Harbor, MD. Photo by Alicia Pimental/ Chesapeake Bay Program

Exhausting Behavior

aryland Attorney General Brian Frosh announced that he’s joining a coalition of attorney generals in the lawsuit against the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHSTA), challenging the Trump administration’s attempt to remove California automobile exhaust standards. Five jurisdictions affecting the Bay directly (Delaware, New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Washington, DC) have adopted these stricter regulations—in no small part to reduce pollution entering the Chesapeake—and Chesapeake Bay watershed jurisdictions including Virginia are also suing over the Trump Administration’s ruling. Chesapeake Bay Foundation vice president of environmental protection and restoration, Lisa Felds, issued a statement saying: “A cleaner Chesapeake Bay requires cleaner cars. That’s why so many states that make up the Bay’s watershed already use California’s stricter vehicle emission regulations. Without these tougher standards, it will be even more difficult for the Bay states to reach their 2025 cleanup goals.”

A

T

Fat Cat

he state of Delaware officially has a new record blue catfish. Colt Williamson caught the 43-inch, 47.75-pound beast in the Nanticoke River late this summer, after enduring a 25-minute battle. The new record was weighed in at Taylored Tackle in Seaford, proving it bested the previous mark by over 11 pounds.

Bunker Busters

s if you didn’t already hate Omega Protein enough… this fall the company said it would exceed the 51,000-metric-ton cap it had previously agreed to comply with. “It’s frustrating and disappointing to see the menhaden cap intentionally exceeded,” said Mike Leonard, vice president of government affairs for the American Sportfishing Association. “The Chesapeake Bay is a critical nursery for menhaden and many of its predators, such as striped bass, which is why leaving sufficient menhaden in the Bay is so important. This action undermines not only the health of the marine environment, but also the science-based process the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission used to make their decision.” Note that Omega made this announcement literally days after the Marine Stewardship Council laughingly certified the Atlantic menhaden fishery as a “sustainable fishery” (telling you everything you need to know about the Marine Stewardship Council and what their version of “sustainable” is).

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 13


Fish News

Block Party

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driving force behind the Ocean City Reef Foundation, Captain Monty Hawkins on the Morning Star, spent a day this fall with divers aboard to check on coral growth and reef progress at Monk’s Reef and the Jackspot rail car reef. In both cases they reported good visibility and plentiful reef growth. Sea whip and mussel growth stood out, with the better sea whip growth at the substantially older Monk’s Reef. According to Hawkins, sea whip colonization is slow but as more and more surface area is colonized, coral spawn increases and the time for colonizing new substrate decreases. Remember, the Ocean City Reef Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit which does its reef building with donations. Also remember that making a $50 donation scores you a chartbook including GPS coordinates for all the reefs they’ve planted (read: bass, tog, and flounder hotspots). Visit ocreefs.org to learn more.

##Deckhands on the Morning Star prepare a block fish “condo” for deployment at one of the OC Reef Foundation sites.

Learn How To Fly

T

he Free State Fly Fishers, in Davidsonville, MD, has announced a series of fly-tying sessions open to all members. During these sessions novice fly anglers can learn how to tie and members can swap patterns and learn new techniques. Enough materials to make two to three flies are included in the session. Plans for what will be the fly pattern of focus at each session are announced through the club’s email message distributed to all members. Anglers should bring their tools and vise, but if you’re new to tying, the club has some vises and tools you can use to get started. Saturday sessions on November 2, December 7, and January 4 will start at 10 a.m. and end around noon. The price of admission? It’s free to members—and joining costs a whopping $15, so becoming part of the Free State Fly Fishers is an excellent and economic way to break into the sport. Meetings and fly-tying sessions are held at the Davidsonville Family Recreation Center, 3789 Queen Anne Bridge Road. Visit fs-ff.com to learn more.

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14 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

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Fish For a Cure and Beers n’ Bucktails

T

he Fish For a Cure tournament goes off on the second day of November, so act fast, people! Visit fishforacure.org while there’s still time, and sign up ASAP. Or, you could always pitch in and help team FishTalk/PropTalk as we strive to help raise cash to fight cancer—just go to the Fish For a Cure website (fishforacure.org), click on “Help a Boat,” and choose Team FishTalk/ Proptalk. Team FishTalk/PropTalk will also host a Beers ‘n Bucktail Bash to raise funds for F4AC October 24 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Boatyard Bar & Grill in Annapolis. We have loads of tackle and fishing gear donated by our fishing industry supporters to give away. There will be door prizes and drawings galore for brand-spanking-new rods and reels (including top-notch goodies from Shimano, St. Croix, Okuma, and Daiwa), boxes full of lures, tackleboxes, tools, and all kinds of fishing goodies. Find details on our Facebook page.

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##Gabriel and Herbert Riggs hoist one of the prize-winning stripers at the Back River Restoration Committee Fishing Tournament.

Back River Wrap-Up

ome records were set at the 12th annual Back River Restoration Committee Fishing Tournament this past September—all by the same intrepid angler. Gabe Riggs cranked in a striper topping 36 inches, which not only took first place but was the biggest fish of the tournament’s history. On top of that, it was the first time a Sportsman Boat won the tournament and earned the extra Sportsman purse (yup, Riverside Marine is a sponsor!). Gabe thoughtfully donated that purse back to the Back River Restoration Committee, and on top of all that he also won the Youth division with his second rockfish in the fishbox. WTG, Gabe!

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HOT NEW GEAR H

Hoppin’ Hondas

onda’s refreshed its powerband for 2019, and now offers the BF200, BF225, and BF250 in Intelligent Shift and Throttle electronically-controlled versions. These 3.6 liter V6 engines have enhanced digital redundancy thanks to both CAN and NMEA2000 protocol, offering a built-in back-up in case of connection failure. Other features include new color options (you can get them in either Aquamarine Silver or Grand Prix white), improved corrosion resistance, an integrated water separator and fuel strainer, and a high-pressure filter that’s been relocated for easier maintenance. Added bonus: these Hondas come with a transferrable, non-declining five-year warranty. Price: Varies by dealership, model, and equipping, but figure you’ll be in the $20,000-ish range. Visit marine.honda.com to learn more.

H

ey, hold my drink... no wait, never mind, I got it. With this new cranial contraption conceived by the creatives over at 13 Fishing your whole crew will now be fighting over fish cleaning duty. Good thing they made it out of a helmet! The Fillet Table Management System comes complete with dual anti-gravity beverage holsters that funnel into a hydration-pack-style drinking tube for hands-free whistlewetting. Channel your favorite fishing tunes while you work through the top-mounted Bluetooth speaker. This hilarious hardhat is also donned with a built-in bottle opener, a head lamp, and a knife sharpener (be careful with that, especially if you’re making good use of the beverage holders). So next time you fill your cooler with a hundred pounds of white perch, be sure crack a couple cold ones and load your libations into this delightful dome before you hit the cleaning station. We’ve been testing one as we wrote thsi, and it werks great!.. Price: $99 and well worth it. Visit 13fishing.com to lern moor.

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The Whole World in Your Hands

ith the Garmin GPSMAP 86 Series you really can hold the whole world in your hands, in a manner of speaking. These handheld GPS units come preloaded with BlueChart g3 Coastal cartography with integrated Navionics data, and the 86sci and 86sc models come preloaded with a worldwide base map. But what’s really cool about these units is the expanded capability Garmin has built into them. Get a subscription plan (starting at $11.95 a month), and you can utilize integrated InReach capabilities to text message or send an SOS from just about anywhere on the face of the planet. They can also connect with and stream to and from onboard Garmin MFDs and instruments, can be used as an autopilot remote control, and can be used as a Fusion stereo remote control. Price: $399 to $649. Visit garmin.com to learn more.

A Treasure Terrova Opportunities

Y

ou say you wish you could enjoy all the advantages a bow-mounted electric motor provides, but your boat’s just too big and the bow’s too tall? That may have been true in the past, but this year Minn Kota has introduced an 87-inch shaft-length Riptide Terrova model. This is a 112-pound-thrust, saltwater, 36-volt model, and can handle a 28-footer tipping 10,000 pounds in any reasonable conditions. In fact, Minn Kota says it can even handle boats up to 30 feet in length. And yes, this model has all the perks of other Terrovas like Spot-Lock, autopilot, and i-Pilot Link, and mobile app compatibility. Price: $2999. Visit minnkotamotors.com to learn more.

16 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


I

Shimano SLX DC 150

f you’re anything like us, professional-level backlashes are a fact of life when fishing with low-tech low-profile baitcasters. Don’t you wish you could afford those fancy reels with digitally controlled braking systems? Hah! Unless you have a pile of cash in your tackle fund… wait a sec! Shimano’s new SLX DC actually has a digital brake yet costs less than $200. In fact, it’s the same I-DC4 braking system found in the popular but more expensive Curado DC. The SLX also has an all-aluminum HAGANE body, can put out 12 pounds of drag, and comes in 6.3:1, 7.4:1, and 8.3:1 gear ratios. Line capacity is 150 yards of 20-pound Power Pro. Price: $189. Visit fish.shimano.com to learn more.

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The AI Advantage

ou want to slay fish like the Terminator? Artificial intelligence is the answer, and you get it in the Robotic Swimming Lure. This battery-powered rechargeable lure has a propeller in its nose. The water-activated motor spins the prop for 10 to 12 seconds at a time, making the robotic reaper look alive before pausing to initiate strikes. According to the manufacturer’s website “live fish bait cannot be legally used in counties within 31 U.S. states,” a problem clearly faced by billions of Mid-Atlantic anglers living in North Dakota. But now you don’t need a livewell, you don’t need refrigeration, and you don’t need to go to the bait shop – all you need to do is spend $44.95 to $39.95 to get yourself a Robotic Fishing Lure, and all your live bait problems are forever solved by this swimming singularity. Added bonus: the Robotic Fishing Lure has rattling, fish-attracting encased steel balls (as does whoever felt bold enough to bring this thing to the market). Price: All of humanity. Visit roboticlure.com to initiate the Rise of the Machines.

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Wiley X Sunglasses

very angler knows that a good pair of polarized sunglasses is essential. These shades from Wiley X offer exceptional visibility and cut through the glare in a variety of conditions. What makes them superior to others is their impact resistance. During a demonstration, we watched as a one-pound bullet weight dropped directly onto the lens bounced right off, leaving only a scratch. That kind of eye protection is definitely something to favor when you’re on a boat with some unruly casters tossing heavy jigs around. Wiley X also goes one step further with their climate control series. These frames feature a low-profile removable foam gasket similar to those you’d find on ski goggles. We found this feature to be useful for several reasons. First, the gasket gives the frame a tighter fit to your face allowing less light pollution in the sides. Secondly, the tight seal keeps out pollen, dust, and debris blowing through the air. Lastly, when the throttle drops while running from fishing spot to spot, these goggle-like glasses block out way more wind than our normal frames. Each pair of their sunglasses comes with a lanyard strap, cleaning cloth, and a soft case. Learn more at wileyx.com.

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I Spy With My Little Eye

ow much attention do you pay to the guides when you buy a new fishing rod? Probably not enough, especially considering that your line will be travelling through them on each and every cast. Enter the Fuji LKW, a new double-foot guide for casting rods. The LKWs are lighter, have a shorter length, and a newly designed “winged” foot that can better handle the torque when your rod’s fully loaded and under heavy-duty pressure. LKW guides are available in three Corrosion Control finishes: Gunmetal Slim SiC, Dark Grey ALCONITE, and Matte Silver ALCONITE. Price: Free! Well, sort of – you do have to buy a fishing rod with ‘em. Visit fujitackleusa.com to get the details.

F or mor e g e ar r e v i e ws , v i s i t : fishtal k mag . c o m / gear FishTalkMag.com November 2019 17


Plan Of Attack ##Paddle tail baits are a key component of fall LTT success.

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By Holly Innes

s the water chills out this month, LTT (light tackle trolling) is a tactic many anglers in search of schoolie stripers should consider. Especially when you aren’t 100-percent sure where the fish are or you’re in an unfamiliar area and you need to cover some water, give this method a shot: 1. With jigging or relatively light tackle gear, tie on a half- or threequarter-ounce jighead, and dress it with a paddle-tail style soft plastic of four or five inches in length. White, pearl, chartreuse, and yellow are all good colors to try. 2. Set up three or four lines like this (more lines mean there’s more

possibility of strikes, but also more possibility of tangles), and pick a course. Deploy the lines by casting them out as far as possible, then letting out another 20 or 30 yards of line; the biggest mistake many people make is trolling these light lures (which remain very close to the surface) too close to the boat.

3. Set boat speed between three and four mph. Target areas of less than 10 feet of water, with structure or variations in depth. As a general rule, less is more in this case – often the best fall LTT catches will come from very shallow water, where the dropoff may be from just three or four feet of water to five or six feet of water.

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es, water temps are falling, but no, that doesn’t mean your snakehead adventures are over for the season – you just need to alter the tactics a bit. As things cool off the standard topwater bite on plastic frogs, Whopper Ploppers, and other surface lures will certainly drop off. The best way to get ‘em at this time of year? Switch to a KISS minnow and bobber rig. • Rig up a number-one Eagle Claw snelled hook to the end of your line, and give it a bit of weight with a split-shot. Another effective rig is tying on a 1/8th or 1/16th jig head; occasionally the added color can help. If you’re using braid line, however, be sure to first add a few feet of mono leader (15- or 20-pound test) or the snakehead’s rather vicious teeth will likely chafe right through your braid if the fish inhales the jighead all the way into its mouth.

##Minnow under a bobber are the ticket, at this time of year. Photo courtesy of Caz Kenny

18 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

• Clip on a bobber one to three feet above the hook. You’ll be aiming to let that minnow swim just a few inches off bottom so set the bobber according to water depth.

• Pick out the biggest, slimiest minnow in the bucket. Put the hook in through the lower jaw and out through the top. Some snakehead sharpies swear you’ll catch more fish if you actually put two minnow on the same hook. • Cast out in areas where there’s a slight channel, drop-off, or hole. Since so much snakehead water is shallow, a two-foot channel surrounded by one foot of water is often all it takes. Note: bridges are often hotspots, since they usually have easy-to-locate channels running under them.

If the hits don’t come as often as expected, try varying bobber length.


C hesapea k e C alendar Brought to you by

For Chesapeake Bay boating news, visit proptalk.com

November Oct 25 - Nov 27

The King’s Tide One-Man Exhibition The King’s Tide features over 40 new watercolor paintings with a full range of subjects, including workboats of all descriptions, watermen plying their trade in wild weather, hunters in the field, and the historic Chesapeake Bay log canoes. At Massoniart in Chestertown, MD.

For links to the websites for these events and more, visit proptalk.com/calendar

1

TKAA Red Drum Tournament Anglers may fish anywhere in the State of Virginia as long as the body of water is open to the public and has public access. Target species: red drum. Catch, photo, release. $30 entry fee. Tidewater Kayak Anglers Association.

1-2

Urbanna Oyster Festival This is a walking pay-as-you-go festival in Urbanna, VA. Try all the different ways to eat these bivalve delicacies. Wine and oyster pairings, craft beer tasting, and more.

1-3

Sultana Downrigging Festival Visit historic Chestertown, MD, for the Mid-Atlantic’s largest annual gathering of tall ships, schooners, and historic wooden boats, with public sails, musical performances, maritime talks, food, and family-friendly activities by the Sultana Education Foundation.

1-10

Light City Baltimore Light City transforms Baltimore with light displays, sculptures, video projections, and music. Fireworks finale on November 10 at 9:45 p.m. Free.

2

Fish For a Cure Fish to raise funds for cancer survivorship programs at Anne Arundel Medical Center’s JoAnn DeCesaris Cancer Institute.

2

MD HOW-Private Pond in Laytonsville Maryland Heroes on the Water. Final event of the season at a private pond in Laytonsville, MD. Volunteers should be ready at 7 a.m. Rain or shine. Maryland@heroesonthewater.org

2

Oyster Jam Banquet and Auction 12 to 4 p.m. at Phillips Wharf Environmental Center in Tilghman Island, MD. Featuring oysters from all over the state of Maryland, both aquaculture grown and wild caught, along with craft beer and signature dishes offered by local restaurants. General admission tickets $30.

2

Thomas Point Keep the Light Shining Gala 7 to 10 p.m. at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, MD. Gala tickets $85 per person include great food, parking, two drink tickets. Silent auction, wine pull, music by The Eastport Oyster Boys. Dress is casual. Fundraiser for Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse.

3

Across the Bay 10K Due to mandatory maintenance on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, this year’s event will be a virtual run. Complete 6.2 miles around your neighborhood, at the gym, on the beach, etc., prior to November 3 to get your medal and t-shirt.

6

KIF Club Monthly Meeting 7:30 p.m. at Kent Island American Legion Post 278 in Stevensville, MD. Speaker Tobin Mergenthaler from Imperium Outfitters: 3D printer that makes fishing lures.

8-10

Easton Waterfowl Festival DockDogs, live music, galleries and exhibits, wine and beer tasting pavilion, raptor demonstrations, World Waterfowl Calling Championships, kids’ “paint a decoy” class, retriever demonstrations, fly fishing demonstrations, and more! Activities spread through the town of Easton, MD. Tickets $15, valid for all 3 days.

9

CBF Oyster Restoration Open House Learn all about oyster restoration, sample local oysters, and get hands-on experience at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Brock Environmental Center in Virginia Beach, VA. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The first 100 registrants will receive a complimentary one-year CBF membership.

11

Leonardtown 44th Annual Veterans Day Parade St. Mary’s County honors veterans and active duty military in one of the largest Veteran’s Day parades in Maryland. A memorial wreath-laying ceremony follows the parade. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in historic downtown Leonardtown, MD.

11

Pasadena Sportfishing Group Monthly Meeting Doors open at 6 p.m., meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. at Earleigh Heights Volunteer Fire Company, Severna Park, MD. Free, open to the public. Food and beverages available, free door prize for adults and children, tackle raffle, 50/50 drawing. Speaker: David Gaestel, Crazy Horse custom fishing rods.

Do you have an upcoming event? Send the details to: kaylie@FishTalkMag.com FishTalkMag.com November 2019 19


Chesapeake Calendar

november (continued)

13

HDG Maritime Museum Film Screening 7 to 9 p.m. at the Havre de Grace Maritime Museum. Film screening of “Gladesmen: The Last of the Sawgrass Cowboys,” a documentary about the federal government’s ban on Florida’s iconic airboats in much of the Everglades. Free.

13

The Archaeology of the Ship Caulkers’ Houses Doors open 6 p.m., lecture begins at 6:30 p.m. at the Maryland Historical Society in Baltimore, MD. Archaeologists present their research on the two smallest and oldest wooden homes in Fells Point. The buildings were home to African American ship caulkers who were part of a prolific shipbuilding industry. $10 members, $15 non-members.

14

Saving the Bay Through the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint 6:30 to 8 p.m. at Dorchester Center for the Arts Water/Ways Exhibit in Cambridge, MD. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Alan Girard will describe the Blueprint, its results, and how it’s becoming a national model for cleaning up polluted waterways. Registration required at cbf.org.

16

Tochterman’s Fly Tying Class Learn the basics of fly tying. 1 p.m. at Tochterman’s in Baltimore, MD. $60 per student. Each class is four hours long and includes all the materials to get a hang for the basics. Register: (410) 3276942.

21

Lighthouse Lecture at the Mariners’ Museum 7 to 9 p.m. at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, VA. Topic: the important role of the James River lighthouses in our country’s history, and how technology and the decline of river commerce led to their demise in the 1930s. $5.

21 - Dec 31

OC Winterfest of Lights The one-mile train ride takes you through 58 acres of lights and features a 50-foot Christmas tree in Northside Park in Ocean City, MD. $5 to board the train, free for children 11 and younger.

5

17th Annual Mid-Atlantic Rockfish Shootout At the Oyster Farm Marina in Cape Charles, VA. Register before November 25, 2019 for early bird pricing! Lines in at 8 a.m., lines out at 2 p.m. Weigh in from 1 to 5 p.m. at Kings Creek Marina in Cape Charles, VA.

22 - Feb 8, 2020 7 6 to 9 p.m. at The Wharf in WashingThe District’s Holiday Boat Parade

Sailing Into the Winter Solstice Visit seven unique lighted boats sailing at Carroll Creek Linear Park in Frederick, MD.

ton, DC. Enjoy hot cocoa and s’mores at the fire pit, visit the lighted tree, and enjoy live music, an ice rink, and a wine and beer garden as the lighted boats pass by.

Middle River Lighted Boat Parade The Mid Atlantic’s largest lighted boat parade! Boats will parade along Wilson Point waterfront restaurants in Middle River, MD, beginning at 5:45 p.m. To register your boat, simply text your name, address, and boat size to (410) 463-2686. Captain’s package valued at $325 per boat for parade participants.

Pasadena Sportfishing Group Monthly Meeting Doors open at 6 p.m., meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. at Earleigh Heights Volunteer Fire Company, Severna Park, MD. Free, open to the public. Food and beverages available, free door prize for adults and children, tackle raffle, 50/50 drawing. Speaker: Lenny Rudow, FishTalk Magazine 2019 review.

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For links to the websites for these events and more, visit proptalk.com/calendar

December

1

TKAA Striper Tournament Anglers may fish anywhere in the State of Virginia as long as the body of water is open to the public and has public access. Catch, photo, release tournament using iAngler app. Tidewater Kayak Anglers Association.

1 - Jan 4, 2020 Chesapeake City’s Winterfest of Lights

Month-long holiday event with Victorian Candlelight House Tour, horse-drawn carriage ride, Dickens carolers, ice-skating, holiday lighting, and a Christmas Tree made entirely of crab pots. Chesapeake City, MD.

9

13-15

Christmas in St. Michaels Tours of decorated homes, “Santa Dash” start to the Christmas parade down Talbot Street, breakfast with Santa, holiday music, and more in St. Michaels, MD. Celebrating 33 years of community service. This year’s event benefits 28 Bay Hundred nonprofit organizations.

14

13th Annual All Saints Christmas Market 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at All Saints Episcopal Church in Sunderland, MD. Free admission and parking. Expert craftsmen with gifts for your holiday giving, music, and home-baked goods. Proceeds benefit parish and community projects.

14

Eastport Yacht Club Lights Parade 6 to 8 p.m. Skippers circkle the waterfront in two fleets: one circling in front of Eastport, City Dock, and the Naval Academy Seawall; the other circling the length of Spa Creek inside the bridge. Rain or shine. Skippers may register their boats until December 10. Presented by Eastport Yacht Club in Annapolis, MD.

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

20 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Reader Photos presented by

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

www.BayshoreMarineEngines.com

##Zadalynn found the spot on a recent fishing trip to Janes Island with her dad Brad (whom we must note has impeccable style).

##The Annapolis Anglers Club had a red-hot day this summer, with five boats all catching their limit at the Bridge. Photo courtesy of Kevin McMenamin

##Eric Olson picked up this nice wahoo at the Cigar, on the Auggiekat.

##Ed Newcomer from PA hooked this whopper of a yellow on a perch pounder fishing on Beards Creek. Photo by Mike Ditmars

##Paul Sell got into this fat cat in a Carroll County pond. Photo courtesy of Rich Sell

Send your fishing pics to lenny@fishtalkmag.com FishTalkMag.com November 2019 21


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Thomas Hosselrode and crew found a nice batch of triggerfish out of OC this summer.

##Andy and sons Tucker and Gunner caught ‘em up off Sandy Point. Photo courtesy of Scott McAuley

##Junior Jiminez tempted this eightpound snakehead with a chatterbait.

##Ray got into this BEAUTIFUL red near the High Rise.

22 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##As Mark Grande says, “old guys on Jet Skis RULE!!”


Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##The whole crew had fun fishing on the Tuna The Tide this summer.

##Brian McNew and his uncle John got into some nice ones, using soft crab this summer.

##Steve Allen and Jerry Van Camp had a great day, fishing with Mike! Photo courtesy of Mike Van Camp

##Piper pulled up this flattie just inside the ocean City inlet. Photo courtesy of Brooke King

##John takes the pictures while Marie catches the fish – as usual.

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 23


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##David Gaestel caught this fat blue cat on his home-built rod in Cambridge this summer.

##Jason took a trip to the OBX and got into the tuna. Photo courtesy of Jessica Kazmarek

##Tom Blundel caught this 42-inch cobia, while fishing out of Reedville.

##FishTalk’s own Bob Daley got a 23-inch Spanish, this summer. Nice one, Bob!

##Four-year-old Dylan started his fishing career out the right way with his father Mark.

24 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##A ladies’ group snap from the deck of the Morning Star after an excellent day of fishing for sea bass out of Ocean City, MD. Photo courtesy of Capt. Monty Hawkins

##Davy Dickinson caught this hawg in Virginia Beach this summer, when the bass were hitting 4.5-inch red Zoom shad and Strike King crankbaits.

##That’s a darn nice flattie for Jeff Sykes.

##Travis Long found some bigger blues in the Bay – nice one.

##Andrew and Kaden caught ‘em up on the Flats, right before the sun set. Photo courtesy of Matt King

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 25


Reader Photos presented by Authorized deAler. Certified teChniCiAns.

##Dale’s first snakehead, pulled from the Little Blackwater. Photo courtesy of Eric Packard

##Tyler Porta tangled with this 7.6-pound snakish creature at Newbridge in Vienna. Photo courtesy of Michael Porta

##Nick and Ollie had a toddler-riffic great day on the Middle Chesapeake!

##10-year-old Evan cranked up this beautiful fourpound, eightounce flounder at Stinky Beach on a three-inch Gulp!, while fishing with his father Patrick.

##Jonsey got his first perch, with a little help from Pop-Pop Mike while fishing in the North East River. Nice perch, Jonsey!

26 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Hot New Fishboats By Lenny Rudow

Sea Pro 259: Hot Sauce

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ou want to boil the water with a top-end speed pushing 50 mph, slice through the chop with a 22.5-degree deep-V hull, and arrive at the fishing grounds with armaments like a 30-gallon pressurized livewell and a Simrad NSS12 EVO3? Then get ready to add a little spice into your life with the Sea Pro 259.

Quick Facts LOA: 25’9” Beam: 9’4” Displacement: 4850 lbs. Draft (hull): 1’7” Transom Deadrise: 22.5 Fuel Capacity: 147 gal. Max HP: 400

The real story behind this boat – the queen of Sea Pro’s Deep-V fleet – is in just how well equipped it comes right out of the box. The list of standard features is stellar, and includes big-ticket items that virtually every other builder charges extra for on a 26-footer. Take the through-hull anchoring system, for example. Most boats of this size don’t have a throughhull system, and even fewer include a Lewmar Pro Fish 1000 windlass. But that’s part of the package with no extra charge, so you’ll never have to wrestle with the anchor line again. Or consider

the tilt-hydraulic steering, Fusion RA70 Like most modern CCs the Sea stereo system with four speakers, or the raw Pro is designed to add a bit of comfort water washdown and freshwater shower. to your fishing day. While we’re Yup, again, all are standards, and all are certainly not going to prioritize that the sorts of items other builders charge you over fishability, just in case you need extra for. to reassure your better half that he or When you arrive at the hotspot you’ll she will be able to kick back and relax also appreciate features like the quad rocket in luxury, we do want to note that this launchers on the leaning post and hard top, boat has a couple of seating perks you the pair of kingfish holders on the top, the won’t find elsewhere. The fold-down leaning post tackle center, and the twin aft bench seat has a unique backrest 40-gallon fishboxes in the deck. Those that’s adjustable, and the forward sets fishboxes drain via macerators (we’d rather have both flip-up backrests and resee diaphragm pumps here, since they tend movable (optional) lounger backrests. to handle scales and bones better) that feed Plus coaming bolsters ring the cockpit, a manifold drain, which also evacuates any and for the helm seats you can have water entering the scuppers. The big upflip-down bolster Llebrocs. Ahhhhh, side here is that by utilizing the manifold Llebrocs... system you don’t need to have multiple There are a ton of center consoles in through-hulls perforating the boat. In fact, this size range on the market, and anythe only through-hulls you’ll find on the one interested in a boat like this has a 259 are those of the manifolds and the lot of sifting to do before they can narbilge pumps. Sweet. row down their search. If you’ve done One rather unusual option: the 259 can your sifting and the Sea Pro 259 seems be had with a dive-door and ladder in the like a fit, you’ll be glad that thanks to portside gunwale. True, that’s something that comprehensive standard feature most Chesapeake dwellers won’t use much, list you get a turn-key boat right out unless you enjoy diving in waters where of the box – and you can get out there you can barely see your hand in front of and start boiling the water just soon as your mask. But it could come in handy for you fill up the fuel tank. boarding or re-boarding, particularly if you Tradewinds Marina, Middle River, MD often take out senior Area (410) 335-7000 or tradewindsmarina.com anglers. And if you want it, your opportuDealer Danny’s Marine, East New Market MD, (410) 228-0234 or dannysmarine.com nities in this size range will be quite limited.

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 27


Hot New Fishboats

Xpress XP20CC: Xpress Yourself

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luminum, or fiberglass? Let the debate rage! Sure, there are plusses and minuses for each. Aluminum boats are lighter, so they’re easier to tow, launch, and load. They require less power. And the maintenance factor is seriously reduced. Of course, that light weight also means they get blown around in a breeze and smacked around a bit when it’s rough. So, which is better? Both, and neither. But there’s one more very cool thing about aluminum boats: they tend to cost a whole lot less than fiberglass fishing machines. The Xpress XP20CC, which starts at around $25K with a Yamaha F115 sitting on the transom, is a perfect example. If you’ve looked at fiberglass rigs of this size you already know they can cost twice as much with

28 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

this size engine and similar standard features. Just what sort of features does this boat come with? The console has vertical rodracks for six rigs, there are jump seats that fold out of the aft casting deck, a Minn Kota Riptide trolling motor on the bow, a livewell in the aft deck and a second one in the front of the console, and a real leaning post instead of one of those swing-back cooler seats you often see on relatively inexpensive models. And – surprise! – this rig also comes with a single-axel aluminum trailer. We have only one beef with the standards list: it also includes a Humminbird PiranhaMax 4, which is a rather low-end unit in the Humminbird line-up in this day and age; we’d strongly recommend upgrading to the optional Helix 7 CHIRP SI. Performance-wise, that standard F115 is truly all you need on a boat of this size and nature. It gets you a cruise of close to 34 mph at 4500 rpm and a topend of 45 mph, which is more than enough in a 20-footer. Plus, the fuel economy is rather spectacular. Remember how we said that aluminum boats require less power than glass? Good luck finding a 20-foot fiberglass center console with 115 horses that can beat the Xpress’s peak efficiency of 7.4 miles to the gallon (at

Quick Facts LOA: 20’3” Beam: 7’11” Displacement: 1261 lbs Draft: NA Transom Deadrise: NA Fuel Capacity: 18 gal Max HP: 150

area dealer JF Marine Service, Prince Frederick, MD (443) 432-3121 jfmarineservice.com Lingo Marine, Millsboro, DE (302) 934-9877 lingomarine.com

20 mph and 3000 rpm) or its cruising efficiency of 6.0 mpg. Another thing we like about the XP200CC: it’s an all-welded boat, made with .100-inch-thick 5052 aluminum alloy that’s auto-CAD cut. Belowdecks voids are foam-filled, and the center console is fiberglass. The whole affair gets backed up by a fiveyear warranty and a lifetime transom and hull seam weld warranty. The bottom line? If you want a bay-boat-style fishing machine for use on a tributary or on the open Bay when conditions are right, the Xpress XP200CC provides some rather Xciting possibilities.


PB Airboats

Pretty Bonkers!

I

f you fancy yourself a true snakehead destroyer, you probably enjoy the thought of bow fishing from a boat with zero draft, a kill box large enough to hold an entire flock of dragons, and a bank of halogens powerful enough to fry the fish to a crisp before you even skewer them. True, the use of air boats in populated areas (common maximum allowed noise limits: 90 dBA) could be an issue (average sound level of an airboat: 108 dBA). Yes, it can get a little expensive feeding the 850 horses that provide power to the 82-inch, five-blade Sensenich propeller. And of course, your wife is going to kill you (everyone within earshot of this thing

will cheer her on, too). So what? Who says the guys in the Everglades get to have all the fun? Besides, with this global warming thing going on there’s a fair chance we’ll soon have alligators joining the snakeheads and you’ll be the first one on the block prepared for a hunt.*

Area Dealer None. The factory is located in Steinhatchee, FL, which is located on Deadman Bay. Visit pbairboats. com, if you don’t get the irony.

quick facts There are no Quick Facts because each one of these airboats is custom-built; you get to call the shots, within reason. On second thought, the term “within reason” may not apply in this case.

*Note: as of yet we still don’t have any minimum size or maximum creel limits on alligators in Maryland, Delaware, or Virginia. Quick! Kill ‘em all while you can!

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

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FishTalkMag.com November 2019 29


Techno-fishing Modern tech can help you catch more fish, and these three new gizmos will get the ball rolling.

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ure, we all hear about things like high-tech side-looking fishfinders, 3-D views of what lies beneath the boat, and the amazing resolution of down-scanners. Just about everyone’s been exposed to the plethora of angler-assisting apps by now. And the application of virtual anchoring has become widespread among anglers. But there’s still some gee-whiz stuff out there that many of us either haven’t heard about, or haven’t considered as fish-catching tools. And that’s too bad, because for all its drawbacks modern tech can in fact help you catch more fish. Here are three little-known or under-utilized ways you can harness it to boost your catch rate.

Take a Bathy

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By Lenny Rudow

ust about everyone who fishes from a boat uses a chartplotter, and often refers to the contour lines, depth soundings, and other bathymetric information. There’s just one problem: no matter how good your digital charts are, they aren’t perfect. In fact, the database for most bathymetrics began with NOAA depth soundings, some of which are so old they date back to the days of lead-lines. Anyone with a good deal of experience can probably remember driving his or her boat right across one of those contour lines, and seeing nothing but smooth bottom – not to mention trying to find a charted wreck that’s not saved as a waypoint. Good luck with that. The thing is, many of us could be vastly improving our bathymetric data as we cruise and as we fish. For a little over five years it’s been possible to set your chartplotter and GPS to work in concert with one another, constantly recording the pings from the transducer and GPS position data to update and re-draw your digital charts. True, early systems were a bit clumsy and you had to upload and download the recordings to a website or the cloud. But tech advances at lightening speeds, and these days there are multiple ways to make it happen in the background with no additional effort on your part. If your MFD has WiFi, it’s almost certainly a piece of cake; in some cases you can set an app on your phone to pair up with 30 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

##You think that additional and up-to-date bathymetric data might enhance your ability to judge what lays beneath the boat? Darn straight it will.

the MFD and fling the data around, and in other cases the unit can be set to initiate data-crunching when it comes within range of a hotspot. And some of the latest units to hit the market, like the Raymarine Element series, can perform the task in real-time with no added input from the user. The first time I tested a unit with self-charting capabilities it was rather shocking to see just how wrong the original digital charts were. Contour lines were off by literally hundreds of feet in some areas at the mouth of the South River, and some charted obstructions were so far off target as to be laughable. Are there downsides? Of course – all tech is a PITA in one way or another. In this case, it’s a matter of figuring out how your system has to be set up to do this task. The steps vary quite a bit

from manufacturer to manufacturer, but again, note that today’s systems aren’t nearly as clunky as they were just a few years ago. Still, some level of timeinvestment will be necessary. But just imagine how much more accurate your bathymetry could be for the areas you fish on a regular basis, much less what you can learn as you explore new spots. You’ll be able to view contour lines down to one-foot increments, see tiny bumps and ditches that are too subtle to show up on mass-market digital charts, and gain a much more accurate perspective of what the bottom really looks like where you fish. Do you think a difference like this could give you a leg up on the competition? Youbetcha – and if your unit has self-made charting capability that you’re not using, you’re missing out.


A Shore Thing

Y

By Eric Packard

ou might not have a boat, but that doesn’t mean you can’t harness the tech found in a fishfinder. Deeper Smart Sonar lets you do just that. Small enough at just 3.5 ounces to cast from a fishing rod, it’s the perfect sonar for the shoreline fishermen. With a WiFi range of 330 feet and the ability to transmit its imagery to your cell phone, simply cast the transducer out and retrieve it slowly back in. Whether you’re fishing from the shore, off a pier, a bridge, or from a small watercraft, with Deeper you can scan topography of your favorite fishing spot – and find the fish. There are currently three models offered by Deeper, with a fourth coming soon. I tested the Deeper Pro+ at three of my go-to fishing spots: a local pond, pier, and lake. My first outing was at a local pier on Mill Creek. Easy enough, right? But first you’ll have to download the Deeper Smart Sonar app to your smart phone or other portable device. I started by simply walking around the pier towing Deeper with one of my heavier catfish rods, spooled up with 30-pound braid fishing line. (Yea, I was terrified that I’d make a cast and watch the Deeper sail away!) If you were targeting crappie on an ultralight spinning rod you wouldn’t cast out 3.5-ounce bait, so plan ahead and bring a heavy rod for it. I scanned the perimeter of the outer reaches of the pier, marking fish as I went along. Putting Deeper aside, I then picked up my fishing rod and started making casts along the pier counting down to the depth where I marked – and then caught — plenty of fish. Next, I tried casting Deeper into a pond. I chose Calvert Cliffs State

Park, because I’ve always wanted to know how the bottom of the pond looks. But one thing that hadn’t occurred to me about the Deeper sonar was how the big splash was in a small pond. Yep, major disruption to the pond life. So take note that if you plan to scan a small pond, you may want to take the time to plot the pond out then wait a while or come back another time to do the fishing. But with a little planning you can do just that, because the Deeper app will hold the history of all of your previous sonar scans and you can review them whenever you like.

##Photo courtesy of Eric Packard

Pros: • Deeper offers a ton of information and training for their products on its website.

##A Deeper’s view, as seen on the cell phone during testing. Photo courtesy of Eric Packard

For my final test-outing I loaded up my kayak and headed to St. Mary’s lake. I attached Deeper to the Flexible Arm Mount that they sell for the sonar. As before, the Deeper sonar provided me with water depth, water temperature, and contour of the lake bottom. What was different on this outing is that I turned on the boat mode option in the app. The app then tracked my location on the lake, giving me access to all the data at a later time by using the Deeper Lakebook management platform, which is a web-based application. My final thoughts on Deeper: it works, but it does have pros and cons as do all sonar devices and tech products.

• The Lakebook management platform provides an interface where you can access all your data for planning your next outing or tracking your outings.

• You don’t need a boat to see fish and the topography of everything within casting distance.

• It’s flexible enough to use from shore, kayak, jon boat, pier, and/or bridge, and it can be used for ice fishing, too. Cons: • I found the Deeper will drain your phone’s battery life, so plan ahead.

• It’s heavy, so it makes a big splash and you will need a stout rod to cast it. • Deeper is not complicated, but you will have to dedicate some time to learning the app and the online interface. Visit deepersonar.com for more info.

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 31


Techno-fishing

(CONTINUED)

The Automaton Advantage

T

hrough the years I’ve run boats offshore with autopilots that worked great, some with autopilots that were temperamental, and some with no autopilot at all. And there’s no doubt that those long runs to the canyons are made a lot more leisurely if you don’t have to constantly baby the wheel. So during a big renovation and upgrade this past winter, I had a Si-Tex SP-110C added to my own boat. Knowing how much easier those epic-length cruises would be, I couldn’t wait for the chance to haul down to Ocean City, launch the boat, and head for the deep. Imagine my surprise when I learned that having an autopilot actually helped me catch more fish right here near home, on the Chesapeake Bay. This summer’s magnificent run of Spanish mackerel deserves a lot of the credit for the discovery. I’m not usually big on trolling, but with mackerel swarming the waters and towing a spread of spoons behind planers unquestionably the most effective way to catch ‘em, troll I did. And I rapidly learned that using an autopilot while trolling will absolutely, positively help you catch more fish. The first reason: tangles can be drastically reduced. With the SP-110C you can set a heading, then change course in one-degree increments by pressing the “jog” button left or right. Ten quick button-presses takes just a couple of seconds and creates a 10-de-

By Lenny Rudow gree course-change. Steering strictly on autopilot, I learned that I could circle back on hotspots with a much smoother, more reliable rate of turn than can be accomplished by spinning the wheel by hand. Net result? Tangling the lines – something I usually accomplish in rather grand fashion while trolling – became rare. That meant I spent less time straightening out messes and re-rigging, and more time with all the lines effectively deployed. Reason number two: I discovered I could actually fish, instead of focusing entirely on steering the boat. With a full and experienced crew this isn’t an issue. But multiple times this summer while taking out an inexperienced group or a very small crew, I hit the “auto” button and then rigged a line or reeled in a fish. I even found it possible to spend an afternoon trolling for mackerel alone. Yes, you do need to be careful to continually pay attention to what’s ahead of the boat and a potential

##Of course you still need to be aware of what’s in front of the boat and maintain a lookout, but autopilot lets you get in on the action as you glance over the bow.

Yep, you know it, this is just a peek at a small selection of the tech out there that can help you catch more fish. But as you consider which goodies and gizmos are worth bothering with and which are more of a PITA than they’re worth, make sure to consider these three electronic options – because all of them can help you catch more fish.

32 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

pitfall is the temptation to pay too little attention to maintaining a good lookout. But without the autopilot (at least in my case) trolling alone simply wouldn’t have even been an option.


H i dd e n in Plain Sight By Wayne Young

You can find fish-attracting structure with a little tech and some time.

R

ugged bottom structure providing fishing opportunities exist throughout the Chesapeake Bay. It may be charted as shoals, marked by aids to navigation, or inferred by sounding data and depth contour lines on nautical charts – but there are also rugged bottom features which are located where charts suggest flat or gradually sloping bottom. Modern navigation and fish-finding technology and shaded relief bathymetric images facilitate the search for bottom features and potential fishing opportunities. A couple of amazingly useful structure-finding tools available to anglers include the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Bathymetric Data Viewer (BDV) web application (maps.ngdc. noaa.gov/viewers/bathymetry), and electronic nautical and bathymetric charts. Few people, however, use the BDV – or for that matter, are even aware of it.

Using the Bathymetric Data Viewer

NOAA side-scan sonar coverage is partial in the Chesapeake, but the combination of sonar data and side-scan images shown in shaded relief overlaid on a translucent digital chart are powerful search aids. Where NOAA sidescan sonar image coverage is available, distinct rugged bottom structure can be discerned in otherwise non-descript areas. Some of these anomalies are subtle. Blending into chart colors, the anomalies are essentially hidden in plain sight and can be easily missed without careful, close review. An interesting formation that provides a working example of what to look for is along the western shore south of Cedar Point and just north of Point No Point.

The graphic above shows the different visual scenes that can be generated as you click the different boxes in the BDV menu. “DEM Color Shaded Relief” displays sounding data. “BAG Color Shaded Relief” displays sidescan sonar images. DEM and BAG images can be combined, and either or both can be overlaid on a raster nautical chart. This is the basic toolbox for searching the BDV for bottom structure. Zooming in on the BAG Color Shaded Relief image on-line reveals even more rugged character than is

shown in the graphic. You won’t see any of this detail on a regular chart, but it’s here for interested anglers to discover on the NOAA BDV. Color-shaded relief for soundings is useful for scoping broad areas. The area around Pooles Island, for example, abounds with structure. Many trenches off Pooles Island, especially to the southeast to down off Tolchester, were created by dredges to extract relic oyster shell for use in oyster restoration. The old dredge cuts provide a form of structure FishTalkMag.com November 2019 33


H i dd e n in Plain Sight c o n t i n u e d

that interacts with physical forces to provide predator foraging opportunity. Click on the “DEM Color Shaded Relief” to fill in depth sounding images. Overlay the image with a translucent navigation chart using the click-on box in the drop-down. Zoom in and look for anomalies under the chart layer between depth lines. Also look along steep dropoffs for anomalies. Then, remove the chart layer to see what’s there. Some interesting features will stand out!

BDV Examples

Although many historic reef formations were flattened and smoothed by oyster dredges, there are still some irregular reef formations out there. For example, east of Point Look-In southeast of the Point No Point Fish Haven and adjacent to a marked obstruction, there’s a bottom anomaly. It’s positioned directly under sounding data. Neither NOAA’s Automatic Wreck and Obstruction Information System (AWOIS) nor Electronic Navigation Chart data have any data for the obstruction. While zooming in on the obstruction with the BDV to check what might be there, however, the anomaly caught my attention. It was obscured

##This formation east of Pt Look-in is not shown on nautical charts. The anomalies in the upper right corner of the image are the wrecks and Wilson Bridge rubble reefs in the Point No Point Fish Haven. Screenshots from NOAA Data Bathymetry Viewer

by the chart data so it wasn’t obvious at first. But at the lowest zoom levels, the chart disappears. It was then that the anomaly revealed itself, and another light tackle jigging spot could be added to the run-and-gun list. Also, this provides a lesson to be learned when using the BDV. There may be anomalies located directly under charted data, so be sure to remove (click off) the chart and look underneath, before moving on. Below Point Lookout as the Bay widens up the bottom, in general, has a more gradual contour. Thus, bathymetry depth lines are farther apart, and less helpful in pinpointing hard

bottom structure. And it’s in this portion of the Bay where NOAA’s BDV really shines. Structure in otherwise unremarkable areas is revealed by using BDV image overlay features. Again, overlay the image with a translucent navigation chart using the click-on box in the drop-down, zoom in and look for anomalies under the chart layer between depth lines, and look along steep drop-offs for anomalies. Then, remove the chart layer to see what’s there. South of Tangier Sound Light provides another excellent example. Two interesting anomalies are clearly visible under the translucent BDV chart. The BAG color shaded relief is under the chart in the graphic. The insert is a screenshot of the larger anomaly with the chart layer removed. The images have not been retouched except for the red circles added to highlight the structure. There is an extremely rugged shelf along the edge of a naturally deep channel. It was this channel that drew my attention while slowly scrolling through the BDV images specifically looking for rough channel

##Rugged edge and bottom southwest of Tangier Sound Light. Untouched screenshots from NOAA Bathymetry Data Viewer

34 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


##BAG color shaded relief of bottom area east of Smith Point. Screenshot from NOAA Bathymetry Data Viewer

edges. The dark blue shaded relief of the deep-water areas provides additional contrast that facilitates seeing anomalies. These natural features provide additional fishing options away from the Tangier targets (shown in the upper left-hand corner of the graphic), and the San Marcos target (not shown). A good location to practice using the BDV is the area east of Smith Point, shown in the final screenshot, a “BAG Color Shaded Relief” image. The broad area shown is within easy striking distance of Southern Maryland and the Northern Neck of Virginia, and is heavily fished. Just to the south is the Northern Neck Fish

Haven which is also within BDV sidescan sonar coverage. Make sure to zoom in on the various bottom features. The closer the zoom, the sharper the image. Look for sub-features within structure such as underwater ravines and bowls that fish may orient to. Also check

current data, and consider how current may interact with the structure. Using this tool, anglers up and down the Bay can locate potential fishing grounds that they might otherwise never find. Fishing grounds that are hidden in plain sight. P

Wayne Young is the author of “Bridges Under Troubled Waters: Upper Chesapeake and Tidal Potomac Fishing Reefs,” available at Amazon.com. You can find his Facebook page at Chesapeake Bay Fishing Reefs.

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##Two more happy anglers, glad they made the choice to fish at the bridge.

How to Fish t h e

C h e sa p e a k e

B ay

B r i d g e s

By Lenny Rudow

This Upper/Middle Bay hotspot is an ace in the hole for thousands of anglers – and maybe for you. Consider it in the big picture, and you may discover it’s even better than you think.

E

ach and every year, more than 25 million cars and trucks pass right over one of the hottest fishing spots in the entire Chesapeake Bay. And while the people in those cars may be thinking about which lane is faster or why the backup continues past the toll plaza, those of us floating around below them are thinking about something entirely different: how to catch more, bigger fish. We’ve examined how to jig at the Bridge before (hit FishTalkMag.com if you haven’t seen the article), and live-lining and chumming here have dominated the Upper and Middle Bay fishing reports through much of the striper season for two years running. So instead of dwelling on a particular 36 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

method or tactic, this month we’re going to look at how to approach the bridge as a whole – the complete package, so to speak.

The Number One Tip

Fishing at the bridge changes. Sometimes it’s a slow change and sometimes it changes overnight, but the biggest danger to anglers who fish here regularly is thinking that what worked yesterday will work again tomorrow, next week, next month, and next year – and that it’s the only thing that will work. In the 70s trolling over deepwater sections of the bridge was our standard tactic. During parts of the 80s the rockpiles held all the fish. In the 90s it was the Western Shore pil-

ings, then the Eastern Shore pilings, then the rockpiles again. And from the turn of the century to today we’ve seen the same sections of the bridge complex go from hot to not, and back to hot again. The bottom line: don’t get myopic, don’t fall into a rut, and don’t have a conniption if there are five boats clustered around your favorite piling. There are literally dozens of places and tactics to try at the bridge and even though one or another was red-hot yesterday, that doesn’t mean it’s the only one that will work and it doesn’t mean you can count on it working tomorrow. Now let’s break that concept down a bit: not only does fishing at the bridge change through time, it


changes through tidal cycles. Fish the bridge long enough, and you’ll experience days when the best bite is on the eastern side during one tide, but on the western side during the other. Fish it a little longer, and you’ll experience days when the diametric opposite occurs. You’ll also encounter timeframes when specific structures at the bridge require modifying your location according to the tide. The best bite at the east rockpile, for example, is often on its western side during an outgoing tide. But on an incoming, the northern side usually produces best. Larger pilings can display the same microhotspot specificity.

Be Your Boat

The second-most important thing to keep in mind about fishing the bridge is probably remembering that with raging currents, lots of structure to slam into, and plenty of other boats in the area, boat handling is a key to being successful here. In many situations you’ll have to dedicate yourself to running the boat, and constantly jockeying the throttles to maintain safe and proper casting distances, positions, and drifts. You have to get your anglers into the right spot, and then trust them to do the catching while you grab a cast or two when possible. Wait a sec – why not just anchor up, and not worry so much about handling the boat? Sure, that’s an option. In fact, when other boats are anchored up around the bridge it’s often the only acceptable option. But this shouldn’t always be the first choice because a) multiple boats can work a piling adrift while one anchored boat cuts other anglers out of the action and/or forces them to move in too close to get a shot; b) you stand a good chance of losing an anchor around the bridge; c) dropping anchor reduces your flexibility and forces you to dedicate yourself to one single spot for longer than you might otherwise; and d) it raises the element of danger, because an errant wave, gust of wind, or changing tide can turn a safe anchor job into a piling-slammer in the blink of an eye. All of that said, many sections of the bridge have been so crowded with anchored boats the past few seasons that it’s been discourteous and dangerous to try fishing in the area without dropping the hook. The bottom line? Whether to anchor or not is each individual captain’s choice on any given day, but you should consider the current situation and think a bit before reaching for the ground tackle. There’s one more very big and very important exception to consider: virtual anchoring. I can’t even begin to express how jealous I’ve become when I see a boat with a Minn Kota on the bow, Spot-Locked in place 20 feet from a piling. My boat doesn’t have this capability (and unfortunately can’t be rigged with it) but I’ve fished on plenty of boats with either bow-mount electrics or Helm Master systems that allow for button-press GPS position holding – and it’s an invaluable advantage.

##Note the handheld wireless remote hanging from the lanyard around the captain’s neck; this boat has Spot-Lock in its arsenal, and it comes in very handy at the bridge.

Bar Hopping

The aforementioned crowds notwithstanding, one of the most effective ways to approach this wonder of mass fishing structure is to hop from one spot to the next, working your way along the different teepee-style FishTalkMag.com November 2019 37


How to Fish t h e C h e sa p e a k e B ay B r i d g e s

pilings, cross-bars, four-leggers, and rockpiles. The specific tactic you’re using can vary with this approach. Slinging jigs is a favorite of many, but tossing live spot or soft crab chunks will also work as you go hopping from one spot to the next. The most important thing to remember about this technique is that you’re essentially prospecting just as you would when casting to a long rip-rap jetty, and similarly, you’ll want to stay on the move. Having a good side-scanning sonar is a huge help in this situation, since you can tell if there are fish schooling around a piling merely by passing slowly along and keeping an eye on the screen. Combine this tactic with a trolling motor that has Spot-Lock and is interfaced with your MFD (note that Minn Kota and Humminbird are sister companies and Solix or Helix models can be integrated into what they call the “One-Boat Network,” so they communicate seamlessly with each other) and you can greatly reduce the amount of time you spend casting blindly at barren water. Whether you see fish or don’t have the ability to, three or four casts at a single

piling is plenty – if there are no hits, be quick to move on because any fish you may see could be inactive. If someone felt a bump or two maybe give the piling an extra cast. If someone lands a throwback give the piling a half-dozen more chances, and if a keeper comes to the net plug away at the spot for a few minutes. One rule: don’t bounce north-south between the two bridges as you hit one piling after the next, but instead work east-west. Usually one side or the other will have a better bite, but it’s rare that the north bridge will be a whole lot better than the south bridge, or vice-versa, as you work your way along. (That’s looking at the bridges as a whole; specific pilings are different and there are a few both on the north span and on the southern span that stand out on their own individual DC Washington Eastern Power Boat Club merits). DE

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North-South-East-West

That said, as a general rule of thumb the south bridge pilings tend to be better on the western side, and the north bridge pilings tend to be better on the eastern side. Yes there will be exceptions – many exceptions – but over the long term this

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tends to be the case. And here’s another overly generalized statement that is most certainly not 100-percent true, but is likely to be correct when looking through a long-term lens: on an incoming tide the western side (south span) is often a better bet, but on an outgoing the eastern side (north span) is often a better bet. Taking all of these factors into consideration, when you arrive at the bridge on an incoming tide a solid game plan is to start on the western side, south span and work your way east. After hitting the rockpiles, run to the eastern side edge where the bottom comes up from the old Susquehanna riverbed channel and switch to the north span. If you arrive during an outgoing, try running the same play but in reverse. Can you count on the Bay Bridge Myersville Harbor toNational produce fish each and every time Newburg North Beach you Of course not – there’s not a Northvisit? East Nottingham Ocean City hotspot in the world that’s quite that Oxford Parkton good. Pasadena But the bridges do stand head and Perryville Port Deposit shoulders above many other locations Prince Frederick Point Lookout Marina onRidge the Rising Sun Bay. And one thing is for sure: Riva Hall noRock matter what the bite’s like, you’ll be Rosedale Rosehaven having a heck of a lot more fun than the Salisbury Savage Severn people in those cars passing overhead. P Severna Park Solomons A Sparrows Point ST Michaels St. Leonard Stevensville Taylors Island Tilghman Timonium Trappe Upper Marlboro Westminster Westover White Marsh NJ Cape May MT Laurel Somers Point Villas PA Abbottstown Bensalem Columbia Dallastown Dover Emigsville Hallam Havertown Loganville Philadelphia Shrewsbury VA Accomac Alexandria Ashland Carrolltonh Cheriton Chesapeake Colonial Beach Deltaville Brown’s Dumfries Eastville Exmore Fairfax Fort Monroe Dead Rise Old Point Comfort Marina Fredericksburg Glen Allen Grafton Dare Marina Hague Hartfield Hayes Heathsville Hopewell Irvington Dahlgren Poquoson Portsmouth Reedville Saluda Stafford Tappahannock Townsend Urbanna Virginia Beach Wachapreague Warsaw Williamsburg Woodbridge Yorktown

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Golden Oldies That Still Work

W

hen I was a kid back in the 70s fishing at the bridge was mostly a trolling game, though drifting eels up against the pilings was also a tactic we used now and again. Since then, however, a couple of effective methods have come and gone. Who knows why they fell out of vogue – both will still put fish in the boat and the smart money says that at times, may prove more effective than anything else you try.

Feather Jigging

Tie a triple swivel on your line, and clip a one- to two-ounce dipsy sinker onto one of the remaining eyes. Then add a four-foot section of soft mono leader to the third eye, and tie on a threeto four-inch feather jig (similar to a bucktail but tied with chicken feathers) in white, yellow, or chartreuse. Cast the rig out, and allow it to sink to the bottom. As soon as it hits begin reeling and every second or third revolution of the crank, jig the rod tip. Sometimes crank-crank-jerk works best, others crank-crank-crank-jerk wins. Keep a steady rhythm to the retrieve until the rig breaks the surface because sometimes fish will follow it right up to the boat and strike at the last second.

Live-Baiting Bull Minnow

People may be calling jumbo bull minnow “Snakehead Destroyers” these days, but in the past many anglers thought of big bulls as prime striped bass baits whenever fish were staging near the rockpiles. Rig a regular topand-bottom rig with thin wire 1/0 to 2/0 hooks, and add an ounce or two of weight. Drop the rig down to the bottom, then give it a couple cranks so it stays above the snags as you drift along the rockpile’s edges. Full disclosure: I haven’t tried doing this since circle hooks became mandated and always used Js for this tactic, so I can’t swear as to whether you should allow the fish to eat or begin reeling the moment you get a strike.

##The Chesapeake Bay Bridge has been more than just a hotspot the past couple of seasons – for months at a time, it’s supported the hands-down best striper fishing in the entire region.

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Five Alive By Chuck Harrison

Check out these five fall fishing hotspots in the Lower Bay and Way South Chesapeake zone.

A

s I write this, it’s late August and the weather already feels different. Our summer of fishing has been like most – some good news, some bad. I fish from a small boat which limits my range, adding to the challenge. I have not had a good summer with flounder, but as many of you know it has been a great year for Spanish mackerel. I have caught exactly one red drum this year – but she was 48 inches – and no black drum. The spadefish I have caught have averaged bigger than most years, but no triggerfish. Some bluefish big enough for the table are around, but the togs are running small. I could keep going, but you get the point: no two years are alike these days! A few cold fronts from now we will be fully into fall fishing (and by the time this issue hits the streets, it should be well underway). I can’t wait, because my favorite fish in the Lower Bay is the speckled trout, and a few of them have already started to bite. I also enjoy red drum (puppy drum and the big ones) at this time of year. Sometimes we will catch flounder well into the fall. And with luck, we will start to see an uptick in striper action as the water cools. One piece of good news is that most of the species hanging around in autumn may be caught using the same gear in the same places. This article will be more about the “where to” than the “how to,” using simple “how to” techniques: fishing fairly light spinning gear, and Gulp! Swimming Mullet in white or chartreuse on 3/8 or 1/2 ounce jig heads. Work it along the bottom until the fish hits. That’s it. 40 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

The Hot Spots 1. Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel Area

I guess you could say this is an “inlet,” as lot of water from the Hampton River, James River, and Elizabeth River along with many other tributaries emp-

ties into the Bay here. I say “area” because it’s not just one spot. If you are a regular reader you may remember I wrote an article about fishing this area (How to Hit the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel, which you can read at FishTalkMag.com) not too long ago. If you aren’t a regular reader… why not?


##The HRBT island on the Hampton side has good fishing and is accessible by small boats and kayak anglers.

Typically, I will start on the tube end of the island on the Hampton side. (By the way, in fishing language “tube” means “tunnel”). I’ve done well here on all the aforementioned species. Depending on the current, I’ll anchor between the tubes or on the outside of the southbound tube. If nothing happens around there, I work the Hampton Roads side of the island down to the bridge end of the island. I have caught stripers around the first few sets bridge pilings. In the past few years I have spent more time between the two bridges leading onto Fort Monroe. This is an area popular with wade anglers, and increasingly with kayakers as well. A lot of specks congregate here before the weather turns too cold. There’s a channel running between the two bridges which is about 12 feet deep. I work the channel edges all the way from one bridge to the other. Last year the specks were running small, but there were plenty of them.

2. Little Creek Jetties

This used to be a go-to place for my fall fishing, and I fished out of Little Creek for years. I still stop by there from time to time. I always fished around the jetty on the south side of the inlet and have done well inside and outside of the jetty, anchoring or drifting. This is where I honed my skills with speckled trout. I have had some of my best puppy drum fishing right there as well. And school stripers love this area. There have been times when I got skunked at the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel only to catch my dinner at the jetties on the way back in.

##John Ericson with a nice HRBT puppy drum.

Launch Points

Most of the places mentioned here have boat ramps nearby. There’s a ramp at Old Point Comfort Marina in Hampton a few hundred yards from the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel. (This is where I launch). There is also one in Willoughby on the Norfolk side. There’s a ramp on the military base in Little Creek, but only people with a Department of Defense ID may use it. Lynnhaven has a nice ramp adjacent to the Lesner Bridge. This is a good jumping-off spot for both the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel and the whole Lynnhaven River area. Rudee Inlet has a popular ramp at Owl’s Creek on General Booth Boulevard. Kiptopeke State Park and Cape Charles both have ramps as well. (Note: the Kiptopeke ramp can be sporty in a strong west wind, as the concrete ships only afford so much protection).

3. Lynnhaven Inlet

There is a whole tribe of speckled trout anglers who never leave Lynnhaven Inlet. With miles of shoreline, marshes, and shell beds, this is a breeding ground for lots of fish. At times, this can be a great area for puppy drum as well. Back in the day anglers would be shoulder-

to-shoulder lined up behind the DuckIn restaurant (just outside of Lesner Bridge), casting to specks. Shore-bound anglers still have a good shot at catching fish wading on either side of the bridge. From a boat I like to fish areas where ditches pour out of the marsh into the river on the falling tide. Places FishTalkMag.com November 2019 41


Five Alive where channels cut through shallow water are also good bets. Just be careful – there is a lot of really shallow water in there. It pays to watch the locals and keep an eye on the bottom machine.

4. Rudee Inlet

Yes, it’s officially outside the Bay, but Rudee is within shooting distance for many Lower Bay anglers and this is the last stop for southbound fish heading for the Carolinas in the fall. Fishing can be good from the jetties all the way up to the Marine Science Museum. This allows for both shore-bound anglers and boaters to have a shot. Both specks and pups will over-winter here in mild years. Unfortunately, the odd cold snap can cause a fish kill in the inlet.

5. Cape Charles/Cherrystone The whole lower end of the DelMarVa Peninsula is very fishy! I’m no expert on the area, but there are a lot of options.

From Fisherman’s Island you can travel up “inside” to miles of marshes and creeks. The area around Kiptopeke (including the Concrete Ships which form a breakwater for the boat ramp) has always been fishy. We once placed in the money in a striper tournament trolling the area outside of the Concrete Ships. Heading up the Bay, you will confront several inlets including Cape Charles and Cherrystone. Even further you will

find Hungars Creek, which has always produced some of the biggest speckled trout in Virginia. If you’re new to fishing the Eastern Shore, I suggest watching what the locals do. Give them their space but observe and learn. There’s good fishing this time of year, and some of it is available to shore-bound anglers. So as the fall chill approaches, don’t pack away that fishing gear just yet! P

Fall Travelers

Stripers may hang around through the winter some years (but keep an eye on the changing regulations), depending on the weather. But as winter approaches, most of the specks and pups will move on from most spots. One fall we tagged some puppy drum at Little Creek that were caught a week later in North Carolina. Those fish were on the move!

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##Matt Gronaw with a high-end golden from a southern Pennsylvania lake where synthetic corn enticed this fish into biting.

Carp – Why Not? By Jim Gronaw

T here ’ s gold in them thar waters

Q

uestion: what species of fish is considered throughout much of the world to be one of the smartest, most challenging, largest freshwater targets out there? A fish that anglers spend untold thousands of dollars and travel extensively, just to get a shot at a 30- to 40-pounder? One anglers are willing to bankroll almost their entire worth to purchase highly specialized gear and baits to consistently fool? Are we talking about muskies? Pike? Sturgeon?! Do you give up? Well folks, it’s actually the common carp, and several sub-species that abound both in the US and abroad. Although routinely considered at the bottom rung on the gamefish ladder around here, or not even considered a gamefish, carp are indeed a very available fish that brings a lot to the table.

True, carp are not ranked high in North American waters, where predators that jump high, look purdy, or have teeth rule the scene. But in their own special way they’re every bit as challenging and worthy as a gamefish. Besides, how else can the average angler find volumes of 20- to 30-pound class fish, in multiple bodies of water within a few hours drive or even less throughout much of the Mid-Atlantic region? Personally I like carp, and I like them a lot. They’re big, strong fighters, and they can be extremely spooky and skittish, offering unique challenges to the angler. One growing and popular way to catch them is with a fly rod, and most anglers I know who have caught them in this manner claim they are every bit as wary and selective as the trout species. Although they are primarily taken on a

variety of corn, dough, or boilie baits, they will take a variety of lures. I have taken them on jigs, spinners, small crank baits, and some on the popular prepared trout dough and paste baits. I even caught one on a double-bladed spinnerbait years ago that smashed the lure with amazing force and challenged my fish-playing skills for a 30-minute gig. The loser went 25 pounds! As a kid growing up in central Maryland, I cut my teeth on carp fishing at Liberty Reservoir simply by fishing shallow coves for them with my panfish gear of the 1960s. Ultra-light spinning tackle had yet to come onto the scene, so the lightest rod I could use and six-pound test was good enough. We used numberfour Eagle Claw hooks and baited them with nightcrawler chunks and pinched on some large split-shot FishTalkMag.com November 2019 43


Carp – Why Not? (continued)

about 20-inches above the hook for additional casting weight. Canned corn was broadcasted in the backs of shallow coves when the waters were low, and then either the worm or the corn itself was threaded on the hook. We would toss

out, place the rod on a forked stick with an open bail, and watch for a line-peeling bite that almost always signaled a carp strike. Subsequent hookups ##A carp fishing rodholder resulted in spirited set-up like this makes tussles with six- to deploying the lines easy. 10-pound fish that not only improved our angling skills but nets, hair rigs and synthetic corn, and also made a bunch of schoolboys think numerous other “carp gear” that makes they were “real” fishermen. It was a great the catching of these fish easier. We time! were taught by a group known as the Carp fishing of today, however, has “Carp Mafia” back in the early 2000s taken on a whole new level of gear, from southern Pennsylvania waters who strategy, and expertise. I currently own a took their fishing seriously and caught pair of nine-foot “carp rods” paired with lots of big fish. Almost all of this carp Shimano Baitrunner spinning reels that gear came from European descent as hold lots of 14-pound test Suffix Elite carp tackle companies are now in the and enable me to make super long casts states and one can easily purchase speto reach fish from the shore. My son cialized gear for catching them. Matt and I have bite alarms, rod pods, But in truth, you do not need specialbank sticks, baiting spods, collapsible ized gear or bite alarms to meet success

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with these golden bruisers. In most situations you can catch carp with medium spinning gear and 10- to 14-pound monofilament and numberfour or number-six baitholder style hooks and one to three ounce in-line oval sinkers that you might use for heavy Carolina rigging. In most cases carp in our rivers and lakes are prevalent enough that “pre-baiting” or chumming an area is not necessary. However, some anglers prefer to chum overnight or the day before any carp trip is planned. Be sure to check any and all local and regional regulations in regards to the legality of this tactic. Where permitted, simple canned corn or small dough balls can concentrate carp to a specific area, upping your odds of numbers of fish. Use a 24-inch leader attached to a barrel swivel and the in-line weight should be on the mainline. Keeping your line tight or on an open bail, the carp will usually take the bait and then streak off quickly once it feels the hook. Using Baitrunner style reels allows a bolting carp to race off, then when you

engage the reel the fighting drag kicks in, setting the hook if it has not already penetrated the carps tough, rubbery lip. We have used electronic bite alarms for this static approach in combo with our Baitrunners as it immediately gives a loud shrill alarm when the carp is running. Other items such as hair-rigs, weigh matts, pack bait, and specialized carp baits and formulas of all flavors can be found on internet resources like Big Carp Tackle, Wacker Baits, Korda Tackle, and Resistance Tackle. The best organization to refer to would be Carp Anglers Group, but a quick internet search will show many others. All of our carp fishing adventures over the years have been strictly catch and release affairs. Some anglers keep them for carp cakes, others for fertilizer. What you do with your carp is up to you, but please do not waste the resource of one of the largest freshwater fish in our region. Enjoy them! P

##Four year old Colson caught this chunky carp on his first cast – ever!

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p r o p ta l k . c o m / p o w e r b o at- ya c h t- b r o k e r s FishTalkMag.com November 2019 45


Using Technology

to Find New Fishing Spots By Matt Stone

Search out new waters before you ever even get there, with these five techy tools.

I

t’s a common occurrence in online fishing communities: someone pops in, likely new, and asks “Where is a good place to catch (insert fish species here)?” Let me be the first to say that there’s nothing wrong with this. The fishing community is just that – a community. Communities should share and support. Yet these folks, in all of their hopeful innocence, are often given a hard time by salty veterans resistant to sharing what they’ve learned after countless years on the water. And I get it! Nothing can take the place of experience. Money, time, and the prerequisite blood, sweat, and tears have been poured into long hours learning a particular body of water, and veterans have a right to keep that close to the vest. But if you’re thinking of fishing new water, how can you plan for your trip without getting ribbed online? Hopefully, the following five tools will give you some insight into the spot you’re curious about before you even put hull to water.

1

Public Water Access Maps Powered by the Maryland DNR, the ArcGIS version map is the most detailed, thorough, and comprehensive water access map that I have found thus far. Each blue dot represents a water access point, from sandy beach launches up through quadruple-lane cement boat ramps. Clicking a dot opens a window which provides details about the launch size, parking lot size, ramp surface, hours, and helpful information such as a website, phone number, and governing body in charge of the ramp. This website is a game changer, whether you want to access a familiar body of water from a

##You can access the map by searching “Maryland Public Water access ARCGIS” on your web browser.

46 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

new location or want a new adventure in a completely different part of the state. When searching out Virginia waterway access, visit the Department of Game & Inland Fisheries website where they have a Public Boating Access search field (no map) searchable by body of water or by county and city. You can also find listings of coastal and Bay launches in the Virginia Marine Resources Commission Saltwater Angling guide online. Google Earth and Google Street View This is not new tech for most, but it’s grossly underrated as a scouting tool for fishing spots. Most of the time,

2

there’s no way to know what type of water, structure, current, or shoreline you’ll be fishing until you have your boat in the water. With Google Earth, that changes. Download this free add-on, and immediately you can zoom in so far that you can practically see the five-pound largemouth hiding under that log. Additionally, for anyone curious about a new ramp’s size or parking, you can utilize the “Street View” feature of Google Earth to put you on the ground at most known spots for a pavement-level perspective of the area you want to check out. Navionics Web App The paid version of Navionics is used widely by tens of thousands of boaters and fisherman for accurate navigational and depth information. Even though it’s not as detailed, the free version of Navionics, found by searching “Navionics Web app” on your phone or computer, is a fantastic way to nail down points, shoals, flats, humps, and dropoffs before setting off on the day of your trip. Some of the information isn’t fully accurate, so don’t use the free version as your main navigational tool. However, when you’re heading out to fish new water, this version does provide you with at least a strong idea of what bottom contours you can expect. It’ll point you in the right direction so that you aren’t aimlessly paddling your kayak or burning fuel in order to find your desired depth

3


and structure. While it covers primarily the ocean and the Bay in our area, there are also some lakes mapped. Online Forums Chances are, you’re not the first person to have a particular question about a location or species. Most forums, such as Stripers Online and Tidal Fish, can be searched for previously posted content without having to join the forum itself. Often, the response to a question is for a senior forum member to link the newbie to a conversation when the question was asked previously. That’s a lot of time and effort to be put in when a quick search could have yielded the same results. So, research before you post. If then you still aren’t satisfied, well, it’s probably time to join the forum and become a part of these fishing communities. Weather Apps FishWeather, Windfinder, Windy, live buoy data, and regular old weather apps are smart and safe resources to use before entering new water and can help you decide which part of a waterway to fish prior to launching. This is particularly true if you’re in a smaller boat or kayak and are entering big water that’s

##Navionics can give you serious intel on what lays beneath the water’s surface.

4

5

new to you. Check multiple sources for the direction and intensity of forecasted wind, waves, and weather, and have a backup plan in case things go awry. Often, if the weather is looking sketchy it’s smart to have a couple of backup launces which may afford you a quicker escape if the weather turns. For kayakers in particular, learning about the “fetch” of waves is vital. If you’re on the western shore of the Bay and there’s an eight-mph breeze from the west, you’re probably sitting pretty on some lightly

rippling water. But switch that breeze to the south on an outgoing tide, and you could be in a washing machine. New water is exciting but no fish is worth your life, so checking weather apps and making a backup plan for your trip is crucial. Your best bet is to use all of these tools in combination. Some may be more helpful than others, but hopefully they can help you make the most of your time when you set off in search of new waters and new memories. P

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FishTalkMag.com November 2019 47


ch e sap e ak e

&

M i d - atlant i c

fishing report Gathered over the past month by Mollie Rudow

Editor’s Note: We all know printed fishing reports are generalized, and days or weeks have passed before the report gets into your hands. For timely, up-to-date reports, visit our website FishTalkMag.com. Current reports will be published every Friday by noon—just in time for your weekend fishing adventures.

Coastal

Time for last licks, people. There are usually still some flounder in the inlets this month, blues should still be around, and anglers fishing coastal bay structure will in all likelihood see plenty of schoolie stripers. Meanwhile, tog fishing only gets better as autumn kicks into high gear. The bigger question for most anglers: will the keeper-sized stripers show up along the beaches and inlets this November? There’s no way to predict if and when it’ll happen, so stay tuned in to the fishing reports. If this year’s like last year, surf anglers will at the very least have plenty of kingfish and snapper blues to keep things interesting in the suds. Offshore, meanwhile, when the weather allows boats to get out we’d ##Specks are in your sights this month? Soft plastics are an excellent bet.

expect to hear about more swordfish this fall. Recent daytime catches have been better than in previous years, it seems like a growing number of Mid-Atlantic anglers have figured out how and where to make daytime swording work – and historically November is a great month for broadbills.

Freshwater Presented by:

DISTRICT ANGLING Snakehead hunters, look for those brief warming trends and take advantage of them. Remember that shallow water areas

which heat up quickly with a sunny day or two (think: Blackwater, and shallow marshy areas) will continue to present plenty of opportunities. By this month, however, there’s a good chance the topwater bite will be history. Sticking with subsurface lures like spinnerbaits or tossing out minnow under a bobber are likely to be better bets. In the region’s lakes and reservoirs, remember that November often brings with it the peak of the fall crappie bite. Small tube jigs and hair jigs tipped with minnow fished in 10-plus feet of water around structure and remaining weedbeds should be the ticket to success. We also note that last year at this time, a solid bite came on in the Baltimore area reservoirs for pike, musky, walleye, pickerel, and other species that thrive in cooler waters. Fish jumbo shiners on bottom at points and rockslides, or fan-cast plugs to get ‘em. What about the bass? Largemouth will still be hitting in the lakes, but those ISO smallmouth will find that small crayfishpattern crankbaits are lethal in our area’s western rivers. Consider the Shenandoah and the Potomac from Harper’s Ferry up prime destinations.

Way North Presented by:

Let’s hope we don’t have a repeat of last November’s overflowing water volume. Assuming we don’t get flooded out again, the mouth of the Susquehanna, the Gunpowder, and the Bush can all be expected to start seeing an uptick in the perch bite for both yellows and whites. We should 48 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Tangier and Lower Shore

##Dale Morton and his son Cris caught this fattie near Thomas Point. Photo courtesy of Marty Abel

still have some stripers roaming through the area this month, too. Setting aside all the speculation and hoping, one thing is for sure: there will be plenty of big, fat catfish throughout this area providing a reliable option when you want a tug and fillets for the fryer.

Upper Bay Presented by:

Through the years November has always been a good month for striper fishing, but after the shockingly good summer season, topping it this fall is a longshot at best. Still, chumming, jigging, and looking for birds are almost always solid bets for rockfish action at this time of the year in the Upper Bay. But don’t forget about the perch, either – the whites really put on the feeding bag as temperatures drop and bloodworms on a bottom rig fished in tribs over hard bottom and structure in 10 or 15 feet of water can be as good as it gets.

Middle Bay Presented by:

As we go to press we note that the schools of bunker we’d usually be seeing move out

of the tributary creeks haven’t really been around in the hoped-for numbers. Fingers are crossed that this will change, and we’ll have a solid run on football-shaped rockfish in the river mouths this month. If not, look to find more of the fish in open water under anchovies. On the flip side of the coin, shallow water anglers working in the South, West, Pax, and in Eastern Bay have already begun finding better numbers of larger fish on rip-rap and docks with a topwater bite in low-light conditions and jigs working well the rest of the time. Let’s hope that keeps up through the month.

Lower Bay

Wow – what a summer it was for mackerel, not to mention the cobia and the reds. These days, however, with the summer species departing stripers will be the name of the game. Yes, VA anglers in the Lower Bay have had their bag limit slashed, but that doesn’t mean there’s not going to be some great action this month. Also note that if we see a repeat of last year, late this month the mouth of the Potomac will be the epicenter of that action. And considering how the early fall’s speckled trout fishing has been, as long as the weather cooperates we should have an excellent bite until the cool temps become down-right cold.

As we go to press specks are providing decent action in the Tangier, and that should continue until the temperatures really plummet. As usual, four- to six-inch soft plastics are an excellent bet with pink, white, and chartreuse leading the charge. Expect to find plenty of stripers in the same skinny-water environs. Many area anglers will, of course, be distracted and tempted by the fall snakehead bite in the upper tribs and Blackwater area. Who ever said temptation was a bad thing?!

Way South

What’s the very best thing about fishing in the zone of the Bay where the Chesapeake mixes with the Atlantic? We’re not sure – there’s plenty to choose from – but the diversity of the November bite here certainly has to be near the top of the list. If this month is anything like it was exactly one year ago, some big stripers will begin to show up, the flounder action at the CBBT and the inlets will get a boost, tog will be snapping at the pilings and islands, and specks will be smacking soft plastics and plugs in both Rudee and Lynnhaven. Last year the sheepshead also stuck around through most of the month so maybe we’ll get lucky with them, too. Dare we hope for the puppy drum to keep us entertained, as well? Keep a sharp eye on the reports.

##It’s a first – Jacob baited, hooked, and landed this perch from start to finish! Photo courtesy of Jeff Cover

F or mor e r e ports , v i s i t F ish T al k M ag . c o m / fishing - rep o rts FishTalkMag.com November 2019 49


Tips & Tricks

When tog are the target, make sure you use enough lead that you can keep the bait sitting dead on bottom, without moving or bouncing regardless of wave action and currents. A bouncing sinker can deter this species from biting.

When trying to match the hatch, bait size is critical. Fish focused on bay anchovies are likely to ignore large lures even when in a feeding frenzy, so scale down your offerings to match.

F or mor e t i ps & tr i cks , v i s i t: f i shtalkmag . com / how - to 50 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


Paddler’s Edge

Making the Grade

T

By Zach Ditmars

ake a look at any seasoned angler’s setup and you’ll be hard pressed to find a kayak without more than a few custom modifications. Once you’ve spent a few trips on your kayak you will quickly realize that a rod holder would be more convenient here, or your fish finder would be easier to reach if it was there. The fact is that modifying your kayak to tailor your needs and comforts will ultimately optimize and make ease of your time on the water.

Electronics Installing a fish finder on your kayak will absolutely help you on your hunt for fish. If you are on a pedal kayak, it is important to know water depth so your drive unit does not run aground. Virtually every fishing electronics manufacturer offers smaller sonar units that are the ideal size for a kayak. But if you have the fish finder mounted towards the bow of the kayak, you may want something larger, like a seven-inch screen that will be easier to see from four to five feet away. When it comes to mounting your transducer, there are several options. There are a few different styles of trackmounted transducer arms available that can easily be flipped up out of the water as needed. Another option is to affix the transducer with silicone inside the hull of the kayak. However, this method can be met with mixed results of effectiveness. There are also scupper-mounted transducers, and some companies are now including pre-installed transducer mounts on the hull of the kayak. A 12-volt 10-amp sealed lead acid battery will typically do the trick to power a fish finder for a whole day and then some, before the need for recharging. Many companies are now offering lithium ion battery packs that are a fraction of the weight of traditional batteries and can carry much more power, but will cost a tad bit more. Get Rolling A select few companies have wheels integrated into their kayak, but for the most part a solid cart for getting your kayak around is essential. If you ever get sick of toting around a cart and having to strap

##Customizing your kayak can help optimize your time on the water. Photo by Brad Spittel

it on every single time you load/launch, then there are other options. The landing gear from BooneDOX features an integrated wheel system that installs onto the stern of your kayak using your existing tracks, or by adding mounting plates to a flat area of your deck. Once you’ve wheeled your kayak to the water, the aluminum legs and wheels simply rotate up and out of the way. The downside is that you do have to be in a few feet of water to deploy or disengage the landing gear. You also must be conscious of your hull weight when transporting via the landing gear as excessive weight can result in damage to your kayak. But speaking from experience, the overall convenience of this upgrade is worth the investment. Hull Protection How many years of dragging over dirt, rocks, and sand can your plastic kayak withstand? If you want to get the most out of your investment and enjoy it for years to come, adding some hull protection is a good idea. High-density polyethylene is a relatively non-stick material so permanent adhesion can be a challenge. There are several keel guards available that are specifically designed for canoes and kayaks. I recently installed a One Objective Keel Protector onto one of our kayaks and after several rigorous trips is still holding up great. Many kayak anglers suggest coating worn areas with Gorilla Tape, which can get the job done on a budget. But the tape can easily get chewed up on rocky terrain and release glue into the water. For that reason this method is less than environmentally friendly. If you’re shopping for a new kayak, a feature to look out for are plastic sacrificial skid plates that some manufacturers are now adding to their kayak hulls.

Tackle Management With being confined to one spot in a kayak, it is a good idea to have your critical gear within arm’s reach. Building a custom crate for storage of your tackle and gear in the rear tank well is great, but you have to constantly twist and reach behind you. Installing an under-seat tackle storage system has been a blessing in having two tackle boxes immediately accessible. Pockets for pliers and fish grips are also a must have and there are several gear track retractable tethers on the market for snips and other tools. Tackle trays are also an excellent addition if you’re someone who likes to quickly swap lures. Customize your tray by adding a magnet to keep lures from sliding around. Accessory Mounts Of course rod holders on a fishing kayak are a no brainer. I have 10 on mine. Reason being is that the vertical tubes on the crate can also be used for stashing items like a flag pole, pliers, or grips. Up front, I prefer several mounting points for various accessories such as rod holders, a camera, or fish finder mounts. There are many aftermarket mounting options to choose from companies such as Railblaza, Scotty, YakAttack, and Ram Mounts. It’s best to stick with one brand so that everything is interchangeable. That way you can move things around based on the type of fishing you’re doing. For example, if you’re trolling you’ll want rod holders on both port and starboard sides. But if you’re drifting with live bait, you may want the rod holders on the same side of the boat. Having one style also enables you to use the same attachments on multiple kayaks. So in short, spend some time with your kayak and get your feels for what works best for you. There are many upgrades out there to customize your kayak that can help you make the most of your fishing days.P

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 51


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Tides & Currents

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

WEEKLY FISHING REPORTS

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StationId: 8575512 nOAA Tide predictions StationId: 8638863 Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Station Type: Primary Station Type: Primary Time Zone: LST_LDT Zone: Md,2019 LST_LDT Baltimore, Fort Mchenry, patapscoTime River, Datum: MLLW Datum: MLLW

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BALTIMORE november October

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Height

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AnnApOLIs december november October

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Times and heights of high and Low Waters

ChEsApEAkE BAy BRIdgE TunnEL december november

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ft AM 0.3 AM 0.9 PM 0.1 PM 1.7

ft cm 0.6 9 1.3 27 0.3 3 1.6 52

0.6 12 18 04:55 02:22 AM 17 17 1.3 30 40 09:39 07:35 AM Sa 05:00 W 02:37 PM PM 0.2 0.2 6 Su 6 03:22 Th 02:02 PM 09:25 PM 1.8 55 10:13 08:45 PM

AM 0.3 AM 0.9 PM 0.1 PM 1.6

0.6 9 18 2 1.2 27 37 0.3 3 M 9 1.6 49 49

AM 0.3 AM 0.9 PM 0.1 PM 1.6

2.815 06:04 85 03:42 3AM12:07 0.6 9 18 06:32 04:14 AM 0.2 AM 0.5 6 AM05:15 AM -0.1 AM 0.3 -3 0.4 9 3 3 18 18 18 0.227 6 08:45 1.1 27 34 11:35 09:25 AM06:08 AM 0.8 AM 0.9 24 11:24 AM11:41 AM 0.9 AM 0.8 27 3.124 Th 3.4 W 0.3 3 Tu 9 05:28 Su 03:41 PM12:37 PM 0.1 PM 0.2 3 6 104 05:37 M 03:03 FPM06:05 PM -0.1 PM 0.0 -3 0.5 0 07:08 PM 0.4 12 1.6 49 49 10:42 PM 1.4 43 11:47 09:56 PM PM 1.2 1.4 37 43

3 01:30 12 04:23 AM AM 0.2 3 94 09:5406:30 AM AM 0.7

2 70 04:1005:42 AM AM -0.1 18 18 12:07 18 09:54 W AM PM 0.7

AM 0.2 AM 1.0 PM 0.2 PM

4 0.6 6 18 1.1 30 34 0.3 6 W 9 ◐ 1.6 49

12:04 01:02 1.2 AM 2.615 06:52 79 04:37 2.4 9 73 05:09 4AM 19 4 01:32 05:08 AM 0.5 37 AM12:02 AM -0.1 AM 0.3 -3 AM AM 0.2 4 19 19 07:14 AM07:03 0.2 AM 0.427 12 09:56 0.524 4 15 10:5807:34 10:28 AM 0.9 6 12:29 PM06:01 AM 0.9 AM 0.8 27 AM AM 0.7

2.2 6 0.721 91 M 01:56 W 05:02 PM PM 0.1 2.6 3 08:34 PM 15 11:27 ◐ PM 1.0 0.630 ◐

67 05:02 19 12:43 AM AM -0.1 19 3 21 11:0706:47 AM AM 0.7

AM 1.5 AM 0.2 PM 1.0 PM 0.2

0.6 46 18 5 1.0 6 30 0.3 30 Th 9 1.6 6 49

12:35 FPM01:33 0.9 PM 3.2 Th 98 Sa 3.0 3 M 04:40 PM 0.2 27 6 06:55 Tu 04:08 PM12:29 PM 0.0 PM 0.1 0 06:34 PM08:10 0.2 PM 0.540 15 10:5306:58 PM 1.3 6 PM PM 1.3 0.540 ◐ 11:35 ◑ ◑

2.4 73 20 12:54 AM 2.4 73 5 02:38 AM 12:51 1.1 AM 5AM02:03 05:59 AM 0.5 34 12:43 AM06:56 AM 1.1 AM 0.2 34 AM 0.1 5 20 20 0.615 18 05:32 0.5 6 5 15 05:5508:40 07:52 AM08:04 0.1 AM 11:34 AM 0.9 3 27 07:38 11:12 AM AM -0.2 0.9 -6 27 12:02 PM AM 0.8 Sa 3.0 01:36 PM02:35 0.9 PM Tu 05:40 PM 0.3 27 9 0.7 F 07:43◐PM09:15 0.3 PM 9

2.2 3 0.7 91 Tu 02:57 PM 2.524 Th 06:02 PM 0.2 6 18 09:27 PM 0.6

AM AM PM PM

cm 18 40 9 55

1 9 7 0

AM AM PM PM

0.6 1.3 0.3 1.8

18 40 9 55

5 3 4 4

AM AM PM PM

0.6 1.2 0.3 1.8

18 37 9 55

2 3 8 2

AM AM PM PM

0.6 1.1 0.3 1.8

18 34 9 55

04:44 AM 07:24 AM AM 0.5 4 4 09:58 12:10 PM 1.0

1 AM 9 AM 2 PM

0.6 1.1 0.3

18 34 9

05:46 AM 12:52 AM AM 1.5 5 5 10:55 08:12 AM 0.4

7 9 1 8

AM AM PM PM

1.8 0.5 1.1 0.4

55 15 34 12

8 3 6 5

AM AM PM PM

1.8 0.5 1.2 0.4

55 15 37 12

1 3 1 3

AM AM PM PM

1.7 0.4 1.3 0.4

52 12 40 12

02:17 AM 03:21 AM AM 1.3 8 8 08:36 10:05 AM 0.3

2 9 4 7

AM AM PM PM

1.7 0.4 1.4 0.3

52 12 43 9

03:04 AM 04:01 AM AM 1.3 9 9 09:20 10:35 AM 0.2

NOvEMBER 2019 TIdES

Times and heights of high and Low Waters

Annapolis, Md,2019

cm h mh m 15 04:04 01:37 AM 16 16 43 08:47 07:02 AM Sa 6 02:30 W 01:26 PM 55 09:22 08:02 PM

ft 0.6 1.3 0.3 1.8

0 2 3 6

F

RUDOW’S

S/CO-OPS ry DT

m 1 0 5 2

4

1 F

h mh m 05:36 01:50 AM 1 10:16 07:33 AM 04:09 Tu 01:50 PM 11:07 08:30 PM

ft AM 0.4 AM 1.1 PM 0.1 PM 1.8

ft cm 0.5 12 1.4 34 0.2 3 1.8 55

06:34 02:46 AM AM 0.4 2 2 11:10 08:19 AM AM 1.0 12:00 AM AM 1.7 3 3 03:44 06:31 AM AM 0.5 09:06 Su 11:08 AM Th 03:26 04:58 PM 10:23 11:56 PM

0.6 52 18 05:47 03:11 AM 18 18 1.3 15 40 10:37 08:11 AM 1.0 0.2 30 M PM 6 04:24 F 02:41 PM 0.3 9 PM 1.7 52 11:09 09:31 PM 1.6 49

0.7 21 06:39 04:04 AM 19 19 1.2 15 37 11:39 08:53 AM F 04:19 PM 0.3 30 Tu 9 05:36 Sa 03:25 PM M 06:04 PM 0.3 9 11:23 PM 1.7 52 10:23 ◑

0.7 21 05:01 12:08 AM 20 20 1.1 46 34 07:29 09:46 AM Sa 05:15 PM 0.3 12 W 9 12:43 Su 04:19 PM Tu 01:12 PM 1.1 34 11:20 ◐ 06:55 PM 07:14 PM 0.4 12 06:00 12:24 AM 1.6 49 01:08 AM 21 21 01:47 AM AM 1.4 0.7 43 21 6 6 10:54 06:48 08:16 AM 08:55 AM AM 0.4 1.1 12 34 M 05:21 Su 11:58 Th 01:49 PM W 02:13 PM 1.1 34 ◑ 06:14 PM 0.4 12 08:14 PM 08:21 PM 0.4 12 01:23 AM 02:36 AM AM 1.4 7 7 07:45 09:32 AM 0.4

1.6 49 02:06 12:20 AM 22 22 0.7 43 21 09:01 07:00 AM M 01:04 PM 1.1 12 34 F 02:52 Tu 12:12 PM Th 03:10 PM 1.2 37 07:14 PM 0.4 12 09:28 06:30 PM 09:23 PM 0.4 12

F

1.6 0.7 40 Tu 02:07 PM 1.1 9 04:02 PM 1.3 08:11 PM 0.4 40 10:20 PM 0.4 12

1.5 0.6 40 W 03:05 PM 1.2 6 Sa 04:48 PM PM 1.4 0.4 43 09:05 11:12 PM 0.4 12

AM AM PM PM

1.7 0.3 1.5 0.3

52 9 46 9

04:38 AM AM 1.2 10 10 09:59 11:04 AM 0.2

3 AM 3 PM 0 PM

1.6 0.2 1.7

49 6 52

04:21 12:02 AM AM 0.4 11 11 10:35 05:15 AM AM 1.2

0 3 3 4

AM AM PM PM

0.3 1.5 0.1 1.8

9 46 3 55

04:54 12:50 AM AM 0.4 12 12 11:10 05:53 AM AM 1.1

1 1 2 5

AM AM PM PM

0.3 1.4 0.1 1.9

9 43 3 58

05:27 01:38 AM AM 0.4 13 13 11:45 AM

0 8 1 6

AM AM PM PM

0.3 1.3 0.0 1.9

9 40 0 58

12:10 02:26 AM AM 0.4 14 14 05:59 07:14 AM AM 1.0

9 6 1 6

AM AM PM PM

0.3 1.3 0.0 1.9

9 40 0 58

12:53 03:14 AM AM 0.3 15 15 06:31 07:59 AM AM 0.9

8 5 3 6

AM AM PM PM

0.4 1.2 0.1 1.9

12 37 3 58 dIFFEREnCEs

03:44 AM

1.5 0.5 37 Th 03:56 PM 1.3 6 Su 05:29 PM PM 1.4 0.5 43 09:55 1.5 12 0.5 37 F 04:42 M 11:33 AM PM 0.1 1.3 3 10:42 06:07 PM PM 1.5 0.5 46

AM 6 1.4 0.6 43 18 AM 0.1 1.0 3 30 PM 9 1.2 0.3 37 F 0.2 6

04:27 Sa 03:46 W PM06:09 PM 0.1 PM 0.1 3 0.2 Tu 3 04:24 Su 6 02:05 Th PM05:19 PM -0.1 PM 0.0 -3 0.4 0 11:15 10:48 PM PM 1.3 1.5 40 46 10:52 09:02 PM11:18 PM 1.3 PM 1.4 40 2.543

91 Su 01:23 PM 3.0 01:35 W 05:18 PM07:57 PM 1.1 PM 0.1 34 21 0.6 3 08:14 11:50 PM PM 0.0 1.2 0 37

01:54 AM 2.4 01:37 12:25 03:11 AM 1.1 AM 1.3 34 2.440 01:39 73 06:25 21 6 6AM AM08:00 AM 1.0 AM 0.1 30 21 21 0.6 3 08:28 06:47 AM09:10 AM 0.1 AM 0.4 3 0.712 21 12:26 08:24 AM02:25 PM -0.3 PM 1.0 -9 M 3.030 02:34 W 12:39 Su PM03:41 PM 1.0 PM 1.0 30 2.830 85 Sa 02:39 Th 06:29 PM09:01 PM 1.2 0.1 37 0.5 3 08:50 06:39 PM10:17 PM 0.3 PM 0.3 9 0.7 9 09:28 21 ◑PM 0.0 PM 0

2.4 6 0.421 Sa 12:59 PM 12 M 03:07 PM 0.0 3.0 0 76 09:5607:37 PM PM 1.1 0.534 2.3 6 0.621 Su 12:55 15 Tu 04:03 PM PM 0.0 2.8 0 10:4207:36 PM PM 1.0 0.630

73 6 18 91 F 15

12:11 AM 6 03:39 06:3909:41 AM 01:03 W 03:54 PM 07:0110:13 PM

1 73 03:1804:45 Tu AM AM 0.0 17 17 11:12 12 08:44 AM AM 0.6 91 Tu 02:54 Su 05:41 PM PM -0.2 15 09:3211:41 PM PM 1.1

85 W 03:59 M 06:39 PM PM -0.1 18 10:26 PM 1.0

13 18 ID: Station Source: NO Station Typ 67 05:54 2. 20 01:51 5 02:43 AM AM -0.2 2.4 -6 73 TimeAM Zone 20 01:12AM 9 04:24AM 08:52 -1.0E 12:4 21 12:1707:58 0.3 AM 0. PM AM 0.8 24 14 4 08:00AM 10:30AM 0.5F 19 08:0 76 W 02:13 F 06:20 PM PM 0.0 2.7 0 82 Th 02:52 PM 2. 18

01:18PM 3 04:12PM 09:14 -0.6E Sa 12:4 0.1 PM M 0. 07:00PM 10:36PM 1.0F 06:1 2.624 79 6 03:39 AM 2. 0.2 -9 6 09:49 AM 0. 2.7 27 82 F 03:45 2. 02:06AM 05:24AM -0.9E PM 01:4 09:06AM 11:36AM 09:58 0.5F PM 08:5 -0.1 0 -3 0. 01:4 Sa 02:24PM 05:12PM -0.5E Su Tu 08:00PM 11:30PM 0.9F AM 07:1 AM 0.7 2.8 21 Slack 85 04:28 2. Maximum 7 ◐ 0.1-12 3 AM -0.4 10:40 AM 0. m Sa h m PM 1.0 2.730 h82 04:35knots PM 2. PM 0.0 -0.2 0 -6 10:39 PM 02:3 0. 01:36AM 03:06AM 06:24AM -0.9E -1.1E 05:06AM 07:42AM 10:06AM 12:36PM 0.5F 0.8F 09:4 01:36PM 03:30PM 06:18PM -0.5E -0.9E 02:5 AM 0.7 21 10:36AM 91 05:13 AM W 2. Tu Su 3.0 M 8 08:00PM 09:06PM AM -0.4 -0.1 -12 04:36PM -3 11:261.2F AM 08:1 0. PM 1.1 2.734 11:24PM 82 Su 05:22 ◑ PM 2. PM 0.0 -0.3 0 -9 11:20 PM 0. 02:30AM 12:36AM 0.8F -1.1E AM 0.6 3.3 18 06:00AM 101 05:55 AM 03:3 2. 04:06AM 07:18AM -0.8E 0.7F 908:36AM 11:24AM 02:24PM 11:00AM 01:42PM 0.5F -0.8E 10:3 PM -0.4 -0.2 -12 -6 12:09 PM Th 0. W di M Tu 08:48PM 04:42PM 07:24PM -0.5E 1.2F PM 1.2 2.7 37 05:18PM 82 M 06:06 PM 04:0 2. 10:12PM 09:3 0.0 0 G

08:43 PM F

70 12:17 AM 21 21 03:01 21 06:4609:09 AM 76 Sa 01:24 Th 03:20 PM 15 07:2909:42 PM

2.524 0.6 -3 91 Sa 01:58 Th 04:43 PM PM 0.9 2.527 12 07:5810:53 PM PM 0.2 0.4 6

76 01:13 AM 22 22 04:07 18 07:3610:17 AM

02:22 01:10 04:21 AM 1.0 AM 1.2 30 2.437 22 73 12:47 AM 1.2 27 2.437 7 73 12:54 AM AM 0.8 7 7 7AM 22 7 04:31 49 02:34 AM03:02 0.9 AM 09:02 07:30 AM10:17 AM 0.0 AM 0.3 0 0.822 9 24 07:1609:10 AM AM 0.0 0.5 0 15 07:2310:35 AM AM -0.1

17 12

12:18AM 03:24AM -1.0E AM 12:0 2.3 2. 4 01:45 -3 70 07:00AM 09:30AM 07:50 0.6F AM 07:0 0.3 9 0. 21 12:18PM 03:12PM -0.7E FPM Su 12:0 79 Tu 01:08 W 01:57 2. Th 2.8 Th 05:09 PM PM -0.1 -3 85 06:06PM 6 09:36PM 1.1F PM 05:3 18 11:21 07:41 PM 0.2 08:28 0. ◑ ◐ PM 0.9 27 ◑ ○

2.327 0.7 0 2.524 0.5 6

AM 0.9 AM 0.0 PM 0.8 PM 0.2

16 11

AM 0.8 AM -0.3 PM 0.9 PM 0.0

20 15 Octobe

5

49 03:02 01:20 AM 23 23 21 09:45 07:55 AM 34 Sa 03:52 W 01:28 PM 12 10:37 07:39 PM

8 1.5 40 46 0.5 0 15 Su 1.1 43 34 0.3 6 9

03:06 01:52 05:22 AM 0.9 AM 1.2 27 2.537 23 76 01:41 AM 1.1 24 2.634 8 79 01:37 AM AM 0.8 8 8AM 23 8 05:16 03:29 AM04:14 0.8 AM 09:37 08:11 AM11:17 AM -0.1 AM 0.3 -3 0.723 9 21 08:0410:21 AM AM -0.1 0.4 -3 12 08:0511:21 AM AM -0.1

79 02:07 AM 23 23 05:07 15 08:2611:19 AM

6 1

21 16

AM 1.3 AM 0.0 PM 1.4 PM 0.2

46 03:55 02:17 AM 24 24 18 10:26 08:47 AM 37 Su 04:48 Th 02:38 PM 12 11:41 08:46 PM

AM 1.2 AM -0.1 PM 1.6 PM 0.1

9 1.5 37 46 0.4 -3 12 M 1.2 49 37 0.3 3 9

03:50 02:31 06:12 AM 0.9 AM 1.1 27 2.634 24 79 02:33 AM 1.0 21 2.830 9 85 02:19 AM AM 0.8 9 9AM 24 9 05:55 04:22 AM05:21 0.7 AM 10:11 08:50 AM12:09 AM -0.2 PM 0.2 -6 0.624 6 18 08:5111:28 AM AM -0.1 0.2 -3 6 08:4612:03 AM PM -0.2

7 2 85 02:59 AM 24 24 06:01 12 09:1412:16 AM

22 17

09:10 AM -0.3 -9 85 F 01:33 Tu PM 1.1 40 3.034 03:40 PM03:33 1.3 PM 21 07:38 PM 0.2 0 0.4 6 10:37 PM10:06 0.0 PM

09:55 AM -0.4 -12 04:14 F 02:31 Tu PM05:42 PM 1.2 PM 1.1 37 2.834 85 Sa 02:35 W PM 1.2 43 3.037 M 04:37 PM04:41 1.4 PM 10:52 08:29 PM11:59 PM 0.3 PM 0.4 9 0.612 11:39 18 08:43 PM 0.1 0 0.2 3 PM11:06 0.0 PM 10:39 AM -0.4 -12 04:56 Sa 03:17 W PM06:29 PM 1.3 PM 1.2 40 2.837 85 Su 03:31 Th PM 1.3 43 3.140 Tu 05:29 PM05:45 1.4 PM 11:46 09:19 PM PM 0.2 0.4 6 12 09:44 PM 0.1 3

2.624 0.5 -3 91 Su 02:47 F 05:26 PM PM 1.0 2.530 6 08:5111:29 PM PM 0.2 0.3 6

2.824 0.4 -6 94 M 03:32 Sa 06:06 PM PM 1.1 2.534 09:41 PM 0.2 6

0.634 12:36 18 03:22 0.030 0 03:00 10 25 10 12:04 04:34 03:08 AM12:39 AM 0.8 AM 1.1 24 AM12:01 AM 0.0 AM 1.0 0 AM AM 0.7 10 10 25 46 04:46 03:11 AM AM 1.1 1.5 34 46 2.725 82 09:37 3.1 -6 10 94 09:2606:32 25 25 09:27 AM06:54 AM -0.2 AM 0.1 -6 3 05:14 AM06:22 AM 0.7 AM -0.221 AM AM -0.2 15 11:07 09:35 AM AM -0.2 0.3 -6 9 10:46 Th 12:54 PM 0.640 18 FAM12:29 PM 0.143 Tu 3 04:15 Su 12:42 Tu 05:35 Su 04:00 PM PM 1.3 1.3 40 W 11:23 M 04:23 PM -0.4 1.4 -12 PM PM 1.1 40 M 05:41 F 03:41 PM PM 1.7 1.3 52 40 07:09 PM 2.8 85 06:43 PM 3.2 98 06:44 PM 10:06 PM 0.4 12 06:17 10:41 PM PM 1.4 0.1 43 3 10:29 PM 0.2 15 09:50 PM 0.3 9 12:37 AM01:14 0.2 AM 0.534 01:28 15 04:09 -0.127 -3 03:41 11 11 11 26 11 12:39 12:41 AM AM 0.1 1.4 3 43 03:44 AM 1.1 6 AM12:53 AM -0.1 AM 0.9 -3 AM AM 0.7 26 26 26 11 46 04:02 05:19 AM07:32 0.8 AM 2.926 88 10:22 3.4 -9 104 AM AM 1.0 0.2 30 10:04 AM 0.1 24 3 06:05 AM07:17 AM 0.7 AM -0.321 10:0607:08 AM AM -0.3 15 05:35 10:20 6 11:23 W FAM01:34 -0.2 PM -6 0.540 15 Sa 01:26 PM -0.146 W -3 04:57 M 01:19 Tu 11:48 AM -0.2 -6 M 04:40 PM 1.3 Th 12:07 Tu 05:14 PM PM -0.4 1.5 -12 PM PM 1.2 40 Sa 04:40 PM 1.5 46 06:13 PM07:45 1.4 PM 43 2.9 88 07:37 PM 3.2 98 07:21 PM PM PM 1.7 0.3 52 10:51 PM 0.4 12 PM PM 1.4 0.2 43 6 11:16 PM 0.1 ● 06:30 ● 07:03 ● 11:34 15 10:51 9

02:31 AM 1.4 12 43 28 28 05:36 AM 9 07:13 11:49 06:32 AM 1.1 0.3 34 Th 01:11 PM Su 06:05 M 06:27 W 12:34 PM PM 0.0 1.5 0 46 08:05 PM ○ ● 07:17 PM 1.6 49

0.1 AM 0.9 AM -0.2 PM 1.7

03:23 AM 29 29 0.5 12 15 12:44 AM 1.4 30 43 08:02 06:21 F PM M 12:19 9 01:54 Tu 12:33 Th 01:09 PM PM 0.0 0.3 0 08:52 PM 06:43 07:18 07:55 PM PM 1.7 1.5 52 46 04:13 AM 30 30 0.5 9 15 01:39 AM 1.3 27 40 08:52 07:05 Sa 02:41 PM Tu 12:52 9 W 01:18 01:47 PM PM 0.0 0.3 0 09:39 PM 07:22 08:09 08:36 PM PM 1.7 1.5 52 46

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

2 12:34 05:48 04:19 AM05:17 AM 0.2 AM 0.5 6 0.015 05:17 0 02:47 AM04:34 AM 0.0 AM 0.4 0 0.412 2 12 03:36 AM AM 0.2 2 2AM 17 17 17 10:38 09:28 11:45 AM 0.8 AM 1.0 24 3.630 110 10:23 07:43 AM11:00 AM 0.8 AM 0.8 24 3.224 98 08:5406:31 AM AM 0.7

10 Time October

Th f h m ft cm cm Slack 0.2 0 6Maximum 05:01 AM Sla 0. 1 11:26 3.1h18m 94h m AM 2. knots h 0.2 -9 6 Su 05:59 PM 0. 01:36AM -1.1E 2.337 70 11:55 PM 2. 05:06AM 07:42AM 0.8F 05:2 10:36AM 01:36PM -0.9E W F10:4 0.2 0 6 05:53 0. 2 04:36PM 08:00PM 1.2F AM 04:1 3.0 18 91 12:14 PM 2. 11:24PM 11:1 0.2 -6 6 M 06:48 PM 0. 2.334 70 02:30AM -1.1E 06:00AM 08:36AM 0.7F AM 06:1 2. 3 12:48 0.3 -3 9 11:24AM 02:24PM 06:50 -0.8E Th 11:1 AM Sa 0. 2.9 21 88 05:18PM 08:48PM 1.2F 04:5 0.2 -3 6 Tu 01:04 PM 2. 07:39 PM 0. 30

1.6 43 0.6 0 18 Sa 03:27 Th 01:38 M PM04:46 PM 1.1 PM 1.1 34 2.834 1.0 40 30 Su 07:36 PM11:12 PM 0.3 PM 0.3 9 0.7 9 0.3 6 9 09:53

0.1 AM 1.0 AM -0.2 PM 1.7 PM

F

h mh mh ft m ft cmft cm cm h mh m ft m ft cmft cm cm h mh mh ft ft cm cm h mh m ft 05:01 03:25 AM04:29 AM 0.2 AM 0.5 -0.2 6 15 04:30 -6 01:56 AM03:57 AM 0.0 AM 0.4 0 0.312 19 02:49 AM AM 0.2 0.2 6 16 6 02:27 AM AM 0.0 1 1AM 16 16 16 1 05:39 16 03:55 09:44 08:37 10:55 AM 0.8 AM 1.0 24 3.730 113 09:25 06:52 AM10:23 AM 0.7 AM 0.9 21 3.227 98 07:5912:08 AM PM 0.7 3.221 98 07:3910:23 AM AM 0.6 03:31 F 02:54 Tu PM05:14 PM 0.0 PM 0.1 0 0.0 M 3 03:19 Sa 0 01:16 W PM04:37 PM -0.2 PM 0.0 -6 0.4 0 12 Su 02:15 F 06:40 PM PM -0.1 0.3 -3 M9 01:54 Sa 04:48 PM PM -0.3 10:27 09:54 PM11:16 PM 1.4 PM 1.6 43 3.049 09:59 91 08:11 PM10:38 PM 1.4 PM 1.4 43 2.643 79 09:10 PM 1.2 37 08:4110:47 PM PM 1.2

AM 1.4 AM 0.0 PM 1.3 PM 0.2

01:37 AM 43 27 27 04:50 AM 12 06:24 11:05 W 12:29 PM 43 Su 05:34 PM 15 07:18 11:49

1.4 12 0.4 34 Sa 05:25 Tu 12:03 PM PM 0.1 1.4 3 11:27 PM PM 1.6 0.5 49 ○ 06:42

cm 18 1 40 Su 9 49

0.2 AM 0.8 AM -0.1 PM 1.6 PM 0.2 AM 0.8 AM -0.1 PM 1.5 PM

AM 31 02:32 07:50 AM

Low –3:50 +3:30 –0:10 –1:58

Th 02:05 PM 09:01 PM

H. Ht *1.18 *1.59 *0.82 *1.08

01:25 AM01:47 0.1 AM 0.430 12 27 01:42 AM -0.3 -9 04:22 12 06:05 12 12 01:14 04:19 AM 1.0 3 AM AM 0.7 02:15 04:55 AM08:07 AM 0.0 AM 0.8 0 12 1.4 3 43 12 27 AM08:07 0.7 AM 3.027 3.624 110 10:40 AM 0.0 21 0 91 11:07 10:4607:44 AM AM -0.3 AM02:20 AM 0.7 PM -0.321 0.1 30 Th 3 12:02 Sa PM02:11 -0.2 PM -6 0.443 06:53 12 Su -0.2-9 Th -6 05:39 Tu 01:57 Tu 05:20 PM 1.4 PM PM 1.2 -6 F 12:52 W 06:02 PM PM -0.4 1.5 -12 46 1.6 49 06:52 PM 1.5 46 07:58 PM 08:19 PM 2.9 88 08:28 PM 3.2 98 ○ ○ 12 07:48 PM 1.4 43 ○ 0.3 52 9 ○ 11:36 PM 0.4 0.3 9 12:25 02:29 AM -9 13 01:50 AM 02:12 AM02:18 0.1 AM AM 0.2 -0.3 6 13 28 13 13 04:55 AM 1.0 3 03:00 AM08:56 0.0 AM 0 12:02 AM 0.1 1.3 3 40 28 28 13 05:05 3.130 94 05:39 3.724 113 06:52 AM08:41 0.7 AM AM 0.8 18 08:20 11:16 AM 0.0 21 AM03:13 0.6 PM AM AM 0.7 0.0 27 F 0 12:44 Su 0.4 0 07:41 12 M -0.2-9 -6 W 02:36 PM02:47 -0.3 PM -9 Th 11:52 AM -0.3 -9 -6 W 05:59 PM 1.4 43 Sa 01:36 PM -0.3 F AM PM -0.3 1.7 52 07:34○PM08:53 PM 46 2.8 85 06:50 09:17 PM 3.143 94 11:2808:36 ● 1.5 PM 1.4 52 08:31 PM 1.3 40 06:21 PM PM 1.2

02:58 12:21 AM02:50 AM 0.0 AM 0.4 0 0.312 29 9 01:14 AM 0.2 -0.3 6 -9 12:49 14 14 14 29 14 02:29 03:41 AM03:16 0.0 AM 0 AM AM 0.1 29 08:28 14 0.3 6 9 07:41 05:31 AM09:14 AM 0.7 AM 0.9 21 3.227 98 06:24 AM 0.8 21 3.724 113 AM09:44 0.7 AM 05:5108:58 AM AM 0.6 1.2 24 37 Sa 01:30 Th 11:53 M PM03:22 AM -0.2 PM 0.0 -6 0.4 Su 0 02:22 12 F 12:38 Tu 04:04 PM PM -0.2 -9 -0.2-6 Sa -6 12:13 Th 03:17 PM -3 PM -0.3 PM -0.3 0.0 0 08:19 06:40 PM 09:27 PM 1.5 PM 1.4 46 2.8 43 85 07:37 10:05 PM PM 1.4 2.9 43 88 09:16 PM 09:13 PM 1.2 37 07:06 PM 1.2 1.7 49 52 03:44 01:07 AM03:23 AM 0.0 AM 0.4 0 0.312 30 9 02:01 AM 0.2 -0.2 6 -6 01:37 15 15 15 30 15 03:10 04:20 AM04:02 0.0 AM 0 AM AM 0.1 30 15 0.4 6 12 08:31 06:09 AM 09:48 AM 0.7 AM 0.9 21 3.2 27 98 07:10 10:31 AM AM 0.7 3.6 21 110 09:15 AM 0.7 21 06:4209:38 AM AM 0.6 1.1 24 34 Su 02:22 F 12:32 Tu PM03:59 PM -0.2 PM 0.0 -6 0.4 M 0 03:09 12 Sa 01:26 W 04:55 PM PM -0.2 -6 0.0 -6 Su 0 01:01 F 04:00 PM -3 PM -0.2 PM -0.3 0.0 0 09:08 07:24 PM10:02 PM 1.5 PM 1.4 46 2.743 09:54 82 08:24 PM 1.3 34 2.840 85 07:5309:59 PM10:53 1.1 PM PM PM 1.2 1.7 46 52 04:50 AM 0 0.0 0 31 04:57 AM 0.0 31 10:04 AM11:19 0.4 12 3.4 104 0.7 AM 21 1.1 34 0.1 3 Tu 03:58Th PM05:46 -0.1 PM -3 0.0 0 dIFFEREnCEs 11:43 PM 30 2.6 79 dIFFEREnCEs Spring Spring 10:37 PM 1.0 1.6 49

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

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

Low +1:40 –1:15 –3:13 –3:47

H. Ht *0.88 *1.12 *1.33 *1.37

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

Onancock Creek Stingray Point Hooper Strait Light Lynnhaven Inlet

0.221 2.9 -6 0.334 2.5 6 0.121 3.0 -9 0.237 2.5 3 0.121 3.1 -9 0.237 2.5 0.1 3 3.221 0.1 -9 2.537 0.1 3 3.218 0.1 -9 2.437 0.1 3 3.118 0.2 -9 2.437

76 Su 02:25 F 04:25 PM 12 08:3510:38 PM

76 M 03:21 Sa 05:24 PM 9 09:3511:29 PM

76 Tu 04:13 Su 06:19 PM 10:30 PM

6 03:47 -12 10 12:01-1.0E AM -0 25 12:19 AM AM 0.6 -0.418 12:18AM 03:24AM 01:42AM 0.8F AM 2. 25 88 10:0106:51 104 06:35 305:00AM 180. 8 3.4 23 AM AM -0.5 -15 07:00AM 09:30AM 08:18AM -0.8E 0.6F 9 M 01:09 PM -0.3 -9 Tu 12:51 PM 04:2

03:12PM W 05:01 PM 1.2 37 12:18PM 11:48AM 02:36PM 0.6F -0.7E 11:1 Tu Th W 76 11:2007:11 82 06:49 PM F05:0 2. 09:36PM PM PM 0.0 2.7 0 06:06PM 05:42PM 08:30PM -0.6E 1.1F 11:18PM 10:5 3 04:33 01:07 AM -0.4 -12 12:42 AM -0 26 11 AM 0.6 18 26 91 10:4607:39 107 07:15 AM 3. AM AM -0.5 3.5 -15 01:12AM 04:24AM 02:36AM 0.8F -1.0E 6 05:47 Tu 01:59 -9 W 01:32 PM -0 Th PM PM 1.2 -0.3 37 08:00AM 10:30AM 05:54AM 09:06AM -0.8E 0.5F 79 76 ● 07:59 PM 2.6 07:31 PM 05:2 2. 01:18PM 04:12PM ● 03:24PM 0.7F -0.6E 11:5 W F12:30PM Th Sa 07:00PM 10:36PM 06:36PM 09:24PM -0.6E 1.0F 06:0 3 27 01:53 AM -0.4 01:24 AM -0 -12 12 AM 0.0 0 27 94 12:0708:25 07:56 AM 3. AM AM 0.6 3.418 104 Th 02:15 PM -0 6 05:17 W 02:48 -9 F 11:31 AM PM -0.5 -0.3 -15 02:06AM 05:24AM 12:18AM 03:30AM 0.8F -0.9E 76 08:14 PM 12:0 2. ○ 08:46 PM 2.6 79 06:31 PM 1.2 37 09:06AM 11:36AM 06:42AM 09:54AM -0.8E 0.5F 06:1 02:24PM 05:12PM 01:12PM 04:06PM 0.8F -0.5E 12:3 Sa Th -0.3 FAM Su 3 12:50 02:39 AM -9 02:07 -0 08:00PM 11:30PM 0.9F 28 13 07:18PM 10:12PM -0.7E 06:5 AM 0.0 0 28 98 06:0109:10 08:38 AM 3. ◐ 18 101 AM AM 0.6 3.3 3 12:16 Th 03:35 -6 F 02:58 PM -0 Sa PM PM -0.4 -0.2 -12 76 07:1209:32 PM 2.4 73 08:58 PM 2. PM 1.1 34 03:06AM 06:24AM 01:18AM 04:18AM 0.8F -0.9E 01:1 10:06AM 12:36PM 07:24AM 10:30AM -0.8E 0.5F 07:0 3 01:32 03:25 AM -0.1 -3 02:53 AM -0 29 14 03:30PM 06:18PM -0.5E AM 0.0 0 01:48PM 04:48PM 0.8F Sa M 01:1 29 F Su 98 06:4509:55 94 3. AM AM 0.5 3.1 15 09:06PM 08:00PM 11:00PM 09:23 -0.8E AM 07:4 3 01:01 F 04:23 0 Sa 03:44 PM ◑-0 Su PM PM -0.4 0.0 -12 73 07:5210:18 PM 2.3 70 09:45 PM 2. PM 1.0 30 12:36AM 02:06AM 3 05:06AM 0.8F 0.8F 3 02:13 04:12 AM 0.1 03:41 AM 02:1 -0 30 15 AM 0.0 0 04:06AM 07:18AM -0.8E 08:06AM88 11:12AM 10:09 -0.8E AM 07:5 30 94 07:3210:40 2.9 3. AM AM 0.5 15 11:00AM 01:42PM 02:18PM 05:24PM 0.9F 0.5F 01:4 Sa M Su Sa 05:10 3 Su 04:33 PM Tu -0 M6 01:47 PM PM -0.3 0.1 -9 04:42PM 07:24PM 08:42PM 11:42PM -0.8E -0.5E 73 08:3111:05 67 10:36 PM 08:3 2. PM PM 1.0 2.230 10:12PM

02:54 AM 31 08:23 AM

9 4

24 19

10 5

25 20

11 6

26 21

12 7

27 22

0.0 0 01:42AM 02:54AM 05:48AM 0.7F 0.8F 0.6 18 05:00AM 08:18AM 08:48AM 11:48AM -0.8E -0.8E Tu 02:36 PM -0.2 Tu -6 11:48AM 02:36PM 02:48PM 06:00PM 0.9F 0.6F Su M 09:13 PM 0.9 27Spring 05:42PM 08:30PM -0.6E 09:18PM ● 11:18PM High Low H. Ht ○ L. Ht Range

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

03:1 28 23 08:4

13 8

02:3 W

09:2

+4 :15 *0.70 *0.83 2.2 02:36AM 12:24AM -0.9E 0.8F +2 :29 *0.48 14*0.83 1.4 903:42AM 29 24 05:54AM 09:06AM 06:30AM 0.7F -0.8E 04:0 +6 :04 *0.66 *0.67 12:30PM 03:24PM 09:24AM2.0 12:24PM -0.7E 0.7F 09:3 M W Tu Th 06:36PM 09:24PM 03:18PM 06:36PM 1.0F -0.6E 03:1 +1 :08 *0.77 *0.83 2.4 10:00PM

10:1

All times listed are in Local Time, Daylight Saving Time has been applied when appropriate. All speeds are in knots. Tides & Currents predictions are provided by NOAA.gov 12:18AM 03:30AM 01:06AM -0.9E 0.8F

15 10

30 25

06:42AM 09:54AM 04:30AM 07:12AM 0.6F -0.8E 05:0 01:12PM 04:06PM 10:06AM 12:54PM -0.7E 0.8F Tu Th W F10:1 52 November FishTalkMag.com 07:18PM 10:12PM -0.7E 03:48PM 07:12PM 1.0F upon the latest information disclaimer: available2019 as These of the data dateare of based your request, upon the and latest mayinformation differ from disclaimer: the available published asThese oftide thedata tables. dateare of your based request, upon the andlatest may information differ from the available published as of tide thetables. date of your request, and may differ from the 03:5 pu 10:36PM 11:0

32 uTC 2018

Generated On: Tue dec 04 20:08:09 uTC 2018

Generated On: Tue dec 04 20:15:46 Page 5uTC of 52018

01:18AM 07:24AM Page 5 of 5 01:48PM F 08:00PM

11

04:18AM 10:30AM 04:48PM 11:00PM

0.8F -0.8E 05:5 0.8F 11:1 Th Sa -0.8E

31 26


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

03:24AM 09:30AM 03:12PM 09:36PM

-1.0E 0.6F -0.7E F 1.1F

01:12AM 08:00AM 01:18PM 07:00PM

04:24AM 10:30AM 04:12PM 10:36PM

-1.0E 12:48AM 04:06AM -0.9E 01:24AM Source: 08:00AM NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS 0.5F 10:18AM 0.4F 08:30AM Station -0.6E 12:48PMHarmonic 03:36PM -0.4E M 02:24PM Sa Type: 1.0F 06:18PM 10:06PM 0.9F 07:42PM

02:06AM 09:06AM 02:24PM 08:00PM

05:24AM 11:36AM 05:12PM 11:30PM

-0.9E 0.5F -0.5E Su 0.9F

18

12:06AM 07:06AM 12:00PM 05:30PM

03:18AM 09:24AM 02:48PM 09:12PM

-0.9E 0.4F -0.5E Su 0.9F

3

03:54AM 10:12AM 03:54PM 10:00PM

Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Unknown

19

4

Time Zone: LST/LDT

20

01:42AM 08:54AM 01:48PM 07:12PM

October

05:00AM 11:12AM 04:36PM 11:00PM

-0.8E 0.3F -0.4E Tu 0.9F

5

03:06AM 06:24AM -0.9E Slack Maximum 10:06AM 12:36PM 0.5F h m h m-0.5E knots 03:30PM 06:18PM M 01:36AM -1.1E 109:06PM

04:48AM 11:12AM 05:00PM 11:00PM

-1.0E 0.5F -0.5E M 0.8F

12:06AM 07:24AM 12:42PM 05:54PM

03:24AM 09:48AM 03:18PM Th 09:30PM

-0.9E 0.6F -0.5E Tu 0.7F

01:00AM 08:00AM 01:48PM 07:06PM

04:18AM 10:42AM 04:24PM F 10:36PM

18 19

3 4

-0.9E 0.5F 03:30AM -0.4E 10:00AM Tu 0.8F 04:48PM 10:48PM

-0.9E 0.7F 04:12AM -0.5E 10:24AM 0.7F 05:12PM 11:00PM

01:00AM 07:18AM 01:24PM 07:48PM

0.8F -0.9E 0.9F M -0.8E

12:30AM 0.9F 03:00AM 06:24AM -1.0E 09:18AM 12:54PM 1.4F Tu 04:24PM 07:30PM -1.1E 10:36PM

01:30AM 0.8F 01:00AM 0.7F 0.5F 08:30AM -1.1E 11:36AM 0.7F 08:00AM 11:06AM 04:30AM 07:54AM 03:12AM 06:42AM -0.9E 05:24AM Sou ce-0.5E NOAA NOS CO OPS0.8F -0.5E 03:00PM 05:36PM 02:36PM 05:24PM 11:00AM 1.2F Sa 09:42AM 01:24PM 1.3F M -0.6E 11:24AM W 02:06PM Th S a on 0.6F Type mon-0.9E c 0.7F 08:24PM -0.8E 11:24PM 08:30PM 11:18PM 0.6F 05:54PM 08:30PM 05:06PMHa 08:06PM 06:06PM ◐ ◑LST LDT ◐ 11:54PM 11:42PM 11:06PM T me Zone

01:42AM 08:12AM 02:18PM 08:36PM

0.7F -0.8E 0.8F Tu -0.7E

01:18AM 0.9F 04:12AM 07:24AM -1.0E 10:18AM 01:48PM 1.2F W 05:24PM 08:18PM -1.1E ◐ 11:30PM

3

12:42AM 12:42AM 07:48AM 06:54AM 02:00PM 01:12PM 07:12PM 07:36PM

04:06AM 1.0F 10:42AM -1.1E 04:36PM 1.4F F 10:24PM -1.0E

-0.9E

12:24AM 03:42AM 12:18AM 0.7F 07:18AM -0.9E 10:18AM 05:42AM -0.4E 01:30PM 04:12PM 09:00AM 1.4F Su W 12:42PM 0.6F 07:06PM -0.9E 10:12PM 04:12PM 07:24PM 10:30PM

18 18 0.6F 02:36AM

3

NOAA Tidal Current S a on-0.9E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h 22-0.9E ee -0.9E 01:30AM 04:54AM 01:12AM 04:36AM 4

19

19

4

18 19

3

01:12AM 0 04:48AM 07:36AM -0 10:30AM 01:30PM 0 05:18PM 08:06PM -0 11:30PM

02:06AM 0 NOAA 4 T da Curren

05:54AM 08:24AM -0

11:18AM 02:30PM 0 -0 Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2019 Chesapeake ◑ ◑ Bay Ent 206:06PM 0 n08:54PM mi N Latitude: 39.0130° N Longitude: 76.3683° W

02:18AM 05:36AM -0.9E 09:18AM 12:06PM 0.6F 03:24PM 06:06PM -0.5E W 08:54PM

La ude 36 9594° N Long National Oceanic and Mean F ood5D 297° T Mea 20 Su Tu W T mes and speeds o Th max mum and Atmospheric Administration december

Mean Flood Dir. 25° (T) Mean Ebb Dir. 189° (T)

01:48AM 05:12AM -0.9E 02:18AM 05:42AM -0.8E 02:06AM 05:24AM -0.8E 02:18AM 0.7F 0.7F 02:54AM 20Times 5 maximum 20 01:42AM 08:42AM 11:36AM 09:12AM -1.0E 12:24PM 08:42AM -0.9E 12:00PM 5 0.7F 20 0.8F 5 in1.0F 05:36AM 08:48AM 04:00AM 07:42AM 06:24AM speeds of and minimum current, knots 09:06AM 02:54PMand 05:42PM -0.5E 03:54PM 06:36PM -0.5E 03:36PM 06:30PM -0.7E 12:00PM 1.0F 10:36AM 1.2F 12:18PM 03:42PM Th 03:06PM F 02:12PM

Sa 0.7F 08:30PM 11:42PM 09:36PM -0.7E 07:00PM 09:18PM

november

02:36AM 05:54AM -0.8E 12:00AM 0.7F Slack Maximum Slack Maximum 09:48AM 12:12PM 0.4F 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.8E h m h m-0.4E knots 10:00AM h m h m0.7F knots 02:54PM 05:42PM 01:00PM W Th 01:48AM -0.9E 03:06AM 08:18PM 04:24PM 07:06PM -0.5E -1.1E 05:06AM 07:42AM 0.8F 05:24AM 07:54AM 0.5F 1 06:48AM 09:18AM 0.6F ◑ 16 10:42AM 10:00PM 10:36AM 01:36PM -0.9E W 01:30PM -0.6E F 12:06PM 02:54PM -0.6E

21

Tu

01:00AM 07:36AM 01:12PM 06:30PM

6

21

09:48PM -0.9E 06:00PM 08:48PM 11:48PM

0.7F -0.8E 0.8F 06:54PM 09:36PM -0.7E

Oc ober

U.S. Department of Commerce 21 6

02:24AM 1.0F 05:30AM 08:18AM -1.0E 11:30AM 03:00PM 1.1F 06:18PM 09:12PM -1.1E

november

02:42AM 06:00AM -0.8E 12:24AM 0.5F 12:24AM 0.5F Slack Maximum Slack Slack 12:30AM 03:12AM 0.6F Maximum 02:30AM 0.7F Maximum 12:54AM 04:12AM 0.7F S a 03:12AM Ma -0.9E mum -0.8E S a 03:00AM Ma -1.0E mum -0.8E Sa Ma mum 09:24AM 12:30PM 0.8F 06:30AM 06:18AM 06:42AM 05:12AM 07:18AM h m h m-0.7E knots 09:42AM h m h m0.9F knots 08:30AM h m h m1.1F knots 10:06AM -0.8E 03:54PM 06:48PM 09:48AM 09:24AM 01:06PM 0.9F 02:30AM 11:36AM 1.2F 02:12AM 01:18PM 04:36PMm 0.8F Th m01:06PM m01:00PM F m04:36PM Sa m03:12PM Su M W 01:54AM -1.0E -1.1E -1.0E m 09:54PM 04:42PM 07:30PM 04:36PM 07:36PM 07:54PM -0.6E 06:54PM 09:36PM -0.9E 07:48PM 10:30PM -0.8E AM 06:18AM AM 08:54AM E-0.6E AM 06:00AM AM 08:30AM E-0.8E AM 16 1 16 05:54AM 08:06AM 0.4F 10:18PM 0.6F 0.5F ◑ 16 -0.5E 11:06PM 1 -0.5E 10:48PM 1 -0.5E AM AM 11:54AM AM 02:30PM AM 11:24AM AM 02:00PM AM E 10:42AM 01:24PM

6

6

21

21

12:24AM 03:36AM 1.1F S a 09:30AM Ma -1.1E mum 06:36AM

12:42PM m04:12PMm 1.1F For more information check out www.noaa.gov 07:12PM 10:12PM -1.2E AM AM

Sa

Su PM 08:36PM E W 0.9F M PM 04:36PM PM 08:12PM E F PM 03:54PM 07:42PM 0.9F AM Tu 1.0F PM 05:00PM PM 11:54PM PM PM 11:36PM PM PM PM 11:18PM 12:42AM 0.6F 01:18AM 0.5F 01:30AM 0.5F 01:30AM 04:48AM 0.6F 12:42AM 03:36AM 0.8F 02:00AM 05:00AM 0.8F PM 03:42AM 06:54AM -0.8E 04:00AM 07:18AM -0.7E 04:00AM 07:12AM -0.8E

12:18AM 06:42AM 12:18PM 06:54PM

16

AM

AM

6 F

03:24AM 09:24AM 03:42PM 09:54PM

0 -0 0 -0

01:12AM 04:24AM 0 S a 10:24AM Ma -0 07:42AM 01:30PM m04:36PMm 0 -0A E 07:36PM 10:42PM AM

1

AM

P

PM PM E Su PM P Sa PM PM PM 04:42AM 1.3F 02:00AM 05:06AM 1 22 7 22 7 10:42AM -0.9E 22 06:24AM 22 09:30AM -1.0E 7 08:12AM 11:00AM -0.8E 22 01:24AM 7 07:42AM 7 07:48AM 10:36AM -1.1E 08:36AM 11:18AM -0 10:06AM 01:24PM 1.0F 10:24AM 01:48PM 0.9F 10:12AM 01:48PM 1.2F 02:36AM -1.0E -1.0E -1.0E 05:18PM 0.9F F 02:18PM 0.9F 03:18AM 12:42PM 1.2F 02:54AM 02:24PM 02:06PM 05:06PM 1.1F Sa 02:48PM 05:18PM 0 Sa 05:36PM Su 04:30PM M -0.8E TuE-0.7E ThE-1.0E AM 07:06AM AM 09:48AM AM 06:42AM AM 09:24AM AM AM AM E 17 205:24PM 17 04:48PM 07:48PM 08:24PM 05:30PM 08:36PM 06:36AM 09:00AM 0.4F 11:18PM 0.6F 10:36PM 0.6F 11:24PM -0.8E -0.6E 07:48PM -0.9E 08:06PM 11:06PM -1.2E -0A 208:48PM 17 208:42PM 208:18PM 11:18PM AM 01:00PM PM 03:30PM AM 12:30PM PM 03:06PM AM AM E 17 AM PM AM A 11:42AM 02:18PM -0.4E -0.4E -0.5E 11:06PM 11:48PM Su M PM 09:30PM E Th 0.8F Tu PM 05:48PM PM 09:12PM E Sa 0.8F AM PM PM PM E M AM P W 0.9F PM 06:06PM Su 05:18PM 08:48PM 1.2F 04:54PM 08:30PM 1.0F 06:30PM 10:06PM 0.9F 04:48PM 08:36PM PM PM PM PM E PM PM P PM PM 01:42AM 0.8F 01:06AM 0.8F 02:00AM 0.6F 01:48AM 0.6F 02:18AM 0.4F 12:18AM 02:30AM 0.5F 02:36AM 05:42AM 0.7F 01:42AM 04:54AM 0.9F 02:54AM 05:36AM 0.9F 02:18AM 05:30AM 1.6F 02:36AM 05:42AM 1 23 8 23 8 23 05:00AM 08:18AM -0.8E 04:24AM 07:42AM -0.8E 04:54AM 08:06AM -0.8E 04:36AM ID: 07:42AM 04:54AM 08:00AM 05:00AM -1.1E 08:06AM 8 -0.8E 23-0.7E 8 -0.7E 08:42AM 11:42AM -0.9E 07:30AM 10:42AM 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.9E 23 08:54AM 11:42AM -1.2E 8 09:30AM 12:12PM -0 CT4996 Depth: Unknown Station cb0102 Depth: 22 feet 12:18AM 03:24AM -1.0E 12:06AM 03:18AM -0.9E 01:00AM 03:54AM -1.0E 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.9E 12:42AM 04:06AM -0.9E 12:24AM 03:42AM -0.9E 11:48AM 02:36PM 0.6F W 18 11:12AM 02:00PM 0.6F F 11:18AM 02:30PM 0.9F Sa 18 10:48AM 02:12PM 1.1F 02:30PM 1.0F 10:54AM 02:36PM 1.3F AM AM AM 1.0F 10:42AM 01:54PM 1.3F 10:18AM 1.0F Sa 03:18PM 06:00PM AM 1.1F Su 03:48PM 05:54PM A 0 Su 06:18PM M 05:30PM 305:42PM 311:00AM 18 07:00AM 09:30AM 0.6F 07:06AM 09:24AM 0.4F 3 07:36AM 10:12AM 0.5F Source: 07:24AM 09:48AM 0.5F 07:48AM 0.6F 07:18AM 0.7F 05:54PM Tu -0.9E W E-0.8E F E-1.1E 303:18PM 18 303:18PM A/NOS/CO-OPS NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS AM AM AM AM AM AM E 18 AM E 3 A 08:30PM -0.6E -0.7E 05:06PM 08:00PM -0.6E -0.5E 05:54PM 08:48PM -0.7E -0.5E 05:42PM 08:48PM 06:06PM 09:12PM 06:18PM 09:30PM 09:42PM 08:42PM -1.0E 09:24PM 09:00PM AM 08:54PM AM 12:18PM 03:12PM 12:00PM 02:48PM 03:54PM 12:42PM 03:18PM -0.4E Tu -0.4E 11:36PM 04:12PM -0.5E AM Th F Su 01:12PM M W AM 02:00PM PM 04:36PM AM 01:30PM PM cb0102 AM PM AM P dictions 11:18PM Station ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Unknown ID: ACT4996 Depth: Station Depth: Station Unknown ID: Depth:Current Station 22 PM feetID: cb0102 Depth:Current Station 22 feetID: cb0102 DeT Th Unknown F Su Tidal M TuPredictions NOAA Tidal Predictions NOAA Predictions NOAA Tidal NOAA 06:06PM 09:36PM 1.1F 10:54PM 05:30PM 09:12PM 0.9F 06:30PM 10:00PM 0.8F Station 05:54PM 09:30PM 0.8F ID: ACT4996 07:12PM 10:24PM 0.6FCurrent 07:06PM 10:12PM 0.7F Harmonic Type: Harmonic

04:36PM 08:00PM 1.2F 11:24PM 12:36AM 0.8F

04:18PM 07:54PM 1.0F 11:18PM 12:00AM 0.8F

05:36PM 09:06PM

1.1F

01:00AM 0.6F 04:06AM 07:18AM -0.8E 03:30AM 06:48AM -0.8E 04:06AM 07:24AM -0.8E 11:00AM 01:42PM 0.5F -1.1E 10:30AM 01:06PM 0.5F -0.9E 10:42AM 01:48PM 0.8F -1.0E 02:30AM 02:30AM 12:42AM 04:00AM Tu Th F 204:42PM 07:24PM -0.5E 0.7F 17 04:00PM 06:48PM -0.5E 0.5F 2 05:12PM 08:00PM -0.6E 0.5F 06:00AM 08:36AM 06:12AM 08:36AM 07:42AM 10:12AM 11:24AM 02:24PM -0.8E Th 11:18AM 02:06PM -0.5E Sa 01:06PM 03:48PM -0.5E 10:12PM 09:36PM 11:06PM W

NOAA Tidal Current Predictions

E

NOAA Tidal Current Predictions

Baltimore Harbor Approach (off Sandy Point), 2019 Chesapeake Bay Ent., 2.0 n.mi. N of Cape Henry Lt.,

PM PM E PM PM E PM PM E PM PM E PM P Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS Source: NOAA/NOS/C PM PM PM Source: NOAA/NOS/CO-OPS PM PM

Time Zone: LST/LDT 02:36AM 0.8F 02:06AM Type: 0.8F 12:06AM 02:48AM 0.6F Type: 12:18AM 02:48AM 0.6F 12:48AM Harmonic 03:06AM 0.4F 01:18AM 03:30AM 0.5F -0.7E 02:42AM Station 05:54AM 1.2F 12:12AM -0.9E Type: Harmonic 12:00AM -1.3E 12:00AM -0 Station Station Harmonic Station Type: Type: Harmonic Station Station Type: Harmonic eST/LDT Tunnel, VA,2019 24 05:24AM 9 Harmonic 24N05:30AM 9 12:12AM 24 11:48AM 05:54AM 09:06AM -0.8E -1.0E 08:36AM -0.8E -0.9E 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.8E -0.9E 08:36AM -0.8E 05:42AM 08:42AM -0.6E 05:54AM 09:00AM -0.7E 9 76.3683° 24 9LST/LDT 24 01:12AM 04:24AM 12:48AM 04:06AM 01:24AM 04:48AM 01:00AM 04:18AM -0.9E 01:30AM -0.9E 01:12AM -0.9E 06:18AM 03:42AM 06:24AM 0.8F 04:54AM 08:42AM -1.2E 03:30AM 1.1FHarbor 06:24AM 1.7F 9 (off 03:06AM 06:24AM Latitude: 39.0130° Longitude: WHarbor Latitude: 36.9594° N03:12AM Longitude: 76.0128° W AM AM 04:36AM AM AM Baltimore Baltimore Approach Harbor (off Sandy Baltimore Approach Point), (off 2019 Sandy Chesapeake Approach Point), Bay 2019 Sandy Ent., Ches-1AA1 412:30PM 411:54AM 411:36AM 19 Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT Zone: Time Zone: LST/LDT Time Zone: LST/LDT 03:24PM 0.7F 0.5F 11:54AM 02:54PM 0.8F 0.4F 03:12PM 0.9F 11:30AM 03:00PM 1.2F 03:12PM 11:42AM 03:30PM 1.3F 08:00AM 10:30AM 08:00AM 10:18AM 08:30AM 11:12AM 0.6F 08:00AM 10:42AM 0.5F 0.7F 0.8F 12:42PM -0.9E 03:12PM 06:24PM 1.4F 11:06AM -1.0E 09:54AM 12:48PM 409:36AM 19 409:48AM Th 19 Sa Su 19 M Tu Time AM 08:30AM AM 11:36AM AM 08:00AM AM AM AM SuE 19 AM AM M E 4 AM W Dir. ThE 1.1F SaE Mean h and01:18PM Low Waters Flood05:00PM Dir. 25° 189°12:30PM (T)03:00PM Flood Dir. 297° (T) Mean Ebb-1.3E Dir. 112°10:12AM (T) 01:12PM 04:12PM -0.6E 12:48PM 03:36PM -0.4E Mean 02:24PM -0.5E(T) Mean 01:48PMEbb 04:24PM -0.5E 05:36PM -0.5E 02:36PM 05:24PM -0.6E 06:36PM 09:24PM -0.6E F 07:00PM 10:36PM

december

1.0F

06:06PM 09:00PM -0.7E Sa

Latitude: Longitude: Latitude: 76.3683° 39.0130° W 76.3683° 39.0130° Latitude: 76.3683° 06:36PM 09:42PM -1.1E 06:48PM 10:00PM -0.9E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.1E 1.1F 39.0130° 09:42PMNTh 04:00PM 06:42PM 1.0FLatitude: 04:18PM 06:54PM 1.0FLongitude: 04:36PM 06:42PM 0 Tu W AM PM AM PM AMN Longitude: PM AM WN PM AM 36.9 P F04:06PM 06:54PM Sa M Tu W

06:36PM 09:36PM -0.8E M

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NOvEMBER 2019 CuRRENTS

01:42AM 01:06AM 0.8F 02:00AM 01:48AM 0.6F 02:18AM 0.4F 12:18AM 02:30AM 0.5F 12:18PM 03:12PM -0.7E 12:00PM 12:18PM 02:48PM 03:12PM -0.5E -0.7E 01:12PM 12:00PM 03:54PM 12:18PM 02:48PM -0.5E 03:12PM -0.5E -0.7E 12:42PM 03:18PM 12:00PM 03:54PM 02:48PM 10:00AM -0.5E -0.5E 01:12PM 02:00PM 12:42PM 04:36PM 1.4F 01:12PM 03:18PM 03:54PM 09:00AM -0.4E -0.5E 12:42PM 01:30PM 01:12PM 02:00PM 04:12PM 1.4F 12:42PM 04:36PM 1.4F 03:18PM 10:24AM -0.4E 09:00AM -0.4E 01:24PM 10:00AM 12:42PM 01:30PM 0.9F 01:12PM 02:00PM 04:12PM 1.4F 04:36PM 09:18AM -0.5E -0.4E 12:54PM 09:00AM 01:24PM 1.4F 12:42P 01:30 0 Th 0.8F F Th Su 0.6F F Th M Su Th -0.4E Tu M Su F -0.4E Th W Tu M Su -0.5E F Th W Tu M 1.4F Su F10:24AM W T 8 -0.8E 23 -0.7E 810:00AM 23 8 802:54AM 23 803:30AM 23 8F01:12PM 23 AM 09:30PM AM 0.8F E-1.1E AM -1.0E AM 0.6F E-1.1E AM -0.9E AM 0.7F E 0.6F AM -0.8E AM -1.0E E 0.7F AM -1.1E P 05:00AM 08:18AM 04:24AM 07:42AM 04:54AM 08:06AM 04:36AM 07:42AM 04:54AM 08:00AM 05:00AM 08:06AM -0.7E 06:06PM 09:36PM 1.1F 05:30PM 06:06PM 09:12PM 09:36PM 0.9F 1.1F -0.8E 06:30PM 05:30PM 10:00PM 06:06PM 09:12PM 0.8F 09:36PM 0.9F 1.1F 05:54PM 06:30PM 05:30PM 10:00PM 09:12PM 04:48PM 0.8F 07:36PM 0.9F 07:12PM 05:54PM 10:24PM 06:30PM 09:30PM 10:00PM 04:12PM 0.8F 04:48PM 07:24PM 0.8F 07:06PM 07:36PM 07:12PM 10:12PM 05:54PM -1.0E 10:24PM 09:30PM 05:12PM 04:12PM 07:48PM 0.8F 04:48PM 07:24PM 07:06PM 07:36PM 07:12PM -0.9E 10:12PM 10:24PM 04:24PM 05:12PM 07:30PM 0.6F 04:12PM 07:48PM 07:24P 07:06 -0 05:48AM 0.7F -0.8E 03:12AM 05:48AM 0.7F -0.8E 05:54AM 0.5F 12:06AM -1.2E 12:06AM 12:36AM

06AM 03:18AM -0.9E 01:00AM 12:06AM 03:24AM -0.9E 12:42AM 12:42AM 1.0F 04:06AM -0.9E 12:30AM 12:18AM 12:24AM 0.7F 03:42AM 01:00AM 0.8F -1.5E 12:30AM 0.9F -1.0E 01:12AM 0.7F -1.3E 01:06AM 1.1F -1 .1 64 19 01:36 AM 2.4 03:54AM 73 -1.0E 03:18AM -1.1E-0.9E 12:06AM 03:06AM 02:36AM 12:06AM 03:06AM 02:30AM PM-0.9E PM PM-0.9E PM PM-1.0E PM PM-0.8E PM PM-1.1E P 10:48PM 10:30PM 10:48PM 11:00PM 10:30PM 10:48PM 10:36PM 11:00PM 10:30PM 3:.5 28 13 28 13 28 09:24AM 11:48AM 02:36PM 0.6F 11:12AM 02:00PM 11:18AM 02:30PM 0.9F 10:48AM 02:12PM 1.1F 11:00AM 02:30PM 1.0F 10:54AM 1.3F 09:06AM 3 AM 18 0.6F 3NOAA 3 Tidal 18 18 3220.7F 18 02:36PM 3 28 18 13 08:48AM 11:48AM -0.8E 08:42AM 11:36AM -0.9E 08:30AM 11:18AM -0.6E 04:00AM 0.6F 04:06AM 06:12AM 0.4F 04:24AM 06:54AM 0.6F 13 28 13 06AM 09:24AM 0.4F 07:36AM 10:12AM 07:24AM 09:48AM 0.5F 03:30AM 06:54AM 07:48AM -1.1E 10:42AM 0.6F 02:36AM 05:42AM 07:18AM 10:18AM 04:12AM 07:18AM 03:00AM 06:24AM 04:48AM 07:36AM 04:12AM 07:12AM Tu W F05:18AM Sa Su 15 07:46 0.1 3 0.5F ACT4996 Depth: Unknown Tu W F Sa Su M 06:12AM 09:18AM 1.2F 06:00AM 1.9F 1.6F 06:18AM 09:42AM 1.7F 05:30AM 09:24AM 1 Current S a 06:18AM on-0.4E DPredictions cb0102 Dep h-1.3E ee-0.5E PM PM 0.9F PM 09:30PM E-0.6E -1.1E PM PM 0.9F PM 1.3F 05:42PM 08:30PM -0.6E 05:06PM 08:00PM -0.6E 05:54PM 08:48PM -0.7E 05:42PM 08:48PM -0.9E 06:06PM 09:12PM -0.8E 06:18PM NOAA T da Curren Pred c ons 02:48PM 06:00PM 0.9F 02:30PM 06:00PM 1.3F 02:00PM 05:42PM 1.1F 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.7E 08:42AM 11:30AM 09:42AM 12:24PM 00PM 02:48PM 01:12PM 03:54PM -0.5E 12:42PM 03:18PM -0.4E 10:00AM 01:12PM 02:00PM 1.4F 04:36PM 09:00AM 12:42PM 01:30PM 1.4F 04:12PM -0.5E 10:24AM 01:24PM 09:18AM 12:54PM 1.4F -1.2E 10:30AM 01:30PM 10:06AM 01:24PM .2 67 Th-0.5E 01:53 PM 2.5 76 12:30PM 03:36PM 12:42PM 03:36PM -1.6E 12:36PM 03:24PM 01:18PM 03:54PM -1.2E 12:54PM 03:36PM -1 M W Th F Sa Su M Th Tu F W Su M Tu W Su M W Th F 01:12AM 04:24AM 12:48AM 01:12AM 04:06AM 04:24AM -0.9E -1.0E 07:36PM 01:24AM 12:48AM 04:48AM 01:12AM 04:06AM 04:24AM -0.9E -1.0E 01:00AM 01:24AM 04:18AM 12:48AM 04:48AM 04:06AM -0.9E -0.9E 01:30AM 01:30AM 01:00AM 04:54AM 0.8F 01:24AM 04:18AM 04:48AM -0.9E -0.9E 01:00AM 01:12AM 01:30AM 01:30AM 04:36AM 0.7F 01:00AM 04:54AM 0.8F-0.9E 04:18AM -0.9E -0.9E 01:42AM 01:00AM 01:12AM 0.7F 01:30AM 01:30AM 04:36AM 0.7F 0.8F 04:54AM -0.9E -0.9E 01:18AM 01:42AM 0.9F 01:00A 01:12 0 11:18PM 0.9F 10:54PM OAA/NOS/CO-OPS 09:18PM 09:24PM 09:12PM 02:30PM 06:12PM 1.2F 02:00PM 05:54PM 1.2F 03:00PM 06:36PM 1.1F 30PM 09:12PM 06:30PM 10:00PM 0.8F 05:54PM 09:30PM 0.8F 04:48PM 07:12PM -1.0E 10:24PM 0.6F 04:12PM 07:24PM 07:06PM -0.9E 10:12PM 0.7F 05:12PM 07:48PM -0.8E 04:24PM 07:30PM -1.1E 05:18PM 08:06PM -0.9E 04:54PM 07:54PM .4 12 -0.2 -6 -1.0E Sou ce-0.9E NOAA NOS CO OPS 06:48PM 09:42PM 1.2F 07:06PM 09:54PM 1.2F 07:06PM 09:30PM 0.8F 10:06PM 0.9F 07:18PM 09:42PM 0 ◑ 08:19 4 PM 4 19 4 19 4 -0.9E 4 19 4 19-0.9E 4 19 4 19 4 0.8F 19 407:36PM 19 4 19 -1.1E 4 19 19-1.3E 4 08:00AM 10:30AM 0.5F 19 4 08:00AM 08:00AM 10:18AM 10:30AM 0.4F 4 0.5F 19 08:30AM 08:00AM 11:12AM 08:00AM 10:18AM 0.6F 10:30AM 0.4F 0.5F 08:00AM 08:30AM 10:42AM 08:00AM 11:12AM 0.5F 10:18AM 04:30AM 0.6F 07:54AM 0.4F 08:30AM 08:00AM -1.1E 11:36AM 08:30AM 10:42AM 0.7F 11:12AM 03:12AM 0.5F 04:30AM 06:42AM 0.6F 08:00AM 07:54AM 08:30AM -0.9E 11:06AM 08:00AM -1.1E 11:36AM 10:42AM 05:24AM 0.7F 03:12AM 08:12AM 0.5F 04:30AM 06:42AM 08:00AM -0.8E 07:54AM 08:30AM -0.9E 11:06AM 11:36AM 04:12AM 0.8F 05:24AM 07:24AM 0.7F 03:12AM 08:12AM -1.0E 06:42A 08:00 -0 ● 09:42PM 09:30PM 10:00PM ○ ● 10:48PM 10:30PM 11:00PM 10:36PM 11:30PM 11:12PM 11:54PM 01:18PM 04:12PM -0.6E Sa F 12:48PM 01:18PM 03:36PM 04:12PM -0.4E -0.6E 02:24PM 12:48PM 05:00PM 01:18PM 04:12PM -0.4E -0.6E 01:48PM 02:24PM 04:24PM 12:48PM 05:00PM 03:36PM 11:00AM 02:06PM 03:00PM 01:48PM 1.2F 02:24PM 04:24PM 05:00PM 09:42AM -0.5E 11:00AM -0.5E 01:24PM 02:36PM 02:06PM 03:00PM 05:24PM 1.3F 01:48PM 05:36PM 1.2F 04:24PM 11:24AM -0.5E 02:18PM 11:00AM 01:24PM 02:36PM 0.8F 02:06PM 03:00PM 05:24PM 1.3F 05:36PM 10:18AM 11:24AM -0.5E 01:48PM 09:42AM 02:18PM 01:24P 02:36 0 pe: Harmonic02:36AM F M Sa F Tu Ha M Sa F -0.5E W -0.4E Tu M Sa -0.5E F Th W Tu M -0.6E Sa F09:42AM Th W Tu 1.2F M Sa Th 1.2F W AM E-0.5E AM 05:36PM AM AM E-0.5E AM E-0.6E A 0.8F 02:06AM 0.8F 12:06AM 02:48AM 02:48AM 0.6F 03:06AM 0.4F 01:18AM 03:30AM 0.5F S12:18AM a 03:36PM on-0.5E Type mon c12:48AM 07:00PM 10:36PM 1.0F 06:18PM 07:00PM 10:06PM 10:36PM 0.9F 1.0F 0.6F 07:42PM 06:18PM 11:00PM 07:00PM 10:06PM 0.7F 10:36PM 0.9F 1.0F 07:06PM 07:42PM 10:36PM 06:18PM 11:00PM 0.7F 10:06PM 05:54PM 0.7F 08:30PM 0.9F 08:24PM 07:06PM -0.8E 11:24PM 07:42PM 10:36PM 0.6F 11:00PM 05:06PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:06PM 0.7F 08:30PM 08:30PM 08:24PM -0.9E 11:18PM 07:06PM -0.8E 11:24PM 0.6F 10:36PM 06:06PM 0.6F 05:06PM 08:36PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:06PM 08:30PM -0.7E 08:30PM 08:24PM -0.9E 11:18PM -0.8E 11:24PM 05:24PM 0.6F 06:06PM 08:18PM 0.6F 05:06PM 08:36PM -1.1E 08:06P 08:30 -0 9 24 9 24 9 .19 64 02:44 AM 2.5 76 AM AM AM AM E AM AM AM AM AM A 24 9 24 9 24 20 05:54AM 09:06AM -0.8E 05:24AM 08:36AM -0.8E 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.8E 05:30AM (off 08:36AM -0.8E 05:42AM 08:42AM -0.6E 05:54AM 09:00AM -0.7E Baltimore Harbor Point), ◐ Approach ◑ Sandy ◐ ◐2019 ◑ ◐Chesapeake ◑11:42PM ◐Bay ◑ Ent ◐ ◑11:42PM ◐ N of ◑ ◐ ◑ ◐ 11:42PM 11:06PM 11:54PM 11:06PM 11:30PM 11:54PM 11:06PM e:.6 LST/LDT n mi Henry 12:24AM -0.9EAM 12:36AM -1.2E 0.8F 12:30AM -1.0E 12:54AM -1.2E 12:48AM 01:18AM -1.1E 48AM 04:06AM -0.9E 01:24AM 01:00AM 04:18AM -0.9E 01:30AM 01:30AM T 0.8F 04:54AM -0.9E 01:00AM 01:12AM 04:36AM 01:42AM 01:18AM 02:06AM 02:06AM 18 08:57 0.1 04:48AM 3 -0.9E AM 0.7F PM -0.9E E-1.1E PM 0.7F PM 03:30PM AM 0.9F -1.0E PM 2E 0 AM 0.7F -1.1E PM Cape E M AM 1.2F L me Zone LST LDT 01:00AM 03:48AM -1.0E 12:48AM -1.4E 12:54AM 03:48AM 12:00AM 03:06AM -1P 12:30PM 03:24PM 0.7F 11:54AM 02:54PM 11:54AM 03:12PM 0.9F 11:30AM 03:00PM 1.2F 11:36AM 03:12PM 1.1F 03:48AM 11:42AM 1.3F 02:54AM W Th Sa Su W Th Sa Su M Tu 4.2 29 14 29 14 29 4 PM 19 -0.7E 4 -0.8E 439.0130° 19-0.9E 19 4 -0.9E 19-0.8E 436-0.8E 19 0.7F 03:42AM 06:30AM 0.7F 04:06AM 06:42AM 0.7F 04:18AM 06:36AM 0.5F 04:48AM 07:12AM 0.6F 04:48AM 07:00AM 0.4F 05:06AM 07:42AM 0.6F 14 29 14 29 14 PM-0.9E PM PM-0.8E PM-1.0E PM PM-0.7E PM PM-1.1E P 00AM 10:18AM 08:30AM 11:12AM 0.6F 08:00AM 10:42AM 0.5F 04:30AM 07:54AM 08:30AM -1.1E 11:36AM 0.7F 03:12AM 06:42AM 08:00AM 11:06AM 0.8F 05:24AM 08:12AM 04:12AM 07:24AM 05:54AM 08:24AM 05:30AM 08:06AM Latitude: N Longitude: 76.3683° W 67 F 0.4F 02:59 2.4 73 06:42AM 10:00AM 1.3F 06:48AM 10:12AM 1.9F 05:54AM 1.6F 07:12AM 10:30AM 1.5F 06:18AM 1 06:36PM 09:24PM -0.6E 06:06PM 09:00PM 06:36PM 09:36PM 06:36PM 09:42PM -1.1E 06:48PM 10:00PM -0.9E 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.1E La09:48AM ude 9594° N Long ude 0128° W 10:06AM 02:06AM 05:24AM -0.9E 01:42AM 02:06AM 05:00AM 05:24AM -0.9E -0.8E 02:18AM 01:42AM 05:36AM 02:06AM 05:00AM 05:24AM -0.8E -0.9E 01:48AM 02:18AM 05:12AM 01:42AM 05:36AM 05:00AM -0.9E -0.8E 02:18AM 02:18AM 01:48AM 05:42AM 0.7F 02:18AM 05:12AM 05:36AM -0.9E -0.9E 01:42AM 02:06AM 02:18AM 02:18AM 05:24AM 0.7F 01:48AM 05:42AM 0.7F 05:12AM -0.8E -0.9E 02:54AM 01:42AM 02:06AM 0.7F 02:18AM 02:18AM 05:24AM 0.7F76 05:42AM -0.8E -0.8E 02:24AM 02:54AM 1.0F 01:42A 02:06 0 PM PM PM PM 09:24AM -0.7E 09:30AM 12:24PM -0.8E 09:12AM 11:54AM -0.5E 09:54AM 12:36PM -0.6E 09:36AM 12:18PM -0.5E 10:36AM 01:12PM -0.5E 48PM 03:36PM -0.4E 02:24PM 05:00PM -0.5E 01:48PM 04:24PM -0.5E 11:00AM 02:06PM 03:00PM 1.2F 05:36PM -0.5E 09:42AM 01:24PM 02:36PM 1.3F 05:24PM -0.6E 11:24AM 02:18PM 0.8F 10:18AM 01:48PM 1.2F 11:18AM 02:30PM 0.8F 11:18AM 02:30PM 1.1F .3 9 12:24PM 09:17 PM -0.3 -9 01:12PM 04:12PM -1.3E 01:36PM 04:24PM -1.5E 01:18PM 04:06PM -1.1E 02:00PM 04:42PM -1.0E 01:36PM 04:24PM -1 5 20 5 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 5 20 20 Tu Th F Sa Su 09:06AM 11:12AM 11:36AM 0.3F 0.5F 09:18AM 08:54AM 12:06PM 09:06AM 11:12AM 11:36AM 0.3F 0.5F 08:42AM 09:18AM 11:36AM 08:54AM 12:06PM 11:12AM 05:36AM 0.6F 08:48AM 0.3F 09:12AM 08:42AM -1.0E 12:24PM 09:18AM 11:36AM 12:06PM 04:00AM 0.7F 05:36AM 07:42AM 0.6F 08:42AM 08:48AM 09:12AM -0.9E 12:00PM 08:42AM -1.0E 12:24PM 11:36AM 06:24AM 0.8F 04:00AM 09:06AM 0.7F 05:36AM 07:42AM 08:42AM -0.8E 08:48AM 09:12AM -0.9E 12:00PM 12:24PM 05:30AM 1.0F 06:24AM 08:18AM 0.8F 04:00AM 09:06AM -1.0E 07:42A 08:42 -05 M 09:06AM 11:36AM 0.5F Tu 08:54AM F Flood WDir. Sa 0.6F Th Dir. M 0.7F Tu 0.8F W 1.0F Th -1.0E M Tu Th F06:06PM Sa Mean 25° (T) Mean Ebb 189° (T) 03:18PM 06:36PM 03:12PM 06:42PM 02:36PM 06:18PM 1.1F 03:18PM 06:54PM 1.1F 02:48PM 06:36PM 1.1F 03:48PM 07:18PM 1.0F 18PM 10:06PM 0.9F 1.0F 07:42PM 11:00PM 0.7F 1.3F 07:06PM 10:36PM 0.7F 05:54PM 08:30PM 08:24PM -0.8E 11:24PM 0.6F 05:06PM 08:06PM 08:30PM -0.9E 11:18PM 0.6F 06:06PM 08:36PM -0.7E 05:24PM 08:18PM 08:54PM -0.9E 05:48PM 08:48PM Mean F-1.1E ood D-0.7E 297° Mean Ebb D 112° T10:30PM 07:36PM 10:18PM 1.1F 08:00PM 10:36PM 1.1F 10:06PM 0.7F 08:18PM 10:48PM 0.8F 08:00PM 0 05:42PM 05:42PM -0.5E 05:42PM -0.5E 02:24PM 05:12PM -0.5E 01:48PM 02:24PM 04:36PM 05:12PM -0.4E -0.5E 03:24PM 01:48PM 06:06PM 02:24PM 04:36PM -0.5E 05:12PM -0.4E -0.5E 02:54PM 03:24PM 01:48PM 06:06PM 04:36PM 12:00PM -0.5E -0.4E 03:06PM 03:54PM 02:54PM 06:36PM 1.0F 03:24PM 06:06PM 10:36AM 12:00PM -0.5E 02:12PM 03:36PM 03:06PM 03:54PM 06:30PM 1.2F 02:54PM 06:36PM 1.0F 12:18PM -0.5E 10:36AM 03:42PM 12:00PM 02:12PM 03:36PM 0.8F 03:06PM 03:54PM 06:30PM 1.2F 06:36PM 11:30AM -0.7E 12:18PM -0.5E 03:00PM 10:36AM 03:42PM 1.1F 02:12P 03:36 0 Sa Su Sa Tu Su Sa W Tu Su Sa -0.5E Th W Tu Su -0.5E Sa F07:48PM Th W Tu Su Sa FT Th W 1.0F Tu Su F -1.3E T ◐ AM ◑ 0.8F ◐ 0.6F ◑ 0.6F ◐ ◑ ◐ ◑ 10:12PM 09:54PM 10:24PM 10:12PM 10:42PM 08:00PM 11:30PM 0.9F 07:12PM 08:00PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 0.9F 0.9F 08:54PM 07:12PM 08:00PM 11:00PM 11:30PM 0.9F 0.9F 08:30PM 08:54PM 11:42PM 07:12PM 0.7F 11:00PM 07:00PM 09:18PM 0.9F 09:36PM 08:30PM -0.7E 08:54PM 11:42PM 06:00PM 07:00PM 08:48PM 09:48PM 09:18PM 09:36PM -0.9E 08:30PM -0.7E 11:42PM 06:54PM 09:36PM 0.7F 07:00PM 08:48PM 09:48PM -0.7E 09:18PM 09:36PM -0.9E -0.7E 06:18PM 09:12PM 06:00PM 09:36PM -1.1E 08:48P 09:48 -0 AM E AM E 0.7F AM E 06:00PM AM E 06:54PM A 11:42PM 11:06PM 11:54PM 11:30PM 12:18AM 03:30AM 0.8F 12:06AM 03:12AM 01:00AM 03:36AM 01:18AM 03:42AM 01:42AM 04:00AM 0.4F 02:12AM 04:24AM 0.5F .310:00PM 70 03:51 2.7 82 21 10:06 and speeds of maximum and minimum current, knots ◐ -0.8E 25 06:12AM 09:18AMTimes ◐ ◐ ◐ in09:24AM ◐ ◐ 10 -0.8E 10 25 -0.6E 25 11:48PM 11:48PM AM 06:30AM AM AM 06:54AM AMT09:48AM AM AM m n AMmum 10 A mes10and oAM max 25 mum and cu 11:48PM en AM n kno 06:42AM 09:54AM -0.9E 10 06:24AM 09:30AM -0.7E 25 06:24AM 09:24AM -0.7E speeds .510 15 AM 0.0 0 01:12PM 04:06PM

0.8F

12:30PM 03:42PM

0.9F

12:24PM 03:48PM

Th 1.3F AM 12:12PM 03:48PM

1.0F

PM 03:54PM E F 12:06PM

1.1F AM

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PM PM 03:30PM E 0.9F PM PM E 1.2F AMthe PM information PM as of1.1F PM AM AM PM AM PMtidaA Th F Su M of1.0F Sa of Tu Su Th F 12:36AM SaE of Su disclaimer: These data are based upon latest the date your request, and may differ from the published Tu 12:58 -0.3 -9 W Th Sa Su M Tu 02:54AM 05:48AM 0.7F 03:12AM 05:48AM 0.7F 03:30AM 05:54AM 0.5F 12:06AM -1.2E 12:06AM -1.1E -1.1E 13 28 13 28 13 04:54PM 08:30PM 1.0F 06:30PM 10:06PM 0.9F 04:48PM 08:36PM 0.9F 06:06PM 09:30PM 0.8F 05:48PM 09:12PM 0.8F 00PM 06:48PM -0.5E 05:12PM 08:00PM -0.6E 04:48PM 07:48PM -0.8E 08:48PM 11:18PM 05:24PM -0.6E 08:24PM -0.7E 07:48PM 10:36PM 05:30PM -0.9E 08:36PM -1.0E 08:42PM 11:24PM -0.8E 08:06PM 11:06PM -1.2E 08:18PM 11:18PM -0.8E 08:30PM 11:36PM -1.2E .213 67 AM 02:48AM AM 0.6F AM -0.7E AME 0.4F AM 03:30AM AM 0.5F AM -0.9E AM AM -1.3E A PM 28 02:48AM PM 13 PM 28 PM PM 12:12AM PM 05:54AM PM E 03:06AM PM PM 02:36AM 02:06AM 02:36AM 0.8F 0.8F -0.6E 12:06AM 02:06AM 0.6F 02:36AM 0.8F 0.6F 0.8F 12:18AM 12:06AM 02:48AM 02:06AM 0.6F 12:12AM 0.8F 12:48AM 12:18AM 03:06AM 12:06AM 02:48AM 02:48AM 02:42AM 0.6F 05:54AM 0.6F 01:18AM 12:48AM 1.2F 12:18AM -0.7E 03:06AM 02:48AM 0.4F 12:12AM 0.6F 01:18AM 12:12AM 12:48AM 03:30AM 1.2F 0.5F 12:00AM 0.4F 02:42AM 12:12AM 05:54A 01:18 -0 28 09:06AM 13 06:57 2.3 70 0.8F 11:48AM -0.8E 08:42AM 11:36AM 08:30AM 11:18AM 04:00AM 06:18AM 04:06AM 06:12AM 0.4F 04:24AM 0.6F PM 08:36AM PM E-0.8E PM 08:42AM PM PM -1.2E PM E-0.6E PM 1.1F PM E-0.7E PM 1.7F P 36PM 08:48AM 11:06PM 11:06PM 11:48PM 9 PM 24 -0.9E 9 9 24 9 24 9 24 9 -0.8E 9 24 9 24-0.6E 9 9 24 9 -0.7E 24 902:42AM 24 9 24 -0.7E 9 24 24 9 05:54AM -0.8E 05:24AM 05:54AM 08:36AM 09:06AM -0.8E -0.8E 05:42AM 05:24AM 08:48AM 05:54AM 08:36AM -0.8E 09:06AM -0.8E -0.8E 05:30AM 05:42AM 05:24AM 08:48AM 08:36AM 03:42AM -0.8E 06:24AM 05:42AM 05:30AM 0.8F 05:42AM 08:36AM 08:48AM 08:42AM 03:42AM -0.8E 11:48AM 05:54AM 06:24AM 05:42AM 09:00AM 05:30AM 08:42AM 0.8F 08:36AM 03:30AM 08:42AM -0.8E 06:18AM 03:42AM 11:48AM 05:54AM 06:24AM 05:42AM 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AM AM 10:30PM 10:30PM 10:06PM 05:42AM 10:30PM 1.2F 09:48PM 10:06PM .807:06AM 85 09:24AM 07:25 AM 3.1 94 0.4F 04:54AM 07:36AM 10:12AM 0.5F 04:36AM 07:24AM 09:48AM 0.5F 11:42AM 07:48AM 10:42AM 0.6F 07:18AM 10:18AM 0.7F 24AM 07:42AM -0.8E 08:06AM -0.8E 07:42AM -0.8E 08:42AM 04:54AM -0.9E 08:00AM -0.7E 07:30AM 10:42AM 05:00AM -1.1E 08:06AM -0.7E 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.9E 08:54AM 11:42AM -1.2E 09:30AM 12:12PM -0.9E 09:54AM 12:42PM -1.1E AM AM E AM AM AM AME AM AM AME AM AM AM AME AM AM AM A .0 0 02:48PM W 0.6F 01:46 PM -0.3 -9 E-0.5E AM AM AM AME E E E 12:00PM -0.5E 01:12PM 03:54PM -0.5E 12:42PM 03:18PM -0.4E 04:36PM -0.4E 04:12PM 12AM 02:00PM 11:18AM 02:30PM 0.9F 10:48AM 02:12PM 1.1F 03:18PM 06:18PM 11:00AM 1.0F 02:30PM 1.0F 01:54PM 05:30PM 10:54AM 1.3F 02:36PM 1.3F 03:18PM 05:54PM 1.0F 03:18PM 06:00PM 1.1F 03:48PM 05:54PM 0.7F 04:18PM 06:36PM 0.8F 12:18AM 03:30AM 0.8F 12:06AM 12:18AM 03:12AM 03:30AM 0.8F 01:00AM 12:06AM 03:36AM 12:18AM 03:12AM 03:30AM 0.8F 0.8F 01:18AM 01:00AM 12:06AM 03:36AM 0.6F 03:12AM 0.6F 01:06AM 0.8F 01:42AM 04:00AM 01:00AM 03:42AM 0.4F 03:36AM 0.6F 12:30AM 0.6F 02:12AM 01:42AM 04:24AM 01:18AM -0.8E 04:00AM 0.5F 03:42AM 0.4F 01:00AM 0.6F 02:12AM 01:06AM 01:42AM -1.2E 04:24AM 04:00AM 0.5F 12:54AM 0.4F 12:30A 02:12 -0 12:24AM -0.9E 12:36AM 12:30AM 12:54AM 12:48AM 01:18AM Su M Tu W 14 -1.2E 29 -1.1E 14 -1.1E 29 14 AM 02:00PM PM AM 01:30PM PM AM 01:18AM PM AM 01:06AM PM AM 12:30AM PM AM 01:00AM PM F PM Sa -1.2E Tu 0.8F Su -1.0E W 0.6F M F Sa Su M AM 03:42AM AM AM -0.8E AM AM -1.2E AM AM -0.9E AM AM -1.3E A .2 67 09:12PM 07:45 2.3 70 Th F08:42PM Su M Tu W 10 25 10 10 25 10 25 10 25 10E-0.8E 10 25 10 25E-0.6E 10 25 10 25 10E-0.7E 25 10 25 10 25E -0.8E 10 25 25 1 05:30PM 0.9F 06:30PM 10:00PM 0.8F 05:54PM 09:30PM 0.8F 07:12PM 10:24PM 0.6F 07:06PM 10:12PM 0.7F 14 29 14 06PM 08:00PM 05:54PM 08:48PM -0.7E 05:42PM 08:48PM -0.9E 09:42PM 06:06PM 09:12PM -0.8E 11:36PM 06:18PM 09:30PM -1.1E 09:24PM 09:00PM 08:54PM 09:24PM 06:42AM 09:54AM -0.8E 06:12AM 06:42AM 09:18AM 09:54AM -0.9E -0.8E 06:24AM 06:12AM 09:30AM 06:42AM 09:18AM 09:54AM -0.9E -0.8E 06:24AM 06:24AM 09:24AM 06:12AM 09:30AM 09:18AM 04:30AM -0.9E 07:06AM 06:30AM 06:24AM 0.9F 06:24AM 09:24AM 09:30AM 03:42AM 04:30AM -0.7E 06:42AM 06:54AM 06:30AM 1.4F 06:24AM 09:24AM 0.9F 09:24AM 04:00AM 03:42AM -0.8E 07:00AM 04:30AM 06:42AM 06:54AM 07:06AM 06:30AM 09:48AM 1.4F 0.9F 09:24AM 03:54AM 04:00AM -0.6E 07:18AM 03:42AM 07:00AM 06:42A 06:54 1 03:42AM-0.6E 06:30AM 0.7F 04:06AM 06:42AM 0.7F 04:18AM 06:36AM 0.5F 04:48AM 07:12AM 0.6F 04:48AM 07:00AM 0.4F 05:06AM 07:42AM 0.6F PM 29 PM E-0.7E PM 14 PM PM 29 PM PM 07:06AM PM PM PM PM PM PM-1.0E PM E-0.7E PM 09:24AM PM E-0.8E PM 09:48AM PM E-0.6E PM 1.2F PM E-0.7E PM 1.8F P M -0.6E Tu -0.5E Th F Sa 01:42PM -1.4E 01:12PM 04:06PM 0.8F 12:30PM 01:12PM 03:42PM 04:06PM 0.9F 0.8F -0.5E 12:24PM 12:30PM 03:48PM 01:12PM 03:42PM 1.0F 04:06PM 0.9F 0.8F 12:12PM 12:24PM 03:48PM 12:30PM 03:48PM 1.3F 03:42PM 10:24AM 1.0F 01:24PM 0.9F 12:06PM 12:12PM -1.0E 03:54PM 12:24PM 03:48PM 1.1F 03:48PM 09:48AM 1.3F 10:24AM 12:48PM 1.0F 12:30PM 01:24PM 12:06PM -1.4E 04:18PM 12:12PM -1.0E 03:54PM 1.3F 03:48PM 10:30AM 1.1F 09:48AM 01:36PM 1.3F 10:24AM 12:48PM 12:30PM -1.2E 01:24PM 12:06PM -1.4E 04:18PM -1.0E 03:54PM 10:48AM 1.3F 10:30AM 1.1F 09:48AM 01:36PM 12:48P 12:30 -1 54PM 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.7E 09:30AM 12:24PM -0.8E 09:12AM 11:54AM 09:54AM 12:36PM 09:36AM 12:18PM 10:36AM 01:12PM -0.5E Th F Th Su F Th M Su F Th Tu M Su F Th W Tu M Su F Th W Tu M Su F W T PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM P PM F06:54PM PM Sa PM Su PM 07:36PM PM PM Tu 10:12PM Th 07:18PM 06:54PM 07:18PM 10:00PM 10:12PM -0.9E -0.7E 1.1F 07:12PM 10:24PM 07:18PM 10:00PM -0.9E 10:12PM -0.9E -0.7E 07:24PM 07:12PM 10:36PM 06:54PM 10:24PM -1.1E 10:00PM 04:42PM -0.9E -0.9E 07:36PM 07:30PM 07:24PM 10:42PM 1.1F 07:12PM 10:36PM -1.0E 10:24PM 04:18PM -1.1E 04:42PM -0.9E 07:18PM 07:54PM 07:30PM 11:06PM 1.4F 07:24PM 10:42PM 1.1F-1.2E 10:36PM 04:48PM -1.0E 04:18PM -1.1E 07:30PM 04:42PM 07:18PM 07:54PM 0.9F 07:36PM 07:30PM 11:06PM 1.4F 1.1F 10:42PM 05:12PM -1.2E 04:48PM -1.0E 07:48PM 04:18PM 07:30PM 1.0F 07:18P 07:54 0 0.1M -3 2606:36PM 01:36 AM -0.4 -12 -0.7E 03:18PM 1.0F 03:12PM 06:42PM 1.3F 02:36PM 06:18PM 03:18PM 06:54PM 1.1F 02:48PM 06:36PM 1.1F 03:48PM 07:18PM 1.0F 11:12PM 10:30PM 11:12PM 10:36PM 10:30PM 11:12PM 10:36PM 10:36PM 10:30PM .0 91 08:10 AM 3.1 94 10:00PM 10:12PM 09:54PM 10:24PM 10:12PM 10:42PM 12:48AM 04:06AM -0.9E 01:24AM 04:48AM -0.9E 01:00AM 04:18AM -0.9E 01:30AM 04:54AM -0.9E 01:12AM 04:36AM -0.9E 02:06AM 0.8F 12:06AM 02:48AM 0.6F 12:18AM 02:48AM 0.6F 12:12AM 12:48AM -0.7E 03:06AM 0.4F 02:42AM 05:54AM 01:18AM 1.2F 03:30AM 0.5F 12:12AM -0.9E 12:00AM -1.3E 12:00AM -0.9E 12:30AM -1.3E AM AM AM AM AM AM 0.1 -3 Th 02:32 PM -0.3 -9 AM-1.2E AME-0.7E E 0.8F AM -0.9E AME 0.4F E 0.6F 06:24AM AM -1.3E AME 0.5F E 0.4F 06:24AM AM -1.0E AME -0.9E E 0.5F 07:06AM AM -1.4E A 08:00AM 0.4FPM 08:30AM 11:12AM 08:00AM 10:42AM 0.5F 11:36AM 0.7F 11:06AM 24AM 08:36AM 05:42AM 08:48AM -0.8E 05:30AM 08:36AM -0.8E 03:42AM 05:42AM 0.8F 08:42AM 08:42AM 05:54AM 09:00AM 03:30AM 1.1F 03:12AM 1.7F 03:06AM 1.4F 03:42AM 1.8F 01:18AM 04:18AM 0.8F 0.6F 01:12AM 01:18AM 04:06AM 04:18AM 0.8F 0.8F 06:24AM 01:48AM 01:12AM 04:24AM 01:18AM 04:06AM 0.6F 04:18AM 0.8F 11:48AM 0.8F 02:12AM 01:48AM 04:36AM 01:12AM 04:24AM 0.6F 04:06AM 0.6F 06:18AM 02:00AM 0.8F 02:30AM 02:12AM 04:42AM 01:48AM 04:36AM 04:24AM 01:24AM 0.6F 03:00AM 02:30AM 05:12AM 02:12AM -0.9E 04:42AM 04:36AM 01:36AM 0.6F 03:00AM 02:00AM 02:30AM -1.3E 05:12AM 04:42AM 01:42AM 0.4F 01:24A 03:00 -1 AM 08:30AM AM E-0.6E AM 08:00AM AM AM 11 AM AM 02:00AM AM AM 01:24AM AM AM 01:36AM AM 08:30 2.3 70 .3 70 10:18AM ● -0.8E 15 -1.1E 30 -1.1E 15 30 15 01:06AM -0.9E 01:24AM -1.2E 01:12AM -1.0E 01:42AM 01:30AM 02:00AM -1.0E 11 26 11 11 26 11 26 11 26 11-0.8E 11 26 26-0.6E 11 26 11 26 11-0.7E 26 11 26 11 26 1.0F 11 26 26 1 AM 10:06AM AM AM-1.0E AM AM-1.3E AM AM-1.0E AM AM-1.2E A 07:24AM 10:30AM -0.8E 07:06AM 07:24AM 10:06AM 10:30AM -0.8E 07:12AM 07:06AM 10:06AM 07:24AM 10:06AM 10:30AM -0.9E 07:12AM 07:12AM 07:06AM 10:06AM 10:06AM 05:12AM -0.7E -0.9E 07:54AM 07:12AM 07:12AM 10:06AM 1.0F 07:12AM 10:06AM 10:06AM 04:30AM -0.8E 05:12AM -0.7E 07:36AM 07:48AM 07:12AM 10:42AM 1.6F 07:12AM 10:06AM 1.0F 10:06AM 04:24AM -0.6E 04:30AM -0.8E 07:48AM 05:12AM 07:36AM 07:48AM 1.4F 07:54AM 07:12AM 10:42AM 1.6F 10:06AM 04:42AM -0.7E 04:24AM -0.6E 08:12AM 04:30AM 07:48AM 1.9F 07:36A 07:48 1 12:48PM 03:36PM -0.4E 02:24PM 05:00PM -0.5E 01:48PM 04:24PM -0.5E 03:00PM 05:36PM -0.5E 02:36PM 05:24PM -0.6E 54AM 02:54PM 0.8F 11:54AM 03:12PM 0.9F 11:30AM 03:00PM 1.2F 09:36AM 11:36AM -0.9E 03:12PM 1.1F 03:12PM 06:24PM 11:42AM 1.4F 03:30PM 1.3F 09:48AM 12:42PM 09:54AM 12:48PM 10:12AM 01:12PM 10:48AM 01:36PM W Th AM 30 PM AM 15 PM AM 30 PM AM 07:54AM PM AM PM AM PM Sa M Su Tu W -0.9E M 12:30PM Th -0.7E Tu -0.8E Sa Su M Tu 15 30 15 F04:06PM Sa M Tu W Th 04:30AM 07:12AM 0.6F 05:00AM 07:30AM 05:06AM 07:18AM 0.4F 05:30AM 08:00AM 0.6F 05:24AM 07:42AM 0.5F 05:42AM 08:24AM 0.6F PM 04:36PM PM E 0.6F PM -1.1E PM E Th PM -1.5E PM E 1.2F PM -1.3E PM E 1.3F PM -1.4E P 01:48PM 04:48PM 0.8F 01:12PM 01:48PM 04:24PM 04:48PM 1.1F 0.8F 12:54PM 01:12PM 04:24PM 01:48PM 04:24PM 1.1F 04:48PM 1.1F 0.8F 12:54PM 12:54PM 01:12PM 04:24PM 1.3F 04:24PM 11:06AM 1.1F 02:12PM 1.1F 12:42PM 12:54PM 04:30PM 12:54PM 04:36PM 1.2F 04:24PM 10:54AM 1.3F 11:06AM 01:54PM 1.1F 01:18PM 02:12PM 12:42PM 05:00PM 12:54PM -1.1E 04:30PM 1.3F 04:36PM 11:12AM 10:54AM 02:18PM 1.3F 11:06AM 01:54PM 01:18PM 02:12PM 12:42PM -1.5E 05:00PM -1.1E 04:30PM 11:42AM 11:12AM 02:30PM 1.2F 10:54AM 02:18PM 01:54P 01:18 -1 06:18PM 10:06PM 0.9F 07:42PM 11:00PM 0.7F 07:06PM 10:36PM 0.7F 08:24PM 11:24PM 0.6F 08:30PM 11:18PM Tu W F Sa Su 06PM 09:00PM -0.7E 06:36PM 09:36PM -0.8E 06:36PM 09:42PM -1.1E 06:54PM 06:48PM 1.1F 10:00PM -0.9E 09:42PM 07:06PM 10:18PM -1.1E 04:00PM 06:42PM 1.0F 04:18PM 06:54PM 1.0F 04:36PM 06:42PM 0.6F 05:06PM 07:30PM 0.8F F Sa 0.7F F M Sa F Tu M Sa F W Tu M Sa F W Tu M Sa F Th W Tu M Sa Th W PM 07:48PM PM E-1.0E PM 07:54PM PM PM 08:06PM PM PM 08:24PM PM E-1.2E PM PM E 1.2F PM PM -0.7E 10:18AM 01:12PM -0.8E 09:54AM 12:42PM 10:54AM 01:30PM 10:24AM 01:06PM 11:30AM 02:06PM -0.5E 10:54PM 11:00PM -1.0E -0.8E -0.5E 11:06PM 08:00PM 10:54PM 11:00PM -1.0E -0.5E -0.8E 08:06PM 07:48PM 11:06PM 10:54PM 05:24PM -1.0E -0.5E -1.0E 08:24PM 08:06PM 1.2F 07:54PM 11:24PM 11:06PM 05:18PM -1.2E 05:24PM -1.0E 08:12PM 08:36PM 08:06PM 1.4F 08:06PM 11:24PM 1.2F 11:24PM 05:36PM -1.1E 05:18PM -1.2E 08:12PM 05:24PM 08:12PM 08:36PM 08:24PM 08:06PM 11:54PM 1.4F 11:24PM 06:00PM -1.2E 05:36PM -1.1E 08:36PM 05:18PM 08:12PM 08:12P 08:36 0 PM 11:24PM PME-1.2E PM 11:24PM PME-1.1E PM 11:54PM PM PM 0.9F PM PM 1.0F P 0.2Tu 10:06AM -6 2712:54PM 02:21 AM -0.3 -9 -0.8E ◐08:00PM ◑07:48PM ◐07:54PM W 11:00PM F08:00PM 10:30PM 10:12PM ◐10:06PM ◑09:48PM ◐09:24PM ● ◑ ●PM M ●11:54PM ●11:54PM ● ◑ ● PM Sa 04:06PM 07:42PM PM Su 03:42PM 07:24PM PM ● 11:54PM 1.0F 11:18PM 11:00PM 11:18PM 11:18PM 11:00PM 11:18PM 03:48PM 07:12PM 1.0F 3.0 03:54PM 03:12PM 07:00PM 1.1F 1.0F 04:42PM 08:06PM 0.8F .0 91 08:52 AM 91 07:30PM 1.3F 10:36PM 11:00PM 10:36PM 11:12PM 10:54PM 11:24PM 0.1 -3 F 03:15 PM -0.2 -6 01:42AM -0.8E 02:06AM 02:18AM 05:36AM 01:48AM 05:12AM 02:18AM 05:42AM -0.8E 02:06AM 05:24AM -0.8E 05:06AM 0.8F 02:06AM 05:00AM 05:06AM 0.8F 0.8F 01:06AM 02:42AM 02:12AM 05:06AM 02:06AM 05:00AM 0.5F 05:06AM 0.8F 12:30AM 0.8F 03:06AM 02:42AM 05:30AM 02:12AM 05:06AM 0.6F 05:00AM 0.5F 01:00AM 02:42AM 0.8F 03:18AM 03:06AM -1.0E 05:30AM 02:42AM 05:30AM 05:06AM 0.6F 12:54AM 02:18AM 0.5F 03:42AM 02:42AM 03:18AM -1.4E 06:00AM 03:06AM -1.0E 05:30AM 0.6F 05:30AM 0.4F 12:42AM 02:06AM 0.6F 03:42AM -1.0E 02:42AM 03:18AM -1.4E 06:00AM 05:30AM 0.6F 01:24AM 02:24AM 0.4F -1.4E 02:18A 03:42 -1 06AM 03:12AM 0.8F 01:00AM 03:36AM 0.6F -0.9E 02:12AM 01:18AM 03:42AM 0.6F -0.9E 01:42AM -0.8E 04:00AM 0.4F 02:12AM -1.2E 04:24AM 0.5F -1.3E -0.9E AM-0.9E AM E 27 AM AM AM AM AM 02:18AM AM AM 02:06AM AM .3 70 05:00AM 09:12 2.2 67 12 PM 27 -1.2E 12 12 27 12 27 12 27 12E-0.7E 12 27 12 27 0.4F 12 12 27 12E-0.6E 27 12 27 12 27E -1.0E 12 27 27-1.3E 1 08:06AM 11:12AM -0.8E 07:54AM 08:06AM 10:48AM 11:12AM -0.9E -0.8E 07:48AM 07:54AM 10:42AM 08:06AM 10:48AM 11:12AM -0.9E -0.8E 08:06AM 07:48AM 11:00AM 07:54AM 10:42AM 10:48AM 05:42AM -0.6E 08:36AM 08:00AM 10:48AM 1.1F 07:48AM 11:00AM 10:42AM 05:18AM -0.7E 05:42AM -0.6E 08:30AM 08:48AM 08:00AM 11:30AM 1.8F 08:06AM 10:48AM 1.1F 11:00AM 04:48AM -0.6E 05:18AM -0.7E 08:24AM 05:42AM 08:30AM 08:48AM 1.5F 08:36AM 08:00AM 11:30AM 1.8F 1.1F 10:48AM 05:24AM -0.6E 04:48AM -0.6E 09:00AM 05:18AM 08:24AM 1.8F 08:30A 08:48 1 08:54AM 11:12AM 09:18AM 12:06PM 0.6F 08:42AM 11:36AM 0.7F 12:24PM 0.8F 12:00PM 1.0F 12AM 09:18AM -0.9E 0.3F 06:24AM 09:30AM -0.7E 06:24AM 09:24AM -0.8E 04:30AM 07:06AM 06:30AM 0.9F 09:24AM -0.6E 03:42AM 06:42AM 06:54AM 1.4F 09:48AM -0.7E 04:00AM 07:00AM 1.2F 03:54AM 07:18AM 1.8F 03:36AM 07:12AM 1.5F 04:30AM 08:00AM 1.8F 31 -0.9E AM -1.2E AME-0.6E 02:12AM 02:42AM -1.0E AM 09:12AM AM E-0.6E AM 08:42AM AM AM 08:06AM AM AM 08:36AM AM AM AM AM AM 02:18PM 05:24PM 0.9F 01:48PM 02:18PM 05:12PM 05:24PM 1.2F 0.9F 01:24PM 01:30PM 01:48PM 05:00PM 02:18PM 05:12PM 1.1F 05:24PM 1.2F 12:48PM 0.9F 01:42PM 01:30PM 05:18PM 01:48PM 05:00PM 1.3F 05:12PM 11:48AM 1.1F 01:36PM 02:54PM 1.2F 01:24PM 01:42PM 05:12PM 01:30PM 05:18PM 1.2F 05:00PM 11:48AM 1.3F 11:48AM 02:48PM 1.1F 02:06PM 02:54PM 01:24PM -1.6E 05:48PM 01:42PM -1.2E 05:12PM 1.2F 05:18PM 11:54AM 1.2F 11:48AM 02:54PM 1.3F 11:48AM 02:48PM 02:06PM -1.3E 02:54PM 01:24PM -1.6E 05:48PM -1.2E 05:12PM 12:30PM 1.2F 11:54AM 03:12PM 1.2F 11:48AM 02:54PM -1.3E 02:48P 02:06 -1T Sa Su Sa Tu Su Sa W Tu Su Sa Th W Tu Su Sa F Th W Tu Su Sa F Th W Tu Su F 01:48PM 04:36PM 03:24PM 06:06PM -0.5E 02:54PM 05:42PM -0.5E 03:54PM 06:36PM -0.5E 03:36PM 06:30PM -0.7E 31 31 30PM 03:42PM 0.9F -0.4E 12:24PM 03:48PM 1.0F 12:12PM 03:48PM 1.3F 10:24AM 12:06PM -1.0E 03:54PM 1.1F 09:48AM 12:30PM -1.4E 04:18PM 1.3F 10:30AM -1.2E 10:48AM 01:42PM -1.4E 10:54AM 01:54PM -1.1E 11:36AM 02:18PM -1.2E PM PM E 05:54AM 08:24AM 0.6F 06:24AM 09:12AM 0.7F Tu W F08:54PM PM 08:36PM PM AM 08:30PM PM PM 08:54PM PM AM 09:06PM PM PM PM PM PM Su AM Th -1.1E Tu Th F -1.0E W -0.8E Su 11:42PM M 11:48PM Tu Th W 1.2F Th -1.1E 08:42PM 11:42PM -0.8E M 08:36PM 08:42PM 11:42PM 11:42PM -0.8E 08:30PM 11:48PM 08:42PM 11:42PM 11:42PM -1.1E 08:36PM 11:48PM 06:00PM -1.0E 09:06PM 08:48PM 1.2F 08:30PM 06:12PM 06:00PM -1.0E 09:06PM 09:18PM 08:48PM 1.3F 08:54PM 1.2F 06:24PM 06:12PM 08:48PM 06:00PM 09:06PM 09:18PM 0.8F 09:06PM 08:48PM 1.3F 06:48PM 06:24PM 09:18PM 06:12PM 08:48PM 0.9F 09:06P 09:18 0 Sa Su Tu W F 0.2 -6 03:05 -0.2 -6 07:12PM 11:00PM 0.9F 08:54PM 08:30PM 11:42PM 0.7F 09:36PM 09:48PM 28 PM 54PM 10:00PM -0.9E 07:12PM 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.1E 04:42PM 07:30PM 1.1F 10:42PM 04:18PM 07:18PM 1.4F 11:06PM 04:48PM 05:12PM -0.5E 07:48PM 1.0F 05:48PM 08:18PM 0.8F 11:12AM-0.9E 02:00PM -0.7E 12:30PM ○ 07:36PM ○07:54PM ○ 07:30PM ○ 0.9F ○PM 11:24PM 07:30PM 11:24PM PM PM E-1.0E PM PM E-1.2E PM Tu PM E 03:00PM PM ○ E 05:18PM PM ○ 0.6F PM E ○ PM PM ○ Th 10:24PM .1 94 09:33 AM 2.9 88 08:18PM 1.2F 04:42PM 05:42PM 08:54PM 10:30PM PM 10:36PM 10:36PM 0.7F 09:54PM 11:00PM ◐11:12PM 0.2 -6 Sa 03:57 PM -0.2 11:48PM -6 0.7F 02:54AM 05:48AM 03:12AM 02:54AM 05:48AM 05:48AM 0.7F 0.7F 03:30AM 03:12AM 05:54AM 02:54AM 05:48AM 0.5F 05:48AM 0.7F 0.7F 03:30AM 12:06AM 03:12AM 05:54AM -1.2E 05:48AM 12:30AM 0.5F 03:18AM 0.7F -1.1E 12:06AM 03:30AM 12:06AM -1.1E 05:54AM 12:06AM -1.2E 12:30AM 03:06AM 0.5F 03:18AM -1.5E 12:36AM -1.1E 12:06AM -1.1E 12:06AM -1.1E 12:06AM -1.2E 02:36AM 12:30AM 03:06AM -1.0E 03:18AM -1.5E 12:36AM -1.1E 12:06AM 12:06AM -1.1E -1.1E 03:06AM 12:06AM 02:36AM -1.3E 03:06A -1 .3 70 09:54 PM 2.2 11:48AM 67 -0.8E 28 13 13 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 28 13 28 28 1 08:48AM 08:42AM 08:48AM 11:36AM 11:48AM -0.9E -0.8E 08:30AM 08:42AM 11:18AM 08:48AM 11:36AM -0.6E 11:48AM -0.9E -0.8E 04:00AM 08:30AM 06:18AM 08:42AM 11:18AM 0.6F 11:36AM 06:12AM -0.6E -0.9E 09:18AM 04:06AM 04:00AM 06:12AM 1.2F 08:30AM 06:18AM 0.4F 11:18AM 06:00AM 0.6F 06:12AM -0.6E 09:24AM 04:24AM 09:18AM 04:06AM 06:54AM 1.9F 04:00AM 06:12AM 1.2F 0.6F 06:18AM 05:18AM 0.4F 06:00AM 09:06AM 0.6F 06:12AM 09:24AM 04:24AM 1.6F 09:18AM 04:06AM 06:54AM 1.9F 1.2F 06:12AM 06:18AM 0.6F 05:18AM 09:42AM 0.4F 06:00AM 09:06AM 1.7F 09:24A 04:24 1 02:36AM 05:54AM 12:00AM 02:42AM 06:00AM 12:24AM 0.5F 01:24AM 12:24AM 0.5F 01:36AM 12AM 04:06AM 0.8F -0.8E 02:48PM 01:48AM 06:00PM 04:24AM 0.6F 0.7F 02:30PM 02:12AM 04:36AM 0.6F -0.8E 02:00AM 02:30AM -0.9E 04:42AM 0.4F 03:00AM -1.3E 05:12AM 0.5F -1.0E 01:42AM -1.4E 01:18AM -1.0E 02:12AM -1.3E AM Su AM AM AM W AM AM 03:36PM AM AM AM AM AM 0.9F M 02:48PM 06:00PM 06:00PM 1.3F W 0.9F M 02:00PM 02:30PM 05:42PM 02:48PM 06:00PM 1.1F 06:00PM 1.3F W 0.9F 09:00AM 02:00PM 11:48AM 02:30PM 05:42PM 06:00PM 12:30PM 1.1F 03:36PM 1.3F 08:42AM 09:00AM -1.3E 11:30AM 02:00PM 11:48AM 05:42PM 12:42PM -0.7E 12:30PM 03:36PM 1.1F 09:42AM 08:42AM -1.6E 12:24PM 09:00AM -1.3E 11:30AM 11:48AM 12:36PM -0.5E 12:42PM -0.7E 03:24PM 12:30PM 03:36PM 09:42AM -1.2E 03:36PM 08:42AM -1.6E 12:24PM 11:30AM 01:18PM -0.6E 12:36PM -0.5E 03:54PM 12:42PM 03:24PM 03:36P 09:42 -1F Su 07:12AM Su Th M Su -0.7E F Th M -0.5E Su Sa F Th W -0.6E M Su Sa F Th -1.3E W M Sa -1.2E 09:48AM 12:12PM 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.8E 09:24AM 12:30PM 0.8F 03:12AM 06:30AM -0.8E 03:00AM 06:18AM -0.8E 06AM 10:06AM -0.9E 0.4F 10:06AM -0.7E 07:12AM 10:06AM -0.8E 05:12AM 07:54AM 07:12AM 1.0F 10:06AM -0.6E 04:30AM 07:36AM 07:48AM 1.6F 10:42AM -0.7E 04:24AM 07:48AM 1.4F 04:42AM 08:12AM 1.9F 04:12AM 08:00AM 1.7F 05:12AM 08:48AM 1.7F AM 09:24PM AM E AM AM E 1.2F AM AM En1.2F AMa 09:42PM AM E 1.1F AM AM E 1.2F AM AM 09:18PM 09:24PM 09:18PM 09:12PM 09:18PM 02:30PM 09:12PM 06:12PM 09:24PM 06:48PM 09:42PM 02:00PM 02:30PM 05:54PM 1.2F 09:12PM 06:12PM 07:06PM 1.2F 06:48PM 09:54PM 03:00PM 02:00PM 06:36PM 1.2F 02:30PM 05:54PM 1.2F 06:12PM 07:06PM 1.2F 07:06PM 09:30PM 1.2F 06:48PM 09:54PM 03:00PM 0.8F 09:42PM 02:00PM 06:36PM 1.2F 05:54PM 07:36PM 1.1F 07:06PM 10:06PM 1.2F 07:06PM 09:30PM 0.9F 09:54P 03:00 0 0.2 -6 03:48 AM -0.1 -3 d a me The e da a a e ba ed upon he a e o ma on a ab e a o he da e o ou eque and ma d e om he pub hed 29 02:54PM 05:42PM -0.4E 10:00AM 01:00PM 0.7F 03:54PM 06:48PM -0.7E 09:48AM 01:06PM 0.9F 09:24AM 01:00PM 1.1F ○12:54PM 04:36PM ○ 1.3F ● ○ ● ○ 02:30PM ● 12PM 04:24PM 1.1F ○ 12:54PM 04:24PM 1.1F ● 11:06AM 02:12PM 04:30PM 10:54AM 01:54PM 01:18PM 05:00PM 11:12AM 02:18PM -1.3E 11:42AM 02:30PM -1.4E 11:36AM -1.2E 12:18PM 03:00PM -1.2E 09:42PM 09:30PM 10:00PM 09:42PM 11:54PM 09:30PM 11:54PM 10:00 W F●12:42PM Sa PM ○ -1.1E PM Sa 1.2F AM ● -1.5E PM M PM 09:42PM PM Tu PM 09:30PM PM PM 10:00PM PM PM PM Mdata Tu Th F 1.3F Th W F Th Sa .1 94 10:13 AM 82 Su M W Th disclaimer: These are 2.7 based upon the latest available as ofW the 08:24PM date your and may08:12PM differ04:36PM from the07:36PM published tidal current 0.9F tables. 08:18PM 04:24PM 07:06PM -0.5Einformation 09:54PM 04:42PM 07:30PM -0.6E -0.8E 48PM 10:54PM -1.0E 07:54PM 11:06PM -1.0E 08:06PM 11:24PM -1.2E 05:24PM 08:06PM 1.2F 11:24PM 05:18PM 08:36PM 1.4F 11:54PM 05:36PM 08:12PM 1.0F 0.7F 06:30PM 09:00PM 0.8F PM of PMrequest, E-1.1E PM PM E-1.2E PM PM E 06:00PM 08:36PM PM PM E 05:54PM 08:18PM PM PM PM PM a ed12:54AM on Tue dec 04 20 20 1912:48AM uTC12:54AM 0.2 -6 Su 04:38 PM -0.1 -3 ● Gene ●2018 ● E -1.0E 10:00PM 10:48PM 11:54PM 11:00PM 11:18PM 10:30PM 11:48PM 12:24AM -0.9E ● 12:36AM 12:24AM -1.2E -0.9E 12:30AM 12:36AM -1.0E 12:24AM -1.2E -0.9E 11:06PM 12:30AM -1.2E 12:36AM 01:00AM -1.0E -1.2E 03:48AM -1.0E -1.1E 12:30AM 12:48AM -1.2E 01:00AM -1.0E 03:48AM 03:48AM -1.4E 01:18AM -1.0E 12:48AM 12:54AM -1.1E 12:48AM -1.2E 02:54AM 01:00AM 03:48AM -1.0E 03:48AM -1.4E 01:18AM 12:48AM 12:54AM -1.1E -1.1E 03:48AM 12:48AM 02:54AM 03:48A -1 ◑11:18PM .3 Generated 70 10:36 PM 2.1 64 0.7F secondary stations Time differences speed Ratios secondary stations differences speed Ratios on: Tue dec 04 20:17:30 uTC29 2018 529 ofTime 514 14 14 14 29 14 29 14 14 29 14 29Page 14 29 14-1.1E 29 14 29 14 29 14 29 29-1.1E 1 03:42AM 06:30AM 04:06AM 03:42AM 06:42AM 06:30AM 0.7F 14 0.7F 29 04:18AM 04:06AM 06:36AM 03:42AM 06:42AM 0.5F 06:30AM 0.7F 0.7F 04:48AM 04:18AM 07:12AM 04:06AM 06:36AM 0.6F 06:42AM 06:42AM 0.5F 10:00AM 0.7F 04:48AM 04:48AM 07:00AM 1.3F 04:18AM 07:12AM 0.4F 06:36AM 06:48AM 0.6F 06:42AM 10:12AM 0.5F 05:06AM 10:00AM 04:48AM 07:42AM 1.9F 04:48AM 07:00AM 1.3F 0.6F 07:12AM 05:54AM 0.4F 06:48AM 09:48AM 0.6F 06:42AM 10:12AM 05:06AM 1.6F 10:00AM 04:48AM 07:42AM 1.9F 1.3F 07:00AM 07:12AM 0.6F 05:54AM 10:30AM 0.4F 06:48AM 09:48AM 1.5F 10:12A 05:06 1

7

7 2

22 17

7 2 7 2

22 17 22 17

7 2

22 17

7 2

22 17

8

8 3

23 18

8 3 8 3

23 18 23 18

8 3

23 18

8 3

23 18

9

9 4

24 19

9 4 9 4

24 19 24 19

9 4

24 19

9 4

24 19

0

10 5

25 20

10 5 10 5

25 20 25 20

10 5

25 20

10 5

25 20

1

11 6

26 21

11 6 11 6

26 21 26 21 11 speed 6 Current differences and Ratios 26 21

11 6

26 21

09:24AM 12:24PM -0.7E Tu M 09:30AM 09:24AM 12:24PM 12:24PM -0.8E -0.7E 09:12AM 09:30AM 11:54AM 09:24AM 12:24PM -0.5E 12:24PM -0.8E -0.7E 09:54AM 09:12AM 12:36PM 09:30AM 11:54AM 12:24PM 01:12PM -0.5E 04:12PM 09:36AM 09:54AM -1.3E 12:18PM 09:12AM 12:36PM 11:54AM 01:36PM -0.6E 01:12PM -0.5E 04:24PM 10:36AM 04:12PM 09:36AM -1.5E 01:12PM 09:54AM -1.3E 12:18PM -0.5E 12:36PM 01:18PM -0.5E 01:36PM -0.6E 04:06PM 01:12PM 04:24PM 10:36AM -1.1E 04:12PM 09:36AM -1.5E 01:12PM 12:18PM 02:00PM -0.5E 01:18PM -0.5E 04:42PM 01:36PM 04:06PM 04:24P 10:36 -1S M Th M F Th Tu M -0.6E Sa -0.8E F Th Tu -0.5E M Su Sa F Th Tu M Su Sa F -1.3E Th Tu Su -1.0E Min.Tu Min. Min. 12:00AM 0.8F 01:00AM 0.6F Min. 12:42AM 0.6F 01:18AM 0.5F 01:30AM 0.5F

12AM 05:00AM 0.8F 02:42AM 05:06AM 0.5F 03:06AM 05:30AM 0.6F 1.0F 02:42AM 03:18AM -1.0E 05:30AM 0.4F 03:42AM -1.4E 06:00AM 0.6F -1.0E 02:24AM -1.4E 01:54AM -1.1E 02:54AM -1.3E Harbor Bay 03:18PM 06:36PM 03:12PM 03:18PM 06:42PM 06:36PM 1.3F 06:18PM 03:18PM 06:42PM 1.1F 06:36PM 1.3F 02:18AM 1.0F 03:18PM 06:54PM 03:12PM 06:18PM 1.1F 06:42PM 07:36PM 1.1F 02:06AM 10:18PM 1.3F 02:48PM 06:36PM 1.1F 02:36PM 06:54PM 06:18PM 08:00PM 1.1F 07:36PM 10:36PM 1.1F 03:48PM 02:48PM 07:18PM 1.1F 03:18PM 06:36PM 1.1F 1.0F 06:54PM 07:48PM 1.1F 08:00PM 10:06PM 1.1F 07:36PM 10:36PM 03:48PM 0.7F 10:18PM 02:48PM 07:18PM 1.1F 1.1F 08:18PM 1.0F 07:48PM 10:48PM 1.1F 08:00PM 10:06PM 0.8F 10:36P 03:48 0 AM 03:12PM AM AM 02:36PM AM AM 03:18PM AM AM 10:18PM AM AM AM AM AM -6 06:48AM 04:32 AM 0.0 0 1.0F 30 20.2 710:00PM 702:36PM 22 12Baltimore 27 22 12 -0.7E 12 27E-0.6E 27 08:30AM 12EChesapeake 27E 1.1F 12 27E 06:36PM 03:30AM -0.8E 04:06AM 07:24AM -0.8E 03:42AM 06:54AM -0.8E 07:18AM -0.7E 07:12AM -0.8E 08:24AM 54AM 10:48AM -0.9E 07:48AM 08:06AM 11:00AM 08:36AM 08:00AM 1.1F 10:48AM 05:18AM 08:48AM 1.8F 11:30AM -0.6E 1.5F 05:24AM 1.8F 04:48AM 08:42AM 1.7F 06:00AM 09:30AM 1.6F 10:12PM 10:00PM 09:54PM 10:12PM 10:00PM 10:24PM 09:54PM 10:12PM 10:12PM 09:54PM 10:42PM 10:24PM 10:12PM 10:42 705:42AM 22 704:48AM 22 22 AM 04:00AM AM AM 04:00AM AM AM 10:24PM AM AM 10:12PM AM E 7 AM 10:42PM AM AM AM before before before 09:00AM before .0 91 10:53 AM 2.5 10:42AM 76 -0.6E

10:30AM 01:06PM 0.5F 10:42AM 01:48PM 10:06AM 01:24PM 1.0F 0.9F 1.2F 48PM 05:12PM 01:30PM 05:00PM 1.1F 0.8F 05:18PM 11:48AM 01:24PM -1.2E 05:12PM 11:48AM 02:06PM -1.6E 05:48PM 11:54AM 02:54PM -1.3E 12:30PM 03:12PM -1.3E 12:18PM 03:00PM -1.2E 01:00PM 03:36PM -1.1E Approach Entrance Sa Su PM 10:24AM PM 01:48PM PM 10:12AM PM 01:48PM PM PM W F PM PM Th Sa PM PM F PM PM Tu Th W F01:42PM Sa 1.3F Th 02:54PM Su 1.2F F 02:48PM Tu 1.2F 0.2 -6 06:48PM M 1.2F 05:18 0.0 0 -0.9E M Tu Th Su 04:00PM -0.5EPM 05:12PM 08:00PM -0.6E 08:54PM 04:48PM 07:48PM -0.8E 08:24PM -0.7E 08:36PM -1.0E -1.2E Ebb 01:06AM 01:24AM 01:06AM -1.2E -0.9E 01:12AM 01:24AM 01:06AM -1.2E Ebb -0.9E 01:42AM 01:12AM 01:24AM 01:24AM 04:12AM -1.0E 01:30AM 01:42AM 01:12AM 01:30AM -1.1E 01:24AM -1.0E 04:24AM 04:12AM -1.3E 02:00AM -1.0E 01:30AM 01:42AM 12:30AM -1.1E 01:30AM -1.1E 03:24AM 01:24AM 04:24AM -1.0E 04:12AM -1.3E 02:00AM -1.0E 01:30AM 01:42AM -1.0E 12:30AM -1.1E 04:48AM 01:30AM 03:24AM 04:24A -1 Flood Flood Ebb09:06PM Ebb Flood Flood Flood Ebb Flood 36PM 11:42PM -1.1E 08:30PM 11:48PM 06:00PM 08:48PM 1.2F 06:12PM 09:06PM 09:18PM 1.3F 06:24PM 08:48PM 0.8F 06:48PM 09:18PM 0.9F 06:36PM 09:00PM 0.7F 07:12PM 09:42PM 0.9F PM 05:24PM PM E-1.0E PM 05:30PM PM PM 15 PM PM PM E-1.0E PM PM PM PM .3 70 11:18 2.1 64 -1.0E 15 15 30 30 15E-1.1E 15 30 30E-1.1E 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30 15 30EEbb 15 30 30-1.0E 1 04:30AM 07:12AM 0.6F 30 15 05:00AM 04:30AM 07:30AM 07:12AM 0.7F 15 0.6F 05:06AM 05:00AM 07:18AM 04:30AM 07:30AM 0.4F 07:12AM 0.7F 15 0.6F 05:30AM 05:06AM 08:00AM 05:00AM 07:18AM 0.6F 07:30AM 07:12AM 0.4F 10:36AM 0.7F 05:24AM 05:30AM 07:42AM 1.4F 05:06AM 08:00AM 0.5F 07:18AM 07:42AM 0.6F 07:12AM 11:00AM 0.4F 05:42AM 10:36AM 05:24AM 08:24AM 1.8F 05:30AM 07:42AM 1.4F 0.6F 08:00AM 06:42AM 0.5F 07:42AM 10:30AM 0.6F 07:12AM 11:00AM 05:42AM 1.6F 10:36AM 05:24AM 08:24AM 1.8F 1.4F 07:42AM 08:06AM 0.6F 06:42AM 11:18AM 0.5F 07:42AM 10:30AM 1.3F 11:00A 05:42 1 ○ PM ○ 30 ○ ○ 09:36PM 11:06PM 11:06PM 11:48PM 11:24PM 11:12PM

Tu 10:06AM 12:54PM -0.7E W 03:48PM 07:12PM CoveAM Point, 3.9 n.mi. East 05:17 0.1 3 1.0F 310.7F 10:36PM 01:06AM 0.8FAM 02:00AM 12AM 05:48AM 03:30AM 0.5F 0.6F 11:34 2.4 05:54AM 73 04:24AM 07:42AM -0.8EPM 04:54AM 08:06AM -0.8E 42AM 11:36AM 08:30AM 11:18AM Tu-0.9E 05:59 0.1 3 -0.6E Sharp Island Lt., 3.4 n.mi. West 11:12AM 02:00PM 11:18AM 02:30PM 0.9F 30PM 06:00PM 1.3F 0.6F 02:00PM 05:42PM 1.1F W F Th 31 05:06PM 08:00PM -0.6E 09:12PM 05:54PM 08:48PM -0.7E 24PM Thomas Pt. Shoal Lt., 2.0 n.mi. East Th 10:54PM

3

13 8

10:18AM 10:06AM 01:12PM 12:54PM -0.8E -0.7E 09:54AM 10:18AM 12:42PM 10:06AM 01:12PM -0.5E 12:54PM -0.8E Tu F W Tu Sa 03:54PM 07:30PM 07:12PM 1.3F 1.0F 03:54PM 07:00PM 03:48PM 07:30PM 1.1F 07:12PM 1.3F -3:2903:48PM -3:36 -4:0803:12PM -3:44 0.4 11:00PM 10:36PM 10:36PM 10:36PM 01:48AM 0.6F 03:18AM 02:18AM 0.4F 12:06AM -1.2E 12:30AM -1.1E 12:06AM -1.1E 12:06AM AM 11:00PM AM 04:36AM 07:42AM -0.8E 09:18AM -0.7E 04:00AM 06:18AM 0.6F 06:12AM 04:06AM 1.2F 06:12AM 0.4F 06:00AM AM 04:54AM AM 08:00AM E0.4 -1:39 -1:41 -1:57 -1:43 02:12AM 02:12AM -1.2E 10:48AM 02:12PM 1.1F 1.0F 09:00AM 11:48AM -0.7E 12:30PM 08:42AM -1.3E 11:30AM 12:42PM Sa Su PM 11:00AM PM 02:30PM Su -1.2E F 03:36PM M -0.5E Sa 31 Tu W 05:54AM 08:24AM 0.6F 05:54AM 08:24AM 0.6F 05:42PM 08:48PM -0.9E 09:42PM 09:12PM -0.8E 02:30PM 06:12PM 1.2F 06:48PM 02:00PM 1.2F 05:54PM 1.2F 07:06PM PM 06:06PM 11:12AM 11:12AM -1:05 02:00PM -0:14 -0:20 02:00PM ○ -0.7E -0:22Th ● 0.6 -0.7E 09:42PM 09:30PM 04:42PM 08:18PM 1.2F 04:42PM 08:18PM 1.2F

28 23

4 miles02:48AM Southwest 02:06AM Pooles 0.8F Island, 12:06AM 0.6F

13 8 13 8

11:48PM

+0:59 +0:56 12:18AM+0:48 02:48AM 0.6F

-0.7E 10:54AM 09:54AM 01:30PM 10:18AM 12:42PM 01:12PM 01:54PM -0.5E 04:48PM 10:24AM 10:54AM -1.2E 01:06PM 09:54AM 01:30PM 12:42PM 02:30PM -0.5E -0.5E 05:12PM 11:30AM 04:48PM 10:24AM -1.3E 02:06PM 10:54AM -1.2E 01:06PM 01:30PM 02:00PM -0.5E 02:30PM -0.5E 04:54PM 05:12PM 11:30AM -1.0E 04:48PM 10:24AM -1.3E 02:06PM 01:06PM 02:48PM -0.5E 02:00PM -0.5E 05:42PM 02:30PM 04:54PM 05:12P 11:30 -1S F W Tu -0.5E Su -0.8E Sa F W -0.5E Tu M01:54PM Su Sa F -0.5E W Tu M01:54PM Su Sa -1.2E F W M -0.9E 1.0F 04:06PM 03:12PM 07:42PM 03:54PM 07:00PM 1.0F 07:30PM 08:24PM 1.1F 10:54PM 1.3F 03:42PM 07:24PM 0.9F 03:12PM 07:42PM 1.0F 07:00PM 08:54PM 1.0F 08:24PM 11:30PM 1.1F 04:42PM 10:54PM 03:42PM 08:06PM 1.0F 04:06PM 07:24PM 0.9F 0.8F 07:42PM 08:30PM 1.0F 08:54PM 10:54PM 1.0F 08:24PM 11:30PM 04:42PM 0.7F 10:54PM 03:42PM 08:06PM 1.0F 0.7 0.9F 07:24PM 09:00PM 0.8F 08:30PM 11:42PM 1.0F 08:54PM 10:54PM 0.8F 11:30P 04:42 0 0.6 Chesapeake Beach, 1.504:06PM miles North +0:29 +0:48 +0:06 +0:00 1.0 11:12PM 10:36PM 11:00PM 10:54PM 10:36PM 12:06AM 03:06AM 11:24PM 11:12PM 10:54PM 12:36AM 03:30AM 11:24 02:30AM 03:06AM -1.5E 12:36AM -1.1E 0.5F 02:36AM -1.0E -1.3E 02:30AM -1.2E -1.2E AM 12:18AM AM AM 11:12PM AM AM 10:54PM AM AM 11:24PM AM AM AM

23 28 23 28 09:24AM 13E 0.6F 13E 805:30AM -0.7E 09:06AM 04:24AM 1.9F 06:54AM 1.6F 06:18AM 09:42AM 1.7F 09:24AM 1.7F 06:48AM 10:06AM 1.4F 805:18AM 23 AM 05:00AM AM 08:06AM AM AM 28 E 23 AM AM +0:32 AM PM 28 E 1.2 AM PM 0.5 Channel, +0:38 -1.2E 2.2 02:12AM -1.2E (bridge tunnel) +0:05 02:18AM 05:18AM 02:42AM -1.0E +0:19 02:18AM 05:18AM -1.2E 02:42AM -1.0E 02:18AM 05:18A 10:54AMChesapeake 02:36PM 1.3F

11:48PM

03:36PM 09:42AM 12:24PM 12:36PM 03:24PM -1.2E M PM 31-1.6E PM PM PM Th W -0.6E 31 F07:06PM 05:54AM 08:24AM 0.6F 09:30PM -1.1E 09:30PM 09:54PM 03:00PM 1.2F 06:36PM 0.8F PM 06:18PM E 1.1F PM 11:12AM 02:00PM -0.7E 0.6 Th PM Stingray Point, 12.5 miles East Th 10:00PM 11:54PM 04:42PM 08:18PM 1.2F 11:48PM

01:18PM -1.2E 12:54PM 03:36PM -1.2E 01:42PM PM PM F 0.7F PM 11:54AM PM 1.6F PM PM Sa M 31 03:54PM 31 31 31 04:18PM 31-1.0E Sa Su 08:36AM 11:54AM 06:24AM 09:12AM 1.6F 08:36AM 06:24AM 0.7F 08:36AM 11:54A 06:24 07:36PM 10:06PM 0.9F 07:18PM 09:42PM 0.8F 09:12AM 07:54PM 10:24PM 0.8F PM PM 06:12PM 03:24PM 12:30PM 03:00PM -0.5E 03:24PM 12:30PM 03:00PM 03:24PM 12:30 Tu 06:12PM Th +2:36 Tu Th PM Tu 06:12P +2:18 +3:00 -1.1E +2:09 1.2 -1.1E 0.6 -0.5E 09:36PM 05:42PM 08:54PM 0.7F 09:36PM 05:42PM 08:54PM 0.7F 09:36PM 05:42

+1:12 03:06AM 0.6 0.4F 0.8 01:18AMSmith Point 0.5F Light,02:54AM 6.7 n.mi.-1.0E East +2:29 +2:57 +2:4512:00AM +1:59 0.3 12:48AM 03:30AM 03:06AM 0.5 -1.2E AM E 12:54AM 03:48AM -1.1E AM E AM E 01:24AM 04:18AM -1.0E AM 09:48AM 1.6F 07:12AM 10:30AM 1.5F 06:18AM 10:06AM 1.7F 07:36AM 10:54AM 1.3F AM AM AM AM AM AM AM AM Turkey Point, 1.2 n.mi. Southwest +2:39 +1:30 +0:58 +1:00 0.6 0.8 Point No Point, 4.3 n.mi. East +4:49 +5:33 +6:04 +5:45 0.4 11:54AM 02:54PM 0.8F 11:54AM 03:12PM 0.9F 11:30AM 03:00PM 1.2F 11:36AM 03:12PM 1.1F 11:42AM 03:30PM 1.3F 30AM 12:24PM -0.8E Th Sa 09:12AM 11:54AM -0.5E F 09:54AM 12:36PM -0.6E 01:12PM 04:12PM 09:36AM -1.3E 12:18PM 01:36PM 04:24PM 10:36AM -1.5E 01:12PM -0.5E 01:18PM 04:06PM -1.1E 02:00PM 04:42PM -1.0E 01:36PM 04:24PM -1.2E 02:18PM 05:12PM -1.0E Su M Tu AM PMof E-0.5E PM PM AM PM E Su AM PM E available AM PMthe E 0.2 AM PM M information Sa Tu Su Th Fbased Sa Su disclaimer: These data are based disclaimer: upon the latest These data are available based upon disclaimer: as the the latest date These information of data your are request, available based and upon as may disclaimer: of the the differ latest date from information These of the your published data request, available are tidal and as may current disclaimer: upon of differ the the tables. date latest from These of the your information published data request, are based tidal and may current disclaimer: upon as differ of the tables. the latest from These date information of data published your are request, available based tidal and current upon as may of the tables the differ late d W Th Sa M Tu 06:06PM 09:00PM 06:36PM 09:36PM 06:36PM 09:42PM -1.1E 10:18PM -0.9E 10:36PM 10:18PM -1.1E 10:06PM 12PM 06:42PM 1.3F -0.7E 02:36PM 06:18PM 1.1F -0.8E 03:18PM 06:54PM 1.1F 07:36PM 02:48PM 1.1F 06:36PM 1.1F 08:00PM 03:48PM 1.1F 07:18PM 1.0F 07:48PM 0.7F 08:18PM 10:48PM 0.8F 08:00PM 10:30PM 0.9F 08:36PM 11:12PM 0.8F PM 06:48PM PM 10:00PM PM 07:06PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM 12PM 09:54PM 10:24PM 10:12PM 10:42PM Generated on: Tue dec 04 20:17:30 Generated uTCon: 2018 Tue dec 20:17:30 Generated uTCon: 2018 Tue dec 04 20:17:30 Generated uTC 2018 on: Generated uTC 2018 Page Tue5dec ofto 504 20:20:19 Generated on: 2018 Page Tue5dec of 504 20:20:19 uTC Corrections Applied to 04 Batlimore Harbor Approach Corrections Applied Chesapeake Bay Entrance PM PM Tue dec 04 20:20:19 PM on: PM uTC PM

12:36AM -1.2E 12:30AM -1.0E 12:54AM -1.2E 01:00AM 03:48AM -1.0E 12:48AM 12:48AM 03:48AM -1.4E 01:18AM AM AM AM 406AM 904:48AM 24 14 904:18AM 29 24 14 0.6F 14 10:00AM 29E-1.1E 29 10:12AM 14E-1.1E 05:24AM 08:36AM 05:42AM 08:48AM 05:30AM 08:36AM -0.8E -0.6E -0.7E 06:42AM 0.7F -0.8E 06:36AM 0.5F -0.8E 04:48AM 07:12AM 1.3F 07:00AM 0.4F 06:48AM 05:06AM 1.9F 07:42AM 0.6F 906:42AM 24 905:54AM AM 05:42AM AM 08:42AM AM 05:54AM AM 09:00AM

29 24

14 9

29 24

12:06AM 03:12AM 0.8F 01:00AM 03:36AM 0.6F 01:18AM 03:42AM 0.6F 01:42AM 04:00AM 0.4F 02:12AM 04:24AM 0.5F 03:24AM -1.0E AM E 10:30AM 1.6F AM AM 12:30PM 03:42PM 12:24PM 03:48PM 12:12PM 03:48PM 1.3F 12:06PM 03:54PM 1.1F 12:30PM 1.3F 04:54PM 18AM 01:12PM -0.8E 0.9F 09:54AM 12:42PM -0.5E 1.0F 10:54AM 01:30PM 01:54PM 04:48PM 10:24AM -1.2E 01:06PM -0.5E 02:30PM 05:12PM 11:30AM -1.3E 02:06PM 02:00PM -1.0E Tu W AM PM E AM PM 04:18PM AM PM SaE F Su Sa M Tu -0.5E Su W M F E-0.5E Th F08:54PM Su 06:54PM 10:00PM 07:12PM 10:24PM 07:24PM 10:36PM -1.1E 10:54PM 07:30PM 10:42PM -1.0E 07:54PM 11:06PM -1.2E 54PM 07:30PM 1.3F -0.9E 03:12PM 07:00PM 1.1F -0.9E 04:06PM 07:42PM 1.0F 08:24PM 03:42PM 0.9F 07:24PM 1.0F 11:30PM 04:42PM 1.0F 08:06PM 0.8F 08:30PM 10:54PM 0.7F ublished tide tables. PM PM PM PM PM PM 00PM 10:36PM 11:12PM 10:54PM 11:24PM PM PM PM

04:48AM -1.0E AM E 12:54AM 03:54AM -1.2E AM E 02:12AM 05:18AM -0.9E AM 11:18AM 1.3F 07:12AM 10:54AM 1.6F 08:18AM 11:36AM 1.2F AM AM AM AM AM AM 02:48PM 05:42PM -0.9E 02:18PM 05:18PM -1.2E 03:00PM 06:12PM -1.0E AM PM E AM PM E W AM PM Su M M Tu November 2019 53 09:00PM FishTalkMag.com 11:42PM 0.8F 08:42PM 11:24PM 1.0F 09:24PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM

01:12AM 04:06AM 01:48AM 04:24AM 02:12AM -1.2E 0.8F 654AM 07:06AM 10:06AM 07:12AM 10:06AM 08:24AM 0.6F -0.9E 11 Page 5 of 5

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01:24AM -1.2E 01:12AM -1.0E 01:42AM -1.1E 01:24AM 04:12AM -1.0E 01:30AM 01:30AM 04:24AM -1.3E 02:00AM 12:30AM AM AM 500AM 10 25 15 10 30 25 15 0.6F 15 10:36AM 30E-1.1E 30 11:00AM 15E-1.0E 06:12AM 09:18AM 06:24AM 09:30AM 06:24AM 09:24AM -0.8E -0.6E -0.7E 07:30AM 0.7F -0.9E 05:06AM 07:18AM 0.4F -0.7E 05:30AM 08:00AM 07:12AM 05:24AM 1.4F 07:42AM 0.5F 07:42AM 05:42AM 1.8F 08:24AM 0.6F 06:42AM 10 25 10 AM 06:30AM AM 09:24AM AM 06:54AM AM 09:48AM

01:12PM 04:24PM 12AM 02:00PM -0.7E 1.1F M 07:48PM 10:54PM -1.0E

0.6F -0.7E 12:54PM 04:24PM 1.1F Tu 07:54PM 11:06PM -1.0E

26

02:12AM 07:12AM 12:54PM 08:06PM

04:36AM 10:06AM 04:36PM F 11:24PM

0.6F 11 11-0.8E AM 1.3F -1.2E

02:30AM 0.4F 05:18AM 03:00AM -1.2E 02:42AM AM 04:42AM E 02:18AM AM 05:12AM E-1.0E 0.5F 07:12AM -0.6E 11:54AM 08:36AM 06:24AM 1.6F 09:12AM 0.7F -0.7E AM 10:06AM AM 07:48AM AM 10:42AM

31 26 31 26

11

01:42AM 30 25 08:06AM

AM

1.2F 1.3F AM 03:24PM 12:30PM -1.1E 03:00PM W Th AM 12:42PM PM 04:30PM AM 01:18PM PM 05:00PM E-0.5E ThE Sa Tu 06:12PM M 08:06PM 11:24PM -1.1E

08:36PM 11:54PM -1.2E

AM AM PM

E

E Tu

15 10

AM AM

AM AM PM

E

11

E W

30 25

AM AM

12:00AM 0.8F AM E AM 03:00AM 06:18AM -0.8E AM AM AM 09:00AM 12:18PM 1.1F PM TuE Th PM PM

31 26


Charters, Guides, and Headboats

O

ne of the most difficult ways to learn how to fish the Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean is trial and error. Then there’s the boat issue; we don’t all have one. Luckily, the Bay is full of knowledgeable guides and charter captains ready to show you the ropes. Below you will find a directory of professional guides, charter boats, and head boats to get you started on your quest for the perfect fish. Whether you like to fly fish, troll, or bottom fish, there’s likely a local expert who can lend a hand. c o astal

M iddle B ay

Capt. Monty’s Morning Star

CHARTERS. FISHING. CRUISES.

(410) 520-2076

Located at Eastport Yacht Center

“The O.C. Partyboat That's US Coast Guard Never Crowded!” Licensed US Coast Guard LicensedGear, Tackle & Precision Fishing on MD’s Coral Reefs

Licenses provided 10 Years Experience on the Chesapeake Up to 6 passengers All Gear, Tackle & Licenses provided

m or nings t arfi s h i n g .c oUpm to 6 passengers

Contact Ray & Michelle 443-336-7853

M iddle B ay

Vickie Ann Charters Capt Bob Flynn 301-675-4769

Paradise Marina, Deale, MD

vickieanncharters.com

Contact Ray & Michelle 443-336-7853

Patent Pending Charters

DEEP SEA FISHING HALF DAY, FULL DAY, AND CHARTERS

46’ Markley • 6 Person Capacity

Call Today 410-430-8420

410.703.3246

Capt. John Whitman Herrington Harbor North • Deale, MD

patentpendingcharters.com • patentpendingcharters@gmail.com

judithmfishingoc.com

443-280-4410

www.pennysuecharters.com Capt. Mike Smolek

USCG LiCenSed 1048 turkey point rd · edgewater, Md 21037

l o wer B ay

upper bay

Drizzle Bar Charters

Penny Sue Charters private & instructional charters

Fishing · Cruises Private Parties

Boat Rental · Fishing · touRs & sightseeing

Captain Stan Gold

Kentmorr Marina • Stevensville, MD

b l i n d d at e c h ar t e r s . com | 757-944-0850

Captain George Bentz 410.428.7110 drizzlebarcharters@verizon.net • drizzlebarcharters.com

P o t o mac M iddle B ay Guided fishing trips & Custom Rod Builders

Private Charters • Herrington Harbor North poTomac cReeK LLc

Capt. Mike Sielicki & Capt. Chris Evans

SnakeheadS | CatfiSh | RoCkfiSh | CRappieS

f i s h a p e x . c o m 540-408-3113 Deale, MD

301.752.3535 • BackdraftCharters.com

tangier S o und

Tricia Ann II ChArTer FIshIng Captain Billy Gee Book Your Trip Deale, MD

FishEbbTideCharters.com

TodaY!!!

Join Capt. Wayne Schuhart for a great day on the Bay! at ROD ‘N’ REEL DOCK Chesapeake Beach, MD

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

triciaanncharterfishing.com

F or l i nks , v i s i t fishtal k mag . c o m / charter - fishing - guide 54 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com


BROKERAGE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS donations CCA MARYLAND’s Scholarship Fund Asks your help to raise money by donating your boat. This charitable act will contribute money to the University of Maryland’s Marine Estuarine Environmental Sciences Program and support graduate students earning MS and PhD degrees using the Chesapeake Bay as the living laboratory for their work. Call Pete Abbott, 443 871 5342 or for details email abbottgru@aol.com

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

26’ Back Cove ‘07 Down East style, built in Maine. Comfortable, efficient & beautiful lines. Single 210-hp Yanmar dsl and bow thruster. Asking $92,500. Call Matt Weimer at (410) 212-2628 or matt@annapolisyachtsales.com

Strike –36’ Pacemaker ’72 - $16,500 Lars Bergstrom 910-899-7941 lars@curtisstokes.net – www.curtisstokes.net

power 19’ Grady White 192 Freedom ’15 Bow rider with low hours on a Yamaha 150. Complete with bimini. $39,147 Contact: Tad Wood at 410-693-8693 or tad@annapolisyachtsales.com

(Courageous) 27’ Judge ’00 $42,500 David Robinson (410) 310 8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

37’ Topaz Sportfisherman ’88 44’ Tiara 44 Coupe ’15 $650,000. Great fishing boat. Tower, tuna door, Annapolis. x2 Volvo IPS 600s large baitwell, new hull paint, (590 hrs). Powered sunroof. cockpit outriggers, twin trolling valves. Come entertainment center. Garmin Glass see it now! Asking $81,000 OBO. Call cockpit technology. To schedule a Shaun Guevarra at 443-679-2244 or showing please contact Bob Wagner at shaun@AnnapolisYachtSales.com 484-832-3331 or bob@cyc.yachts 46’ Prestige 460S DEMO $799,000. X2 Volvo IPD 600s. Tremendous Value. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts

Key West 1900 CC Sportsman ‘05 W/2005 115-hp Johnson 2-stroke, T-Top, live bait well, depth sounder fish finder, bow cushion & rear seat, pole holders on boat & T-Top. Load Rite trailer w/spare. $9,200. 410 708-5024. 20’ 2011 Stingray 208lr ’11 Comes with trailer, covers, stereo, 27’ Shamrock ’01 $25,000 merc 4.3, gps, carpets, forward David Robinson - (410) 310 8855 boarding ladder, $21,999 Waterfront david@curtisstokes.net Marine 443-949-9041. www.curtisstokes.net Robalo 222ex ’18 Robalo 222 cc, 28’ Edgewater 280 ’16 Very low gps, stereo, t-top, ski tow, forward hrs; complete w/ most options; back rest, leaning post, Yamaha 200 This impressive hull design is with 15 hours, with transferable still in production so purchase warranty, $54,999 Waterfront Marine this boat at below replacement 443-949-9041. cost. Asking $195,000. Contact: Tad Wood at 410-693-8693 or 23’ Pro-Line Se Series ‘11 A one tad@annapolisyachtsales.com owner Center Console with only 140 hrs T-Top w/ canvas & aft cooler. Suzuki 200-hp 4S DF outboard motor. Has dual axel trailer. Asking $31,900 OBO. Call KT. Nesbitt at 443-3704720 or email kt@annapolisyachtsales.com 24’ Chaparral 246 SSI ’18 Located in Edgewater beautiful condition custom GPS unit - $77,900 Waterfront Marine 443-949-9041 (Chesapeake) 30’ Pursuit ’01 $79,900 David Robinson (410) 310 8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

25’ May-Craft ’17 $95,800 Mark Welsh (410)645 0007 mark@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

Sea Ducer - 43’ Trojan ’87 - $129,000 David Robinson - 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net

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

Out N About - 37’ Tiara - ’98 $125,000 Mary Catherine Ciszewski 804-815-8238 marycatherine@curtisstokes.net www.curtisstokes.net 39’ HCB 38 Speciale ’18 DEMO MSRP $777,000. Baltimore. Triple Yamaha 350 engines. Custom T Top. Transom Bait/Prep Station. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

My Island Lady – 47’ Buddy Davis ’86 $339,000 David Robinson 410-310-8855 david@curtisstokes.net

47’ Maine Power Cat ’14 Incredible custom cherry Interior, twin Volvo 220 hp (3.3gph @8.3 kts) , bow thruster, Garmin instruments, AB Oceanus 42’ HCB 42 Siesta ’18 DEMO tender w/40hp plus plus. Asking $827,647. To see this unique custom MSRP $999,000. Baltimore. Quad yacht call (804) 436 4484 or email. Yamaha 350 engines. Helm Master jonathan@annapolisyachtsales.com joystick. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 50’ Beneteau Monte Carlo MC 5 ’15 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts $749,900. Annapolis, MD. x2 Volvo IPS 600s (300 hrs). Cockpit docking station. 42’ Keizer 42 DEMO ’19 $699,000. hydraulic swim platform w/ In-laid Baltimore. Twin Volvo 400s, Sleeps 4. chalks. custom stereo system. Cockpit Galley. Tremendous savings. Motivated sellers. To schedule a To schedule a showing please showing please contact Ian Dimka at contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

To find more used boats, visit fishtalkmag.com

50’ Prestige 500S ‘16 $799,000. Middle River, MD. x2 Volvo IPS 600s (215 hrs). Cockpit docking station, hydraulic swim platform, Williams Jet Tender in tender garage. To schedule a showing please contact Brad Heil at 443-262-1760 or brad@cyc.yachts

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

FishTalkMag.com November 2019 55


Brokerage & Classified 52’ Prestige 520S ’18 DEMO $999,000. Baltimore. New Yacht Warranties. Amazing Buying opportunity. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts 53’ HCB 53 Sueños ’18 DEMO MSRP $1,823,000. Baltimore. Quad Yamaha 350 engines. Helm Master joystick. Seakeeper. cockpit summer kitchen. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts 55’ Prestige 550 Fly ’14. $874,900. Kent Island. Like new cond, Only 230 hrs. Engine/Pod warranty through July 2019. 3 strms, 2 heads. Single owner, motivated seller. To schedule a showing please contact Ian Dimka at 410-693-7386 or ian@cyc.yachts

56’ Prestige 550HT Fly ’17. $1,120,000. Kent Island. Hard Top. Engine warranties through 10/21, Pods through 10/22. Well maintained. Only 150 hrs. To schedule a showing please contact Brad Heil at 443-262-1760 or brad@cyc.yachts

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56’ Prestige 560 Fly ’17 TRADE $1,099,099. Baltimore. Like new cond.. Yacht/Engine warranty through November 19. x2 Cummins 600-hp. 380 hrs. To schedule a showing please contact Chesapeake Yacht Center at 410.823.BOAT or sales@cyc.yachts

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

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

Ad Copy:

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

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

56 November 2019 FishTalkMag.com

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


MARKETPLACE & CLASSIFIED SECTIONS

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

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

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

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

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FishTalkMag.com November 2019 57


Biz Buzz New President

Annapolis Yacht Sales (AYS) announces the appointment of Mark Andrews as president. Mark has extensive knowledge and years of experience in the marine industry. He moved to the Chesapeake Bay area 20 years ago and became involved in marina and marine service management as well as boat brokerage, working with Island Yacht Brokers, Gratitude Yachts, and S&J Yachts in Annapolis. With experience in both sail and powerboats, Mark possesses the passion for the marine industry combined with the skills and experience to help maintain Annapolis Yacht Sales’ position as one of the region’s premier yacht sales, brokerage, and service providers. Mark and his partner Lori reside by the water in Annapolis with their three dogs and enjoy as much time as possible enjoying the Bay on their EdgeWater 245 CX (purchased through AYS). “Mark Andrews is the final piece in our two year transformation plan. We have worked hard to build out our infrastructure and develop metrics. The only thing we were missing was a leader with a solid background and reputation in the marine industry, and Mark Andrews is that individual. I am extremely happy he has decided to jump in to run the AYS team!” said Rob Taishoff, CEO of Annapolis Yacht Sales. annapolisyachtsales.com

Acquisitions

Snag-A-Slip, the online boat slip reservation service, announces it has acquired SlipSure, the largest app for instant and same day boater bookings. “Snag-A-Slip’s mission is to make booking slips seamless and as easy as possible for both boaters and marinas. The acquisition of SlipSure accelerates our mission by increasing the number of partner marinas that let boaters instantly book,” said Dan Cowens, founder and CEO of Snag-A-Slip. Sherrie Norton, co-founder of SlipSure, says: “We all know why we like Hotel Tonight, Airbnb, Uber, and other apps. They have a way of giving us more choices, while simplifying those choices. She adds, “This is exactly what we set out to do when we created SlipSure. We are delighted to take this vision to new heights with Snag-A-Slip.” Paul and Sherrie Norton will be joining the Snag-A-Slip Advisory Board. snagaslip.com; slipsure.com

Authorized Dealer

Sunseeker USA Sales Co. Inc. announces the appointment of a new authorized dealer, Grande Yachts International, a subsidiary of OneWater Marine, the USA’s fastest growing dealership group. OneWater Marine will serve new and existing clients in various states and regions of America including Boston, the Chesapeake Bay, Florida (excluding Miami and Monroe County), and a number of the southern states. The announcement is part of Sunseeker’s continuing focus on strengthening and developing its international dealer network. Sean Robertson, president of Sunseeker USA Sales Co. Inc, comments: “I am delighted to welcome OneWater Marine to the Sunseeker family along with its subsidiary retail brands including Grande Yachts International. We continue to invest in our distributor network throughout the region to ensure the delivery of our world-class sales and customer service. This announcement is coupled with a major new product development plan for Sunseeker which will see the range double in size to 22 models over the next three years. sunseeker.com; grandeyachts.com

President and CEO

CMP Group announces the appointment of Don Hambly as its new president and chief executive officer. Don has held executive positions in companies such as Cap Gemini, Ernst & Young, A.O. Smith, and Olon Industries. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering, plus an MBA from the Ivey Business School. Don is highly experienced in overseeing strategic growth initiatives, spearheading supply chain and manufacturing transformation, and leading new acquisitions. Don’s appointment is a reflection of CMP Group’s vision to deliver world-class products and services to its customers around the world. CMP is a leading manufacturer and provider of marine, construction, and industrial products via world class brands such as Martyr, Dock Edge+, Rocna, Titan, Seaguard, and Octopus. cmpgroup.net

New Dealer

Albemarle Boats announces the appointment of Rhode River Boat Sales as its exclusive sales and service dealer for the state of Maryland and the Washington, DC, metro area. “Fishermen have long recognized Albemarle Boats for their rock-solid construction and unparalleled offshore performance, but I am most proud of the long-term customer relationships that we have built over the past four decades,” stated Albemarle general manager Burch Perry. “Brian Conner is a marine industry veteran, and he has built Rhode River Boat Sales on these same customer-focused principles… We are confident that Rhode River will prove to be a huge asset and will further strengthen our growing dealer network.” Conner commented on the newly formed relationship as well: “I have known Burch for years and have been watching the recent evolution of the Albemarle product line. Albemarle Boats provide a soft ride and superior protection from the elements, extending the season and allowing boating and fishing even when the weather keeps others at the dock. We think Albemarle will be a great fit and meet the needs of both fishermen and families here on the Bay.” albemarleboats.com; rhoderiverboatsales.net

Anniversary

Hinckley Yacht Services recently celebrated its one-year anniversary in Annapolis with an open house at its facility at Whitehall Marina on Whitehall creek. In October of 2018, Hinckley announced the expansion of its service operation to the Annapolis area to better serve the upper Chesapeake region. Part of the celebration included announcements of dealerships and service for Mercury and Yamaha outboards, as well as winter YachtCare and storage packages. At the event, general manager Charlie Petosa stated, “This expansion builds upon Hinckley’s existing location in Oxford. Our first year of operation has been well received and is a tremendous success.” For more information contact cpetosa@hinckleyyachts. hinckleyyachts.com

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


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The HCB Speciale is a 39 foot family-friendly center console yacht that comes standard with everything you need and some.

Discover the HCB Experience

410.823.BOAT

RGB Values:

CMYK Values:

sa les@cyc .yac hts

33/40/66

173/215/222

90/81/45/49

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Stepping aboard you will immediately notice the spacious aft layout and rear facing lounge seat that easily converts to a tackle station. The bow is perfect for fishing or entertaining with removable seat cushions, cocktail table and large forward-facing lounge. With a top cruising speed of over 60 miles per hour, this yacht exemplifies the finest combination of cutting edge performance, innovation, quality, and pure beauty. In an HCB, get ready to live out your dream. // hcbyachts.com


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