Skipjack Wilma Lee Comes Home to the Chesapeake Bay
The historic skipjack Wilma Lee has come home to the Chesapeake from Ocracoke Island.
The historic skipjack Wilma Lee has come home to the Chesapeake from Ocracoke Island.
The Bay is filled with gunkholes for any boat, but the shallow waters of the Chesapeake make it especially inviting to multihulls.
The Maryland DNR advises commercial and recreational anglers, boaters and watermen to avoid the Susquehanna River and Upper Chesapeake Bay over the next few days due to the heavy water flows
Connecting with nature at the Chesapeake Bay Environmental Center aka CBEC in Grasonville, MD, on Kent Island.
The launching of Eve, a privately built 20-foot log canoe on the banks of the St. Mary's River.
For the first time since the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Chesapeake Bay Report Card scores have been calculated, the positive trajectory is now statistically significant.
Some facts about the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries courtesy of the Chesapeake Bay Program.
Family weekend trip prep and five ways to make it easier on a busy family who's committed to sailing but still needs to get stuff done.
Four lessons learned while writing a book about the Chesapeake Bay. ~by Tom Pelton
There is comfort in knowing that even in moments of solitude, there is a network of sailors ready to lend a hand, provide advice, or share a drink, becasue sometimes sailors yearn for fun and shared experiences.