Scenic USA - Maryland Tilghman Island |
Photo by Scott Dommin Scott Dommin Photography |
Watermen, lighthouses, skipjacks and seafood, words you'll find intertwined with Maryland's Eastern Shore and Chesapeake Bay vocabularies.
Here on Tilgham Island, visitors will find true working villages, and home to the last fleet of skipjack sailing vessels. Designed with a wide beam, low gunwales, easy to handle and able to take a strong wind, the skipjack was well suited for the bay area. During its heyday, a few thousand dotted the Chesapeake Bay. Seafood prices and dwindling harvests significantly trimmed the skipjack fleet. With today's penchant for seafood, it's quite possible the skipjack will make a comeback.
Here at Dogwood Harbor, home to a few restored skipjacks, guests will find excellent seafood, fishing and sail charters, and some of the state's last watermen. Well-known for working the bay, watermen scoured the Chesapeake for crabs, oysters, eels and fin fish. Although oyster diving may have been around for centuries, the practice is aided by scuba gear today.
At one time, more than 75 separate lighthouses marked many of the bay points, harbors and side estuary entrances. Today, lighthouse fans are able to see more than two dozen lighthouses that still operate on Chesapeake. Here on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, you'll find there's plenty to see and experience.
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