has anyone w/4 1/2'' draft used the inside route between O.C.,Md. and Cape Charles, Va.? where who one find info on this mater?
I plotted it out years ago as a backup plan in case the ocean kicked up while in Ocean City, but never had the need to go there. Also never heard of any transporters doing it, but for us it's all about time. According to my charts there's a few places with 4'-6' depth, but you should be able to make it. Unless it's your destination though, I can't imagine why you'd go that way. It's definitely the slow way to go, plenty of chances to meet the bottom, limited services, and not the most picturesque or interesting. 4'6" draft tells me your probably over 45'. I'd check marina's along there to see if any can accomodate you, and get some local knowledge, before trying it. I don't think any cruising guides cover it, but the chart kits do.
I've never done it, but if you plan on doing it, it sounds risky. I would attempt it at near high tide and rising if I HAD to do it.
A friend up in Del. asked me about it.. he was thinking about going that way on his way south after the holidays,if needed..Two years ago he said he was stuck in O.C. for a week and was tempted to try it ... I remember in the late 60's , 3 SF ,on there way south from the N.E. got tired of the weather while stuck in O C and ran that route to Norfolk ..But the water was about 5' higher than normal... they made it O K , but the lead boat's skipper was sort of a daredevil..
By "inside" you mean NOT up the Delaware Bay, across the canal, and then down the Chesapeake? IOW, some combination of Chincoteague Bay, etc.? -Chris
As said, in all these years I've never had the need, although I've always been prepared. I'd rather wait out the weather in O.C. or better still head up to the C&D if there's ay question about weather. If it's blowing hard enough to get me thinking of the inside there, I'd be concerned about it blowing the water off the shoals or push me onto them inside.
I've never heard of anybody doing it in anything bigger than a 20' boat (Jet ski, kayak, etc). I'm not 100% sure they made it the whole way either. Might have hauled out at a ramp near the end. I suppose you could do it in a larger boat but you'd need a boat that can run aground and sit on the sand while waiting for the tide to change.
Basically not passable. Some areas bare at low tide, many with controlling depth <3ft. CG has been considering officially discontinuing the Virginia Inside Passage and has stopped maintaining the ATONs, so many are missing, broken or off station. Dredging only takes place at major inlets, such as Chincoteague.
thank you Caltexflanc. You gave me information that 3 government and 2 state agencies failed to provide...
You're welcome, however a lot of the same info is available on the charts, Coast Pilot and the Local Notices To Mariners, enough to pretty much have come to the same conclusion without the additional local knowledge. I'm curious, did you try calling the CG at Chincoteague and Ocean City?
i called O.C. and they refereed me to district...District refereed me back to O. C. O. C. basically told me they can not give out any info other than what is published in Notice to Mariners...Liability ????
Welcome to dealing with the military. lol. It's all in the book. Independent thinking not encouraged....liability, responsibility. What they say has to be right. If you want local knowledge, call the local Sea Tow franchise or charter boats in the area.
i found that the depth stated on a chart is not always correct.. That's why I asked if anyone had hands on information ..
Good move. When you have the chance take a look at the date of your chart. Odds are it's from the 1980's. The Notices to Mariners should be up to the date of your publication, but even that's not really accurate. Nothing beats local knowledge. In areas prone to shoaling, they tend to change with every good storm and certainly with each change of season. Such are the sand bottoms on the east coast. Up here on Moriches Bay, there's a bunch of us who get several phone calls each summer from people wanting to know this year's conditions. Some years you'll pass the inlet with a 6' draft, others you'll dig bottom with 3'. Some years the channel is over here, and some it's over there. Sea Tow keeps busy.
True. But I try to avoid those inlets such as Oregon inlet. I generally utilize ones with ship channels that always stay the same if I can, or ones that are natural deep river outlets that don't shift......