- #1
Thread Owner
Your input is appreciated. First, I was in Delaware at several spots over this past weekend and talked to someone who had been detecting the beach a lot longer than me. Of course, in the good old days, there were more coins than now. Also back then, he stated there was a great fishing hotspot just offshore on a pile of rocks (the ballast from the Faithful Steward or Three Brothers), both of which went down close to each other in the 18th century. Anyway he stated the rock piles were no longer there, the fish left too.
It took me two days to figure out I knew where there is an "undiscovered" rock pile full of fish in the Chesapeake.
There is a spot, visible on my little boat's sonar, which apparently is a rock pile in 14' of water in the bay. The fish love it. It's at a river mouth, and near a very very busy place.
I haven't fished it in three years, but think could locate it precisely with gps in a day if I wanted to. Now, I'm really sure I don't dive, nor will start, and there must be a zillion laws
against disturbing a shipwreck site in Maryland.
Anyway, question is this, any way to determine if it is indeed a shipwreck without getting wet? That water has maybe a 4' visibility factor. On a good day. The pile is about 20' x 10', or less. I wonder if that's big enough for a ballast pile.
Thanks.
It took me two days to figure out I knew where there is an "undiscovered" rock pile full of fish in the Chesapeake.
There is a spot, visible on my little boat's sonar, which apparently is a rock pile in 14' of water in the bay. The fish love it. It's at a river mouth, and near a very very busy place.
I haven't fished it in three years, but think could locate it precisely with gps in a day if I wanted to. Now, I'm really sure I don't dive, nor will start, and there must be a zillion laws
against disturbing a shipwreck site in Maryland.
Anyway, question is this, any way to determine if it is indeed a shipwreck without getting wet? That water has maybe a 4' visibility factor. On a good day. The pile is about 20' x 10', or less. I wonder if that's big enough for a ballast pile.
Thanks.