Possibly the tallest ship to ever enter the Chesapeake Bay passed underneath the twin spans of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge this afternoon. I spent the morning fishing then stayed out to get some photos. I decided to leave the kayak at home today and head out from Sandy Point in my Scout center console. I fished for 4 hours, jigging pilings and finding fish in open water 2 miles south of the bridge where I left them on Mon. I caught at least 25 rockfish today, and probably more. The disappointing part was that most were 10"-14" and the largest was 16".
I first got near the ship about 12:30 as it was opposite the lower end of Kent Island. At that point there were only about 20 spectator boats around. I was able to ride all the way around (keeping a wide set-back distance) and get photos from various angles without other peoples' boats in the foreground.
The ship is Chinese and is transporting 4 gigantic cranes that will be installed at the marine shipping terminal in Baltimore. There are only a few other ports in the world that have cranes as large as these. The loaded ship was 14 stories tall (approximately 140 ft above the water level). There was some concern as to whether the tips of the cranes could clear the bridge.
I left the ship and rode up to the bridge and caught a few rockfish while waiting for the ship to approach the bridge. By that time, they were easily hundreds of spectator boats on all sides. It seemed to me that the ship stopped just short of the first bridge for about 10 minutes, then began inching forward. It was quite a spectacle.
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I first got near the ship about 12:30 as it was opposite the lower end of Kent Island. At that point there were only about 20 spectator boats around. I was able to ride all the way around (keeping a wide set-back distance) and get photos from various angles without other peoples' boats in the foreground.
The ship is Chinese and is transporting 4 gigantic cranes that will be installed at the marine shipping terminal in Baltimore. There are only a few other ports in the world that have cranes as large as these. The loaded ship was 14 stories tall (approximately 140 ft above the water level). There was some concern as to whether the tips of the cranes could clear the bridge.
I left the ship and rode up to the bridge and caught a few rockfish while waiting for the ship to approach the bridge. By that time, they were easily hundreds of spectator boats on all sides. It seemed to me that the ship stopped just short of the first bridge for about 10 minutes, then began inching forward. It was quite a spectacle.
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