Attention on deck! Daily photos are no longer being updated on The Dinghy Dock...
Visit my other blog,
"ORIENTAL DAILY PHOTO"
for my almost daily photos of Oriental/Pamlico County/ Local Waterways...
Thanks for coming aboard!
-Capt. Ben
Monday, July 28, 2008
Saturday, July 26, 2008
7.26- Seven Boats Rafting
These seven sailboats were rafting in Oriental harbor anchorage earlier this evening.
This weekend brings the Rotary Club's Tarpon (that's a fish) Tournament to town, and while powered fishing vessels full of anglers dominate the harbor scene, this group of sailboats from New Bern NC, Hampton Roads VA, Boston MA, and somewhere in MD dropped anchors, rafted together, and had a big party. After an hour or so, the boats dispersed.
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Thursday, July 24, 2008
7.24- "Southern Lady" under tow
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Monday, July 21, 2008
7.21- Amazing Grace, She Needs a Fix, To Save a Wrecked Port-Pole
"Amazing Grace" isn't out shrimping today... she is tied up at Point Pride Seafood with a maimed port-side outrigger.
Shrimp trawlers suspend nets, attached with cables, from the boat's two outriggers, which are lowered into horizontal positions for trawling... The boats are rigged so that the nets sweep along just above the bottom of the river or sea, while bottom-crawling cables called "ticklers" prompt the bottom-dwelling shrimp to swim up into the paths of the nets.
The vessels also tow large wooden "doors" that act as underwater wings to spread the two ends of the net wide apart to increase the catch area (they do indeed look like doors, from cottage-sized doors to cathedral-sized doors... you can see one hanging from the rigging above the aft deck on the starboard side of this trawler).
The outriggers also provide stability to the vessel the same way a tightrope walker uses a balancing pole. They lower the outriggers into horizontal positions once the vessel is underway, even when they are not trawling with the nets.
I understand that essentially identical commercial vessels can also "troll" for fish by using such outriggers to suspend numerous fishing lines with baited hooks as the boat pulls them through the water... Such boats are called "trollers" rather than "trawlers," and their outriggers are known as "troll poles"... slowly traveling with baited lines is called, not surprisingly, "trolling."
Most of the commercial trawlers operating out of slips at Oriental harbor's two fish-houses ("Fulcher Seafood" and "Point Pride Seafood") are shrimp trawlers, at least at this time of year.
However it works, this shrimping season so-far promises to be a huge one, from what I hear on the street.
By evening, the damaged outrigger had been removed.
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Saturday, July 19, 2008
Friday, July 18, 2008
7.18- Pelecanus occidentalis (breed Orientalis)
A Brown Pelican (pelecanus occidentalis) takes wing from its perch on top of Pecan Grove Marina's private Marker #1 at the mouth of Smith Creek. Masts in the background are at Oriental Harbor Marina, across the creek.
Seems like I take a lot of pictures of Pelicans, but they are such cool birds. They always remind me of something that should be on Skull Island in "King Kong" (the original).
I took this picture while sailing around the harbor in a Bauer 10 foot Dinghy. I really wanted to get a picture of the bird perching, because they look like painted wooden carvings... in hindsight I was lucky it decided to take off just as I pointed the camera.
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