I love this 1961 photograph by A. Aubrey Bodine, which I found on the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum's Facebook page, both as a very nice black and white image and also as a little piece of history. The photograph was taken in the shallows off the beach at Matapeake (marked with the arrow below) on Kent Island. I wish I understood more about the rigs on the boats - booms hanging off the sides and also the wider boards (for culling??) towards the sterns. Here is a comment from on the Facebook page about the clamming from S Michael Mielke....
The workboats here are small by today's standards. Most of these are 30 to 35 ft long and quite narrow. A couple of tucksterns. These short rigs worked shallow waters where there were plenty of manoes (White clams) in these early days of clamming.
No comments:
Post a Comment