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5 results for "Pamlico Sound--Description and travel"
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Record #:
23079
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Veteran Captain Richard Andrews appeals to tourists and locals with his description of summer fishing on the Pamlico. After explaining the importance of tourist fishing for the coastal economy, he provides a detailed account of the fish species that enter the Pamlico Sound and Pamlico River during the summer.
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Record #:
23921
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Tarpons live and breed in the Florida Keys, but each summer they venture as far north as the Chesapeake Bay. In July, they populate the Pamlico Sound, providing anglers with a challenging but entertaining opportunity to chase these 100-pound fish.
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Record #:
23923
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From July through September, the elusive Giant Red Drum populates the Pamlico Sound. A strategic style of bait and line movement is necessary to catch these tricky fish.
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Record #:
24469
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A boy reveals what it was like crossing the Pamlico Sound in the 1930s from Washington, North Carolina to Ocracoke.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 59 Issue 2, July 1991, p34-36, por
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Record #:
15702
Abstract:
With the exception of Long Island Sound, Pamlico Sound, at 1,700 square miles and reaching over eighty miles in length, is the East Coast's largest sound. This article describes the sound and a number of towns located along it, including Stumpy Point, Engelhard, Swam Quarter, and Germantown.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 22 Issue 3, July 1954, p21, 23, 66-67, il
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