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June 21, 2008

Public Access to Northern Neck and the Chesapeake Bay

Filed under: *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 8:00 am

Published June 21, 2008

The Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries are beautiful, but you can't get to them easily.

Currently, only 2 percent of the shorelines of the Maryland Chesapeake offer public access.

"Along the Anacostia River," says environmentalist Robert Boone, "there are only two boat ramps along 8 miles of tidal river." The Potomac, "other than along the C&O Canal tow path, does not have much access either."

Anne Arundel County also has limited access for boaters. There are just two full-fledged public boat ramps, one at Truxtun Park in Annapolis and another at Sandy Point State Park. The county government is working on putting one in Pasadena.

On Maryland's Eastern Shore, there is a shortage of waterside parks and boat ramps. Veteran kayaker Clarence "Doc" Kuntz points out that there is "very little Talbot County shoreline open to the public. Fifteen narrow boat ramps with minimal parking provide the only access points. Only the strand in Oxford offers a pleasant public shoreline in Talbot."

A similar dearth of Eastern Shore access points prevails on the Wicomico River and along the Nanticoke River. This makes it very difficult for canoeists and kayakers to enter the tributaries and have enjoyable experiences. Launching a canoe from a sloping shore at a local bridge is an option, but is not what many people have in mind when it comes to access.

The situation is worse in Virginia, observes environmental planner Stuart McKenzie. In the counties of Virginia's famed Northern Neck, where he works, only 1 percent of the shoreline is available to public access for kayakers, fishermen and birdwatchers.

Despite the recent downturn in real estate, waterfront parcels are at a premium and cost from $250,000 to $400,000 per waterfront acre, Mr. McKenzie adds. At these prices it is difficult for counties and municipalities to purchase a typical site consisting of two acres for a boat ramp and picnic area and one acre for parking.

Public access issues come at a time when the balance between the private and the public realm has shifted significantly, with personal property rights ascending over community access to landscape and seascape. Increasingly litigious landowners in riparian and coastal areas see themselves as an entitled class of second home or holiday homeowners who feel little obligation to open their property to bird watchers and canoeists.

One bright spot in the public access story is the Chesapeake Bay Program. Since 2000 the bay program has acquired sites for its Public Access Program and access has increased in Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia. The Chesapeake Bay Program is currently 91 percent of the way toward its goal of 805 public access sites by 2010.

Today there is also increasing public interest in the expanding network of water trails like the Capt. John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail and land trails like those that connect the National Park Service's Chesapeake Bay Gateways Network.

When it comes to improving public access to Chesapeake waters, Jim Rapp of Delmarva Low Impact Tourism Experiences in Salisbury is optimistic.

"Our organization is scoring notable success with county governments and the hospitality industry in the region in recognizing the importance of eco-tourism. Kayakers, canoeists, fishermen and bird watchers all come to the region and spend significant sums of money," Mr. Rapp said. "We will have greater access to Chesapeake waters in the future "because people want a better quality of life."

Mr. McKenzie's experience as a planner on Virginia's Northern Neck prompts him to believe that it will be the developers themselves who will spearhead public access to the Chesapeake.

"They see the need for increased amenities for inland tidewater homeowners," he says.

He foresees them buying pieces of shoreline as set asides for boat ramps and water park access that will be available to their homeowners and to the public through tax rebates.

Whether environmentalists like it or not, notes Mr. McKenzie, "if they want more access to the Chesapeake, they will have to partner with developers."

The only alternative concludes Mr. McKenzie, will be to wait for bridges to be realigned so that old structures can be used as fishing piers - and that promises to be a long wait.

John R. Wennersten is the author of numerous books on the Chesapeake Bay and regional environments in the Mid-Atlantic. This column is distributed by Bay Journal News Service.

May 31, 2008

The Northern Neck Not Only Has Real Estate But Plenty Of History TOO!

Filed under: Real Estate, *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 6:15 pm

The Virginian-Pilot
© May 29, 2008

WILLIAMSBURG, Yorktown, Monticello, Mount Vernon. Those historic sites and others are immediately recognizable to millions of Americans. But mention Virginia's historic Northern Neck region, and you're likely to draw a blank stare.

The region's charms may soon become better known. Sens. John Warner and Jim Webb recently joined a long-running legislative effort, taken up several years ago by the late Rep. Jo Ann Davis and others, to declare the peninsula between the Rappahannock and Potomac rivers a National Heritage Area.

The congressional designation is intended to draw travelers' attention to regions that played substantial roles in U.S. history. Just as importantly, the designation creates a framework for local residents and government leaders to collaborate with state and federal officials to preserve historic resources and promote tourism.

There are currently 38 National Heritage Areas. The most recent addition, part of legislation signed earlier this month by President Bush, is The Journey through Hallowed Ground NHA, a string of historic sites stretching from Gettysburg to Charlottesville.

The lesser-known Northern Neck region is deserving of the extra attention and preservation work, too. The rural, five-county area, explored by Capt. John Smith in the early 1600s, was the birthplace of three presidents, George Washington, James Madison and James Monroe.

It's also home to Stratford Hall, where the only brothers to sign the Declaration of Independence - Richard Henry and Francis Lightfoot Lee - lived and where Gen. Robert E. Lee was born.

The federal designation, by itself, cannot ensure that the region's many historic homes and rich Chesapeake Bay traditions will survive. But the special focus improves those chances, as well as the likelihood that more Americans will become familiar with the region's contributions to the nation's heritage.

May 26, 2008

Northern Neck Summer Retreat

Filed under: Real Estate — admin @ 7:08 am

Have you been looking for that perfect Northern Neck Retreat.

Well look no further because it is here. Sandy Point has been the favorite of summer folks for decades. This one is priced RIGHT!! 

Terrific Waterfront Home with endless views of the Potomac River right out to the Chesapeake Bay. Great Community!!

For more go to Beach_House

MLS #: R80009A  List Price: $399,000

26 Skipjack Road KINSALE, VA 22488
PROPERTY TYPE:    R
LIST PRICE:    $399,000
SOLD PRICE:    $0
DAYS ON MARKET:    22
STREET #:    26
911 STREET NAME:    Skipjack Road
SUBDIVISION OR AREA:    Sandy Point
TOWN:    KINSALE
STATE:    VA
ZIP CODE:    22488
COUNTY:    Westmoreland
WATERFRONT TYPE:    RIVER/CREEK
RIVER:    POTOMAC RIVER
CREEK:    Potomac River
WATER FRONTAGE (FEET):    yes
WATER VIEW (WIDE LONG LIMITED):    WideLng
LOT SIZE:    +/- .43 acres
WATER DEPTH:    3-4 Feet
ACREAGE:    < .5 acre
DEED BOOK/PAGE OR INSTRUMENT #:    338/763 & 607/139
TAX MAP #:    50-26
HOMEOWNERS ASSOC:    None
YEAR BUILT:    1954
SQFT +/-:    1140
TOTAL ROOMS:    6
BEDROOMS:    2
FULL BATHS:    1
HALF BATHS:    0
# STORIES:    One Story
TYPE/STYLE:    Other-See Remarks
CONSTRUCTION:    Vinyl Siding
HEATING SYSTEMS:    Wood
COOLING SYSTEM:    Ceiling Fans
FLOORS:    Hardwood, Vinyl
GARAGE:    None
FIREPLACES:    Living Room, One Fireplace
PUBLIC REMARKS:    POTOMAC RIVER COTTAGE OFFERS UNLIMITED VIEW OF POTOMAC AND CHESAPEAKE BAY. LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE. LARGE EAT-IN KITCHEN. SCREEN PORCH.
DIRECTIONS:    FROM CALLAO: RT 202 TO RIGHT ON RT 604 (SANDY POINT ROAD); FOLLOW TO END/STOP SIGN. RIGHT ON RT 610 (SKIPJACK ROAD). PROPERTY ON LEFT.

 

May 18, 2008

Northern Neck Real Estate - Quick Access to Chesapeake Bay

Filed under: Real Estate — admin @ 8:31 am

Northern Neck Waterfront Home | Fantastic Northern Neck Real Estate

See Pictures 

Beautiful coastal living home with grand views out of Ellyson Creek to the Little Wicomico River. Great views, water depth and easy access to Chesapeake Bay. Gourmet cook's kitchen with breakfast room overlooking water. Great room with fireplace and built-ins. Second floor bonus room with full bath. Private dining room. Super Screen porch and deck on waterside. Exceptionally nice landscaping.
 

MLS #: R80095A  List Price: $839,000 1 Pintail Place OPHELIA, VA 22530
 

 

LIST PRICE:    $839,000
DAYS ON MARKET:    6
PROPERTY TYPE:    R
SUBDIVISION OR AREA:    Jettys Reach
STREET #:    1
911 STREET NAME:    Pintail Place
TOWN:    OPHELIA
STATE:    VA
ZIP CODE:    22530
COUNTY:    Northumberland
WATERFRONT TYPE:    RIVER/CREEK
RIVER:    LITTLE WICOMICO RIVER
CREEK:    ELLYSON
WATER DEPTH:    3-4 Feet
WATER FRONTAGE (FEET):    232
WATER VIEW (WIDE LONG LIMITED):    WIDE
FLOOD ZONE:    No
LOT SIZE:    .78+-ACRE
DEED BOOK/PAGE OR INSTRUMENT #:    505 page 606
TAX MAP #:    29D((2))021
HOMEOWNERS ASSOC:    Yes
AMPS:    200
YEAR BUILT:    2002
SQFT +/-:    2530
TOTAL ROOMS:    8
BEDROOMS:    3
FULL BATHS:    3
HALF BATHS:    1
GARAGE:    Attached, Two Car
FIREPLACES:    Living Room, One Fireplace
CONSTRUCTION:    Vinyl Siding
FOUNDATION:    Crawl Space
HEATING SYSTEMS:    Forced Air, Gas
COOLING SYSTEM:    Central A/C
FLOORS:    Hardwood, Tile, Wall to Wall Carpet
PUBLIC REMARKS:    Beautiful coastal living home with grand views out of Ellyson Creek to the Little Wicomico River. Great views, water depth and easy access to Chesapeake Bay. Gourmet cook's kithcen with breakfast room overlooking water. Great room with fireplace and built-ins. Second floor bonus room with full bath. Private dining room. Super Screen porch and deck on waterside. Exceptionally nice landscaping.
DIRECTIONS:    From Burgess go North, Right on Hack's Neck Road, Left on Lighthouse View Dr, Right on Canvasback Dr., Right on Redhead Lane, Left on Pintale Place, See Sign
Ken Smith
Cell: (804) 366-2325
Agent Email: ken@ksmithre.com
Web Address: www.ksmithre.com

 

 
     

 

© 2008 Systems Engineering, Inc. - All Rights Reserved
Information Herein Deemed Reliable but Not Guaranteed

 

April 25, 2008

Northern Neck Pre-retirement Tour Set For May 17

Filed under: Real Estate, *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 7:39 am

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Contact Information
Mark Huffman
President
MediaMax
804-456-0052
mark@northernnecktoday.com

Virginia’s Northern Neck, bordered by the Potomac and Rappahannock rivers and Chesapeake Bay, has increasingly drawn retirees who enjoy the peaceful setting and hassle-free lifestyle. Now, the Northern Neck Tourism Council is making it easier for people contemplating retirement to take a first hand look.

The council is sponsoring its first “Northern Neck Pre-Retirement Tour” May 17, 2008, in conjunction with the Fourth Annual Kilmarnock Crab Festival.

“Folks who are thinking about where they want to live when they retire will have the opportunity to see what we have to offer that weekend,” said NNTC President George Beckett.

Beckett said the “tour” is self-guided, but Council volunteers will provide information, literature about the area, and answer questions. Visitors will then set out to visit the region’s museums, farmers’ markets, wineries and other attractions.

“We chose to hold our first tour during the Crab Festival because it’s a great introduction to the culture of the Northern Neck,” Beckett said.

The Crab Festival, initiated by Kilmarnock businessman Shawn Donahue, celebrates the local watermen’s culture. It features crafts, art exhibits, food and entertainment.

“This year we have added lots of live entertainment, so it should be bigger and better than ever,” Donahue said.

The festival begins Friday evening, May 16 and resumes Saturday May 17 for a full day of activities.

“On Saturday, our volunteers will be set up in the festival’s Welcome Center,” Beckett said. “We invite people to drop by and pick up a map, our Tourism Guide, and a suggested itinerary of things to do.”

“Both the Crab Festival and the Pre-Retirement Tour are great ways to meet the other people who live here, and decide whether you might one day also want to make the Northern Neck your home,” Donahue added.

The Northern Neck is made up of four rural counties, but is as close as an hour away from Richmond, Virginia and as close as 90 minutes from Washington, DC.

April 21, 2008

Northern Neck and Chesapeake Bay Crabbers Face Tougher Regulations

Filed under: *Fishing and Crabbing*, *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 7:30 am

On Tuesday, April 23, VMRC will impose more regulations on the crabbers.

The crabbers have been accused of overfishing for years but they have started fighting back. Too late but they are fighting.

For over 30 years commercial waterman have been screaming about the degradation of the Chesapeake Bay that has been causing the decline of life in the Bay.

Although the crabbers will take another hit they have united and several environmental organizations have joined with them as they have threated suit.

Lawyers have advised them that they do have grounds for such a suit. This week the Virgina Waterman's Association will meet with an environmental group that has passed word to them that they have already prepared the legal work for such a suit. They have just been waiting for the right group to come along. They think the Virginia Waterman's Association is that group. 

  

April 6, 2008

Northern Neck Waterfront Lot Close to Chesapeake Bay

Filed under: Real Estate — admin @ 7:34 am


 

Northern Neck Waterfront Lot close to Kilmarnock and a short run to the Chesapeake Bay. Situated among fine homes a great piece of Northern Neck Real Estate.

Price: $399,000 0 SCULLING OAR LANE KILMARNOCK, VA 22482


 Click Here To Search All Northern Neck Properties


Main Photo
Additional View

 

 
PROPERTY TYPE:    L
LIST PRICE:    $399,000
DAYS ON MARKET:    7
STREET #:    0
911 STREET NAME:    SCULLING OAR LANE
SUBDIVISION OR AREA:    KILMARNOCK
TOWN:    KILMARNOCK
STATE:    VA
ZIP CODE:    22482
COUNTY:    Northumberland
WATERFRONT TYPE:    RIVER/CREEK
LOT SIZE:    1.18
WOODED ACRES:    0
TOTAL ACRES:    1.18
RESTRICTIONS:    YES
WATER DEPTH:    5+ Feet
ACREAGE:    1-1.9 acres
RIVER:    CHESAPEAKE BAY
CREEK:    DIVIDING CREEK
WATER FRONTAGE (FEET):    127'
WATER VIEW (WIDE LONG LIMITED):    WIDE
FLOOD ZONE:    No
DEED BOOK/PAGE OR INSTRUMENT #:    404/208
TAX MAP #:    47-(2)-003
HOMEOWNERS ASSOC:    NO
PUBLIC REMARKS:    MLW 5 FEET PLUS, GOOD VIEW OF DIVIDING CREEK, CLOSE TO TOWN OF KILMARNOCK.
DIRECTIONS:    FROM KILMARNOCK TAKE ROUTE 200 NORTH, RIGHT ON ROUTE 606 (SHILOH SCHOOL ROAD), RIGHT ON ROUTE 669 (APPLE GROVE ROAD), LEFT ON ROUTE 763 (SCULLING OAR LANE), PROPERTY ON RIGHT WITH SIGNS.
Ken Smith
Cell: (804) 366-2325
Agent Email: ken@ksmithre.com
Web Address: www.ksmithre.com

 

 
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March 12, 2008

Crab TD

Filed under: *Fishing and Crabbing* — admin @ 12:53 pm

Tougher crabbing limits are set in Virginia

Harsher restraints may come in April if numbers worsen, say regulators

Copied from the Times Dispatch. These regs will make it much rougher on Northern Neck and Chesapeake Bay crabbers. 

 

 

By LAWRENCE LATANE III

TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

NEWPORT NEWS — State regulators passed new limits on the blue crab harvest and promised more to come after a bleak public hearing on the economically important species yesterday.

The measures enacted unanimously by the Virginia Marine Resources Commission are expected "to go a long way towards restoring this iconic resource for the commonwealth," commissioner Steve Bowman said.

Watermen packed the commission's meeting room and complained that water pollution — not harvest — has driven the crab population to its lowest point in decades.

"In this context of a declining ecosystem, today's fishing is tomorrow's overfishing," said Williamsburg waterman Kelly Place.

Many of the eight commissioners agreed but said the only tools immediately available to improve crab numbers are mandatory restrictions that will leave more crabs in the water to multiply.

Rules approved yesterday will go into effect on the March 17 opening of this year's crabbing season.

They include a requirement for watermen to leave two escape hatches open in all crab pots no matter where they are set. Previously, watermen crabbing in the mainstem of the bay and parts of the Eastern Shore had been able to crab legally with only one of the escape hatches open.

The hatches allow undersized crabs, especially small females, to avoid capture. Called cull rings, the hatches were mandated in 1996 when the commission enacted a series of 22 measures designed to reduce fishing pressure on blue crabs.

Last year, a commission study panel concluded the early restrictions had failed to buoy the crab population. It recommended that new conservation measures be implemented this spring.

The study panel said crab numbers have plunged 70 percent since 1991 and pointed out that the crab population is so low it has been overfished seven out of the past 10 years.

The commission said it needs to wait until its April 22 meeting to consider even harsher restraints on crab harvesting.

A Chesapeake Bay census of hibernating blue crabs is expected by April 1; scientists fear it may show the crab in even deeper trouble.

If the survey is as bad as expected, the commission will consider reducing by half the number of crab pots that watermen can fish for both hard crabs and "peelers," which produce high-priced soft crabs.

The commission also voted unanimously yesterday to advertise for public hearing at its April meeting a measure to curtail or close Virginia's historic winter crab dredge fishery. Totaling more than 300 boats a couple of decades ago, the fleet has shrunk to 55 this year because of declining catches, low prices and rising boat operating costs.

Watermen told the commission that they are as endangered as the crab seems to be.

"You're putting us out of business," said Tangier Island waterman Charles Pruitt.

But Bowman said doing nothing puts the crab population in danger of collapse. "If something is not done, I fear you won't have any crabs to deal with later on."
Contact Lawrence Latané III at (804) 333-3461 or llatane@timesdispatch.com.

Find out more about the Virginia Waterman 

 

March 1, 2008

Northern Neck Crabbers Will Be Effected

Filed under: *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 9:13 pm

The Virginian-Pilot
© February 27, 2008

 

NEWPORT NEWS

Virginia officials approved a spate of new rules Tuesday for harvesting blue crabs from the Chesapeake Bay, in the hope of restoring stocks of the seafood favorite, whose numbers have whittled to near-record lows in recent years.

The Virginia Marine Resources Commission voted unanimously for the changes at a tense, standing-room-only meeting in Newport News. Commission members also signaled that even more dramatic reforms are likely coming in the run-up to this year’s crabbing season , which begins March 17.

At the meeting packed with mostly angry commercial crabbers, critics denounced the new regulations as further examples of poor state management of the prized crab fishery, a staple in Virginia and Maryland for centuries. They predicted the rules will do little but cause

economic pain.

“We’re not going to survive this,” said Charles Pruitt, a waterman from Tangier Island, a commercial fishing hub in the middle of the Bay. “You might as well throw us out now; we’ve been regulated to death already.”

Beginning this season, the marine commission will require two escape hatches, or cull rings, to remain open on crab pots throughout the Bay – a move intended to give undersized female crabs a better chance to survive and spawn.

Commission members also increased the minimum size limit for peeler crabs, or those about to shed their shells and which are sold later as soft crabs, a delicacy to many seafood lovers.

They also moved to curb “agents” and “permit stacking,” in which watermen can let someone else catch crabs in their place – a loophole that state officials say has been exploited for years.

And the commission capped the number of watermen who can dredge crabs, almost all of them females, from the muddy bottom of the Bay as they hibernate during winter months.

Only about 55 license-holders will be able to continue this practice, though officials said they may ban winter dredging entirely when the commission meets again in April to discuss other conservation measures.

Also on tap for debate in April will be cutting the amount of crab pots and traps by between 10 and 30 percent, and perhaps as high as 50 percent; doing away with recreational crabbing licenses; and enforcing no-harvest sanctuaries for longer periods during the commercial season.

“Believe me, the commission gets no pleasure out of passing regulations that make things more difficult for watermen,” said Steve Bowman, who heads the marine commission. “But the numbers don’t lie. Things are bad. They’re really bad.”

For example, the average annual harvest in Virginia and Maryland from 1945 to 2006 was 72 million pounds. The harvest in 2007 was expected to be about 40 million pounds, the lowest on record.

Researchers at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science have also documented a 70 percent decline in the abundance of adult crabs since 1991 – a time when the state enacted 22 regulations designed to enhance stocks.

Jack Travelstead, state director of fisheries, said Tuesday that the years of regulation may not have turned the population around, but they probably helped avoid a complete collapse of the species.

Watermen, though, said the experience proved what they have argued for years – that the biggest problem facing crabs is not overfishing, which the commission has tried to regulate. Instead, they argued, crabs are suffering from a combination of environmental degradation – pollution, lost habitat, little oxygen to breathe – along with increasing numbers of natural predators such as striped bass, croakers and blue catfish.

“Water quality is the key,” Kelly Price, an Eastern Shore crabber, told the commission. “Without that, you lose habitat. And without habitat, you’re done.”

The moves Tuesday come as Maryland is wrestling with new regulations as well. The two states have been discussing joint strategies for weeks, officials said, and will continue to coordinate efforts.

Maryland is eyeing a maximum size limit for female crabs, but only wants to proceed if Virginia agrees to do the same, Travelstead said. The maximum limit, of 6½ inches, will be discussed at the April commission meeting.

As stocks continued to struggle last year, Virginia assembled a team of scientists and government experts from various Atlantic states. The team spent a year studying Virginia’s plight and concluded, among other things, that too many pots are being used to catch too few crabs, and that environmental woes are plaguing any revival.

The actions approved Tuesday stem from that scientific review. Virginia also is studying long-term management changes that would fundamentally shift how crabbing is governed.

That study is continuing but could include a days-on-the-

water system, in which crabbers would be granted specific times when they could go fishing, and could buy, sell or trade those rights as they please. The method has helped turn around the once-troubled sea scallop fishery off the Atlantic coast.

 

 

February 27, 2008

Northern Neck Crabbers will be Effected by New Regulations

Filed under: *Fishing and Crabbing*, *Living in the Northern Neck* — admin @ 8:33 am

Copied from the Daily Press - Please note that overfishing is mentioned but what is not mentioned is that the commission publicly announced that the water quality is what has caused these conditions. KS

Crabbing limits are approved

Blue crab fishermen say the policies hurt them.

| 247-4534

February 27, 2008

 

NEWPORT NEWS - Virginia officials took a step Tuesday toward reining in commercial fishing pressure on a blue crab population scientists say is vulnerable to collapse.

Despite repeated claims from watermen that poor water quality and an increase in natural predators are driving down blue crab numbers more than overfishing, the Virginia Marine Resources Commission voted unanimously to adopt new crabbing regulations. And likely on the way in March and April are even more regulations.

"Things are bad. They're really bad," said Commissioner Steven G. Bowman, referring to a population trend that has seen the Chesapeake Bay's crabs decline to less than a third of the early-1990s numbers.

The blue crab remains the bedrock of one of Virginia's most lucrative commercial fisheries. But a panel of crab biologists concluded months ago that years of overfishing was cutting too far into the blue crab stock and its ability to reproduce.

Watermen, scientists and regulators have disagreed on how much to blame unhealthy waters versus overfishing. During a three-hour public hearing, people from all three groups repeatedly made the point that a degraded Chesapeake Bay is not an abstract problem, but a stark reality that hampers commercial industry and tears at working-the-water traditions of Virginia's bay communities.

Bowman answered concerns from watermen that tougher regulations will cause them hardship by saying the commission was acting in the best long-term interest of the crabs and therefore the crab industry.

"You'd be just as right to come back here in five years (if the crab population collapsed), and say, 'Why didn't you do anything? It was your job to protect the crabs?' " Bowman said.

Doug Jenkins, president of the Twin Rivers Watermen's Association, said previous studies were too quick to single out overfishing. He questioned why researchers haven't looked more closely at the behavior and numbers of the crabs' natural predators — particularly croaker, rockfish and blue catfish.

Charles Pruitt, a Tangier Island waterman, asked why, if overfishing is the primary cause of the blue crab decline, does he also find far fewer starfish and spider crabs when he fishes? These species are not commercially fished, but their numbers seem to have declined just as fast, Pruitt said.

"We're not going to survive," Pruitt said. "We're gone. If you issue all these regulations, you might as well throw us out."

VMRC board member Rick Robins said the dire crab situation left the commission no choice.

He also said that the panel of scientists that targeted overfishing did not neglect to take the bay's ecological fragility into account.

"Our purpose is not to burn down the village to prove we can save it," he said. "This is not something we can shirk from."

 

 

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