Tag: “Fishing”

14 places found.

  1. Cherry Grove Fishing Pier

    Reaching 985 feet into the Atlantic, the Cherry Grove Fishing Pier is a great spot for all fishermen. Several fishing records were established here, including the largest tiger shark ever caught.

  2. Tupper Lake

    great place for boating,fishing and water sking.

  3. Lake Casitas

    Lake Casitas is a midsize lake with camping, boating, water adventure park, fishing and other events.

  4. Spanish Wells

    A lilting accent, part proper British and part rhythmic Caribbean, drifts on the breeze as the ferries chug in and out of the picturesque harbor. Golf carts clog the roads while the sun sets spectacularly over the surface of the Atlantic Ocean.

  5. Wooten Park

  6. kure beach

    kure beach, nc

  7. Seaman Pond

    Seaman Pond is a small pond off of Old Mill Road in Wantagh, NY.

  8. Belmar Marina

    The Belmar Marina is located just off of Route 71 and Route 35 along the Shark River in Belmar, New Jersey. Besides being a place to tie-up your boat if you are an owner, visitors can hop a party boat out into the Atlantic to go fishing for fluke, blue fish, blackfish, ling, cod, stripers, the list goes on...

  9. Historic Port, Quarter & Souks

    The city we know as Byblos in the Western world is a Mediterranean city in the Mount Lebanon Governorate of present-day Lebanon, called Jbeil (جبيل Ǧubayl) in Arabic. It is believed to have been founded around 5000 BC, and according to fragments attributed to the semi-legendary pre-Trojan war Phoenician historian Sanchuniathon, it was the first city ever built, and even today is believed by many to be the oldest continuously-inhabited city in the world.

    It is mentioned in the Bible in 1 Kings 5:32, referring to the nationality of the builders of Solomon's Temple.

    So, it's old.

  10. Buffalo River

    The Buffalo National River flows free over swift running rapids and quiet pools for its 135-mile length. One of the few remaining rivers in the lower 48 states without dams, the Buffalo cuts its way through massive limestone bluffs traveling eastward through the Arkansas Ozarks and into the White River.