The Ultimate Food Lover s Road Trip: Southern Delaware Culinary Coast™
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The great American road trip continues its renaissance as vacationers seek to rediscover the beauty and bounty of the country, and Southern Delaware’s Culinary Coast™ a short drive from many Mid-Atlantic cities with an array of open-air culinary adventures is the ideal destination for exploration. GEORGETWON, Del. (PRWEB) March 04, 2021 Travelers are eager to hit the road again, with 71% of Americans planning a domestic vacation this year according to the World Travel & Tourism Council. The great American road trip continues its renaissance as vacationers seek to rediscover the beauty and bounty of the country, and Southern Delaware’s Culinary Coast™ a short drive from many Mid-Atlantic cities with an array of open-air culinary adventures is the ideal destination for exploration. From five-star beaches and boardwalks to
Why the Delaware Beaches Are a Dream Retirement Destination
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Margie and Bruce Beacham lived in Nantucket and Santa Fe, New Mexico, before deciding to retire along Delaware’s coast, where Bruce vacationed as a boy. Photo by Maria DeForrest
With its scenic locales, low taxes and friendly neighborhood community, Sussex County is the perfect place for retirees to settle.
Throughout their 50-year marriage, Margie and Bruce Beacham asked themselves one question every time they visited a new place: “Would we like to retire here?”
They found their answer in 2018 when they bought a meticulously restored 1840 farmhouse in Lewes. With 3.5 acres, there’s lots of room for their two Labrador retrievers to romp. Family and friends who visit appreciate the pool and two guest cottages.
This postcard from 1908 shows the riverfront in downtown Milton complete with at least two twin-masted schooners. Such schooners, built for the coastwide freight-hauling trade in the eastern United States, were part of a flourishing shipbuilding.
Wagamons Pond Boat Ramp Replacement Begins Thursday wgmd.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wgmd.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Understanding current and tide is key to fishing in Delaware
Black sea bass live in deep water where a strong current can make fishing difficult. KEN NEIL PHOTO
Eric Burnley January 16, 2021
Last week, we discussed the tides and currents that determine where and when fish are likely to feed in the Cape Region. Since almost all the water in the region is tidal, knowledge of tides and current is critical to successful fishing. Most tackle shops give away tide charts, and this newspaper prints the tides in every edition.
What they do not tell you about are the different changes in current direction at locations such as Indian River Inlet and the Lewes-Rehoboth Canal. As the tide fills the Inland Bays, it takes time before all that water reaches the end of the bays at Millsboro and Love Creek. Before the bays fill up, the tidal wave has passed by Indian River Inlet and the water begins to drop. Now high tide has gone by, but the current is still running in. This will