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Social media pseudo-event warrants increased security

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(June 12, 2015) Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice … well, better safe than sorry.

For the second year in a row, Ocean City police and allied agencies organized a significant increase in patrols this past weekend in anticipation of a possible “College Beach Week” event, a rather amorphous happening believed to be driven mostly by social media.

And, for the second year in a row, that event seems not to have happened, at least on any appreciable scale.

“I’m not sure if anything came to fruition, but that’s why we had an increased presence, in case it did,” said Ocean City Police Department Public Information Officer Lindsay Richard.

Which isn’t to say the heightened presence – unmistakable on the Boardwalk, with officers nearly every block – wasn’t needed.

As many local businesses observed, this past weekend, and likely the next two, are the peak season of “senior week,” when high school graduates flood the resort. This year’s crowd has been, by all accounts, particularly large and boisterous, but most doubted that this had anything to do with any kind of organized outing.

“There was certainly a big presence,” said Greg Shockley owner of Shenanigan’s Pub and the Shoreham Hotel. “Whether the police deterred any kind of event, or if it just didn’t happen, I don’t know.”

“You never know if the police presence is overkill, or if that’s the reason that nothing got out of hand,” agreed Lee Gerachis, owner of Malibu’s Surf Shop. “The whole thing looks like a can of gas next to a fire, but for whatever reason, it doesn’t blow up. I saw a lot of teenagers being rowdy, but not necessarily doing anything illegal.”

The quasi-event, spread on social media via the Twitter hashtags #CollegeBeachWeek or #CollegeBeachTakeover, appears to be backed by hip-hop promoter Party Headz DC.

Despite reports elsewhere that the event has “a troubled past,” the reality appears to be that the event has no past. Other promoters have organized similar events in other resorts, and some of those – such as one in Virginia Beach – have turned into public safety nightmares. But the only concrete link between those events and the potential Party Headz DC Ocean City event is the use of the same Twitter hashtag.

The other connection is that all the events, regardless of the location or promoter, are clearly intended to attract college-age African-Americans from urban areas. But racial makeup and Twitter use do not necessarily guarantee the same outcomes.

Nonetheless, police have actively followed up with Party Headz DC, and monitored social media channels to see if anything was actually brewing.

“Town officials have been in contact with the same people who attempted to do the event last year,” Richard said. “Our intelligence unit monitored social media throughout the weekend, but there was really nothing of value that came across.”

Rather, nothing more is needed to make mid-June a rowdy time, other than the usual crop of high school graduates.

“For the past 30 years, this past weekend and the next have been our busiest for the entire year,” Richard said. “Anyone who’s out on the Boardwalk can see that. It is an incredibly young crowd.”

Statistical data from the department would suggest that crime over this past weekend was actually down as compared to the same weekend in 2014. Total service calls over June 4-7 came to 1,740 officer-initiated actions and 521 citizen calls.

For the same Thursday-Sunday span last year – June 5-8, 2014 – in which “College Beach Week” was suspected to occur, the OCPD counted 1,816 and 688 officer and citizen calls, respectively.

More drastic was a decrease in arrests, from 184 last year to only 90 this year. Out of these, drug arrests also dropped, from 66 over four days last year to 17 this year.

The only high-profile incident appears to have been a stabbing on 12th Street and the Boardwalk on the evening of Sunday, June 12 but this did not result in the victim going to the hospital, and charges have yet to be filed after speaking to both the victim and suspect, according to police.

For most businesses, the story is the same: June’s performance is typically mediocre, especially through the week. With most families avoiding the month, and pre-booking for July and August, people in town over the age of 18 are typically spontaneous trip-takers whose visits are weather-dependent.

“I think a lot of it depends on people looking at the forecast and deciding if they’re going to come,” Shockley said. “Mid-week, last week, we were running about 30 percent at the hotel, probably about the same at the restaurant.

“This week, we’re looking at 70 percent, and I’d attribute that to the forecast for this weekend being good, where last week everyone knew it was going to rain.”

This week in OC: June 12-18, 2015

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This weekend, it’s all about the OC Air Show here in Ocean City, MD. Since its inception 7 years ago, the OC Air Show has grown into one of the most anticipated, most attended events of the summer. This year, not only does the OC Air Show feature the Ocean City debut of the legendary Blue Angels, but also some of the other top international flight teams and aerial acts. Watch all the action for free from the beach and Boardwalk, or grab some VIP seats on top of a hotel to be even closer to the action. Find full details on this year’s Air Show and participants here.

Here’s a look at some of the other highlights from around town this week:

– If you’re more of a car or truck person than an Air Show person, make sure  check out the OC Car and Truck Show at the Convention Center. Taking place Saturday and Sunday, the OC Car and Truck Show is one of the largest automotive events on the East Coast and attracts thousands of car and truck fanatics each year. Stop by to check out the hottest rides around, participate in interactive displays, watch live demos, explore national vendors, or enjoy the live music. The show runs 10am-10pm on Saturday and 10am-6pm on Sunday, and all tickets are sold at the door. Visit www,occarshow.com for full details.

Fager’s Island has been an iconic Ocean City establishment since 1975 years and wants to celebrate its upcoming anniversary with you. To do so, Fager’s is hosting a 40th Anniversary pig roast with rum punch bar, live music, and more on Tuesday, June 16. The party lasts from 3pm-close . If you won’t be in town on Tuesday, make sure to stop by 60th St. and the bay for other 40th Anniversary promotions and events throughout the summer.

-Finally, Senior Week is still going strong and Play it Safe is hosting even more events this week to make sure the Class of 2015 has a memorable- and safe- beach week experience.  This week, check out tennis at the OC Tennis Center (61st St.) of Friday beginning at 1pm, beach karaoke on Sunday from 6-8pm on 3rd St., beach volleyball at 4:30pm on Tuesday- also on 3rd St., or any other of this week’s events. Find a full listing of Play if Safe events here.

For full entertainment and event listings for this coming week, or check out the OC Today Appearing Live and Out & About pages. And don’t forget to join our online community by visiting our forumsigning up for our newsletter, and following us on social media at on FacebookTwitterInstagram, and Pinterest for breaking news, breathtaking photos, daily updates, and weekly giveaways from your online authority for everything Ocean City.

Fagers Island celebrates its 40th anniversary

(June 12, 2015) Fagers Island celebrates a milestone this month and to ring in its 40th birthday, the 60th Street hotspot will be throwing it back with an old school pig roast this Tuesday, June 16.

Beginning at 3 p.m., the party lasts all night long with performances from Zion Reggae, The Klassix and DJ Hook will be spinning tunes along with host DJ Batman.

Food platters will be available from 3-6 p.m. with choices such as barbecue ribs, chicken and roasted pig along with a selection of side dishes for $4. There will also be an Island Rum punch bar.

“In 1980, near the end of summer, a couple of friends and I decided to set up a big fire pit out on the beach to roast pigs,” Owner John Fager recalls. “Eventually, it became a tradition and every year around September; we wouldn’t tell anyone and people would wait for the smoke and know we were having our free pig roast party.”

People eventually found out about the annual party by word of mouth and Fager’s Island was usually packed by 5 p.m.

“That was the cool thing about it — everyone would wait for the smoke,” he added.

By the 1990s, the party started to get out of hand and Fager ultimately discontinued them.

In honor of 40 years at Fager’s Island, he is bringing back the pig roast for one night to recreate the glory days.

“A lot of people who came here in the ‘70s and ‘80s to party have said they met their wife here and are now bringing their children with them to visit,” Fager said. “There’s nostalgia for people who used to hang out here in their twenties and are now 60 years old.”

Originally from Baltimore, Fager visited Ocean City with his family in the summer frequently.

“Ocean City has been a great place to live and have a business,” Fager said. “It’s a one-of-a-kind town and very unique.”

In the 1960s, he owned and operated the Purple Moose Saloon, which he sold to embark on a real estate career.

He found the two-acre location on 60th Street in the early 1970s and decided to purchase the land to build dozens of townhomes on the property.

Shortly after, the real estate industry crashed, Fager held on for a few years, but as 1975 approached, his funds were dwindling.

“I had been in the bar business and decided to build a box on pilings to generate some income and when the real estate market rebounded I would move the pilings to make townhomes,” Fager said.

Well, that was the plan anyway.

“Once we opened the plan went out the window because it was very popular,” he said. “Back then, all bars were closed up with no plants or open views of the bay. We were different and people showed up.”

The original structure had “BAR” inscribed on the front with alcoholic drinks being the only menu choice.

“When we first opened it was just a bar. We added food later on,” Fager said. “We didn’t have a sign and people could not see us from the highway back here. It was all word of mouth.”

Throughout the years, Fager’s Island has continued to evolve and change with new decorations, decks and bars, plus remodels and beach additions.

“People like to see new seating or bar areas; it keeps the restaurant fresh,” Fager said.

Fager’s pet project remains the fine dining section upstairs. Fager vows to make the experience a memorable one.

“Ocean City needs fine dining with the hundreds of business conventions and golfers who want more than paper napkins and onion rings,” Fager said. “They want a nice prime rib in an upscale atmosphere, which we are happy to provide.”

Currently, Fager’s Island has 32 premium wines by the glass and a selection of crafted classic cocktails inspired by their 40th anniversary.

Also, five original Fager’s T-shirts have been recreated sporting an “eternal child” face on the front.

“It’s our theme, Fager’s Island is eternal, we will always be young,” Fager said. “We want to keep it fun for all guests whether they are stopping by for a cocktail to watch the sunset, getting a bite to eat or dancing the night away.”

OC Car and Truck Show this weekend

(June 12, 2015) The 14th annual Ocean City Car and Truck Show will feature hundreds of vehicles from classic cars to customized trucks inside and outside the convention center on 40th Street this weekend.

There will be live radio broadcasts from Power 101.7, a Scion zone and Sound FX will sponsor a vendor alley. The event, hosted by Live Wire Media, will have some of the best unique and custom cars on the East Coast, said Brad Hoffman, who created the show more than a decade ago. 

“Exotics, SUVs, low riders and Jeeps, there is something for everyone,” Hoffman said. “There is a melting pot of all types of vehicles.”

The Scion zone will feature Josh Croll’s only right-hand drive Scion TC in the world, which Hoffman calls a “creation and spokescar.”

“Scion is our title sponsor this year and it [Josh Croll’s Scion TC] exemplifies our show,” he added.

A customized Nissan GTR Skyline, FRS Scion sports car and 8thGEN Honda Civics will also be on display.

The Truck Invasion Zone features a growing 4×4 truck market and will take place both days outside the convention center.

“It has grown a lot in three or four years [truck customizations] and to keep on top of the trends we will feature a truck invasion with 4×4’s and more,” Hoffman said. “People add customized rims, electronic upgrades, interiors, installs and exhausts to their trucks.”

The event is family-friendly with numerous activities for Senior Week visitors and younger children.

“We pride ourselves on designing a car show with a family environment where kids and parents can safely look at cars parked at the convention center all weekend,” Hoffman said. “Part car show, part beach vacation, we welcome everyone to come out.”

A kid’s zone will include a plethora of activities such as corn hole and sheets of vehicle silhouettes for children to color in and design their own cars.

“I can’t wait for these kids to come back years from now as an engineer or automotive designer for General Motors, Ford or Toyota,” Hoffman said. “Igniting the passion at an early age is our goal.”

New to the show, Power 101.7 will broadcast live from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday with deejays playing tunes all day long. Following at 5 p.m., hip hop/rap/Reggae artists Rubio and Shorti will perform. 

Visitors can check out the vendor alley for sales of up to 80 percent off head units, screens and more from Sound FX.

“A big component of the show is Sound FX bringing on-site technicians and parts needed to upgrade vehicles,” Hoffman said. “These quality items are 40 to 80 percent off for state-of-the-art goods.”

Other attractions include the Miss OC Car Show Bikini Contest with a cash purse of $500 at 4 p.m. on Saturday and Bryshere Gray, “Hakeem” from the television show, “Empire,” will perform on Sunday afternoon.

“He’s a young guy who is a rising star in music and the television acting world,” Hoffman said. “He is a perfect addition to our show and drawing 60-year-old women who would have never came because they want to meet Hakeem.”

All weekend the show will feature free giveaways including T-shirts and ear buds.

“Our event attracts people who have a passion for custom cars and it’s an automotive lifestyle,” Hoffman said. “Builders are on hand to give inside information and it’s an extension of their personality, that is why they do it.”

Dozens of clubs will be showcasing their custom rides and generally park near one another in order to discuss and learn more about the vehicles they drive.

“Come to hear and see what people have taken to the next level,” Hoffman said.

The OC Car and Truck Show will take place rain or shine, Saturday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the 40th Street convention center. Tickets cost $16 for adults or $10 for children under 12 and seniors over 65, and will be on sale at the door. Children 7 and under get in free with an adult.

Visit www.occarshow.com for more information and to buy tickets.

Live racing returns to Ocean Downs

(June 12, 2015) Live harness racing is now underway for the summer at the Ocean Downs Racetrack on Route 589 in Berlin.

To celebrate the kickoff to 66 years of racing at Ocean Oval, ‘There they go,’ T-shirts were given away last night during opening races. Attendees can catch T-shirts thrown into the stands during every Friday night race in June, July, August and September.

Races will take place on Sunday, Monday, Thursday and Friday through Sept. 4 — except June 15.

Additionally, numerous special events are scheduled throughout the summer, including a presentation from the Ocean City Air Show tomorrow, Saturday. The Lucas Oil Sky Divers will land on the track during a “Salute to our Armed Forces Celebration.” The event begins at 7 p.m., with an American Legion Bike Riders Armed Forces flag display, face painting and balloons with Lollipop the Clown, a meet and greet with the jumpers and a fireworks display at dusk.

Racing continues on Sunday with an autograph session prior to the races with drivers. They will pose for photographs and answer questions. These meet and greets will take place a few times each month.

Look forward to the popular carriage rides about three times a month, which gives visitors a tour of the facility during the early evening races.

The 2015 season also includes pony rides, fireworks displays, a children’s camp in conjunction with the Harness Horse Youth Foundation, fashion shows, a Racing Under Saddle exhibition, demonstrations from a trick rider and a Back-to-the-Track celebration with giveaways and prizes.

Starting at the end of June and continuing throughout July and August, some of the state’s best young racehorses will be showcased in Maryland Sire Stakes and Maryland Standardbred Race Fund events.

On Friday, July 24, the third annual mascot race will begin at 7 p.m. with appearances from the Orioles Bird, Baltimore Ravens’ Poe, Phil the Crab from Phillips Restaurant, The Greene Turtles, Sweet Frog, the Frontier Town cowboy, Elmo and SpongeBob to name a few.

National Football League night at the track will take place on August 23, August 30 and September 4. Each night attendees are encouraged to wear their team jersey and be one of the first 100 fans for a chance to win tickets to a Ravens or Redskins game.

Race qualifiers for pacers and trotters take place each Thursday through Aug. 27 at 10 a.m. 

Post time is 7:20 p.m. and with 10 races each night the action lasts until about 10:20 p.m.

Ocean Downs Racing General Manager Peter Szymanski said the season’s daily purse will range from $50,000-$55,000, with a total purse of about $2.7 million.

“It will be a fun-filled racing season,” Szymanski said. “The racetrack has been here 66 years, it’s been a great ride and will continue to be.”

Szymanski said he anticipates an average attendance of more than 1,000 people per night. On special promotions nights such as firework displays or free giveaways, the Ocean Oval can see anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 attendees.

“Parking and admission is free; betting is not,” Szymanski said.

For more information about events and racing, visit www.oceandowns.com or call 410-641-0600.

Ocean Oval summer events:

During June, July and August, race attendees will have the opportunity to catch a T-shirt, which will be thrown into the crowd every Friday night. There will also be carriage rides and opportunities to meet the drivers.

– Saturday, June 13: Beginning at 7 p.m., the Casino at Ocean Downs will host an Air Show Performer Party where the Lucas Oil Sky Divers will land on the Ocean Downs track during a “Salute to our Armed Forces Celebration.” There will be an American flag giveaway, face painting and balloons with Lollipop the Clown, a meet and greet with the jumpers, Post 166 American Legion Color Guard presentation, American Legion Bike Riders Armed Forces flag display and a special appearance by “Lucky U,” the Ocean Downs Race Track mascot. There will be food, cold beverages and a fireworks display at dusk.

– Friday, June 26: A children’s camp will take place from 10 a.m. to mid-afternoon in conjunction with the Harness Horse Youth Foundation.

– Friday, July 3: Fireworks, military fundraiser, T-shirt blow out, and a Farm & Fashion Country Magazine fashion show.

– Friday, July 10: A Back-to-the-Track celebration with giveaways and prizes, a Racing Under Saddle exhibition, a Farm & Fashion Country Magazine fashion show, Lollipop the Clown, carriage rides and a T-shirt blow out.

– Friday, July 17: Trick Rider makes its first appearance of the summer with trick horse riding in between the live races. A T-shirt blow out and carriage rides.

– Friday, July 24: The third annual mascot race will begin at 7 p.m. with regional, national and local businesses’ mascots. Lollipop the Clown and a T-shirt blow out. Clydesdales Horses make an appearance at the races.

–Thursday, July 30: The races will be in conjunction with the Pocomoke Fair Race to celebrate harness racing. There will be pony rides, slot dollar giveaways and Lollipop the Clown will make an appearance.

–Sunday, August 23 and 30: NFL night at the track. Wear your team jersey and be one of the first 100 fans for a chance to win tickets to a Ravens or Redskins game.

–Thursday, August 27: Carnival of Racing will feature the best racers with slot dollar and prize giveaways, carriage rides, Lollipop the Clown, pony rides and Clydesdales Horses.

 –Friday, September 4: NFL night at the track. Wear your team jersey and be one of the first 100 fans for a chance to win tickets to a Ravens or Redskins game. There will be fireworks, a T-shirt blow out and a meet and greet with the drivers.

The Next Ice Age

(June 12, 2015) Five former competitive figure skaters will dazzle audiences this summer during The Next Ice Age at the Carousel Hotel on 118th Street.

Performances began on Wednesday and will take place at 6:30 p.m. nightly through Aug. 20. Each show will run about 30 minutes and are free to the public.

Returning to Ocean City for its 15th year, the show is a favorite among Ocean City residents and visitors.

“The unique proximity to the ocean… there are not many ice rinks near the beach and the ocean makes it special,” said Nathan Birch, The Next Ice Age executive director. “It’s a free thing to do and exposes the family to a winter sport when they are not expecting it. The show may even inspire people to try skating afterwards at the Carousel.”

The performances involve a story about a family and every genre of music will be heard during the shows, Birch said.

This year, Megan Marschall, 23, will skate alongside, Julianne DiMura, 23, Rachel Jones, 21, Shaun Rogers, 29 and Michael Solonoski, 31.

“I love performing in Ocean City because it’s so exhilarating performing for live audiences every night,” Marschall said. “We have a feel-good, family-friendly show where audience members will experience fantastic tricks, beautiful skating and choreography filled with interesting story lines.”

For the opening weekend of June 13-14, World Figure Skating Champion Kimmie Meissner will join the others and make her Ocean City debut in The Next Ice Age performances.

“I’ve always wanted to perform in the show, especially growing up in the area [raised in Towson],” Meissner said. “It’s a company [The Next Ice Age] you want to be a part of and they spend a lot of time thinking up the idea and building the foundation, which sets them apart.”

In 2005, Meissner became the second American woman to land the triple axel jump in national competition. She was a member of the 2006 Olympic team and the youngest American athlete to compete at those games.

Meissner is the 2006 world champion, the 2007 United States national champion and the 2007 four continents champion. She is the first American to simultaneously hold the world, four continents and national titles.

“The skating has to be at a certain level and the performers are all strong skaters,” Meissner said. “It’s what we really need in the sport and what people love to watch.”

Since spectators are standing during the show and their proximity to the action on the rink is within a few feet, performers are constantly interacting with the crowd.

“You are really close, with just a rail separating audiences and they get drawn in,” Birch said. “Everyone is invited and encouraged to meet the cast to get autographs and take photos after the show.”

Birch said he has met a fair amount of skaters who told him they got their start after seeing a performance.

“I am happy to be associated with something so positive and heartwarming,” Birch said.

“Performing in skating shows for a living is honestly a dream job,” Marschall said. “Skating is something we fell in love with when we were little kids, and we are so grateful to have careers we trained in our whole lives and truly enjoy it so much.”

Watch the Ocean City show every night at 6:30 p.m., June 10 through Aug. 20, at the Carousel Hotel on 118th Street.  There will be no shows on July 9 and 10.

Those who wish to eat dinner during the show should call the hotel in advance at 410-524-1000 to make a reservation for rinkside dining.

Visit www.thenexticeage.org to learn more about The Next Ice Age skating company.

OC author hopes to help others with bipolar disorder experience

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(June 12, 2015) Caroline HeeJeon Gale wrote “My Friend Bipolar” to help cope with her own disorder and hopes her honest depiction of the illness does the same for others who are fighting similar battles.

Her collections of poems and narrations make for a short read of candid snapshots into the mind of a person struggling with bipolar disorder.

“It’s about letting people know they are not alone and to get help,” HeeJeon Gale said. “The medications, talking with a therapist and a support system will all help. Ignoring the disorder is becoming an enemy to yourself. It’s not going away, be its friend by treating and learning how to deal with it.”

Her story begins with an honest poem about the day she woke up in the hospital after a failed suicide attempt in 2007. She was a 17-year-old high school student trying to deal with her disorder, was not receiving the proper treatment and ultimately overdosed. She first showed symptoms of the disease at age 12 and continued to deal with her erratic behavior on her own for more than four years.

“To let go of the painful memories and not think about them as often, it’s important to have a support system,” HeeJeon Gale said.

Talking with therapist Pam Frank in Virginia helped HeeJeon Gale develop techniques to combat her illness. At first, it was hard for HeeJeon Gale to speak at all, she said, but after a while she started to open up about herself and painful memories. She went on to have more than 100 sessions with Frank since 2007.

She explains in her book how becoming a true friend of bipolar meant she had to let go of all sad and painful memories, which is not easy when they cling to her brain like a scar or tumor.

Her poem, “Mistakes,” can relate to anyone who has regrets in their life and “My Side” is dedicated to her mother who has been there for HeeJeon Gale throughout her entire illness.

Her older sister, Michelle, is her best friend and a huge supporter. She provided the cover illustration and a couple pictures inside the book.

“The cover shows different perspectives of myself, which is drawn in pencil, paint and watercolor,” HeeJeon Gale said. “It’s an artistic way of showing bipolar.”

HeeJeon Gale is against the happy and sad faces associated with bipolar disorder because the in-between feelings are never shown, she added.

Ironically, her sister originally drew HeeJeon Gale’s front cover artwork for a class she was taking, which touched Gale because she felt it illustrated her disorder.

HeeJeon Gale started writing her poems in 2007. About six of them were written in an English class during high school when she was dealing with the worst of her depression, and after graduating she found them lying around.

She started writing the narrations of her poems at 20 and after eight years, the book came to fruition.

In March 2014, she signed a contract with AuthorHouse Publishing, had her friends edit the copy and the book was printed in April.

HeeJeon Gale has dedicated “My Friend Bipolar” to her husband, William.

“He is a huge support,” HeeJeon Gale said. “He wasn’t in my immediate family and he did not have to support me. He helped me to heal, feel important and get over it.”

In her book, HeeJeon Gale explains how she became very depressed and had to be hospitalized shortly after they started dating. Will drove from Ocean City to Virginia frequently and continued to visit even when HeeJeon Gale refused to see him. He wrote cards, sent flowers and his persistence helped her recover faster, she said.

She hopes her story will help the more than five million people who have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder in America.

“My main goal is to translate the book to Korean and Spanish that way it reaches more people,” HeeJeon Gale said.

She said it will take about a year to publish and her mother gave HeeJeon Gale the idea to translate in different languages.

“It would help Korean people in Korea. I can be more creative with the Korean language and a friend is helping translate to Spanish,” HeeJeon Gale said.

Her 54-page book can be purchased for $5.99 on Kindle and $24.99 in paperback from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and her publisher’s website, authorhouse.com.

“I would love to share personal advice and help with changes in their [readers] lives to get better,” said HeeJeon Gale, who lives in Ocean City. “I hope this will help and comfort them.”

Readers can contact HeeJeon Gale at myfriendbipolar@gmail.com.

Residents hold funeral for goose ‘Martha’ in Pines

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Residents gathered at the South Gate pond on Monday morning as “Martha,” a beloved snow goose, was laid to rest in Ocean Pines.

Martha the white snow goose, a beloved figure in Ocean Pines seen here circa 2014, was laid to rest on Monday after being struck by a car three days prior. (FILE PHOTO)

Believed to be more than 10 years old, the goose was struck by a car near Food Lion on Friday. Residents remember her as the friendly white waterfowl with the broken wing.

“She’s an icon,” Tammy Fultz said. “People have so many photos of her and she’s been on the cover of local newspapers. I didn’t know her name was Martha – we just called her ‘bad wing. I think everybody had little nicknames for her. She’s been here since I could remember.”

Fultz, who moved to Ocean Pines in 2006, heard about the incident online on Friday just after 3 p.m. Worried that children might see her, she drove her pickup truck to the scene and recovered Martha, storing her in a spare freezer until a proper burial could be arranged.

A few hours later she received a phone call from General Manager Bob Thompson, giving her permission to bury Martha in an area just off the hiking path near the South Gate.

More than a dozen people attended the brief service on Monday.

Kristen Wood, who moved to the area in October with her husband, Rob, and their 21-month-old son Silas, said she was heartbroken when she heard the news.

“We’ve been here since Halloween night and we love walking around here,” she said. “We live just down in South Gate and we come down here all the time to watch the geese. Silas loved her.”

“Martha was special,” resident Donna Dillon said. “She was loved by many. She will not be forgotten, and now that she has a special place here it will be assured that she will be remembered. Rest in peace sweet Martha.”

Fultz said she hoped the incident would help change the perception of the local goose population.

“The more I thought about it the more I thought about what’s going on right now with the goose population in Ocean Pines, where Ocean Pines is trying to curb the population of the geese,” she said. “They’re oiling the eggs and they’re doing things that they’re allowed to do for the migratory birds – I don’t think they’re worried so much about our resident birds. But I thought this would shed a good light on Ocean Pines.

“She was an iconic bird,” Fultz continued. “Everyone knew her. The local residents appreciated her. We watched her for years. She had bad days where she would drag that broken wing, and then there were other days where she was better.”

Flowers and a small porcelain goose were placed on top of the final resting place of Martha, an iconic wild goose, in Ocean Pines on Monday. (JOSH DAVIS/OCEAN CITY TODAY)

After saying a few words Fultz placed flowers and a white ceramic goose over Martha’s final resting place. A permanent plaque commemorating the bird is expected to go up at the site next week.

Run across state hits halfway point

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(June 12, 2015) With the ocean as her destination, Caitlin Adams is still all about the journey.

“I’m going to run across the Route 50 bridge at 9 a.m., cross Division Street and keep on going until I hit the water,” the 18-year-old Towson freshman said.

With that plunge, the track star will have completed a 390-mile journey she began on May 23 in Cumberland to run across the entire state while raising money for Limbs for Life, a nonprofit organization that provides prosthetic limbs for people who may not be able to afford them. She is expected to arrive in Ocean City on June 27.

When contacted on Tuesday evening, she was in Dublin, Md. and was beginning the 15-mile run to Rising Sun. When five miles of that journey was completed, she officially hit the halfway point of her trek.

“Every uphill has a downhill, I have to keep telling myself that. I’m moving forward and my body’s holding up. I have some aches, pains and blisters but I’m getting through it,” she said.

Distance running can be a lonely sport, and it has left Adams with a lot of time to think.

“Sometimes I don’t think of anything,” she laughed, “but I do wonder what I want to do next. Maybe I’ll run across Maryland again, because I know what I’m doing now, or across the United States. I might write a book because I have a few words I’d like to get out there.”

If she does decide to run across the state again, nothing much would change, she said. She would still be raising money for Limbs for Life, and she’s been happy with the route she laid out, including the choice to skip the bay bridge in favor of turning north and running up and around the Chesapeake Bay.

The other options would bring additional plans into the mix, she said.

“With prosthetics, I see something that should be fixed. If you’re born missing a limb or have lost one serving our country you should be able to have it replaced,” she said. “So many other things can be fixed if we take a step back and maybe make more changes.”

Adams said running makes here feel good.

“All you have to do is believe in your idea. Anyone can do anything. I remember what I want to do with my life and what I want to do next,” she said.

That’s the big picture, but the small-scale stuff matters just as much.

“I think a lot about water, and how thirsty and hot I can get out there,” she said.

Last week’s heavy rainfall didn’t help either.

“While I was out running it was great, but as soon as I stopped it got cold and I was shivering,” she said.

Adams said she has learned a thing or two about shoes as well.

“I started with four pairs, and they’re all holding up, but the really light ones I liked when I started have become my least favorite pair,” she said. “The expensive ones I found really stiff, but now they’re my favorite pair.”

Adams has raised almost $17,000 for Limbs for Life through her crowdsourcing site: www.crowdrise.com/caitlinsmdrun-prosthetics.

Each prosthetic costs about $2,500 according to Adams, so she’s about $500 short of being able to provide another prosthetic limb to the 200-plus people on the charity’s list of potential recipients.

Practical work on offshore wind farm begins with survey

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(June 12, 2015) Before the turbines can begin turning on the 80,000 acres slated for offshore wind farms in Maryland, U.S. Wind, the U.S. subsidiary of Italian renewable energy company Renexia, will need to survey the ocean floor to determine the best places to install them.

Renexia won the August 2014 auction for the two Maryland sites, located about 15 miles offshore, with a bid of $8.7 million. The company expects to invest $2.5 billion overall on the project, according to the press release announcing the results of the auction. The zone is estimated to be able to produce between 850 to 1,450 megawatts of power, but the company plans to start with 500, according to the same release.

The turbines are expected to power 300,000 homes.

The Shearwater, a 110-foot former Coast Guard vessel, has been outfitted by U.S. Wind to serve as a geophysical acoustic survey vessel, Bill Wall, technical operations director of U.S. Wind, said.

Early last week the Shearwater had been delayed in arriving to Ocean City to purchase supplies because of fears the vessel would run aground at the inlet. Commercial fishermen have reported shoaling issues at the inlet have been damaging their boats and forcing them to consider moving their operations elsewhere.

After a delay of about 12 hours, the Shearwater arrived at the Coast Guard Station downtown and took on an estimated $80,000 in food, drinks and other supplies for the dozen or so crew embarking on the survey mission. The Shearwater is expected to remain at sea for three weeks at a time ahead of a second, larger “geotechnical” ship, Wall said.

Once out to the site, Wall explained, the Shearwater would tow a magnetometer, a device used to locate ferrous metals, and a side-scan sonar to image the ocean floor. They are looking for “sites’ archeological or biological” importance, Wall said, meaning shipwrecks or nesting areas, mainly.

The two devices are about six feet long and resemble torpedoes. They join side-mounted sensors attached to the Shearwater that can scan up to 200 meters on either side of the boat, but will be limited to about 50 to increase resolution.

Data from the sensors and towed apparatus are fed back into the boat for interpretation, Wall said, but they have contracted with a local boat, the Sea Tow, to run from the Shearwater back to shore every so often to deliver the collected data back to the home office through an agreement with local web developer D3 Corporation.

The Shearwater also includes a hydrophone array to listen for vocalizations of sea mammals, to begin the process of determining the site’s import to marine wildlife before construction affects it.

“From a historical perspective, I am very proud to say I voted for the bill that makes this possible,” State Sen. Jim Mathias said, “I also made sure the economic impact, the foodstuffs, the fuel etc., of this effort remains on the Eastern Shore.”

Mathias also stressed that there would be no charges to the customer to cover these initial outlays before the turbines begin turning, which is part of the bill allowing the process to continue that was signed into law in 2012.

“I believe in it but I also believe in the studies and diligence that went into it. I’ve been an advocate of renewables, but I wanted to make certain it was right,” he said.

Two instances of that include increasing the setback from the shoreline and ensuring the transmission cables that would carry the generated electricity back to shore wouldn’t affect tourism.

“I’ve accepted that the project is moving forward,” Delegate Mary Beth Carozza said, commenting on the Republican party’s resistance to the project in the past, “I’ve been happy with the updates from the company. It’s clear this is a huge project.”

Carozza said the wind turbine project is on a long timeline, with the expected start date near the end of 2019, and will involve many levels of government, agencies and local businesses.

Indeed, Carozza and Mathias have each held meetings between U.S. Wind and commercial fishermen in the past few weeks to facilitate communications between the two.

“We’re excited for Worcester County residents to have access to the 30-40 jobs this is expected to produce,” Merry Mears, deputy director of economic development said.

Teachers, staff look at deal

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(June 12, 2015) While details of a pay proposal put before teachers and support staff union officials as well as the board of education won’t be released for possibly another week, the consensus seems to be that progress that has been made in the past few days.

“We’re getting close to an agreement,” Barb Witherow, spokeswoman for the schools, said this week. “Dr. Wilson has indicated he is looking at eliminating positions in his proposals.”

Beth Shockley-Lynch of the Worcester County Teacher’s Association, agreed.

“The board has been very supportive of our position and felt we were worth the decisions being made. It will come with sacrifices of people and programs, but that’s what we are, people and programs,” she said.

The proposal was developed late last week but at this juncture remained to be ratified by all the parties involved.

“We met Friday and made an agreement, but we have to get the logistics of it,” Ivory Smith, president of the Worcester County Education Support Personnel Association, said.

A source close to the negotiations said both sides requested some clarifications on certain points of the deal and the school board needed more time to contact its members.

The proposal is not expected to be presented to the county commissioners, which it would have to be if funds were reallocated from one area to another.

“The teachers are not being made whole. The board has offered a very generous compromise,” Shockley-Lynch said.

Funding for step increases to teachers and county employees, yearly increases in base salary based on performance and experience, was trimmed from the county’s budget on in favor of reducing an increase in property tax rates and replenishing the budget stabilization fund.

Steps were previously skipped in 2010, 2011 and 2012. Neighboring Wicomico and Somerset counties had also skipped steps in previous years, but have since made up the difference. Worcester, dependent on a different funding model than those counties, has not.

“The real concern was the investment in teachers. If we’ve invested five years in training a teacher and they leave, that training is benefitting someone else,” Shockley-Lynch said.

A number of teachers had indicated they were looking for work outside of Worcester as a means to restore lost steps.

Hogan vetoes bill that would revise weed penalties

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(June 12,2015) Possession of marijuana paraphernalia will retain stiffer penalties than those for possession of the substance itself for another year, as Gov. Larry Hogan vetoed Senate Bill 517 intended to align the penalties for both.

Delegate Mary Beth Carozza had offered an amendment to the bill to give municipalities like Ocean City a measure of control on where the substance could be consumed in order to protect spaces like the Boardwalk.

Under her amendment, marijuana smoking in public areas would be prohibited unless “authorized by a governmental entity that has jurisdiction over that property.”

Simply put in Ocean City terms, people won’t be smoking pot on the Boardwalk unless and until the City Council specifically allows it.

The idea, Carozza said at the time, is that she didn’t want pending marijuana legislation to be more lenient than the existing rules concerning alcohol.

“My amendment is common sense and protects the public. If it’s a misdemeanor to drink alcohol in public, then it should be a misdemeanor to smoke pot in public. It should not be more lenient to smoke marijuana in public than it is to drink in certain public places,” Carozza said in a previous interview.

The amendment, Carozza’s first, was accepted as “friendly,” by the bill’s sponsor, and unusual but not unheard-of practice for a first-term delegate.

The bill passed both house and senate and made its way to the governor’s desk, where, Carozza said, her amendment was stripped out in favor of presenting a “clean” version of the bill. Carozza did vote in favor of the bill, but said she withdrew support when her amendment was removed.

Law enforcement and the state’s attorneys of Worcester and Wicomico, Beau Oglesby and Matt Maciarello, according to Carozza, indicated keeping the consumption of marijuana a criminal, rather than civil offense, would allow for more effective public control.

“If it’s a civil offense, the person who just smoked marijuana in public could be issued a paper citation, and then just walk a little ways down the boardwalk, and light up again,” Carozza said in a release.

Additionally, police would be left without authority to make traffic stops based on marijuana consumption. Law enforcement officials have repeatedly said the only mechanism they have available is the paraphernalia penalty, and while it may not be the most logical solution, it is a solution.

“Since we don’t know at this point whether the General Assembly will try to override the governor’s veto when we return to session in January, I plan to continue to work with law enforcement and the state’s attorneys to draft and, if needed, introduce legislation to keep the use of marijuana in public as a criminal offense. We are safer as a community when these tools are options for our law enforcement,” Carozza said.

Hunger-Free Schools Act may affect parts of county

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(June 12, 2015) Signed into law and taking effect June 1, the Hunger-Free Schools Act of 2015 eliminates the need for an application to receive a free or reduced meal at local schools by instead providing breakfast and lunch to the entire student body at no charge.

To qualify, schools must have at least 40 percent of its student body classified as low income.

Proponents of the bill said it removes the stigma of the application process and will increase participation in the program.

In Worcester County, officials are still evaluating the impact the program could have because participation within the county is a function of where students live. Countywide, the board of education has found that 43.6 percent of Worcester students are eligible for a meal program.

“We know that our school system does not qualify as a whole,” Scott Blackburn, food service coordinator for the schools. “Therefore, we are looking at school clusters — such as Pocomoke area schools — and individual schools to determine if a recommendation should be made to the board of education in terms of participation.”

Upwards of 70 percent of Pocomoke Elementary School students are on the free and reduced meal (FARM) program, exactly 65 percent of Pocomoke Middle students are eligible and almost 60 percent of Pocomoke High students qualify, according to the school board.

The greatest number, by percentage, of students eligible for the FARM program in Worcester County are those who attend Cedar Chapel Special School — almost 72 percent. The lowest percentage in the Worcester public schools is Stephen Decatur High, with 29.2 percent eligibility. The Snow Hill schools and Buckingham Elementary would also qualify based on 2014-2015 numbers.

“Worcester County Public Schools is currently studying the Community Eligibility provision included in the Hunger-Free Schools Act, by evaluating its benefit to our students, calculating its impact on federal reimbursements for free and reduced meals, and anticipating its effect on our food service operation,” said Barbara Witherow, school system spokesperson.

Instead of depending on applications, the Community Eligibility provision uses a formula based on numbers of prequalified children based on factors like homelessness, involvement with foster care or their families’ SNAP benefit eligibility, among other factors to determine acceptance into the program.

“The purpose of Community Eligibility,” Blackburn said, “is to increase the meals provided to students in schools with high levels of poverty while decreasing the burden of intensive paperwork required in the FARMS application process.”

Ocean City Air Show returns this weekend

(June 12, 2015) Ocean City’s eighth annual Air Show takes off this weekend bringing international performers, World War II bomber planes and numerous other acrobatic displays to the resort.

“We’ve pulled off the air show version of a hat trick with the addition of the F-22 Raptor Demo Team. We have three of the biggest acts in the air show industry, all performing in the same year [U.S. Navy Blue Angels and Breitling Jet Team],” OC Air Show President Bryan Lilley stated in a press release.

Although the show does not officially begin until Saturday, events have already kicked off, including breakfast with the performers starting at 8 a.m. today, Friday, at Layton’s Family restaurant on 16th Street.

“Layton’s is kind enough to offer breakfast to our performers who love the opportunity to mingle with all the fans in Ocean City,” said Cathy Bassett, press officer for the show. “Depending on the day and time you go, you could bump into a member of the Blue Angels team, a pilot from the Breitling Jet Team from France, or Mike Wiskus or John Klatt, our two aerobatic pilots, and get an autograph signed.”

Tonight, a free and open to the public Jack Daniels Fire Take Off Party will take place at Cowboy Coast on 17th Street beginning at 7 p.m. It will feature musical entertainment and a chance to meet pilots, jumpers and flight crews.

On Saturday, the Ocean City Air Show launches with performances by the U.S. Navy Blue Angels, B-25 Mitchell “Panchito” WWII Bomber, an L-39 Albatross Cold War era jet and more high-flying acts.

The display village lining the Boardwalk from 13th to 19th streets will open at 9 a.m. for guests to visit various information booths and talk to military recruiters about the Blue Angels and other performances.

Weather permitting, the air show will officially start at noon with the Blue Angels taking to the sky at 3 p.m. for a 45-minute performance.

“This is the first year that the U.S. Navy Blue Angels are performing in Ocean City and with our close proximity to Annapolis and the Naval Academy we know there is a lot of hometown support for these amazing pilots and their entire support team,” Bassett said. “We think Ocean City will be amazed by the show they put on.”

For the first time, the Ocean City Air Show will feature an international jet team, Breitling, who has made Ocean City a stop on its first U.S. tour, she added.

“I have never seen the Breitling Jet Team and there is just a powerhouse of a line-up,” said Jonathon Billie, who will fly the F-22 Raptor in the show this year. “With the Blue Angels, it’s going to be a really good show.”

Billie will give a single-ship demonstration with the F-22 Raptor to show audiences what it can do. He said that although it’s a large aircraft, audiences will see it perform tricks expected of only smaller planes.

“You will see the superior maneuverability of the aircraft, moving fast and slow, going from 90 to 600 knots,” he added.

“Nothing can compare to the power and noise of the F-22 Raptor as it screams across the beach and demonstrates what this most advanced fighter jet can do in the sky,” Bassett said.

After Saturday’s Boardwalk activities, an Air Show Performer Party will take place at Ocean Downs Casino, off Route 589 near Ocean Pines, starting at 7 p.m. and will feature a twilight jump by the Lucas Oil Parachute Jump Team and a fireworks display at dusk.

“The Air Show Performer Party will be the place to meet all the teams as they mingle with the crowd outside at Ocean Downs,” Bassett said.

The air show continues Sunday at noon with more performances by the Blue Angels, World War II P-51 Mustang, C-130 Fat Albert and other favorites.

The public will have a rare opportunity to take rides in the B-25 Mitchell “Panchito” WWII Bomber during the air show. For a $425 donation to the Delaware Aviation Museum Foundation, visitors will get the experience of what it was like to fly onboard the B-25 Mitchell Bomber “Panchito.”

The flights will take off from the Ocean City Airport today through June 14. The plane can seat up to five people and children under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Call 443-458-8926 or email panchitoB25@aol.com to save a seat on the 30-minute flights.

In addition, the Coast Guard will bring along its MH-65 Dolphine helicopter to demonstrate search and rescue missions for the crowd.

Every year, thousands of people watch the Ocean City Air Show from the Boardwalk, hotels, on the beach or on a boat in the ocean, Bassett said.

“The 2015 event will be our best show yet,” Lilley said. “With the inaugural performance of the U.S. Navy Blue Angels and the Breitling Jet Team we expect to have record crowds.”

“Everyone should come out, and I speak for the team, we are really excited to show Maryland what we do,” Billie said.

At the Air Show’s “Show Center” on the beach at 16th Street, spectators can hear commentary and enjoy great views from most spots along the Boardwalk and beach. Others take their boats on the water to catch a seaside view.

Some special packages are still available for the Air Show, but they are selling quickly. Tickets start at $22 for “Drop Zone” seating and $109 for a Flight Line Clubhouse ticket. The VIP Penthouse is sold out for Saturday and Sunday.

“We just want to thank Ocean City for their continued support of this air show and we ask everyone to please come early and stay late, and wear plenty of sunscreen as they kick back and enjoy an amazing day of flying right over the beach in Ocean City,” Bassett said.

Visit www.ocairshow.com for more information.

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

Friday, June 13

8 a.m.: Breakfast with the performers, Layton’s Family Restaurant, 16th Street

7 p.m.: Air Show Jack Daniels Fire Take Off Party, Cowboy Coast, 17th Street

Saturday, June 14

8 a.m.: Breakfast with the performers, Layton’s Family Restaurant, 16th Street

9 a.m.: Display Village and Premium Viewing open, 13th to 19th streets on the Boardwalk

10 a.m.: Flight Line Club VIP and Corporate Beach Chalets open, Show Center Beach, 14th to 17th streets

12 p.m.: Air Show begins featuring L-39 Cold War Era Jet Demo, Fat Albert C-130, B-25 Mitchell “Panchito” WWII Bomber, U.S. Navy Blue Angels, P-51 Mustang Demo, USAF F-22 Raptor Demo, USAF Heritage Flight, USCG Search and Rescue Demo, Mike Wiskus in the Lucas Oil Pitts, Brietling Jet Team and Lucas Oil Jump Team.

3 p.m.: U.S. Navy Blue Angels performance

7 p.m.: Air Show Performer Party, open to the public, Ocean Downs, featuring the Lucas Oil parachute team twilight jump and fireworks display

Sunday, June 15

8 a.m.: Breakfast with the performers, Layton’s Family Restaurant, 16th Street

9 a.m.: Display Village and Premium Viewing open, 13th to 19th streets on the Boardwalk

10 a.m.: Flight Line Club VIP and Corporate Beach Chalets open, Show Center Beach, 14th to 17th streets

12 p.m.: Air Show begins featuring L-39 Cold War Era Jet Demo, Fat Albert C-130, B-25 Mitchell “Panchito” WWII Bomber, U.S. Navy Blue Angels, P-51 Mustang Demo, USAF F-22 Raptor Demo, USAF Heritage Flight, USCG Search and Rescue Demo, Mike Wiskus in the Lucas Oil Pitts, Brietling Jet Team and Lucas Oil Jump Team.

3 p.m.: U.S. Navy Blue Angels performance

Stein’s 281.6-lb. mako takes top award in tourney

(June 12, 2015) One hundred sixty-eight “diehard” anglers and captains headed offshore on 37 boats last weekend during the 19th annual Mako Mania Shark Tournament.

“It went fantastic. Without them it wouldn’t be a success,” event co-director Earl Conley said.

Many of the participants have competed in the tournament before.

“They love the tournament and we love having them as participants,” he said. “We want to thank all of the diehard fishermen and strong supporting cast of anglers and captains.”

The extended forecast prior to the tournament was unfavorable, which deterred some captains with smaller boats from participating in the tournament, Conley said.

Conditions were a little rough offshore last Friday, the first day of Mako Mania, but Saturday and Sunday the ocean was calmer, much better for fishing than expected.

Teams could fish two of three tournament days, June 5-7. Thirty-three went out fishing on Friday. Thirty-four headed offshore Saturday and seven boats left the docks on Sunday.

Joe Stein caught a 281.6-pound mako last Friday aboard Marli, which earned him and his teammates first place in the division. The crew won $27,590.

Adam Sutton reeled in a 183.5-pound mako last Friday while fishing on Talkin’ Trash. The group was awarded $9,534.

Mike Mongiello’s 173.9-pound mako, hooked last Saturday aboard No Limits, finished in third place, netting $6,356.

It took Jeff Green two hours and 40 minutes to boat a 500-pound thresher shark last Saturday. Green and his Hook N’ Tail teammates took home $2,760.

This was the first year first-, second- and third-place prizes were awarded in the thresher division. In past years it was heaviest thresher winner takes all.

Brice Bogar battled a 465.7-pound thresher for two hours last Saturday while fishing on Reel Vibrations. Because of participation in added-entry level calcuttas, Bogar and his teammates were awarded $10,899.

Port-A-Bella angler Jeff Guest, Jr. boated a 212.1-pound thresher last Saturday, good for third place. The crew was presented with $3,411.

Mike Cromwell took first place in the bluefish division with a 10 pounder brought to the Bahia Marina scale, between 21st and 22nd streets, bayside, last Saturday. Cromwell and his Lisa teammates won $4,776.

Sonny Snodgrass caught a 1.3-pound bluefish aboard M Keli Jeane Sunday and was awarded $1,764.

The Reel Vibrations crew released seven makos to win the $1,000 W.W. Harman award for most sharks released.

A total of $68,090 was paid out to tournament winners.

The next Bahia Marina Tournaments event is the 22nd annual Capt. Steve Harman’s Poor Girls Open, Aug. 13-15.

Proceeds from the ladies-only fishing tournament will go to the American Cancer Society. While some of the money will be used for research on a national level, the remainder stays in the area to assist in local breast cancer awareness and patient programs and services. For more information, call Bahia Marina at 410-289-7438.

Joe Stein caught a 281.6-pound mako last Friday aboard Marli, which earned him and his teammates first place in the mako division of the 19th annual Mako Mania Shark Tournament. The crew won $27,590.

MSSA’s 26th Tuna-ment Tournament, June 19-21

(June 12, 2015) The Maryland Saltwater Sportfishing Association will present its 26th annual Tuna-ment Tournament next weekend.

Teams will fish two of three days – Friday, Saturday and/or Sunday, June 19-21.

“We are looking to get 100 boats this year,” said Dave Smith, executive director of the Maryland Saltwater Sportfishing Association.

Tuna is the main division for the tournament and all species are eligible, except false albacore. Teams boating first-, second- and third-heaviest tunas will be awarded prize money.

There are also optional added-entry skill level calcuttas for the chance to win additional prize money for reeling in the largest tuna. Calcuttas range from $50-$500.

A category for dolphin is available as well. The cost to enter is $100.

“Tuna fishing right now is great. It seems our tournament hits right at the beginning of the prime tuna fishing season. At least for the past three years anyway,” Smith said Monday.

Final registration and a local captains’ meeting will take place, 6-8 p.m. at Alltackle in West Ocean City on Thursday, June 18. The cost to enter the tournament is $250 for MSSA members, $300 for non-members.

Sunset Marina in West Ocean City is one of four official weigh-in stations. The others are Wachapreague Seaside Marina in Wachapreague, Va., Curtis Merritt Marina in Chincoteague, Va. and Hook’em and Cook’em at the Indian River Inlet in Delaware.

“Anglers that fish our tournament like the convenience of four weigh stations and the easy-going nature of MSSA tournaments,” Smith said. “We do follow our rules to the ‘T,’ but we do put a high priority on fun.”

This year, weigh-in time has been extended one hour. Weigh-ins will take place from 4:30-8 p.m. each tournament day.

“We extended the weigh station hours for several reasons. Economically speaking, it will allow boats to travel at a more economical speed and still make it in, while also allowing for the most fishing time possible [with] lines out at 3:30 p.m.,” Smith said. “Also, with less stress about getting back in time, that should translate into a more enjoyable experience.”

For more information, visit www.mssa.net or call 410-255-5535.

Fifty-six boats registered for the 2014 tournament. Forty-three of them were out of Ocean City.

Cash and prizes awarded to 2014 winners totaled $40,000.

The crew of the Top Dog reeled in two large big eye tuna, weighing in at 222.1 and 211.7 pounds. The 222.1-pound fish took first place in the 25th annual Maryland Saltwater Sportfishing Association’s Tuna-ment Tournament last year. The crew won $21,041.