![]() ![]() ![]() A few weeks after that trip, I would head to the opposite side of the Chesapeake, to Leonardtown, Md. ![]() My visit to Chincoteague last September was part of an exploration of an American tradition rich in history and lore. Back then, before fish-farming became popular, the land itself functioned as a sort of natural pier for its residents who wrangled clams and oysters and terrapin, as thick as treasure, from beds in the brackish water. As I made my way across, I thought of how, in centuries past, skiffs drifted through the region’s bays, channels and coves in search of shellfish. On the marsh-bound causeway to Chincoteague Island on Virginia’s Eastern Shore, cars and their drivers seemed to float across the still waters of Queens Sound. ![]()
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