Great footage to give you the general ambience of each of our quaint and charming towns--St. Michaels, Oxford, Tilghman Island, Cambridge and Chestertown.
I was bitten, but not by a crab, by the beauty and captivated by the charm of the locals in that beautiful part of the USA the Eastern Shore of MD. Have visited all the towns with the exception of Tilghman Island. I shall return. Thank you for sharing.
I really enjoyed the video as I’ve visited each of the towns in it. As a Marylander I truly appreciate, ney, love the Eastern shore and go there to escape my home in Baltimore. Thanks for sharing!
Very cool. I practice genealogy and I believe my favorite side to work on came from somewhere on the eastern shore. I’m excited to piece everything together and who knows, I may visit one day.
I have lived here my entire life on the eastern shore and many of you may think the eastern shore as its unique charm well it is different then western shore but folks the eastern shore has lost its uniqueness quite a bit from when i was a young boy growing up, it used to be way more laid back and the eastern shore accent was more prevalent amongst a lot more of the watermen and farmers that were around in the 1980's early 1990's but i hate to say this but drugs and to much development and a steady migration of city folks moving to the shore has cost this shore a lot of its eastern shore country character and we will never see it again unfortunately....
Eastern Shore of Maryland is the only part of Maryland outside Baltimore that still has a unique charm and culture. The western shore is just one big suburb (excepting some towns near Virginia and western Maryland) of the DC elite. The eastern shore is filled with history, open space, scenery, and is very beautiful. I hope it stays that way. I don't mean to insert politics, but I feel "liberals" will just come there once they destroy their counties. They have kind of done that already to Delaware..... south of the canal over the last 25-yrs. It used to be a very rustic and very beautiful place, but so many people from northern Delaware and people from Philadelphia and New Jersey started building homes on what used to be historic farms and wetlands. They simply do not care what they do to the locals or how they erase everything. The funny thing is that once they come here, they start complaining that it's not as beautiful as when they first came because of all the new development.