260 CREW POINT TO CAPE RAY. 



Buoy. — A red spar buoy is moored in 3| fathoms of water at the 

 southwestern end of the shoal extending southwestward from East 

 Baldwin rock. 



Rock. — A small rock, bearing 268°, distant 250 yards from East 

 Baldwin, has 10 feet of water over it, and a shoal with 3^ fathoms 

 of water extends southward nearly 65 yards from the rock. 



Buoy. — A white spar buoy, with a white St, Andrew's cross top- 

 mark, is moored in 3^ fathoms at the southern end of the shoal ex- 

 tending southward from this rock. 



West Baldwin, 150 yards off the southwestern shore of the har- 

 bor, ^ mile inside of Channel head, is a rock 50 yards in diameter 

 the shoalest part of which has 1 foot on it at low water. The passage 

 between it and the shoal extending from the rock westward of East 

 Baldwin is 80 yards wide. 



Buoy.— A black spar buoy, with a black conical topmark, is 

 moored in 3^ fathoms at the northeastern end of the shoal water off 

 AVest Baldwin rock. 



E.oad island, the western of two islands extending from the north- 

 eastern shore of the harbor, at nearly y% mile withiai Cliannel head, 

 is 30 feet high and covered with turf over gray rock. 



Gallyboy island, the eastern island, low, flat, covered with grass, 

 and joined to the northeastern shore at low water, lies east-northeast- 

 ward of Road island, and is separated from it by a channel 200 yards 

 Avide, through which is a narrow passage with 3^ fathoms of water, 

 but only available with local knowledge. 



Pancake rock, the eastern end of foul ground extending from the 

 shore of the harbor southwestward of Road island, is about 130 feet 

 in diameter and awash at low water. The channel between the shoal 

 off' this rock and the foul ground oft' Road island is only 90 yards 

 wide, and it is necessary, therefore, to keep on the marks when pass- 

 intx through it. 



Buoy. — A black cask buoy is moored at the northeastern end of 

 Pancake rock. 



Flagstaff hill, 222 feet high, and the highest land in this locality, 

 is surmounted by a large stone cairn, with a wooden triangle at the 

 top. 



Leading" lights. — A Avhite pyramidal tower, 22 feet high, on the 

 southwestern end of Road island, exhibits an intermittent white light, 

 thus : Light, one and a half seconds ; eclipse, one and a half seconds. 



A fixed red light is shown from the northern and western sides of 

 the lantern and is visible over the harbor, but not from seaward. 



A white pyramidal tower, 15 feet high, on the land, bearing 300°, 

 distant 490 yards from the preceding lighthouse, exhibits at 81 feet 

 above high water an intermittent white light, thus: Light, one sec- 

 ond : eclipse, one second. 



