Boaters lucky enough to be at the 2009 Fort Lauderdale Boat Show will be the first in North America to experience Jeppesen Marine’s new C-MAP 4D cartography — the latest advance in electronic charting technology that will change the way boaters see the world.
This innovative approach to electronic charting gives boaters control over their navigation solutions in ways never before possible. Using one cartridge, customers can select the coverage area and the content segment that best meet their boating needs. Customers can select the Max segment which includes all the popular features of the existing C-MAP MAX product, or they can choose the 4D segment of C-MAP 4D which includes a variety of breakthrough features, including:
“4D” Charting — Take the most advanced 3D land and ocean mapping database in the world and add the 4th dimension of time. Based on a continuous update process, C-MAP 4D gives boaters access to a personalized navigation experience with up-to-date data for safe navigation.
True View & Photos — C-MAP 4D includes a realistic navigational perspective with satellite photos and hi-resolution coastal imagery that can be overlaid on accurate and up-to-date 3-D vector data, plus thousands of extraordinary photos of popular marinas and areas of interest.
Nautical Paper Charts — For boaters who enjoy the traditional look of paper charts, C-MAP 4D delivers the exclusive ability to overlay electronic versions of raster charts onto multi-dimensional shaded relief cartography for a new boating experience.
This revolutionary charting technology will be available for use as soon as chart plotter manufacturers are able to implement it onto their units.
This innovative approach to electronic charting gives boaters control over their navigation solutions in ways never before possible. Using one cartridge, customers can select the coverage area and the content segment that best meet their boating needs. Customers can select the Max segment which includes all the popular features of the existing C-MAP MAX product, or they can choose the 4D segment of C-MAP 4D which includes a variety of breakthrough features, including:
“4D” Charting — Take the most advanced 3D land and ocean mapping database in the world and add the 4th dimension of time. Based on a continuous update process, C-MAP 4D gives boaters access to a personalized navigation experience with up-to-date data for safe navigation.
True View & Photos — C-MAP 4D includes a realistic navigational perspective with satellite photos and hi-resolution coastal imagery that can be overlaid on accurate and up-to-date 3-D vector data, plus thousands of extraordinary photos of popular marinas and areas of interest.
Nautical Paper Charts — For boaters who enjoy the traditional look of paper charts, C-MAP 4D delivers the exclusive ability to overlay electronic versions of raster charts onto multi-dimensional shaded relief cartography for a new boating experience.
This revolutionary charting technology will be available for use as soon as chart plotter manufacturers are able to implement it onto their units.


The top fish, reeled in off Block Island aboard Pieros’ 27 Contender, was big enough to win both the tournament and the 1st Place Calcutta in this American Striper Association (ASA) sanctioned event. Captain Greg Nunn of Team Hapi Daze rolled in with his 32-foot Fountain and weighed in a very respectable 29.30-pound striped bass that was good enough for 2nd Place in the tournament. Captain Bob Fitzgerald of Team Comstock Regulator placed 3rd with a 26.95-pound striper, fishing aboard his 26-foot Regulator. Captain Ken Zwirko of Team Bunker Down used his 21-foot Contender to catch and weigh in a 24.75-pound striped bass, which was good enough to land 4th Place in the tournament.
Schneider was on site with a specially equipped truck to transport the four stripers from the Osterville Anglers Club on Cape Cod to the their new home in Connecticut. Schneider reported later that the fish had survived the journey, were actively feeding and were adjusting well to their new surroundings in the Maritime Aquarium exhibit.
Diving for lobsters with scuba gear has been going on for decades. It takes a special breed of person to don a wetsuit, jump into the cold winter Pacific waters and feel their way along the bottom in the dark, peering in to cracks and crevices with flashlights for these scary looking creatures. There’s a reason they’re called “spiny” lobsters — their shells (and especially their muscular tails) are covered with sharp points. And one more thing, you have to grab them with your hands. Even with diving gloves, they’re quite a handful.
The Around the Americas expedition has just completed the first leg of its historic voyage – a west-to-east transit of the Northwest Passage above Alaska and Canada – and is currently sailing down the U.S. East Coast. Their route will take them down the Atlantic Coast of North and South America, around Cape Horn, then back up the Pacific Coast of both continents to its starting point in Seattle, Wash.
My earlier articles detailed just how important navigation electronics are to Quinlan (he’s sponsored by Jeppesen Marine and Simrad). On our trip, we ran about 20 miles out of Marina Del Rey Harbor to an offshore high spot known as the 270. Using his Simrad CX44 chart plotter and bathymetric C-MAP Fishing Contour Charts, we ran to an area several miles upwind of the 270. We “power chummed” (idling forward while dragging a chum bucket) back towards the 270 for a couple of miles, then set up to precisely drift back over the high spot. When we added a stream of fresh chum using Quinlan’s homemade “chum churn,” we soon had a nice slick behind the boat that eventually reached 8 miles in length.



On August 7, Jeppesen Marine put its best foot (or is it fin?) forward at the 16th Annual Joe Cronin Memorial Fishing Tournament, contributing a Silver Level cash sponsorship and demonstrating the angling prowess of Marketing Manager Linda McAndrews, who reeled in 3rd Place in the Ladies’ Bluefish Division. In addition, Jeppesen Marine Business Development Manager Ken Cirillo donated the services of his 29 Blackfin Magic, providing his boat, fuel, mate, lunch, equipment and angling expertise to take out a team of anglers (including McAndrews) participating in this tournament.
Proving that Cirillo has a way with Cape Cod’s big blues, another angler fishing aboard his boat (Mike Yorstin) took Second Place honors in the Men’s Bluefish Division. Of course, Cirillo counts on his C-MAP electronic charts to help him find and catch big stripers, blues and fluke in the waters around Cape Cod. His boat is based out of the Osterville Anglers Club (OAC), where he is currently serving a term as president. Joe Cronin Memorial Fishing Tournament Chairman and event organizer E.J. Jaxtimer is also a long-standing OAC member.