Delaware
Watch out for fog in Delaware bay, we were less than 50' from one mid-bay light house and couldn't see it (mid July, 2005).depending on draft (I'm at 3'10" - Catalina 30 wing keel) you can cross from Reedy Island to the east side of the main shipping channel (at some light house), and then run a rumb line to Cape May Canal across the 'flats' (typically saw at least 6 feet, and more often much more).Remember Cape May Canal has 2 fixed bridges, MHHW clearance is only 55 feet.Consider Utch's marina in Cape May, we always stay there and find them wonderful (right-turn after exiting the canal and then run southward right along their sea-wall and then right-turn into their entrance).Heading north to Atlantic City, consider staying at Gardner's Basin (only $2-2.50/ft versus the State/Casino marina at $4/ft). left turn before bridge and run along steel wall. Docks are in great shape, albeit their outside area bathrooms are terrible, but till 5 pm, the bathrooms inside the museum can be used. Word had it they are thinking of upgrading the bathrooms and installing showers. The other sailor may have meant this place as the docks face 2 restaurants and a nice area with a couple of other restaurants. Also the 'chitney' (bus) can be picked-up right there and runs to the casinos/boardwalk.Futher north, at Barnegat inlet/Lighthouse there's a good anchorage and yacht club still inside the inlet (so to speak). head east staying to the north side of the narrow part of the inlet, then turn left/south as you approach being parallel with the lighthouse and run past the lighthouse, continue south past the coast guard station, around the shoal area, and then turn south west and head southward towards the anchorage (stay in deep/south, closer to the main shoal area will subject you to lots of currents).Heading further north, there's Manasquan inlet, very passable, and a few marina's/restaurants just inside the inlet in/around the rail-road bridge (which is typically open, but very narrow).From here, most folks in our area make the rumb line to Block Island, however personally I have never done it (we run north, stay at Sandy Hook's 'horseshoe cove', then transit NYC harbor, the East River, into Long Island Sound.Also, one other storm-hole -- Shark River, just inside/past the bridges, there are places/marinas to tie-up, but it becomes quickly shallow therein, so be careful.Hope this helps...