Welcome to Bull Creek entrance, SC
The entrance to Bull Creek is lcoated near the town of Bucksport in Horry County, South Carolina. Bull Creek breaks off of the larger Waccamaw River, a portion of the Intracoastal Waterway. Bucksport is a census-designated place mainly known for its history with the lumber industry, which shipped lumber as far as New York City and Boston.
Boating Resources for Bull Creek entrance, SC
Important Contacts
Harbormaster in Bull Creek entrance, SC
Charts, Navigation, & Guides
Online Nautical Chart for Bull Creek entrance, SC
Pilot Guide Info for Bull Creek entrance, SC
Important Locations & Services
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Check Tides in Bull Creek entrance, SC
Print a Tide Chart for Bull Creek entrance, SC
Other Resources
In The Zone: The Sabre 51 Salon Express
By US Harbors When Sabre Yachts completed construction of hull number 200 of its 48 Salon Express model, more than half the crew who built it had also worked on hull number one. The average tenure on that line was 12 years, and they produced a yacht that proved to… Learn More
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Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Story of Octopus Intelligence Set in the Pacific Northwest
By Janet Green Hammerman, best4boats.com. The Netflix adaptation of Shelby Van Pelt’s bestselling novel Remarkably Bright Creatures is drawing renewed attention to one of the ocean’s most fascinating inhabitants — the giant Pacific octopus. Set in a fictional Pacific Northwest coastal town, the story follows an aging widow, a drifting… SEE MORE
Into the Deep: Alvin Dives to Shackleton's and Scott's Lost Ships in the North Atlantic
By Ken Kostel, whoi.edu. Four decades after its legendary surveys of the Titanic, the submersible Alvin is heading back to the North Atlantic — this time to document two shipwrecks tied to the greatest names in polar exploration. WHOI’s R/V Atlantis departed Woods Hole on July 2 carrying scientists, engineers,… SEE MORE
Eyes On The Deep: How Ocean Imaging Is Transforming Underwater Discovery
By Elise Hugus, whoi.edu. From ancient shipwrecks in the Black Sea to a lost WWI submarine off San Diego, the ability to see — and share — what lies on the ocean floor has never been more powerful. A new feature from WHOI’s Oceanus magazine profiles Dwight Coleman, the institution’s… SEE MORE


