American Whitewater
Maryland Navigability Report
Summary
Only streams that are tidal and capable of being boated, including small rowboats and possibly kayaks, are defined as navigable and open to the public. What rights, if any, a boater has on streams that are not influenced by the tide has not been conclusively determined.
State Test of Navigability
Maryland adheres to the ancient common law rule that navigable streams are those streams subject to the ebb and flow of the tide.1) A second test, whether the stream is navigable-in-fact by small boats such as rowboats, might also be employed by a court as an additional restriction on determining whether a tidal stream is navigable.2) The state owns nearly all the navigable waters and the bottoms of navigable streams in the state (with the exception of certain colonial land grants), and the public has the right to use the shore of navigable streams up to the ordinary high water mark.3) The navigable waters of Maryland comprise 2,429 square miles or 20% of the State's total surface area, and the shoreline runs for 3,190 miles.4)
Extent of Public Rights in Navigable and Non-Navigable Rivers
The public has the right to recreate in waters subject to the ebb and flow of the tide. This right extends to the ordinary high water mark. Of course, under the federal navigational servitude,5) the public has the right of navigation in waters navigable in fact that are not subject to the tide. What other rights the public has in waters not subject to the tide, if any, has not yet been determined. The state maintains a recreational system of water trails for kayaking and canoeing and state parks with navigable rivers that includes nontidal waters.6) Regulations of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources cover safety and commercial whitewater kayaking on certain designated rivers, including the Youghiogheny Wild River.7)
Miscellaneous
Trespassing from water vessels onto property that is conspicuously posted against trespassers is a misdemeanor subject to a fine of up to $500 and 3 months in prison.8)