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...excerpt from Bolivar Chambers of Commerce
Fishing and Hunting have been enjoyable pursuits on the Bolivar Peninsula since man first inhabited
the area and are still popular sports, particularly fishing.
Bolivar has fishing available from the Gulf of Mexico,
Galveston East Bay and the Intracoastal Waterway. The Bolivar Peninsula has water on every side and also a channel cut through
its entire length - the Intracoastal Waterway.
Hunting of doves and waterfowl during the fall in the Bolivar marshes
of Galveston East Bay is considered by many the best in the State of Texas.
Rollover Pass is one of our most popular
fishing holes because it is the easiest to reach, it's free, it requires no special equipment and the fish are abundant.
Rollover
Pass, also known as Rollover Fish Pass, is a strait 200 feet wide, five feet deep, and more than 1,600 feet long across Bolivar
Peninsula; it links Rollover Bay and East Bay with the Gulf of Mexico in extreme southeastern Galveston County (at 29°00'
N, 94°30' W). The pass was opened in 1955 by the Texas Game and Fish Commission to perpetuate state fish and wildlife resources
and improve local fishing conditions; it introduces sufficient quantities of seawater into East Bay to increase bay water
salinity, promote growth of submerged vegetation, and help marine fish to and from spawning and feeding areas in the bay.
The pass is named for the practice of ship captains from the days of Spanish rule through prohibition, who, to avoid the Galveston
customs station, rolled barrels of import or export merchandise over that part of the peninsula.
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