The Secrets To A Successful Southern California Lobster Season
If you know absolutely nothing about lobster hunting, I would advise you to initially read my first article.
I have also decided to expand this series into three parts, this being the second installment.
In my early years of lobster hunting, I spent much time, effort and money diving off of beaches and paying for boats, only to come home humiliated and disgraced with an empty game bag.
Buying the extra hunting gear, obtaining the correct permits and practicing your lobster pinning techniques are not enough to guarantee lobster success.
Your hunting strategy must be tailored to the boat you’re on, the beach you’re diving off of and the time of the season.
Assuming you already know the lobster hunting basics, you are ready to go out and stuff your bags!
Go To Where The Lobsters Are
Sounds pretty obvious, huh?
During the beginning of the season (October to November), lobsters tend to be in shallow water between 10 and 40 feet.
As Winter storms set in, lobsters go deeper (60-100 feet and more) to seek refuge from the pounding surf.
Towards the end of the season (February to March), lobsters tend to go back in the shallows.
A lot of lobster hunters won’t tell you where they go, but most will share how deep they’ve been catching them.
Throughout the season, always pay attention to how deep the lobsters are.
If your first dive is in 20 feet, but don’t see any lobster, try another good spot in maybe 40 or 50 feet for your second dive.
If the first spot was very lucrative in lobsters and you didn’t scare them all back in their holes, stay for the second dive.
Keeping Your Lobsters – Prevent Escapes!

It is quite common for an experienced lobster hunter to bring along a novice.
Usually, the senior grabs and the junior holds, opens and keeps his eye on the bag.
Just because you bag a lobster, doesn’t mean that lobster is going to give up on life.
Once you open that bag to put your second lobster of the dive in, your first lobster will try and shoot right out; they are often successful.
Shake your first lobster down to the bottom of the bag, position the second lobster at the bag’s entrance, open, insert and close right away.
After you’ve caught a few lobsters, they tend to cling onto one another and your risk of escape diminishes.
Shore Diving For Lobsters?
All throughout lobster season, especially at the beginning, along the cliffs of Palos Verdes lights can be seen from several dozen lobster hunters.
The most famous place to go lobster hunting from the shores of Palos Verdes is Malaga Cove, aka “The Nursery.”
A name well deserved, because a good night at Malaga Cove is actually catching a legal lobster.
The shore is easily accessible by anyone in moderately good shape, so a lot of times this spot gets picked clean.
But, it’s the perfect place to test your lobster hunting and night diving skills; just make sure you don’t park in the lot between 9 PM and 5 AM.
The harder it is to get to a spot from shore, the less likely that spot has been picked clean; from Mabilu to Orange County, there are still some good places to hunt lobster from shore.

SCUBA diving is the easy part; the challenge is the walk and sometimes crawl down goat trails to the shoreline in darkness.
A warning about Palos Verdes though; over the years a group called “The Bay Boys” (aka “The Gay Boys”) have been territorial over their local surfing spots.
Last season, these 40 year old, punk, low-life losers, who still live with their parents in Palos Verdes, started targeting lobster hunters along the cliffs by slashing tires.
Boat Diving For Lobsters
Access to a good, reliable, boat is key to catching lobsters on a consistent basis.
Every single charter boat goes out on Opening Night.
All along the coast of Catalina and the rest of Southern California, hundreds of private and commercial boats anchor off shore waiting for midnight – the start of lobster season.
The next night, barely a boat can be seen; for the rest of the season; only the serious, regular lobster divers and hoop netters are out.
Dive shops very rarely charter lobster boats after opening night.
A Warning About Lobster Diving From Large Charter Boats
The larger boats that accommodate 20 to 35 divers, are usually chartered by dive shops and tend to cater to “first time” lobster hunters, who may never have even done a night dive.
The boat, many times, will also be needed for a day charter later in the morning, so to save time the boat may anchor in one spot, all night long.
So, basically, you are anchored in one area, with 20 to 35 novice lobster hunters jumping overboard for four hours and scaring all the lobsters back into their holes.
Your Basic Strategy For Lobster Hunting From Large Boats
Be the first diver overboard and check the anchor the first thing after you submerge.
For whatever reason, on big or small boats, check the anchor first; I’ve caught many lobsters just by doing that.
After that, swim against the current and cover as much ground as possible as early as possible in the dive.
If the boat doesn’t plan to move to another spot, your second dive will probably be futile.
Small Boats Are Best
Ideally, a small boat with two to eight divers is ideal for lobster hunting.
There are many small professional boats that can be chartered for about $250 a night; find five other divers to split the cost, and you have a descent hunting trip.
As long as the boat is regularly chartered for fishing and diving, the boat Captain and crew should have a good idea where to hunt lobsters.

Photo By Juan Twenty
The Island Diver out of King Harbor is one such charter.
You should still keep in touch with a core group of lobster hunters to keep tabs on how deep the lobsters are, since the charter boat Captain may not know.
Next Week: What to do with your lobsters!
Photo tips on posing with your trophy, how to de-vein the tail, 2008 season predictions and lobster recipes.



[…] now, after reading The Basics of California Lobster Hunting On SCUBA and The Secrets To A Successful Southern California Lobster Season you are sure to come back from your trips with a bag full of […]
Pingback by What To Do With Your Lobsters & 2008 Season Predictions | Psycho Solo Diver - Online Diving Blog and more! — September 12, 2008 @ 12:12 am
Thank you very much for sharing information. I have been trying my butt off to catch these guys and so far just short ones that I have to let go. Sooner or later I will get lucky.
Comment by Dave Burgess (Master Diver) — January 15, 2009 @ 12:48 pm
So, what kind of season was it this year – great, good, or just so-so? I usually get down to Southern California, to Catalina, for the opener – but didn’t this year. So, now that the season has been closed for almost 3 weeks, I was wondering how it was.
Mark
Salt Lake City, UT
Comment by Mark — April 8, 2009 @ 8:27 pm
Insightful Thank You
Comment by Tim — June 10, 2009 @ 7:06 pm
i have a 2601 striper ill take you to catalina lobster diving and ill hoop net …just pay for gas???
Comment by darin — September 2, 2009 @ 9:49 pm
hey there psycho blubber diver, glad you have this blog here to show lazy dick nuggets like you how to catch lobsters and rape our natural resources. Have you ever even free dove before?? And you talk shit about people you’ve never even met who protect a place from turning into a zoo and being stripped of all that is native!? I bet you’re on of those guys who takes the littles and collects buckets of snails to sell to your korean friend. Glad I got to know you buddy, see you around bubba..
Comment by edward teach — October 13, 2009 @ 7:53 pm
Hi Mr. Edward Teach!
I’m glad you have enjoyed my blog. Just to let you know, I am not a poacher and have turned many in to the DFG, whether they have followed up on my leads, I am not sure.
Yes, I am fat and have a lot of weights to keep me down, but I assure you, sir, that everything that I have done is 100% legal.
As far as raping natural resources? Have you ever heard of fishing? Same as lobster hunting! So, pull your head out of your ass and campaign to someone else to change the fishing laws and will will obey.
Happy hunting!
Comment by PsychoSoloDiver — October 15, 2009 @ 10:54 pm
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Pingback by Rotisserie cornish hen — February 28, 2011 @ 1:04 pm
Mr. Edward Teach,
You are an ignorant man. You are justifying vandalizing the property of others to further your cause. That is moronic. Furthermore, if you understood divers, you would know that they are the true conservarors of our environment, not mindless liberals such as yourself. Divers harvesting sea life for their own consumption is a hell of a lot more “green” than fools like you buying over harvested commercial seafood from Albertsons.
Think about it this way, if you have ever eaten a lobster and not caught it yourself, you are the one “raping our natural resources”. You are a hypocrite and worse than that, ignorant and unwilling to cure it.
Comment by Scuba Steve — September 24, 2011 @ 5:28 pm
Lobster hunting in So Cal is awesome! If you do it legally! Its no fun to break the law. Its cheaper to buy them then break the law! Anybody ever try Lobster Machaca? Too good for words!
Comment by Eric Sanderson — November 20, 2011 @ 8:37 pm
Famous Mr. Ed. –
I genuinely don’t understand the vitriol here. Massive drag netting that commercial boats do to the fish population is rape and will surely be the end of our oceans. If you have the chance to swing by Shanghai, check out what they did to their sea – it looks like milked coffee. Picking up a cock roach with your bare hands in beautiful Southern California waters, eating it or sharing it with your family is pretty darn close to natural as far as I’m concerned. I also think that holds true whether you’re skinny, fat, using a regulator, jumping off a newbie boat, or sporting a camouflaged free diver wetsuit that’s obviously too tight and has your nuts in a bunch. How many bugs you think a newbie is going to get anyway? You probably got road rage too, huh?
-Miguel
Comment by miguel-lobster-diver — January 25, 2012 @ 11:26 pm
So what is the beat time for free diving? Alot of diver out there keep saying diving for lobster at9, ofcourse everyone know at night, but we never saw any legal size ( 7-11 pm)….
Thank alot…
Comment by Single line — March 5, 2012 @ 1:45 am
Hey PSD-It’s been months so I figured I’d brush up.
Comment by Michael (Chipper) Jessen — September 28, 2015 @ 6:37 am