Operation: Lobster Liberation!
Logged SCUBA Dive #327
Secret Location: 4e 6f 72 74 68 20 6f 66 20 74 68 65 20 74 68 72 65 65 20 6c 6f 6c 6c 69 70 6f 70 20 74 72 65 65 73 20 6e 65 61 72 20 74 68 65 20 67 61 74 65 73 20 6f 66 20 4d 61 72 2e
Palos Verdes, CA
Solo Diving/SoCal Buddy Diving
In With: 2700 psi
Out With: 300 psi
Max depth: 60 feet
Waves: Minor swell chop
Visibility: 15 feet+
Temperature: 52 degrees
Total Bottom Time: About 25 minutes
After a jinxed attempt at lobster hunting last Tuesday, Instructor John and I tried it again – this time in a different location!
The ride out in the zodiac was fairly flat; a DFG boat had pulled over a private boat entering the harbor as we were leaving.
We anchored in 60 feet of water and both of us descended around 7:45 PM.
I headed towards shore, hoping to liberate some lobsters in shallower waters.
Micro lobsters covered the rocks along with some shorts.
Visibility was pretty damn good – 15 feet or more and very clear; there was a slight underwater surge.
My secondary light went out, but I continued with my primary light.
About 10 minutes into the dive I was at 45 feet and wondered if I was going to get skunked – I hadn’t seen any lobsters worth grabbing for, and even the small ones were sparse.
My light waved passed a large bug, I moved my light to the side and my frozen hand of liberation made the pounce!
The lobster shot backwards and I ended up tearing off one of its antennas; I chased it, and in the process, I came across an even bigger lobster that I pinned against the ocean floor and bagged.
It was like grabbing a can of motor oil – no need to measure that one!
Five feet away, I spotted the original lobster – or at least another lobster that only had one antennae.
That lobster had no fight left in it and practically crawled into my bag.
Both these monsters were caught in 45 feet of water.
At 1500 psi, I turned around and headed back towards the zodiac.
In 50 feet of water, I pinned three more lobsters, but only one was legal, and just by a few millimeters.
I slowly surfaced with 500 psi of air, fairly close to the boat before submerging again to swim at 10 feet under the kelp to reach the faithful zodiac.
Instructor John followed a few minutes later.

John’s catch of the night was three lobsters; he went deep at first, to 70 feet, but didn’t see any so he went shallow and caught his stash at 45 to 50 feet.

Do I look macho holding my lobsters, or what?
My share of the gas was $15, so $5 per bug sure the hell beats the retail market price that would probably be close to $100.
The ride back was cold and choppy as the wind was picking up.
With a little more than two months to go in the season, I’m going to try and get out at least once a week.



Yes, definitely macho. Why do you wear a hat like that in the middle of the night?
Comment by Lisa — January 10, 2009 @ 9:04 am
Glad to hear this hunt went Much better then last.
Comment by Frank — January 10, 2009 @ 11:59 pm
Nice! Need someone to cook those? One for you, one for Nick, one for me?
I’d double your money and pay you $10 each for mine and Nick’s.
Plus I’d throw in the sides and kings of beer.
Comment by Jill — January 11, 2009 @ 8:23 pm