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    November 11, 2013

    Lobster Hunting: SCUBA Diving vs Hoop Netting

    November 8, 2013

    We moved to the next spot where they threw their nets over before I went in.

    If you don’t know how I got on a boat with some hoop netters, read my last post.

    I went over and down.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #455

    Solo Diving

    Secret Location: 44 69 72 65 63 74 6c 79 20 69 6e 73 69 64 65 20 74 68 65 20 6d 6f 75 74 68 20 6f 66 20 74 68 65 20 62 72 65 61 6b 77 61 74 65 72 2c 20 74 6f 20 74 68 65 20 72 69 67 68 74 20 6c 6f 6f 6b 69 6e 67 20 6f 75 74 2e
    Long Beach, CA, USA

    In With: 2900 psi
    Out With: 1400 psi
    Max depth: 45 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat
    Visibility: shit to 10 feet
    Water Temperature: 62 degrees
    Air Temperature: 72 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: 25 minutes or so

    I hit bottom at 45 feet; the floor was a three foot deep mass of mush.

    I swam towards the wall where there was a mass of boulders; starting at the bottom I went up.

    I didn’t see one lobster – not one.

    I came across a few molts, which gave me hope, but I just didn’t see any lobsters at all.

    They weren’t in the rocks, on the rocks or out in the mush.

    Not to come back empty handed, I put a lobster molt in my bag, and after about 25 minutes doing a lobsterless search for bugs, I called it quits.

    I surfaced, signaled with my light, and the boat came and picked me up.

    Me with my molt.
    Me with my molt – that is just a lobster shell.

    They then went around and pulled the ten hoop nets that they dropped before my dive.

    An ocopus is caught.
    They pulled up an octopus.

    Ranger Danger was about to throw it back, but Luis said, “Keep it, I can make tacos with it.”

    Finally, a bug is on board!
    Ranger Danger pulled up a bug!

    Finally, we are not skunked!

    Well, at least there’s a bug on the boat.

    Ranger Danger shows his bug.
    Ranger Danger shows his bug.

    Captain Tom said, “Enough of wasting our time going SCUBA diving, let’s go where the lobsters are…”

    He started up the boat and went inside the harbor.

    You can hoop net in certain parts of the harbor, but diving anywhere in the harbor is illegal without Police permission.

    I don’t mind because harbor diving is nasty.

    The Los Angeles Harbor
    The Los Angeles Harbor

    We dropped ten hoop nets at two points and drank beer for 40 minutes waiting for the lobsters to crawl into the baited nets.

    It was Luis’s turn to pull the nets.

    The first pull yielded nothing.

    Luis catches his first bug.
    The second pull yielded Luis his first bug.

    The other three at this spot were empty, or as Captain Tom called them, “blanks.”

    We went to the second spot where Luis kept pulling the nets.

    I was looking over Captain Tom’s shoulder to see what was inside when the net broke the surface.

    Suddenly, I got an elbow in my stomach and a push to the other side of the boat, where I landed on the cooler.

    A monster bug is thrown on deck.
    Holy crap! A huge bug landed on deck!

    “We had to get that thing in the boat, it was hanging on the outside,” Captain Tom said.

    Luis shows off his catch.
    Luis with his monster bug.

    The bug weighs in at 10.6 pounds.
    The bug weighs in at 10.6 pounds.

    Ranger Danger poses with the monster lobster.
    Ranger Danger poses with the monster lobster.

    I filled out another line in my lobster report card to reflect the gear change…

    Me throwing a hoop net.
    Me throwing a hoop net.

    Me pulling a hoop net up.
    Me pulling a hoop net up.

    I did as well at hoop netting as I did with SCUBA diving for lobster – ZERO!

    We stayed there for another drop, and ended up catching one more lobster.

    We tried other spots, but had no further success.

    We headed back around 2 AM.

    The catch for the night.
    The catch for the night – four lobsters and one octopus.

    The Queen Mary at night.

    So the final score for tonight:

    SCUBA Diving – 0 lobsters

    Hoop Netting – 4 lobsters

    It was a fun and interesting trip, however, mixing hoop nets and SCUBA on the same boat just is really awkward.

    November 10, 2013

    Lobster Hunting Off Of Long Beach

    November 8, 2013

    I was so sore last Thursday from Cage Fighting training earlier in the week, that I took the night off and went to a local bar to ingest some recovery carbs.

    I was greeted by the hot bartender by her yelling, “So, where the fuck is my lobster? You gave everybody one except me!”

    Yeah, the last trip I got skunked, but I never promise anyone lobster until I actually have them.

    That greeting sparked a conversation with another patron who also goes lobster hunting.

    “Yeah, I have a friend with a boat, if you want to go out Friday night for some hunting, we have a spot,” the guy said, who would later identify himself as Ranger Danger.

    Not knowing if he was bullshitting me because he was drinking, I took his number and followed up the next day – yep, we were going.

    We met at the local pub, where he picked me up to get my SCUBA gear at my apartment in the ghetto.

    “Why are you bringing all that shit?” Ranger Danger asked.

    “Uh, we’re going lobster hunting, right?”

    “Yeah, but we use hoop nets,” he responded.

    Oh, Fuck!

    I guess I should have asked for details on this trip!

    I was determined to dive – scoop up the lobsters, limit, and drink beer while I watch their futile effort to score the big bugs; at least, that was my plan.

    So, for this trip – Captain Tom, Luis, Ranger Danger, all hoop netters, and me on SCUBA.

    Captain Toms boat
    Captain Tom’s boat.

    We boated out of the harbor, but within the break wall, to a secret spot.

    Hoop Nets next to SCUBA gear
    Hoop Nets next to SCUBA gear.

    Hoop nets going over...
    They threw baited hoop nets over.

    “OK, we can’t anchor, but we’ll know where you are by your light; if you pull this off, I’m gonna take a refresher course and join you next time,” Captain Tom said.

    I was determined to limit.

    I geared up and flipped backwards over the starboard side.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #454

    Solo Diving

    Secret Location: 49 6e 20 74 68 65 20 62 72 65 61 6b 77 61 74 65 72 2c 20 6f 75 74 73 69 64 65 20 74 68 65 20 68 61 72 62 6f 72 20 6f 66 66 20 74 68 65 20 69 73 6c 65 20 6f 66 20 43 68 61 66 66 65 65 2e
    Long Beach, CA, USA

    In With: 2900 psi
    Out With: 1500 psi
    Max depth: 35 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat
    Visibility: shit to 10 feet
    Water Temperature: 62 degrees
    Air Temperature: 73 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: 25 minutes or so

    I submerged to a barren wasteland of boulders – I searched in the holes, up and down, going East.

    I saw one lobster and pinned it – it was so short, I didn’t even bother measuring it, and let it go, unharmed.

    I continued hunting… some molts, but no lobsters.

    Fuck, they must be deeper?

    I took a heading and went deeper – the visibility turned to shit.

    Off the rocks, the floor is a three foot deep mass of mush.

    After about twenty five minutes or so, not seeing any legal lobsters at all, I surfaced.

    I spotted the boat, gave three blinks on my light, and was picked up.

    “There’s nothing down there,” I said.

    Captain Tom expressed some concern when I went deeper because they lost sight of my light.

    Once on the boat, they went around pulling their nets.

    All “blanks” except for one sheep crab.

    Ranger Danger looks way too happy to have caught a sheep crab.
    Ranger Danger looks way too happy to have caught a sheep crab.

    The sheep crab was thrown back.

    We went on to our next spot – more to come.

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