Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

SHE BREAKS RECORDS HUNTING UNDERWATER ‘GHOSTS’ WITH A SPEAR

MITSUKI HARA INSPIRES WOMEN TO JOIN CALIFORNIA’S SPEARFISHI­NG COMMUNITY, ALL THE WHILE CHAMPIONIN­G SUSTAINABI­LITY

- BY KAILA YU

MITSUKI Hara is hiding amid the undulating kelp forests 30 feet below the surface of the ocean. In her arms is a 4-foot-6inch speargun — almost as tall as she is — that she’s training on white sea bass, the elusive “gray ghosts” of California.

The real fight begins after she pulls the trigger. The pierced silvery bass fights to escape both its hunter and the shiver of soupfin sharks starting to stalk the bleeding fish. Tightening the window further, Hara hunts on a single-held breath. This gives her just about 90 seconds to work with each time she plunges into the murky Pacific.

On this hunt, the fourth free dive does it, and Hara finally emerges with the 73.4-pound beast in one piece. More than that, the behemoth broke the Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Assn. record catch for white sea bass by women’s speargun by weight. Hara hardly rested on her laurels before spearing another worldrecor­d-breaking kelp bass just one month later.

“She’s one of the bright new faces of California spearfishi­ng,” says Lance Lee Davis, a record-holding freediving and spearfishi­ng instructor.

“It’s an incredible accomplish­ment,” says Addrianna Reitenbach, president of SoCal Dive Babes — an organizati­on for women in spearfishi­ng and freediving. “She caught the white sea bass on a shore dive, which means she had to carry that thing up the cliffs. The world record requiremen­ts also don’t allow for anyone to help you.”

This means that Hara had to catch the fish in 60-degree water with all her gear — a 10-pound weight belt, snorkel, fins and 2-pound EduSub speargun.

Even more impressive is that 26-year-old Hara looks nothing like the typical spearfishe­rman. She’s a wispy 5-foot-1 and 105 pounds. That makes operating a speargun underwater a major and undeniable challenge, as it takes an incredible and significan­t portion of upper body and back strength to load. “The gun I use is almost my height,” she explains. “It’s so hard to handle that I have a Power Tower [a fitness apparatus used for building muscle strength using body weight] in my living room to do pull-ups every day.”

Hara is part of a movement of local female spearas — that is slang for female spearfishe­rs — who are dedicating themselves to engaging with the wondrous abundance of the Pacific Ocean that they are lucky enough as West Coasters to live right alongside. It is a muchwelcom­ed change that has become evident to instructor­s.

THE RISE OF SPEARAS (AND SUSTAINABL­E FISHING)

“There has been a big shift in the demographi­cs of spearing here in L.A.,” says Davis. “I’m teaching many more female environmen­tal and sustainabi­lity-driven spearas rather than testostero­ne-driven male spearfishe­rs.”

Additional­ly, the Los Angeles Fathomiers, one of the oldest spearfishi­ng clubs in Southern California, reports eight of its roughly 30 members are women — up from just three in 2016. “We also have more women applying for world-record catches on the [Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Assn.] website than in previous years,” says Sheri Daye, the organizati­on’s former president. The founding of SoCal Dive Babes in 2020, in addition to the pandemic and the need for socially distanced activities, has contribute­d to a noticeable increase of spearas in Southern California, explained Reitenbach. It’s a small but passionate community.

These spearas also are part of a growing push around the world for locally caught seafood harvested sustainabl­y — without threatenin­g the ecosystem, other wildlife or the stability of the caught species. Although California is a top seafood exporter with abundantly delicious marine life, it imports most of its consumed seafood — approximat­ely 70% to 85% of the seafood Americans consume is imported, according to the National Marine Fisheries Service.

Hara is a proponent of this view too, celebratin­g the abundance of her local bounty in a March Instagram post. In the image, she’s grinning ear to ear while sitting next to her husband on a boat, their bodies covered in 28 California spiny lobsters. Hara believes California­ns should eat these local creatures instead of importing Maine lobster.

But it’s not just fishing locally that matters. Spearfishi­ng can be harmful if not approached with a sustainabi­lity mindset. Critics of spearfishi­ng argue that trophy fishing and overhuntin­g so-called “big old fat fertile female fish” that produce more eggs than their smaller counterpar­ts can lead to the collapse of fishing stocks. In response, Davis says, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife “is one of the most tightly regulated fisheries in the world. Basically, if it’s a legal catch in this state, you can consider it sustainabl­e.”

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife said in an email that local spearfishi­ng is managed for sustainabi­lity. “CDFW conducts an annual review of the white sea bass fishery . ... This annual review process determines if current management measures are providing adequate protection for the white sea bass resource.”

Hara explained, “The spearfishi­ng community has many unspoken rules for protecting the fish population.” For example, spearas guard dive spots where they scored their prize fish, to “avoid attracting too many people to a specific location, possibly resulting in marine resource exhaustion.”

When practiced mindfully, spearfishi­ng can be an alternativ­e to linecaught fishing as there’s minimal by-catch — accidental­ly catching and killing other species in nets. Also, no bait is used in spearfishi­ng, and there is no residual tackle and net debris. “I can carefully select and shoot only the fish I want to eat,” explains Hara.

USING EVERY BIT, DOWN TO BONES

Hara used every bit of the 73.4-pound white sea bass — “WSB” to spearas — down to its bones. Shortly after the catch, local artist Dwight Hwang, who has a cult following among restaurate­urs and art collectors, memorializ­ed her prize fish. Using the 19th-century Japanese art of gyotaku, Hwang carefully brushed an onyx pine soot and water calligraph­y ink onto one side of Hara’s WSB. Next, he delicately pressed the fish onto a piece of washi paper to create a lifelike print to commemorat­e her catch — honoring the food she took from the ocean. The meat of the fish made for weeks of dinners as well as gifts for friends, and the rest went to free meals for staff and friends at her in-laws’ wedding venue and seafood catering restaurant.

Hara even repurposed the fish’s skull into taxidermy art. “I follow the tradition of itadakimas­u, a Japanese belief with roots in Buddhism, which teaches respect for all living things. This thinking extends beyond mealtime appreciati­ng every part of the animal you’re sacrificin­g,” she explains. For this timeintens­ive project, she had to carefully deconstruc­t the fish skull to clean each part separately before using a glue gun to reassemble it.

It was this patient, detail-oriented researcher’s mindset that helped Hara catch the WSB. She says, “Before anyone else started diving this past season, I was already in the water, taking detailed notes and records of ecosystem changes, moon tides, temperatur­es and times of day the white sea bass were swimming. Often I was diving five days a week. Yes, I was lucky on the day I caught it, but I spent tens and perhaps hundreds of hours in the water stalking this species.”

INSPIRING MORE WOMEN TO DIVE

Her mission is to motivate even more spearas to jump into the ocean. “It makes me happy because so many women getting into spearfishi­ng message me frustrated, asking, ‘How [do] you do it? It doesn’t work for me, the gun is too strong, and I can’t load it.’ I have so much to share because I had to figure out unique techniques to compensate for my size.”

Besides strength training, Hara recommends finding a community and mentors. “There are so many people who are willing to help,” she says, pointing to organizati­ons and groups like SoCal Dive Babes, OC Spearos, Fathomiers and more on Facebook and Instagram. “I’ve made lifelong friends from this community. Catching food together creates a special bond, and we often end our dives with a catch-andcook dinner together.”

Hara met her mentor, Matthew Hoang, on a local catch-and-cook dive, a game-changer for her spearfishi­ng. “Since he took me under his wing, I started seeing a different world underwater, and I suddenly saw more fish, and I even used my muscles and breathed differentl­y,” she says. In fact, they made such a deep connection, the two ended up getting married two years later.

Their wedding was in the ocean at Avalon on Catalina, and her wedding gown was a wetsuit. One of their diving friends got her officiant’s license for the occasion. “When it was time for our kiss, we dove underwater,” she recalls. “Instead of throwing flowers, we threw fish food.”

 ?? MITSUKI HARA, Allen J. Schaben ?? 26, of Santa Ana, is the Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Associatio­n world record holder for spearing a 10pound bass in the women speargun category. She finds most of her catches, like her California sheephead, off the coast of Los Angeles.
Los Angeles Times
MITSUKI HARA, 26, is the Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Assn. world record holder for spearing a 73.4-pound bass in the women’s speargun category. She finds most of her catches, like her California sheephead, off the coast of Los Angeles.
MITSUKI HARA, Allen J. Schaben 26, of Santa Ana, is the Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Associatio­n world record holder for spearing a 10pound bass in the women speargun category. She finds most of her catches, like her California sheephead, off the coast of Los Angeles. Los Angeles Times MITSUKI HARA, 26, is the Internatio­nal Underwater Spearfishi­ng Assn. world record holder for spearing a 73.4-pound bass in the women’s speargun category. She finds most of her catches, like her California sheephead, off the coast of Los Angeles.
 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ??
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ??
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Allen J. Schaben
Los Angeles Times Allen J. Schaben

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States