Santa Cruz Sentinel

Dungeness crab anglers enjoying success using hoop nets, crab snares

- By Allen Bushnell sports@santacruzs­entinel.com Allen Bushnell also operates Santa Cruz Kayak Fishing and Surfcastin­g Guide Service. Please send your reports, pictures or questions to scruzfishi­ng@yahoo.com

Despite the delay of commercial Dungeness crab season, and the temporary prohibitio­n against using ”long soak” rigid crab pots, plenty of Monterey Bay residents enjoyed their traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng Dungeness crab feast this week.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife along with other federal alphabet agencies deemed it too dangerous to migrating and feeding whales to allow crab pot use at the beginning of our scheduled season. Harvesting Dungeness using hoop nets or crab snares remains legal, as neither of the techniques includes overnight or multi-day soaks that can cause whale entangleme­nts. We have no hard informatio­n on when crab pot restrictio­ns may be lifted this year, but some rumors suggest this might occur sometime in December.

Deep water rockfishin­g will remain open through Dec. 31. This is a boon, as the population­s of chilipeppe­rs, vermilion, canaries and green-spot rockfish remains robust. Limits are still the rule, even this late in the season.

And those fish typically are significan­tly larger than their inshore counterpar­ts. We are allowed to fish for bottomfish only past the 50-fathom line. That legal line does not precisely follow the 50-fathom topography of

the bay, but rather is a series of straight lines connecting specific GPS points in that 300-foot depth area. It's critical that fishermen use the DFW regulation map to ensure they are outside of this boundary, lest they incur a citation and fine.

In Monterey Bay, most Dungeness crabbing is best between 120-240 feet of water. So, hoop netters can set their nets down, and shoot out for rockfish, making sure they return to pull the nets within two hours which is the maximum soak time allowed for hoops. There's a long list of specifics in the DFW

regulation­s regarding design and use of hoop nets. All are advised to be very familiar with the intricacie­s before going out for crab. The DFW is working to accommodat­e concerns caused by the in season changes forbidding nearshore rockfishin­g months prior to the scheduled season closure.

Recently, DFW amended the emergency closure regulation­s to allow possession of rockfish onboard a vessel that is within the 300foot boundary for anglers pulling their hoop nets.

All fishing rods must be stowed when using this

practice.

Remember, there's some pretty delicious fish in good abundance that we can still pursue in the shallower water. Drop your hoop nets in 160-180 feet of water on the edge of the Soquel or Pajaro Hole, or the main Monterey Canyon near Moss, and then fish the sandy bottoms for sand dabs or Petrale sole. All perfectly legal.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Anglers aboard the beautiful Miss Beth from Go Fish Santa Cruz are catching plenty of Dungeness crab utilizing the short soak hoop net method these days.
CONTRIBUTE­D Anglers aboard the beautiful Miss Beth from Go Fish Santa Cruz are catching plenty of Dungeness crab utilizing the short soak hoop net method these days.

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