It makes me kind of wondering as more people get into spiny lobster and it becomes more commerical for fishing. Maybe we are over fishing it and causing this sea urchin problem in combo with climite change. Maybe it should be ban for commerical fishing and only for rec.
@@fishcandej5002 Nice video, and can't wait until new season opens! I believe incidental catch only applies to commercial lobster traps, but not for recreational hoopnets. This is the answer I got from CDFW in 2020, "According to Chapter 4, subsection 29.10(a) of the CA Ocean Sportfishing Regulations, "Except as otherwise provided in this article, saltwater mollusks, including octopus, may be taken only on hook-and-line or with the hands," so you did the right thing letting them go as they cannot be caught using hoop nets. When fishing by hand or with hook-and-line, there is no minimum size for Kellet's whelk and the daily bag limit is 35 (Chapter 4, subsection 29.05(a))." I would love to keep those and wish whoever gave me this information is wrong.
@@naldodook Believe me, I rather catch sea snails than lobsters. They taste better dipped in fish sauce, lemon, and ginger. We used to catch sea snails at Cabrillo pier until I read up on regulations on these. It's legal and ok to catch them by hand if you're a diver. Can't by net. If caught it's a big fine.
Had a blast Jun thanks 💪🦞
Jun you sure do have a lot of cool friends taking you out doing all these things.
Yahoo. So happy to see video from Jun.
One of my top Bay Area fishing guys channel. 🤗
Nice catch Jun
Thanks
Fun video to watch! 👍😎🦞🦀
It makes me kind of wondering as more people get into spiny lobster and it becomes more commerical for fishing. Maybe we are over fishing it and causing this sea urchin problem in combo with climite change. Maybe it should be ban for commerical fishing and only for rec.
Jun spiny, lobster or Dungeness crab?
what light are u wearing?
FYI...catching those sea snails by hoop nets is illegal. You do what you wanna do but figured I share what I know about regulations on those.
Game wardens out there don’t mess around. Read rules and regulations.
@@fishcandej5002 Nice video, and can't wait until new season opens! I believe incidental catch only applies to commercial lobster traps, but not for recreational hoopnets. This is the answer I got from CDFW in 2020, "According to Chapter 4, subsection 29.10(a) of the CA Ocean Sportfishing Regulations, "Except as otherwise provided in this article, saltwater mollusks, including octopus, may be taken only on hook-and-line or with the hands," so you did the right thing letting them go as they cannot be caught using hoop nets. When fishing by hand or with hook-and-line, there is no minimum size for Kellet's whelk and the daily bag limit is 35 (Chapter 4, subsection 29.05(a))." I would love to keep those and wish whoever gave me this information is wrong.
@@naldodook thank you sir you are correct. I was confused by commercial and recreational. I clarified with a lieutenant.
@fishcandej5002 good to know, and also disappointed that we can't keep those 😂 thank you for confirming!
@@naldodook Believe me, I rather catch sea snails than lobsters. They taste better dipped in fish sauce, lemon, and ginger. We used to catch sea snails at Cabrillo pier until I read up on regulations on these. It's legal and ok to catch them by hand if you're a diver. Can't by net. If caught it's a big fine.
He
Don’t got a UA-cam
I’m not a UA-camr but I do have a few vidz 💪🦞🎣
GPS location plzzzz