Friday, January 26, 2024

     The commercial guys are catching some crab, never as many as they want, but hopefully what they need. From the little I've heard, the crab seem to be running either deep or stupid shallow. "Stupid shallow" is the definition of water so shallow that if you leave your pots there very long and the sea comes up, no more pots for you. Pots wash ashore, walk down the beach, and bury in the sand. Why, it's the very definition of crab ring water! For you dedicated ringers out there, it ain't over. For the crabbers in Tomales Bay, it has been slow. Mostly from really excessive tides with strong currents blowing out crabs and gear. The rainy weather has also kept a lot of crabbers home. That's crazy to me, as they could have come out here and got soaked and cold and maybe caught a crab or two. Well, this weekend looks like great weather inside the bay, and outside should be good tomorrow. The tides kind of suck for crabbing unless you concentrate your crabbing around the turn of the tides. If the water is moving fast, don't drop your gear. It's expensive to replace. In fishing news, there isn't any. Maybe a herring spawn next week. A few jacksmelt swimming by, getting ready to spawn. Pace yourselves. The season of catching is coming. Paint your house. Change your oil. Change the line on your reels. It's coming. Be ready and with less distractions. And maybe a better looking house.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

    The extreme tides this last week have made for a lot of lost gear but not too many crab caught. Beach snarers are getting a few but seem to be doing better on the beers than on the crab. Closer to the sand point has been better for the crab. The point being farther from the restrooms likely makes it less good for beers, but I cannot confirm. Over the weekend I heard boat reports of 0 to 5 Dungeness inside the bay. Today I got a better report from the Shrimp Boat: "12, probably 6 jumbos from 4 conicals with mostly squid. All near the main seal pull out. A funny detail is we were next to a boat that had all their traps in a really tight cluster, right at the confluence of the channels, I figured they were getting lots of crab since they weren't moving around at all. Finally they pulled their traps and we figured they had limits and were leaving. They passed us close enough for us to ask how they did and they said "been crabbing all morning not a single crab!" Then we felt good enough about our take to go to Nick's." The Shrimp Boat crew were soaking gear around the turn of the low tide when the current was slowest. Also, spreading the gear around a bit isn't a bad thing if you're not catching. Don't soak your gear where the crab aren't. Check your traps or rings often and move the ones that aren't catching. Also, this report lets us know that even though Nick's Cove had their shack on the end of the pier burn down a bit over a week ago, it appears that they will still welcome you if you visit from the water. 

   On a salmon note, I received this email today. I thought it couldn't hurt to pass it on: "


We still need your help to fight for salmon families – contact the State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) today! Right now, the SWRCB is accepting public comments on the Phase 2 Draft Bay-Delta Plan. The deadline is Friday, January 19, 2024. Many of you took action in November and December by testifying at the Water Board’s Bay-Delta Plan hearings and we can’t THANK you enough for your impactful statements. 

As the only agency with legal authority to set flow and temperature protections for Fall-run Chinook, your voice matters and, in fact, it is critical that the SWRCB hears directly from you. Whether or not you’ve already provided public testimony, now’s your chance to take action for salmon, healthy rivers and everyone who relies on this fishery. We can’t let industrial agriculture secure more water diversions and determine the future of California’s salmon and salmon families.

Two Ways to Submit Your Comments (Deadline is January 19)

Don’t delay as you can help GSSA restore critical salmon runs!

Sign and Send a Letter to the Water Board

Click HERE to read, personalize with your own comments, and send a letter urging the SWRCB to adopt an unimpaired flow approach in the Bay-Delta Plan

Make a Greater Impact by Writing and Submitting Your Own Comments by Email

Tell the SWRCB why salmon are important to you, your business, culture or family, and that they must adopt an unimpaired flow approach to restore salmon. Send your comments directly to SacDeltaComments@waterboards.ca.gov with the subject line:
“Comment Letter – Sacramento/Delta Draft Staff Report”

"

Thursday, January 11, 2024

 CDFW says,"

CDFW Opens Commercial Dungeness Crab Fishery in the Central Management Area Under Trap Reduction and Lifts Recreational Crab Trap Restriction

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) will open the commercial Dungeness crab fishery from the Sonoma/Mendocino county line to the U.S./Mexico border (Central Management Area: Fishing Zones 3-6) under a 50 percent trap reduction beginning Jan. 18, 2024, at 12:01 a.m. with a 64-hour pre-soak to begin on Jan. 15, 2024, at 8 a.m. This management decision is a balanced approach that achieves two outcomes. First, this trap reduction will help reduce entanglement risk for humpback whales by reducing the amount of gear and vertical lines in the water. Second, the decision gets the commercial fishery open statewide.

This management decision includes exhaustive coordination with affected fishers, businesses and environmental organizations. CDFW reached this decision after seeking feedback and input from the California Dungeness Crab Fishing Gear Working Group, during a meeting on Jan. 10, 2024. The working group expressed broad support for this management decision.

Any commercial Dungeness crab vessel fishing in or transiting Fishing Zones 3-6, regardless of fishing location is subject to the 50 percent reduction. Additionally, they must have at least 50 percent of their valid buoy tags for the current fishing season onboard and available for inspection by CDFW at all times. Commercial Dungeness crab vessels operating in Fishing Zones 3-6 must understand and comply with the restrictions by reviewing the CDFW Declaration, which includes additional information about this gear reduction. The commercial fishery north of the Sonoma/Mendocino county line (Fishing Zones 1 and 2) opened on Jan. 5, 2024, under a fleet advisory and is not subject to any trap reductions.

CDFW is also lifting the temporary recreational crab trap restriction, beginning Jan. 12, 2024, at 8 a.m., from the Sonoma/Mendocino county line to Lopez Point, Monterey County (Fishing Zones 3 and 4). A fleet advisory remains in effect for both the commercial and recreational fishery for all Fishing Zones (1-6).

“This has been an extremely challenging year for California’s commercial fishing industry,” said CDFW Director Charlton H. Bonham. “Today’s action in the Central Management Area strikes a balance. It protects whales and turtles, and it gets people on the water allowing our hardworking commercial fishing fleet to provide fresh sustainable crab to California residents.”

CDFW encourages both the commercial and recreational crab fisheries to implement best practices, as described in the Best Practices Guide and avoid setting any fishing gear in areas were whales or sea turtles are present. In addition, the commercial fishery is encouraged to remain vigilant for lost or abandoned gear throughout the fishing season. Permitted commercial Dungeness crab vessels are allowed to retrieve up to six derelict commercial Dungeness crab traps per fishing trip pursuant to Section 132.2, Title 14, California Code of Regulations. Derelict fishing gear may also be reported through CalTIP.

    So, tomorrow at 8:00 AM you can splash pots for sport purposes and the commercials get to drop half of their gear on Monday at 8:00 AM. Better late than never, right? So, soak 'em if you got 'em.

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

     So, the crab report for today? "No crab!" from the one guy that went out. He may have been a little extra angry, as he and his buddy gave up on crab at low tide (as they weren't catching anything) and switched to clams. They dug up 12 clams, put them in a bag, and came in. The warden was waiting and gave them a ticket, as clams need to be kept in separate containers for each clammer. Fair? I decline to comment. But the law was changed recently and does say a single container for each fisherman. Not that it makes it cool, it just makes it illegal. Remember, folks, "fair" and "legal" are different words and terms and spelled and spoken differently for a reason. They often have nothing to do with each other. Now, CDFW finally changed the the ruled to make licenses 365 day ones instead of calendar-year, in order to make fishing more accessible and sell more licenses. The fact that the regulations make legal fishing so complicated obviously couldn't be a reason why why people decline to fish. It's nice that they made an App, and you can click a map to sort of know what's up (not perfect, like the rules) but it's still kind of scary trying to figure out if fishing on a particular body of water on a certain day is legal. It could be simpler. But then again, if everybody did it we'd be overwhelmed. 

   So, on the crab front, it seems that CDFW is going to allow sport pots soon, as well as allowing commercial to open. Good for the commies, except they're limited to only 30% of their allotted gear. Remember, commercial crabbers have individual pot limits, and this year they get less than a third of that. It takes 300 crab pots to make ends meet? Okay, you get 90. Make it work. To be fair, they will. Not because they can so much as they will. Fishermen fish because they want to. They work at other jobs because they have to. Luckily for them, guys that want to work are still in demand, so finding a job outside of fishing isn't too hard. No commercial fisherman is afraid of hard work. They'd just rather fish. I think we can all sympathize. 

   Also, on a darker note, a petition to declare white sturgeon as endangered has been accepted by CDFW. Does any body want to bet on their decision? My guess is things will go bad. The legal things. Don't worry, they guys thinking dark things will be right, too. Nothing good comes from an endangered listing. I mean, not for fishermen, generally, as they are blamed for the failures of the fish, not the guys regulating the water the fish need to successfully spawn.  "That's different." Or not. Some fish require a fresh water river to spawn. Salmon, sturgeon, striper. Two out of three down.  If I was a striper (and read this report(small percentage of stripers)) I'd be worried. Just know that the powers that be have decided that agriculture is more important, especially the part that gets exported. Almonds, yeah! Salmon, f- off. It appears that sturgeon are also salmon, in the water wars. Gat ready, emotionally.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

 Happy New Year, y'all. May your fishing adventures this year be almost as successful as you imagine them (Unfortunately, reality probably can't support all of our dreams all at once. But maybe almost?). Winter ocean weather has arrived with seas ranging in size from not bad to holy crap! Water temps offshore are still really warm but the next few days of offshore high pressure and spring-style winds may finally cool the water and send the anchovies, pelicans and whales to the south. If the forecast comes true, you may be using traps before the end of the month, and commercial crabbers may finally get a shot here. The huge seas we just experienced may have sent a good portion of the nearshore crab scurrying offshore to avoid the surge. The most recent reports that I have heard from nearshore have been bad. I'm sure that there's a few pockets of happiness out there and people will find them, but there's more water without crab than with. Good luck. The weather mostly sucks lately, so if you want to take your life in your hands to go try to catch crab that mostly aren't there, cool. You do you. Inside the bay, where the Cost Benefit Analysis is on your side (Hint: The benefit is minimal. Less chance of dying, though. Not no chance of dying, people do it successfully here pretty regular, but crossing the bar and even just being out on the ocean can be dangerous this year. I saw wave break in places that I hadn't seen break in a few years (I missed last year's big swell, but Gage told me it was HUGE.. This year I saw the swell. It may not have been bigger than last year, but it coincided with a king tide, and Damn! It was big and scary. I tasted my mortality just looking at them from the hill). That said, people are still catching in the bay, and a heard a few good stories about Dungeness off of the ocean front beach (at least pre-giant surf) from some fellows using a non-standard technique. As I haven't been cleared to say how they're doing it, just know that a couple of guys were getting limits off of the ocean front beach. The crab are there (or they were...) and snarers could catch them if they're still there. Or not. It's fishing.