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Commercial Crabbers Set Sea for First Day of Season

See those extra dots on the horizon? Those are crab boats.

Commercial crab fishermen are gearing up for Thursday's opening of crab season, with vessels large and small starting to assemble pots along Santa Cruz County waters, at Pillar Point Harbor in Half Moon Bay and along the Bay Area coast to catch Dungeness crabs.

The season, which opens each year on Nov. 15 from the Central Coast up to the North Bay's Russian River, comes 13 days after recreational fishermen headed into the water to catch the crustaceans. The season runs through June 2013.

As of Dec. 1, the season will open for the northern coast up to the Oregon border.

According to 11th Coast Guard commercial fishing vessel safety specialist Peggy Murphy, who is based out of Alameda, the Coast Guard has been out in force prior to Thursday's start of the season performing safety inspections.

"We go out and saturate all of the docks and harbors that have commercial crab fisherman," Murphy said. "We offer them safety checks to make sure safety gear is working properly and they have what's required by federal law."

Any fisherman going beyond three miles from the coast is required to have a dockside exam in port, she said, which results in many mandated inspections.

Murphy said the checks occur year-round but are particularly concentrated before the start of crab season.

She highlighted that crab fishing is one of the most deadly of all West Coast commercial fisheries because of the way fishermen fish for the crabs.

She said the way fishermen maneuver and lift the pots full of crabs, confounded with vessels laden with heavy pots that make the boat unstable, and winter weather conditions, make for a dangerous combination while crabbing.

"There's a lot of pressure to get out there and do it and get pots out there," she said about the frenzy at the start of the season.

This is the last year that commercial boats will have an unlimited pot count. By the 2013-14 season, limits will be in place based on vessel size and capacity.

"The idea is that it's safer," she said.

Pillar Point Harbor patrol officials said their office was directing traffic Wednesday as everyone set up pots on their boats in the popular Half Moon Bay crabbing spot in anticipation of the midnight opening.

Other areas that see increased boating traffic during the first few weeks of the crab season include Bodega Bay, the Santa Cruz coast and in San Francisco waters.

The patrol office said the various vessels, ranging from smaller boats with 25 pots and a minimal crew to bigger commercial ships with 500 pots and many fishermen aboard, are offered protection from the harbor patrol once they've passed inspection with the Coast Guard.

Often the boats and fishermen must deal with mechanical problems and bad weather, while trying to out-catch the competition.

Harbor officials said the frantic pace to catch crabs at the start of the season tapers off within the first two to three weeks and is fairly slow by Christmas.

Crab season opens at this time of year based on when the Dungeness crabs have completed molting and grown into their hard shells.

More information about Dungeness crab season can be found at www.dfg.ca.gov/marine/invertebrate/crabs.asp.

—Reporting by Bay City News

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Steve Westside April 17, 2013 at 05:11 pm
During the SUP/Kayak contest a few weeks ago there were a group of us below the end of the contestRead More event area and after we all (Stand-up and prone paddlers) went to far into the area the organizers just pointed out that we need to stay below the judges booth. After a bit we of course all drifted further up and then someone on land announced that it is a misdemeanor to interfere with a contest. Finally, they sent a guy out to mind us and let us know to not drift above him. All very pleasant and cordial. Except for a few surfers thought the rules did not apply to them and constantly snaked in and paddled up to grab waves. Made everyone our there grabbing a few leftover waves looking like prima donnas. Eventually those incorrigibles left and after the contest ended it was a great afternoon of surfing for everyone.
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Is it me or does there seem to be an excessive amount of us vs them mentality and worse, anger inRead More Santa Cruz these days? I went to a community event not too long ago and it was clearly present amongst a number of the people there, they definitely had a "this is our town not yours" vibe going on. It reminded me of the old Valley go home mentality that rears its head sometimes. I know your post was about sharing the ocean but in a more general sense that easy going chill attitude I love about Santa Cruz seems to be getting lost in too much anger and quite frankly a "Me-ism" and egocenteredness that's a big turnoff.
Dan Young April 16, 2013 at 03:45 pm
Hi, Nigel - I agree with you that there needs to be more understanding between everyone. I grew upRead More boating (lake and ocean) in this area and was taught the 'rules of the road'. As long as everyone abides by the rules and keeps each other safe, I don't care what one rides. I agree that the announcer should have been more aware not only with expressing his personal views but he should have had the experience to see that you needed to take a certain path and were not there trying to catch waves. Ignorance on his part. I kneeboard and body surf (yes, I can stand-up surf, also) and have had my share of run-ins over the years. I don't surf the major breaks anymore unless its really big, which thins out all but the most skilled. These days I try and find a little break away from the crowds (not an easy task) and am happy with a few little peelers here and there.
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