Sport harvesting of Red Abalone is permitted with a California fishing
license and an abalone stamp card. Abalone may only be taken using
breath-hold techniques: freediving or shorepicking. SCUBA diving for
abalone is strictly prohibited. Taking of abalone is not permited south
of the mouth of the San Francisco Bay. There is a size minimum of seven
inches measured across the shell and a quantity limit of three per
day and 24 per year. Abalone may only be taken in April, May, June,
August, September, October and November; abalone may not be taken in
July, December, January, February or March. Transportation of abalone
may only legally occur while the abalone is still attached in the shell.
Sale of sport obtained abalone is illegal, including the shell. Only
Red Abalone may be taken; black, white, pink, and flat abalone are
protected by law.
An abalone diver is normally equipped with a very thick wetsuit, including
a hood, booties, and gloves. He or she would also wear a mask, snorkel,
weight belt, abalone iron, and abalone gauge. It is common to take
abalone in water a few inches up to 10m/28' deep; less common are freedivers
who can work deeper than 10m/28'. Abalone are normally found on rocks
near food sources (kelp). An abalone iron is used to pry the abalone
from the rock before it can fully clamp down. Visibility is normally
five to ten feet. Divers commonly dive out of boats, kayaks, tube floats,
and directly off shore. An eight inch abalone is considered a good
catch, nine inches extremely good, and a ten inch plus (250 mm) abalone
would be a trophy catch. Rock- or shore-picking is a separate method
from diving where the rock picker feels underneath rocks at low tides
for abalone.
There has been a trade in diving to catch abalones off parts of the
United States coast from before 1939. In World War II, many of these
abalone divers were recruited into the United States armed forces and
trained as frogmen.
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